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Vanessa Anne Walsh from Emptiness Mind, http://www.emptinessmind.com Chanting the Names of Noble Manjushri. 3. The Survey of the Six Families and 4. The Stages of Awakening According to Illusion’s Net
Vanessa Anne Walsh from Emptiness Mind, http://www.emptinessmind.com Chanting the Names of Noble Manjushri. 5. The Great Vajradhatu Mandala
Donations to Emptiness Mind – Support this Buddhist Teacher
Please help support this Mahayana Buddhist Blog.
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Donate to Emptiness Mind and support this meaningful and effective Buddhist service. We provide a forum and teaching service for Buddhist dharma study and practice for people of all ages. You can tune in and enjoy deep and relevant Mahayana Buddhist discussion, and learn how to apply Buddhist dharma antidotes to delusions in the mind and heart. Learn to fully purify your three doors of body, speech and mind and train in the small, medium and great scope stages of the path to Buddhahood.
Donations can be made to Vanessa Anne Walsh COMMONWEALTH BANK BSB; 062948 ACCOUNT NUMBER; 27641400
Watch the reading by Vanessa Anne Walsh of page two forward of the Introduction to Tsong Khapa’s Speech of Gold in the Essence of True Eloquence.
Sportsbet says it’s easy – but Emptiness Mind doesn’t know how!
Donations to Emptiness Mind – Support this Buddhist Teacher
Please help support this Mahayana Buddhist Blog.
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Donate to Emptiness Mind and support this meaningful and effective Buddhist service. We provide a forum and teaching service for Buddhist dharma study and practice for people of all ages. You can tune in and enjoy deep and relevant Mahayana Buddhist discussion, and learn how to apply Buddhist dharma antidotes to delusions in the mind and heart. Learn to fully purify your three doors of body, speech and mind and train in the small, medium and great scope stages of the path to Buddhahood.
Donations can be made to Vanessa Anne Walsh COMMONWEALTH BANK BSB; 062948 ACCOUNT NUMBER; 27641400
The beauty and holiness of Christmas should be reflected upon again and again.
Donations to Emptiness Mind – Support this Buddhist Teacher
Please help support this Mahayana Buddhist Blog.
$10.00
Donate to Emptiness Mind and support this meaningful and effective Buddhist service. We provide a forum and teaching service for Buddhist dharma study and practice for people of all ages. You can tune in and enjoy deep and relevant Mahayana Buddhist discussion, and learn how to apply Buddhist dharma antidotes to delusions in the mind and heart. Learn to fully purify your three doors of body, speech and mind and train in the small, medium and great scope stages of the path to Buddhahood.
Donations can be made to Vanessa Anne Walsh
COMMONWEALTH BANK BSB; 062948 ACCOUNT NUMBER; 27641400
Dream a little dream of me
What was The Dalai Lama doing just one year ago, when Peter Gaston recorded 54 thousand views of this dance moves music video on YouTube. It’s all deeply suspicious. What was Tenzin up to? Practicing his moves to The Bus Stop perhaps? Archives say, that on March 18, 2022, Tenzin Gyatso was kindly, ethically and compassionately giving students a wonderful discourse on The Jataka Tales. Children, are you tuned in?
Gorgeous. You Dhaka’s and dakinis, go to your respective abodes.
How wonderful to be able to treat the young, middle aged and old with such respect. Take it away Sam! Thank you Tenzin Gyatso. For many a long time, you Glorious Chenrezig, have very appropriately taught your students and indeed children on the downfalls of samsara and the ugliness of the flesh, or unpurified body. You are a great Buddhist master and peaceful or wrathful Saint, and not, as delusional demonic and uneducated idiots try to spit at you, in an unholy rage, something else, that isn’t even worth mentioning.
Vesak or Saka Dawa. Praise the good Lord Shakyamuni and his authentic lineage Lamas, for they abide in the ten Paramitas.
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The language of love does not, in any way, correspond with the language of desire[1].
When one person, or even one being, loves another, their primary concern always lies with how to remove the suffering and pain of another. It begins, continues and ends with thinking about ways to bring pleasure and happiness to another, and will even focus upon the needs and wishes of all beings. This is not because it is trying in any way to deceive another simply to fulfill its own selfish gratifications.
Love aims to avoid creating losses for another person or being. Simply, it aims to protect the integrity, morality and self-respect of another person. Desire attempts to do the opposite. Desire does not care if damage is created in the experience of another person. It cares nothing for the self-respect, morality or aims of another.
Love aims to protect and nurture the happiness, contentment and health of people and all beings. It has no interest in trampling on the needs of others in order to bring about some superficial, short-lived and impermanent experience of satisfaction.
In my experience, the Buddha will think, devise and perform limitless actions aimed at protecting, nurturing and sustaining the happiness and fulfillment of another person. He has no commonality whatsoever in the mundane, selfish and destructive motivations of ordinary, self-possessed beings. An ordinary being, on the other hand, has no thought or care about the consequences of his self-centred actions. An ordinary being with no insight or love will, without hesitation, create suffering and misery in the mind and
experience of another. True, deep, endless love, aims to transcend the boundaries of space, thought and time. It can move beyond the limitations of the human form and reach far into the realms of space to bring peace, contentment and joy.
May all beings identify, recognize and be conjoined with the supramundane love of a Buddha. May they transcend their sufferings and recognize without any shadow of a doubt, that a Buddha can and will free all beings from their limited, miserable lives and transport them to a state of never-ending happiness, peace and everlasting joy.
[1] Desire means thirst. Like drinking salt water. A taste that cannot be satisfied.
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This is the beginning of a story from the days and nights of Lord Buddha Shakyamuni that we hear from the sutra.
Lord Buddha Shakyamuni was walking along the road near Rajgir followed by a procession of 500 monks. Following the Lord Buddha and the procession of 500 monks was Supiya, a wanderer and his pupil Bramadhata.
Supiya was arguing with Bramadhata over the need to praise the Lord Buddha Shakyamuni. Supiya was suggesting that it’s not necessary to praise the Lord Buddha. Bramadhata, the pupil of Supiya was contesting that indeed, it is both necessary and wise to praise the Lord Buddha Shakyamuni. Supiya was a bit heated, but Bramadhata discussed that it is indeed a safe, reliable and valid action of the body, speech and mind to praise the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha.
After a while, the Lord Buddha and his procession of five hundred monks reached their shelter for the night. Lord Buddha Shakyamuni rested whilst the monks gathered to discuss the days events.
After some time, the Lord Buddha Shakyamuni approached the monks and requested politely that they please explain what they, the monks, had been discussing together. The monks said, they had been discussing why Supiya, the wanderer was fuming over the need to praise, prostrate to and value the Lord Buddha, the Dharma and the Sangha.
Lord Shakyamuni spoke gently and calmly about the need to abandon following the Lord Buddha with a deluded mind. Specifically, Lord Buddha said it is indeed wrong to follow the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha with the delusion of arrogance or pride.
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The word ‘diet’ has several different meanings. The Collins Dictionary defines it to be ‘the food and drink one regularly consumes’. An alternative to that is the definition given in A Kind Diet, which states that diet is “a way of living, or thinking, a day’s journey.”
The time we spend on shopping for food, planning our meals, thinking about what it is we like and do not like to eat and what adheres to the medical profession’s recommendations surrounding the subject of diet is indeed considerable. We spend many of our waking hours working out this basic survival function and the money that goes towards keeping this human body of ours in good shape and healthy is enormous. Having thought about that, and briefly looked into some popular diet trends that are heavily advertised on local media, I thought to divert away from the consumerist approach to food for a moment and consider the Buddha’s teaching on non-attachment.
One symbol the Buddha employed as a means to convey his teaching on non-attachment was the use of an alms or begging bowl. Alms are charitable donations of money or goods to the poor or needy, yet the Buddha was neither of these things, so why bother with the use of a begging bowl? The alms bowl is considered to be symbol of the monastic life or life of a renunciate, and an aid to the life of the holy and those interested in seeking the truth. Once made from clay, which broke easily, the bowls were then forged with iron for added durability.
Specifically, the alms bowl refers to the time in the Buddha’s life just before he attained enlightenment, when a young girl, named Sujata offered the Buddha a bowl of milk rice. Although the Buddha was practicing the austerity of eating only a little food at the time, he realized that to achieve the final stages of enlightenment, he would need to partake of the offering of rice from Sujata. After partaking of the meal, one tradition states that the Buddha then threw away the small amount of food left in that bowl to symbolize the Buddha’s complete non-attachment to material possessions. Another legend tells the story that the Buddha threw away the begging bowl itself into the river to symbolize the mind of non-attachment.
The point of all this is to question the validity, or lack thereof, of the attached state of mind itself. The mind of attachment is traditionally explained in Buddhist philosophy to be a mind that exaggerates the good qualities of an object and ignores it’s perhaps less apparent flaws. One apparent flaw in all objects of this world is their impermanent nature. Of the Four Seals of Buddhism, the first is that all compounded phenomena are suffering. The second is that all contaminated objects are impermanent.
What do we mean when we use the word stained or contaminated to describe states of mind and actions?
Stained or contaminated actions are actions, emotions or thoughts polluted by selfish attachment, or by hatred, greed or ignorance. Such actions motivated by these negative states of mind always result in suffering.
When motivated by an attached state of mind, we cling onto material possessions, relationships or even ideas, and fail to recognize the intransigent and impermanent nature of the object. That does not mean to say that we are not in need of food and other such things to ensure our good health. It does indicate however, that having a more open and loving attitude towards other beings is more important. Given the violent nature of our human history and past, the gross lack of regard for the lives of others and destruction of the environment and other species, it is most definitely time to act to lighten our environmental footprint and reduce our grasping towards the status symbols of the wealthy. Instead of spending big bucks on expensive living and chasing the latest fad or diet trend, I suggest that there is much more happiness and satisfaction to be gained and maintained from living a more moderate and simple lifestyle with a focus more upon ensuring a happy state of mind. If we spent more time ensuring our mind itself is in a positive and peaceful state, through the practice of meditation, this would naturally lead to a more balanced and healthy lifestyle which would not only benefit the practitioner, but others on the planet as well.
I will leave you here with a totally different interpretation of the word diet, from one of the founders of Buddhist literature and Mahayana thought. The great Nagarjuna once wrote of the Five Diets being;
The Diet of Concentration
The Course Diet
The Inner Diet
The Diet of Touch and
The Diet of Volition.
The symbol of the Buddha with an alms bowl is an important director of peace, happiness and prosperity to keep in mind as we go about our daily habit of foraging for food, drink and clothing, if in the least to try to minimize our ever-expanding impact on this precious planet.
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Just taking some notes, really. Do you remember The Dead Pool, starring Clint Eastwood, Jim Carrey and Liam Neeson? Funny stuff really. First of all, did you root for Clint’s character or the Mafia?
In this society, who in reality is really innocent? This is a funny turn of phrase. If we were all Buddhas, there would be no negative karmas to extinguish. But clearly, from my point of view, I don’t believe humans are that well developed. Now that is actually a good point for debate. Did we actually advance from the time of Guru Buddha Shakyamuni, or just go backwards, into a state of degradation and decline? This is what The Lord Buddha Shakyamuni referred to as the age of degeneration.
Let’s just discuss the first scene. The poor cop, just driving either to or from or where to, get’s shot at by a bunch of narcissists. Why? Does anyone ever bother to question. Doesn’t he too, in reality have a negative mind, poisoned by attachment, hatred and ignorance, jealousy, pride and wrong view? Death and impermanence is in fact, just a day to day reality for the majority of ordinary humans. Or not? Is he really a Bodhisattva (a Buddha to be) or a pure reality? Judging from the amount of shots fired towards the cop, one could refreshingly state that this is really just a load of bullshit. No-one could ever really survive such an attack. So the movie has no value, even from this early opening position. Hollywood, why are you so stupid?
But it, (the movie) was so popular in its time. Why so? Are the people, its audience really that stupid? One would have to conclude, yes. Do you have any questions? A valid cognition knows and understands of no such reality. A valid mind, a valid cognition and a valid speech, goes beyond such a degraded cycle of misery and suffering. That society, the one where outcasts live in tall buildings, that they are wildly told is some sort of icon proclaiming development, is really just a terror to the mind and body. A no mans land, devoid of spiritual freedom and validity, an encasement or shell, actually in reality just a symbol of a lack of love, happiness, inner peace and true understanding of compassion, patience, wisdom and joy.
The average person, in reality, is not smart enough to support such a structure, without having to violently resort to a great deal of negative action, of body, speech and mind. So, on this level, The Dead Pool speaks to this utterly false assumption. That such a society is a necessity to mankind. These days, false, abortive governments only seem to speak of the need for continuous growth. This places the people of such conditions under the most absurd and negative pressure.