From d00b933b3ef123e5233e15845944ff76545a314a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Chris Koeritz Date: Thu, 2 Feb 2017 04:01:48 -0500 Subject: [PATCH] new fortunes, some editing --- infobase/fortunes.dat | 113 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++--- 1 file changed, 105 insertions(+), 8 deletions(-) diff --git a/infobase/fortunes.dat b/infobase/fortunes.dat index 691b8043..f24c3cd6 100644 --- a/infobase/fortunes.dat +++ b/infobase/fortunes.dat @@ -26,10 +26,10 @@ Sem chung nga jik di dak o. ~ religious letter games... - DEVIL - EVIL - GOOD - GOD + devil + evil + good + god ~ Nam Myoho Renge Kyo ~ @@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ nechung: unable to open fortunes.dat file. (just kidding) ~ are you only using half your brain? if you can only think in terms of logical conclusions, rational assumptions, -and common sense OR +and common sense -or- if you can only think in terms of intuitive jumps, esthetic motivations, and the fluid nature of reality, then you probably are stuck on one side of your head. try moving into @@ -37906,7 +37906,7 @@ for a happy and joyful life, it is still possible to live a happy and joyful life. -- H.H. the Dalai Lama ~ -COMPLICATED SIMPLICITY +Complicated Simplicity Emptiness is the simplest and most unelaborated thing we could imagine, but then there is this whole literature about all these very discursive details @@ -37930,7 +37930,7 @@ If you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning. -- Catherine Aird ~ -THE MIND OF CLEAR LIGHT +The mind of clear light Is spiritual practice really worthwhile? Is it really possible to eliminate from within ourselves the forces that give rise to suffering? As is said, @@ -38061,7 +38061,8 @@ paragate means go beyond and transcend; parasamgate means go utterly beyond, go thoroughly beyond; and bodhi svaha means firmly rooted in enlightenment. -- H.H. the Dalai Lama ~ -ENDURING SUCCESS +Enduring Success + It is often seen that human beings can endure problems quite well, but cannot endure success. When we are successful and have everything we desire, it can easily go to our heads. There is a great danger of losing our common @@ -42544,3 +42545,99 @@ Fear is not an option. A man is the sum of his actions, of what he has done, of what he can do, nothing else. -- John Galsworthy +~ +The Order of the Four Noble Truths + +We do analytical meditation to understand the various unsatisfactory +conditions or sufferings of cyclic existence. When we gain an experience of +them, we then place our mind firmly on that experience using stabilizing +meditation. The more we meditate on suffering, the more we are motivated to +rid ourselves of it. We will want to find out its causes and cease creating +them. Thus, after contemplating true suffering, we contemplate true origin. +Investigating this, we will see that suffering arises from karma, which is +produced in dependence on the disturbing attitudes. These in turn are rooted +in self-grasping ignorance. We will want to eliminate this ignorance, and +will see that because it is a faulty attitude or misconception, it can be +eliminated. Thus we will be certain that we can attain the true cessation of +suffering and its origin. Through further contemplating the four noble +truths, we will recognize that the way to abandon self-grasping ignorance is +to meditate on the true path, since this path is principally the wisdom +realizing the non-existence of the self that is adhered to by ignorance. This +is the order in which the four noble truths unfold in meditation and thus is +the order in which to practice them. So, although the actual order in which +the four occur is first the causes and then the effects, when the Buddha +taught for the purpose of practice, he explained the results first. + -- Geshe Jampa Tegchok, "Transforming Adversity Into Joy and Courage: An + Explanation of the Thirty-Seven Practices of Bodhisattvas", published by + Shambhala Publications +~ +Take Refuge in the Buddha + + We live in an ocean of cyclic existence whose depth and extent cannot be +measured. We are troubled again and again by the afflictions of desire and +hatred as if repeatedly attacked by sharks. + Our mental and physical aggregates are impelled by former contaminated +actions and afflictions and serve as a basis for present suffering as well as +inducing future suffering. While such cyclic existence lasts, we have various +thoughts of pleasure and displeasure: “If I do this, what will people think? +If I do not do this, I will be too late; I won’t make any profit.” When we +see something pleasant we think, “Oh, if I could only have that!” We see +that others are prosperous, and we generate jealousy, unable to bear their +prosperity. We see an attractive man or woman, and we want a relationship. +We are not satisfied with a passing relationship but want it to last forever. +And then, once staying together with that person, we desire someone else. +When we see someone we do not like, we become angry and quarrel after a single +word; we feel we cannot remain even for an hour near this hated person but +must leave immediately. Day and night, night and day we spend our lives in +the company of the afflictions, generating desire for the pleasant and anger +at the unpleasant, and continue thus even when dreaming, unable to remain +relaxed, our minds completely and utterly mixed with thoughts of desire and +hatred without interruption. + Only a Buddha has extinguished all defects and gained all attainments. +Therefore, one should mentally go for refuge to a Buddha, praise him or her +with speech, and respect him or her physically. One should enter the teaching +of such a being. + -- from "The Essence of Tantra," by the Dalai Lama, in The Great Exposition + of the Secret Mantra, Volume I: Tantra in Tibet by Tsongkhapa, published + by Shambhala Publications +~ +V. Path of Perfection + + After the vajra-like absorption, one actualizes the nature of awareness, +the awareness of exhaustion, and awareness of the unborn. The vajra-like +absorption is the state at the edge of the path of meditation and is included +in the preparation and unobstructed stages. This absorption is called +“vajra-like” because it is unobstructed, hard, stable, of one taste, and +all-pervasive. + “Unobstructed” means that it cannot be affected by the action of the +world. “Hard” means it cannot be destroyed by obscurations. “Stable” +means it cannot be shaken by discursive thoughts. “One taste” means +everything is of one taste. “All pervasive” means that it observes the +suchness of all knowledge. + The “awareness of the exhaustion of causes” that arises after this +absorption is the primordial wisdom awareness that observes the Four Noble +Truths by the power of the exhaustion of all causes. The “awareness of the +unborn” is the primordial wisdom that observes the Four Noble Truths by the +power of abandoning the result, suffering. In other words, this primordial +wisdom clearly observes the exhaustion of the cause and non-production of the +result and is called the “awareness of the exhaustion and non-production.” + Why is this called the path of perfection? Because the training is +perfected and one enters the city of nirvana—this is why it is called the +path of perfection. At this stage, there are ten attainments of no-more- +training: starting with perfect view of no-more-training through the perfect +absorption of no-more-training and then the full liberation of no-more- +training and the perfect primordial wisdom of no-more-training—these ten +attainments of no-more-training are included in the five unafflicted skandas: + + perfect speech of no-more-training, perfect action, and perfect +livelihood are in the heap of moral ethics; + perfect mindfulness of no-more-training and perfect absorption are in +the heap of absorption; + perfect view of no-more-training, perfect conception, and perfect +effort are in the heap of wisdom awareness; + perfect, full liberation is in the heap of full liberation; + perfect awareness is in the heap of seeing the primordial wisdom of +full liberation. + -- Gampopa, from "The Jewel Ornament of Liberation", published by Shambhala + Publications + -- 2.34.1