The Buddha Book: Buddhas, blessings, prayers, and rituals to grant you love, wisdom, and healing. Lillian Too

The Buddha Book: Buddhas, blessings, prayers, and rituals to grant you love, wisdom, and healing - Lillian  Too


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      Lillian Too

      The Buddha Book

      Buddhas, blessings, prayers and rituals to grant you love, wisdom, and healing Inspired by the teachings of Lama Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche

      

      

      I dedicate whatever merit arises from this book to the long life of most precious guru, Lama Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche, to whom I prostrate, make offerings and go for refuge. May all his holy wishes be fulfilled immediately. May His Dharma inspired projects in India, Mongolia, Australia, United States, Asia and Europe to benefit sentient beings actualize and meet with success, including the building of the world’s largest Buddha statue of Maitreya Buddha in India.

       Epigraph

      Spiritual means the mind, and spiritual people are those who seek its nature. Through this they come to understand the effects of their behavior, the actions of their body, speech, and mind. Morality is the wisdom that understands the nature of the mind.

      

      When you know the nature of your own mind, depression is spontaneously dispelled. Whatever pain, pleasure, or other feeling you experience, it is all an expression of your mind. When you discover that true satisfaction comes only from the mind, you realize you can extend this experience without limit, and then it is possible to discover everlasting happiness … so it is actually very simple.

      

      LAMA YESHE

      Table of Contents

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Chapter 3: Purifying Negativity: Vajrasattva and the thirty-five Confession Buddhas

       Chapter 4: Meeting the Medicine Buddha

       Chapter 5: Meeting the Compassion Buddha, Avalokiteshvara

       Chapter 6: The Trinity of Longevity Buddhas: White Tara, Amitayus, and Namgyalma

       Chapter 7: Meeting Green Tara, Mother Goddess

       Chapter 8: Meeting the Wealth Buddhas

       Chapter 9: Meeting Maitreya, the Buddha of the Future

       Appendices

       Glossary

       Index

       Acknowledgements

       About the Author

       Copyright

       About the publisher

       On Life

      Life is …

      like a flickering flame: a phenomenon that cannot last long. Like an illusion: appearing real but not there— being empty.

      Phenomena are

      like dewdrops or water bubbles that can perish any time.

      Being transitory in nature

      like a dream they appear real from their own side, yet they are empty from their own side.

      Like a dream—

      exactly like that. Total hallucination Like lightning, transitory in nature. When there is lightning a flash of light appears and then it is gone.

      Same:

      When death comes all appearance of this life go, like friends who were here then pass away and are gone.

      Buddha said:

      If we cling, if we grasp there is suffering. Things cannot last; they are impermanent by nature. Holding the view of permanence only leads to suffering. It creates the cause to reincarnate in samsara again.

      Attachment ties us to

      samsara … again.

      From Lama Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche’s teaching on Impermanence, given at Losang Drakpa Buddhist Meditation Center, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on February 2 2002.

       Introduction Meeting a Living Buddha

      My Personal Journey into Bliss

      

      My journey began in the holy city of Bodhgaya, in India. Several years ago, in February 1997, I had the great good fortune to meet one of the most amazing beings of our time, someone whom I unexpectedly recognized. This strange sensation of déjà vu hit me at the moment when his palms pressed against the sides of my head as I bowed instinctively and presented him with the symbolic offering of a silk scarf. This gesture and ritual are very much a part of the Tibetan Buddhist tradition each time one meets a recognized high lama (guru).

      The sensation of “remembering” happened at some uncanny, experiential level. One moment I was curiously anticipating meeting a holy man, and the next this almost blissful sense of recognition came over me. I felt drawn to him as if he were someone I had known and loved for a very long time. The feeling was momentary – like a television channel flickering for an instant – before switching back to the mundane world where I was being introduced to Lama Kyabje Zopa Rinpoche.

      In this life, that


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