"When there is arrogance, conceit or self-disparagement — whatever it is — examine it; listen inwardly; ‘I am....’ Be aware and attentive to the space before you think it; then think it and notice the space that follows.
Sustain your attention on that emptiness at the end and see how long you can hold your attention on it. See if you can hear a kind of ringing sound in the mind, the sound of silence, the primordial sound.
When you concentrate your attention on that, you can reflect: ‘Is there any sense of self?’ You see that when you’re really empty — when there’s just clarity, alertness and attention — there’s no self.
There’s no sense of me and mine. So, I go to that empty state and I contemplate Dhamma: I think, ‘This is just as it is. This body here is just this way.’ I can give it a name or not but right now, it’s just this way."
Ajahn Sumedho
Sustain your attention on that emptiness at the end and see how long you can hold your attention on it. See if you can hear a kind of ringing sound in the mind, the sound of silence, the primordial sound.
When you concentrate your attention on that, you can reflect: ‘Is there any sense of self?’ You see that when you’re really empty — when there’s just clarity, alertness and attention — there’s no self.
There’s no sense of me and mine. So, I go to that empty state and I contemplate Dhamma: I think, ‘This is just as it is. This body here is just this way.’ I can give it a name or not but right now, it’s just this way."
Ajahn Sumedho
"In emptiness, things are just what they are. When we are aware in this way, it doesn’t mean that we are indifferent to success or failure and that we don’t bother to do anything.
We can apply ourselves. We know what we can do; we know what has to be done and we can do it in the right way. Then everything becomes Dhamma, the way it is.
We do things because that is the right thing to be doing at this time and in this place rather than out of a sense of personal ambition or fear of failure."
Ajahn Sumedho
We can apply ourselves. We know what we can do; we know what has to be done and we can do it in the right way. Then everything becomes Dhamma, the way it is.
We do things because that is the right thing to be doing at this time and in this place rather than out of a sense of personal ambition or fear of failure."
Ajahn Sumedho
"So much of human anguish and despair comes from the added extra that is born of ignorance in the moment. It is sad to realise how the misery and anguish and despair of humanity is based upon delusion; the despair is empty and meaningless. When you see this, you begin to feel infinite compassion for all beings. How can you hate anyone or bear grudges or condemn anyone who is caught in this bond of ignorance? Everyone is influenced to do the things they do by their wrong views of things."
Ajahn Sumedho
Ajahn Sumedho
"Meditation is a way of deconditioning the mind which helps us to let go of all the hard-line views and fixed ideas we have. Ordinarily, what is real is dismissed while what is not real is given all our attention. This is what ignorance (avijja) is.
The contemplation of our human aspiration connects us to something higher than just the animal kingdom or the planet earth. To me that connection seems more true than the idea that this is all there is; that once we die our bodies rot and there is nothing more than that.
When we ponder and wonder about this universe we are living in, we see that it is very vast, mysterious and incomprehensible to us. However, when we trust more in our intuitive mind, we can be receptive to things that we may have forgotten or have never been open to before — we open when we let go of fixed, conditioned reactions.
We can have the fixed idea of being a personality, of being a man or a woman, being an English person or an American. These things can be very real to us, and we can get very upset and angry about them. We are even willing to kill each other over these conditioned views that we hold and believe in and never question. Without Right Aspiration and Right Understanding, without pañña, we never see the true nature of these views."
Ajahn Sumedho
The contemplation of our human aspiration connects us to something higher than just the animal kingdom or the planet earth. To me that connection seems more true than the idea that this is all there is; that once we die our bodies rot and there is nothing more than that.
When we ponder and wonder about this universe we are living in, we see that it is very vast, mysterious and incomprehensible to us. However, when we trust more in our intuitive mind, we can be receptive to things that we may have forgotten or have never been open to before — we open when we let go of fixed, conditioned reactions.
We can have the fixed idea of being a personality, of being a man or a woman, being an English person or an American. These things can be very real to us, and we can get very upset and angry about them. We are even willing to kill each other over these conditioned views that we hold and believe in and never question. Without Right Aspiration and Right Understanding, without pañña, we never see the true nature of these views."
Ajahn Sumedho
Forwarded from Meditations of a Yogin
“Today is the planetary day of the Guru. We pay homage to the Teacher because a teacher helps show us the way. Dorje Drolo subjugates sorcerers and mamos (chaos queens) and shows us with his crazy wisdom how to overcome obstacles ahead of us without falling prey to stagnation.”
- @WukongReborn on Twitter
- @WukongReborn on Twitter
Forwarded from Vajrarastra
"Buddhadharma is so abundant, it's so rich, vast and deep, and if you insist that meditation is sitting on a cushion, you're making it so limited".
~ Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, Meditation: Introduction to Buddhism
In Buddhist sources, the word bhāvanā (lit. cultivation) is used to describe those activities that lead to the development of meditative absorption.
Spiritual cultivation (bhāvanā) is the third of the three grounds for meritorious actions, alongside dāna (generosity) and sīla (ethical behaviour).
Contrary to the popular idea of meditation as simply sitting and observing the breath, bhāvanā delineates a wide array of activities: Praying, making offerings, ritual, studying noscripture, debating, chanting, etc, it's all considered within the realm of spiritual cultivation.
~ Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche, Meditation: Introduction to Buddhism
In Buddhist sources, the word bhāvanā (lit. cultivation) is used to describe those activities that lead to the development of meditative absorption.
Spiritual cultivation (bhāvanā) is the third of the three grounds for meritorious actions, alongside dāna (generosity) and sīla (ethical behaviour).
Contrary to the popular idea of meditation as simply sitting and observing the breath, bhāvanā delineates a wide array of activities: Praying, making offerings, ritual, studying noscripture, debating, chanting, etc, it's all considered within the realm of spiritual cultivation.
Forwarded from Meditations of a Yogin
“Adverse conditions are spiritual friends
Devils and demons are emanations of the victorious ones
Illness is the broom for evil and obscurations
Suffering is the dance of what is”
- Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Thaye
Devils and demons are emanations of the victorious ones
Illness is the broom for evil and obscurations
Suffering is the dance of what is”
- Jamgon Kongtrul Lodro Thaye
Forwarded from 𝖳𝖱𝖨𝖪𝖠 𝖲𝖧𝖠𝖨𝖵𝖨𝖲𝖬
In some traditions, pure luminosity is worshiped as a last phase englobing these states of consciousness as its creative vibrancy.
Fortifying this gnostic ritual with the expansive joy of caste-free sexual union and the consumption of wine, flesh, and the impurities of the body, the initiate penetrates through the inhibition of external values and the rebirth-generating bondage of self-awareness that this inhibition entails, thereby attaining the conviction that his individualized consciousness is but the spontaneous play of these universal powers.
No longer enslaved by the appearance of subjection to the not-self in consciousness, he achieves liberation within the very flow of extroverted cognit.
Fortifying this gnostic ritual with the expansive joy of caste-free sexual union and the consumption of wine, flesh, and the impurities of the body, the initiate penetrates through the inhibition of external values and the rebirth-generating bondage of self-awareness that this inhibition entails, thereby attaining the conviction that his individualized consciousness is but the spontaneous play of these universal powers.
No longer enslaved by the appearance of subjection to the not-self in consciousness, he achieves liberation within the very flow of extroverted cognit.
"Shakti is the creator of the universe,
The universe is Her form;
Shakti is the foundation of the world,
She is the true form of the body.
Shakti is the form of all things,
Of all that lives and moves in the world.
There is no jewel rarer than Shakti,
No condition is superior to that of Shakti."
Shaktisangama Tantra
The universe is Her form;
Shakti is the foundation of the world,
She is the true form of the body.
Shakti is the form of all things,
Of all that lives and moves in the world.
There is no jewel rarer than Shakti,
No condition is superior to that of Shakti."
Shaktisangama Tantra
Forwarded from Wu Journal
Emptiness, the ultimate nature of Dharmakaya, the Ultimate Body, is not a simple nothingness. It possesses intrinsically the faculty of knowing the nature of all phenomena. This faculty is the luminous or cognitive aspect of the Dharmakaya, whose expression is spontaneous. The Dharmakaya is not the product of causes and conditions; it is the original nature of mind.
—Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
—Kyabje Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
Forwarded from Meditations of a Yogin
Everywhere Is A Pure Land
“When you experience that phenomena are unreal,
you will then be free from the concept of self and other, right and wrong, and free from the afflictions of greed, hatred, worry and pride. You will not need to search for peace and purity, and you will not need to detest evil afflictions and impurity.
Although you live in the world of phenomenal reality, to you, any environment is a Buddha’s Pure Land. To an unenlightened person, you are but an ordinary person. To you, all ordinary people are identical with Buddha.
You will feel that your own self-nature is the same as that of all Buddhas, and the self-nature of Buddhas is universal throughout time and space. You will spontaneously apply your wisdom and wealth, giving to all sentient beings everywhere, throughout all time and space.”
~ Master Sheng Yen
“When you experience that phenomena are unreal,
you will then be free from the concept of self and other, right and wrong, and free from the afflictions of greed, hatred, worry and pride. You will not need to search for peace and purity, and you will not need to detest evil afflictions and impurity.
Although you live in the world of phenomenal reality, to you, any environment is a Buddha’s Pure Land. To an unenlightened person, you are but an ordinary person. To you, all ordinary people are identical with Buddha.
You will feel that your own self-nature is the same as that of all Buddhas, and the self-nature of Buddhas is universal throughout time and space. You will spontaneously apply your wisdom and wealth, giving to all sentient beings everywhere, throughout all time and space.”
~ Master Sheng Yen
Forwarded from Borān Kammaṭṭhāna and Tai Esotericism
Teaching by Venerable Luang Phor Uttama(หลวงพ่ออุตตมะ ဦးဥတ်တမ)
We have to believe in the law of kamma. According to the Abhidhamma, even though one may have engaged in many meritous acts in this life, if one is frightened at the time of death, i.e. one's mind is overwhelmed with disturbing emotions and fleeting thoughts, one will inevitably recollect the negative deeds that oneself has done in this life.
If you follow this thought process at the time of death, you will not have a fortunate rebirth, and will inevitably take birth in the womb of a non-virtuous person. Therefore, when one is about to die, one should recite arahang, arahang continuously and let the mind focus on the mantra.
Let the mind only dwell in goodness. Alternatively, others could invite the Venerable Sangha to do chanting for the one who is about to pass.
We have to believe in the law of kamma. According to the Abhidhamma, even though one may have engaged in many meritous acts in this life, if one is frightened at the time of death, i.e. one's mind is overwhelmed with disturbing emotions and fleeting thoughts, one will inevitably recollect the negative deeds that oneself has done in this life.
If you follow this thought process at the time of death, you will not have a fortunate rebirth, and will inevitably take birth in the womb of a non-virtuous person. Therefore, when one is about to die, one should recite arahang, arahang continuously and let the mind focus on the mantra.
Let the mind only dwell in goodness. Alternatively, others could invite the Venerable Sangha to do chanting for the one who is about to pass.
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Forwarded from Egbert Moray-Falls
"The tradition of Nath, the tradition of Aghori, actually it is not Hinduism, it is actually ancient tantric practice. It is the [same] origin of the Tibetan Vajrayana.
"As you know, the Tibetan Vajrayana became a little bit diluted, or watered down, in some sense because of the background of Tibetan culture, Tibetan language, Tibetan tradition. Things were a little bit different, but the root is all the same as what we see with the ancient tantric practices. The same as the Aghori tradition..."
Dilgo Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche
https://fb.watch/pdtJ8YJcEz/
"As you know, the Tibetan Vajrayana became a little bit diluted, or watered down, in some sense because of the background of Tibetan culture, Tibetan language, Tibetan tradition. Things were a little bit different, but the root is all the same as what we see with the ancient tantric practices. The same as the Aghori tradition..."
Dilgo Khyentse Yangsi Rinpoche
https://fb.watch/pdtJ8YJcEz/
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Forwarded from Meditations of a Yogin
“I myself have practiced without distraction
You too should follow this example.”
- Padampa Sangye
You too should follow this example.”
- Padampa Sangye
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