practitioners leave for their countryside retreat to find pleasure.
- Thinley Norbu Rinpoche, from "A Brief Fantasy History of a Himalayan",
published by Shambhala Publications
+~
+As a blind man feels when he finds a pearl in a dustbin, so am I amazed by the
+miracle of awakening rising in my consciousness. It is the nectar of
+immortality that delivers us from death, the treasure that lifts us above
+poverty into the wealth of giving to life, the tree that gives shade to us
+when we roam about scorched by life, the bridge that takes us across the
+stormy river of life, the cool moon of compassion that calms our mind when it
+is agitated, the sun that dispels darkness, the butter made from the milk of
+kindness by churning it with the dharma. It is a feast of joy to which all
+are invited.
+ -- from "Teachings of the Buddha", written by Shantideva, edited by Jack
+ Kornfield, published by Shambhala Publications
+~
+Even though we may actually recognize the nature of awareness, we should not
+hold on to that mindfulness tightly, thinking, “I have indeed recognized it."
+If we do hold on to it tightly, it will be like when a thread is twisted too
+taut: one cannot sew with it, because it knots up. In the same way, if one
+is too tense, one's mindfulness will be obscured. If mindfulness is not
+grasped too tightly but left in the natural flow, sometimes it will be clear
+and sometimes not. But we should not get caught up in whether it is clear or
+not. If genuine mindfulness is left without being altered, gradually we will
+come to know, through our own experience, “This is awareness, and this is
+ignorance; this is mind, and this is wisdom.”
+ -- Dilgo Khyentse, from "Primordial Purity", published by Shambhala
+ Publications