21.01.1998 - Interpretation of dali48
Because our body seems so obvious to exist, - also "I" seem to exist, and "you" and the whole illusory, dualistic world that we constantly project around us seems reliable, solid and real. - If we die, this entire assembled construction will break. - How can anything hurt a "nobody or body"? - Disposed out of the physical body, the mind stands naked, suddenly unmasked as what he has always been:
The builder of our reality. - One way of strengthening the energy of life is to save slaughter animals by buying them from the butcher. It is said in the doctrine that someone who takes away the lives of the animals, is shortening his life, and by giving them their life, must, logically, extend his own one ...
In the Western world, there is little research on the process of dying. - Is this not proof enough that the death process is hardly taken serious, let alone is understood. - Woe, if I have to wander around in "Samsara" because of my unyielding pride! - Guide me, O sublime Buddha, to the path of radiant light, the "wisdom of the essentials!" - May the sublime companion mama protect me from behind. You can help me on the dangerous path of the "Bardo" and guide me to the perfect Buddha-hood. - When our lives have been destructive, and we have harmed others, we experience pain, repentance and fear in the Bardo. - It is said for example In Tibet, that butchers, hunters, and fishermen are hunted by monstrous specimens of their former victims. - The reports of such "life reviews" seem to suggest that after death we will suffer all the suffering for which we were both directly and indirectly responsible ... (S. Rinpoche)
Because our body seems so obvious to exist, - also "I" seem to exist, and "you" and the whole illusory, dualistic world that we constantly project around us seems reliable, solid and real. - If we die, this entire assembled construction will break. - How can anything hurt a "nobody or body"? - Disposed out of the physical body, the mind stands naked, suddenly unmasked as what he has always been:
The builder of our reality. - One way of strengthening the energy of life is to save slaughter animals by buying them from the butcher. It is said in the doctrine that someone who takes away the lives of the animals, is shortening his life, and by giving them their life, must, logically, extend his own one ...
In the Western world, there is little research on the process of dying. - Is this not proof enough that the death process is hardly taken serious, let alone is understood. - Woe, if I have to wander around in "Samsara" because of my unyielding pride! - Guide me, O sublime Buddha, to the path of radiant light, the "wisdom of the essentials!" - May the sublime companion mama protect me from behind. You can help me on the dangerous path of the "Bardo" and guide me to the perfect Buddha-hood. - When our lives have been destructive, and we have harmed others, we experience pain, repentance and fear in the Bardo. - It is said for example In Tibet, that butchers, hunters, and fishermen are hunted by monstrous specimens of their former victims. - The reports of such "life reviews" seem to suggest that after death we will suffer all the suffering for which we were both directly and indirectly responsible ... (S. Rinpoche)
Sogyal Rinpoche - Wikipedia
Sogyal Rinpoche (Tibetan: བསོད་རྒྱལ་, Wylie: Bsod-rgyal; 1947 – 28 August 2019) was a Tibetan Dzogchen lama of the Nyingma tradition. He was recognized as the incarnation of a great Tibetan master and visionary saint of the nineteenth century, Tertön Sogyal Lerab Lingpa.