Tuesday, October 22, 2024

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Via Daily Dharma: Just Practice

 

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Just Practice

Teachings can be most profound, but those who listen may not understand. Never mind. Don’t be perplexed over profundity or lack of it. Just do the practice wholeheartedly, and you can arrive at real understanding—it will bring you to the place the teachings talk about.

Ajahn Chah, “Meeting the Dharma Alone”


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Did you know it's National Estate Planning Awareness Week? The Tricycle Foundation has partnered with FreeWill to share a free, online estate planning tool. In just 20 minutes, you can mindfully plan for your future by protecting your loved ones, safeguarding your assets, and making a lasting legacy to improve access to Buddhist teachings for years to come.
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Taking Refuge in the Three Gems
By Thich Nhat Hanh
According to Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, when we take refuge in the Buddha, the Buddha also takes refuge in us.
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Via Dhamma Wheel | Right Intention: Cultivating Equanimity

 


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RIGHT INTENTION
Cultivating Equanimity
Whatever you intend, whatever you plan, and whatever you have a tendency toward, that will become the basis on which your mind is established. (SN 12.40) Develop meditation on equanimity, for when you develop meditation on equanimity, all aversion is abandoned. (MN 62) 

When a person, thinking a mental object with the mind, is not attached to pleasing mental objects and not repelled by unpleasing mental objects, they have established mindfulness and dwell with an unlimited mind. For a person whose mindfulness is developed and practiced, the mind does not struggle to reach pleasing mental objects, and unpleasing mental objects are not considered repulsive. (SN 35.274)
Reflection
Some objects in the world are naturally pleasing, and some are displeasing. This goes for our thoughts and other mental objects as well. Of course it feels good to think about some things and it feels bad to think of others, but whether we experience stress or suffering depends not on these facts but on our response to them. When attached, we struggle, and when we abide in our minds with equanimity, we are at peace.

Daily Practice
When you are settled for some time in a quiet place, turn your awareness to the thoughts and images that may be streaming through your mind. When you are caught by the content of these, you are swept along by the mental flow, but if you regard what is happening with equanimity, as a process of arising and passing mental objects, your mindfulness is developed and you are no longer favoring some thoughts over others.

Tomorrow: Refraining from Frivoulous Speech
One week from today: Cultivating Lovingkindness

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Monday, October 21, 2024

The Chant of Metta(English Version)by Imee Ooi

 

The Chant of Metta(English version) by Imee Ooi 

May I be free from enmity and danger 

May I be free from mental suffering May I be free from physical suffering May I take care of myself happily 

May my parents teacher relatives and friends fellow Dhamma farers be free from enmity and danger be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering may they take care of themselves happily 

May all yogis in this compound be free from enmity and danger be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering 

May they take care of themselves happily 

May all monks in this compound novice monks laymen and laywomen disciples be free from enmity and danger be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering 

May they take care of themselves happily May our donors of the four supports: clothing, food, medicine and lodging be free from enmity and danger be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering 

May they take care of themselves happily 

May our guardian devas in this monastery in this dwelling in this compound May the guardian devas be free from enmity and danger be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering may they take care of themselves happily 

May all beings all breathing things all creatures all individuals (all beings) all personalities (all beings with mind and body) may all females all males all noble ones (saints) all worldlings (those yet to attain sainthood) all devas (deities) all humans all those in the four woeful planes be free from enmity and dangers be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering may they take care of themselves happily 

May all being be free from suffering 

May whatever they have gained not be lost All beings are owners of their own Kamma in the eastern direction in the western direction in the northern direction in the southern direction in the southeast direction in the northwest direction in the northeast direction in the southwest direction in the direction below in the direction above 

May all beings all breathing things all creatures all individuals (all beings) all personalities (all beings with mind and body) may all females all males all noble ones (saints) (those yet to attain sainthood) all devas (deities) all humans all those in the 4 woeful planes be free from enmity and dangers be free from mental suffering be free from physical suffering may they take care of themselves happily 

May all beings be free from suffering 

May whatever they have gained not be lost All beings are owners of their own kamma 

As far as the highest plane of existence to as far down as the lowest plane in the entire universe whatever beings that move on earth may they be free from mental suffering and enmity may they be free from physical suffering and danger 

As far as the highest plane of existence to as far down as the lowest plane in the entire universe whatever beings that move on water may they be free from mental suffering and enmity may they be free from physical suffering and danger 

As far as the highest plane of existence to as far down as the lowest plane in the entire universe whatever beings that move in air may they be free from mental suffering and enmity may they be free from physical suffering and danger

OFFICIAL Somewhere over the Rainbow - Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwoʻole

Via Shambhala Online // Being a Bodhisattva

 

Being a Bodhisattva: Exploring the Bodhisattva Vow
with Judith Simmer-Brown
Dear friends,
 
We invite you to join Judith Simmer-Brown for Being a Bodhisattva: Exploring the Bodhisattva Vow beginning Saturday, November 30. This three-session course explores the moment in a person’s life when they decide to go one step further than “being Buddhist”—and make a profound commitment to put all others before themselves. It is open to all who are interested in the Bodhisattva vow, or to anyone who would like to reconnect with their original inspiration for taking this vow.

Taking the bodhisattva vow is a powerful moment on a Buddhist practitioner’s path. Join us and explore if this is the right moment for you—or use this as a powerful opportunity to connect with your original inspiration for this moment on your personal spiritual path.


This course is also an excellent follow-up to Being Buddhist: Exploring the Refuge Vow, however you do not have to have taken the Refuge Vow course to participate.
I'm Ready to Explore the Bodhisattva Vow


Planting such a seed as the bodhisattva vow undermines ego and leads to a tremendous expansion of perspective. Such heroism, or bigness of mind, fills all of space completely, utterly, absolutely. Within such a vast perspective, nothing is claustrophobic and nothing is intimidating. There is only the vast idea of unceasingly helping all sentient beings, as limitless as space, along the path to enlightenment…

—Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche

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Via Daily Dharma: Like Clouds in the Sky

 

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Like Clouds in the Sky 

Clouds come out of the sky, rest in the sky, and dissolve back into the sky. In the same way, all the experiences of ordinary life and transcendent states such as nirvana appear out of the primordial basis.

Orgyen Chowang, “Like Clouds in the Sky”


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Did you know it's National Estate Planning Awareness Week? The Tricycle Foundation has partnered with FreeWill to share a free, online estate planning tool. In just 20 minutes, you can mindfully plan for your future by protecting your loved ones, safeguarding your assets, and making a lasting legacy to improve access to Buddhist teachings for years to come.
Learn more »


Exhaling into Emptiness
By Shunryu Suzuki Roshi
In an excerpt from a talk given at the San Francisco Zen Center, a late Zen master expounds on the insights of the outbreath.
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