X-Git-Url: https://feistymeow.org/gitweb/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=infobase%2Ffortunes.dat;h=18bad2ac476755cc7edbd0810cc3da8258b50b1e;hb=f799e53be210af2e72697045c45274a120536813;hp=c074a6a079f82355625ebd9af7b2c19057de2821;hpb=f4f11414fd3fe3467a7df79b5db18cf79a7dd2b4;p=feisty_meow.git diff --git a/infobase/fortunes.dat b/infobase/fortunes.dat index c074a6a0..18bad2ac 100644 --- a/infobase/fortunes.dat +++ b/infobase/fortunes.dat @@ -40775,4 +40775,73 @@ saying, “no.” In this way, compassion must be combined with good judgment to be effective. -- Russell Kolts and Thubten Chodron, "An Open-Hearted Life", published by Shambhala Publications +~ +Since the very beginning, the mind streams of all sentient beings possess the +way of being of the inseparability of being lucid and being empty in an +intrinsic manner. No matter how it may be obscured by adventitious stains, in +terms of its nature, it is never tainted by stains, while the stains exist in +the manner of being separable from it. This mind that is the inseparability +of being lucid and being empty has the nature of being permanent and being +free from change, decrease, and increase. It is ever undeceiving, changeless, +and genuinely stable. Throughout all three phases of ground, path, and +fruition, it is this nature of the mind that is certain to be solely the +object of the genuine meditative equipoise within the qualities that are the +nature of phenomena. This is what needs to be manifested through the practice +of superior insight. + -- from "When the Clouds Part: The Uttaratantra and Its Meditative Tradition + as a Bridge between Sutra and Tantra", translated by Karl Brunnholzl, + published by Shambhala Publications +~ + Whatever obstacles we experience, if we can take them the right way, they +won’t obstruct our spiritual path. Rather, they will become a tool to +stimulate our advancement toward our destination: unconditional love and +enlightenment. + So try to feel joy when facing difficulties, for they provide the chance +to purify unvirtuous past deeds, the cause of ills, and infuse us with the +inspiration to generate yet greater virtuous deeds, the cause of healing and +enlightenment. + -- Tulku Thondup, from "The Heart of Unconditional Love: A Powerful New + Approach to Loving-Kindness Meditation", published by Shambhala + Publications +~ +Although deliberately framed as if it were a law of nature or of mathematics, +its purpose has always been rhetorical and pedagogical: I wanted folks who +glibly compared someone else to Hitler or to Nazis to think a bit harder about +the Holocaust. + -- Mike Godwin, on "Godwin's Law", originated in 1990, which (paraphrasing) + states that any online discussion will eventually devolve into a + comparison with Hitler or Nazism. At that point, the person who brought + either topic up has lost the argument and their basic credibility. +~ +Your mind, the primordial buddha, +Searches elsewhere due to the power of desire. +Doesn’t it notice that it is wandering in samsara? + +Now that you have obtained the precious human body, +You continuously get carried away by mundane actions. +Don’t you notice that your life is running out? + -- Padmasambhava +~ + The key to understanding the truth of suffering is what the Buddha called +the “three marks” of everything that exists. All conditioned phenomena, +he said, are pervaded by these three marks: impermanence (anitya), +dissatisfaction or suffering (duhkha), and insubstantiality (anatman, +“without self”). + According to the Buddha, if we do not understand how conditioned phenomena +are marked by these three aspects, then we will not be able to understand the +first Noble Truth. We may do all we can in order to avoid facing the fact +that everything is contingent and transient—we may try to hide ourselves +from it, and we may even spin out all kinds of metaphysical theories of an +unchanging, permanent, substantial reality to avoid this all-pervasive nature +of ephemerality. Also, if we do not understand that conditioned phenomena are +unsatisfactory, we will not think about restraining ourselves from +overindulgence in sensory gratifications, which makes us lose our center and +become immersed in worldly concerns, so that our life is governed by greed, +craving, and attachment. All of these things disturb the mind. + If we do not understand that everything is insubstantial—anatman—then +we may believe that there is some kind of enduring essence or substance in +things, or in the personality, and because of this belief we generate delusion +and confusion in the mind. + -- Traleg Kyabgon, from "The Essence of Buddhism", published by Shambhala + Publications