Din
10-15-12, 3:14am
A Profound Mind
Cultivating wisdom in everyday life
The Dalai Lama
Harmony Books, N.Y.
p. 22
"The root cause of our unenlightened existence within this cycle of rebirths - samsara in Sanskrit - is said to be our fundamental ignorance: our grasping at a sense of self.... It is an essential subject, as Buddhism understands it's removal to be the way to our true peace and happiness.
We must also initially identify the causes and conditions that shape our unenlightened existence in samsara. These are our afflictive mental attitudes such as craving, aversion, pride and jealousy. They are afflictive in that they bring about our unhappiness."
p.24-25
"...all compounded things, be they air, stone, or living creatures, are impermanent, they are in the nature of suffering, and all phenomena are selfless. Our ignorance of this selfless nature of all that exists is the fundamental cause of our unenlightened existence. Fortunately, it is due to this selfless nature that we have the potential for ending our miserable situation in cyclic existence.
The force of wisdom, cultivated gradually, enables us to diminish and eventually eliminate our fundamental ignorance that grasps at a sense of a self. The cultivation of wisdom will bring about a state beyond sorrow, nirvana in Sanskrit. The fourth characteristic of Buddhism is that nirvana is true peace.
So... the root of our unhappiness is our falsely held view that we possess any true or enduring substantial reality. But, says Buddhism, there is a way out of this dilemma. It lies in recognizing our true identity: the one that lies beneath our falsely held conceptions of an enduring personal self.
Our mind is essentially pure and luminous. The afflictive thoughts and emotions that pollute our everyday, surface selves cannot touch this essential mind. Being adventitious, these pollutions are removable. Buddhist practice is aimed primarily at cultivating the antidotes to those afflictive thoughts and emotions with the goal of eradicating the root of our unenlightened existence to bring about liberation from suffering."
Cultivating wisdom in everyday life
The Dalai Lama
Harmony Books, N.Y.
p. 22
"The root cause of our unenlightened existence within this cycle of rebirths - samsara in Sanskrit - is said to be our fundamental ignorance: our grasping at a sense of self.... It is an essential subject, as Buddhism understands it's removal to be the way to our true peace and happiness.
We must also initially identify the causes and conditions that shape our unenlightened existence in samsara. These are our afflictive mental attitudes such as craving, aversion, pride and jealousy. They are afflictive in that they bring about our unhappiness."
p.24-25
"...all compounded things, be they air, stone, or living creatures, are impermanent, they are in the nature of suffering, and all phenomena are selfless. Our ignorance of this selfless nature of all that exists is the fundamental cause of our unenlightened existence. Fortunately, it is due to this selfless nature that we have the potential for ending our miserable situation in cyclic existence.
The force of wisdom, cultivated gradually, enables us to diminish and eventually eliminate our fundamental ignorance that grasps at a sense of a self. The cultivation of wisdom will bring about a state beyond sorrow, nirvana in Sanskrit. The fourth characteristic of Buddhism is that nirvana is true peace.
So... the root of our unhappiness is our falsely held view that we possess any true or enduring substantial reality. But, says Buddhism, there is a way out of this dilemma. It lies in recognizing our true identity: the one that lies beneath our falsely held conceptions of an enduring personal self.
Our mind is essentially pure and luminous. The afflictive thoughts and emotions that pollute our everyday, surface selves cannot touch this essential mind. Being adventitious, these pollutions are removable. Buddhist practice is aimed primarily at cultivating the antidotes to those afflictive thoughts and emotions with the goal of eradicating the root of our unenlightened existence to bring about liberation from suffering."