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MahaYog - Yoga 🔱 and Buddhism ☸️ avatar

MahaYog - Yoga 🔱 and Buddhism ☸️

🔱 Uncensored Primary Yoga and Buddhism, beyond any sectarian boundaries.
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MahaYog - Yoga 🔱 and Buddhism ☸️ के लोकप्रिय पोस्ट

से पुनः पोस्ट किया:
Dharma - The Way Things Are avatar
Dharma - The Way Things Are
On another occasion, the Buddha said: «Brothers, when I speak to you, do not accept my words blindly merely out of love and respect for me. But test it, test it, test it as a goldsmith tests gold by cutting it, subjecting it to fire, and striking it with a hammer to determine whether it is genuine or counterfeit. Take my words to heart and follow them only if you find them reasonable». This is also the Buddha's way. This is how the Buddha encouraged everyone to think through ideas and concepts by themselves, with their own minds.

Some religions warn against this and ask you simply to believe what they say and teach. Otherwise, their god will send them to hell. The Buddha never uttered curses and never promised punishment to those who did not believe in him.

As for worship rituals, they have no place at all in the Buddha's teachings. You may ask why Buddhists lay flowers in front of the Buddha's image. However, by doing so, they are only showing their gratitude to the greatest Guru for his selfless, lifelong service to all mankind, for his teachings, and for opening the righteous path to the whole world. This is by no means a ritual.

It is not so important whether you take refuge in the Buddha or not. What is important is to lead a good life by following the path he pointed out. The Buddha had one devoted and respectful disciple. One day, sitting down next to him, he looked directly at the Buddha, who was at that moment in his holiest and most beautiful form. The Buddha understood the disciple's condition and said: «What is the use of looking at this body, a mass of flesh and bones? ... Get out of here and look at the Dhamma» (i.e., practice the virtues, follow the law of truth).

Whether you take refuge or not is not as important as living a good life, pure in deed, word, and thought. You are a true follower of the Buddha if you try to lead a pure life.

Venerable Balangoda Anandamaitreya
There is no single Buddhism. There are many Buddhist teachings. When Buddhism enters a country, that country also acquires a new form of Buddhism. The Buddhist teachings in that country will differ from those in other countries. Buddhism, to remain authentic, must align with and conform to the psychology and culture of the society it serves.

Titus Nhat Hanh
There is only one reality. And you are it, although you do not know it. But when you awaken to that reality, you are no longer something, you are everything and always. And that is all.

Kalu Rinpoche
Guru is the nature of our mind. If we have realized the nature of mind, there is no need for an external guru. If comprehension of [the nature of] the mind is maintained in and out of meditation, then the guru is beyond meeting and parting.

Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
The source of all demons is in the mind itself. When awareness holds and embraces any external object, it is at the mercy of the demon.

Machig Labdron
All the water and drink you’ve consumed from beginningless time until now has failed to satisfy your thirst or bring you contentment.

Drink therefore of this stream of enlightened mind, Fortunate Ones.

Milarepa
Do not repay with anger the one who is angry with you -
And you will win a battle that is hard to win.
He who knows that the other is seized with anger,
But consciously keeps peace in his soul, practicing for the good of both,
For the good of himself and the good of the other.

Sanyutta-nikaya
The most important disadvantage of smoking is that it closes a man's Brahma door on the top of his head. So at the time of his death, it will be extremely difficult for him to practice Pho-wa in an attempt to bring his consciousness through this door in order to either free himself from cyclic existence or to pass into one of the three higher worlds.

For the benefit of self and others, all Dharma practitioners should avoid smoking altogether!

Chatral Rinpoche
Oral instruction does not mean many books but rather a few words that hit the target and convey the essence of meaning into your mind.
Vision does not mean just a philosophical opinion; it is freedom from the limitations of mental constructs.
Meditation does not mean mental concentration on something; it means that your mind remains steadfast in its natural ability to know, free from mental effort.
Spontaneous action does not mean licentious behavior; it means freedom from the habit of clinging to illusory sensations as reality.
Distinguishing knowledge (prajña) does not refer to the sharp faculties of mistaken thinking; it is the realization that all dharmas are unborn and free from mental constructions.

Guru Padmasambhava
The sutras say that Mara (“devil” in Buddhism) is an insidious character and a skilled archer. It takes great effort to avoid being caught in the crosshairs of one of his five arrows, because each one targets our most vulnerable places.

The first of Mara's arrows is aimed at those who take great pride in their accomplishments or their material or spiritual wealth.

The second is aimed at those who are ignorant because they have no idea which activities and relationships to abandon and which to embrace.

The third is for those who have wrong views, for example, they do not believe in cause, condition, and effect.

The fourth is aimed at those whose forgetfulness constantly distracts them from mindfulness.

The fifth is directed at those who are distracted by the eight worldly dharmas.

Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche
21.04.202505:16
This life passes as quickly as autumn clouds;
Family and friends are like passers-by in a market;
The demon of death approaches like twilight's shadows;
What the future holds is like a translucent fish in cloudy waters;
Life's experiences are like last night's dreams;
The pleasures of the senses, like an imaginary party.
Meaningless activities are like waves
lapping on the surface of the water.

Guru Padmasambhava
28.03.202512:10
Student: Now, I am struggling with obstacles to practice. One of the significant obstacles is my lack of discipline. It appears to be a significant obstacle.

Rinpoche: You should not think that deviations are always as dramatic as they may seem in this consideration, or that deviations are something that only advanced practitioners should worry about, because deviations often begin early and are initially small. They start with a slight perversion of motivation. The practitioner, from the beginning of the practice, needs to focus steadily on correcting his own motivation.

Student: I think one of the biggest challenges for me is faith. I know it is strongly related to other obstacles. It is similar to not understanding what awakening is. I think I'm waiting for an acid trip or a spectacular experience to come and take me away. There's a need to be unique, to make things come easily.

Rinpoche: You are not the only one like that. The three obstacles you listed are, in fact, the three main reasons why we remain in samsara. The only thing that makes you different is that you have correctly identified these obstacles.

The first problem we face is that we doubt the possibility of awakening. We would like to believe that there is, but we are uncertain whether there really is a way out of samsara. This is a big problem. On the one hand, this doubt manifests for us as a lack of faith, and on the other hand, it manifests as a lack of discipline or diligence; however, it's essentially the same fundamental problem. We lack faith because we don't know if there is anything to believe in. We lack discipline or diligence because we are uncertain about the benefits of our diligence. The things described are mainly due to ignorance of the Dharma. We are still so unfamiliar with it that we are not sure whether it makes sense or not. Because of this ignorance, we are plagued by the occasional fear that it's all made up, that it's just a cultural construct, that it doesn't really work.

Lack of discipline is partly related to this, but it mainly comes from forgetting our own mortality. We are incapable of being disciplined and diligent at certain times because we forget that we will lose everything when we die. We will lose everything we have gained, we will lose every moment of pleasure we had, and we will lose these very bodies that we used to accumulate things and to enjoy. Remembrance of death and its inevitability is probably the most effective means of gaining discipline.

The desire for a special kind of experience is related to the first problem. Because we are unfamiliar with the Dharma, we are not sure about what awakening is. We imagine it is something similar to, or preferably better than, what we have already experienced - as you said, envisioning it as the world's best acid trip or seeing lots of rainbows and flashes of light. This desire for experience is, in fact, just another form of attachment to temporary pleasure.

These three - a lack of faith, a lack of discipline, and a desire for some kind of experience - are what keep us in samsara. Not that they are just a type of obstacle, but they are the main problems you encounter on the path.

This is where remembering that right now, you have the opportunity to go beyond these problems helps. In fact, you may have your only chance to move beyond these problems and achieve awakening. Because if you are reborn as an animal, you will have no opportunity to practice or even hear about the Dharma, and your suffering will far exceed what you have now.

From Kartar Rinpoche's talks to his disciples
Be content with what you have, be happy with what happens to you. When you realize that you do not lack anything, the whole universe will belong to you.

Lao Tzu
If you carry out auspicious activities and create favorable circumstances,
This will help your mind to follow the right direction.
If your mind follows the right direction,
It will help you improve and increase meditative experiences.
If you have proper meditative experiences,
This will help you attain perfect enlightenment.

Guru Padmasambhava
If we catch a glimpse of nondual perception, our preoccupation with the external appearance of things begins to fade.

The more our preoccupation with the appearance of things, our inner fixation, disappears, the more our inner sense of solid concreteness disappears.

The more we train in the awakened state, the more clearly we will see the world around us for what it truly is — a play of illusions devoid of solidity.

Great masters who came to realization could walk on water, pass through stone walls, and remain unscathed by fire. The external elements are but the fruit of clouded perception. No one but ourselves created them; therefore, when our inner fixation collapses, their pseudo-existence collapses with it.

All external appearances are devoid of substance, like smoke and mist. We perceive appearances, but only as a magical game of obfuscation.

Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche
अधिक कार्यक्षमता अनलॉक करने के लिए लॉगिन करें।