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2 198
Repost from πππ±π±π΅πΆππ ππΆπππΌπΏπ & ππΏπ°π΅π²πΌπΉπΌπ΄π
What needs to be done, I will do.
The duty of one whose energy is strong;
the duty of one who longs for awakening:
that Iβll do, I wonβt fail.
See my energy and vigor!
Teach me the path,
the direct route
whose objective is freedom from death.
Iβll know it with wisdom,
as the Ganges knows the ocean.
- Thag 2.24
2 198
Repost from πππ±π±π΅πΆππ ππΆπππΌπΏπ & ππΏπ°π΅π²πΌπΉπΌπ΄π
NO ANGER, NO SUFFERING
Whoever returns insult to one who is insulting,
returns taunts to one who is taunting,
returns a berating to one who is berating,
is said to be exchanging with one another,
sharing company with that person.
But I am neither exchanging nor sharing your company,
Brahmin. It's all yours.
How can anger arise in one who is angerless,
In the tamed one of righteous living,
In one liberated by perfect knowledge,
In the Stable One who abides in peace?
One who retaliates with anger
against one who is angry
is the worse of the two.
But one who does not retaliate
wins a battle hard to win.
He works for the welfare of bothβ
himself and the otherβ
when, knowing the other is angry,
he remains mindful and calm.
The ignorant regard him as a foolβ
but only because they do not know the truth.
- Buddha, SN 7.2: Akkosa Sutta
2 198
Accurately evaluating ourselves and our practice without over-estimation or under-estimation is not easy. The inner evaluator is just another voice in our head, and for a long time is not a particularly reliable one. Meditators often give too much significance to 'wow' moments and too little significance to incremental improvements.
An example of a person able to evaluate himself accurately is the anΔgΔmi householder, Ugga of Vesali. After the Buddha praised him to the Sangha as having 'eight astounding and marvellous qualities', a monk asked Ugga to elaborate on them. That he was able to do so in a remarkably measured and objective way, might arguably count as a ninth astounding and marvellous quality.
The sutta may be found at AN8.21. Here, I will give just one of his qualities, chosen because it demonstrates Ugga's awareness of absence, something we often miss.
"It is not unusual for deities to come and report to me: 'Householder, the Dhamma is well-expounded by the Blessed One'. I then say to these deities: 'Whether you say so or not, the Dhamma is well-expounded by the Blessed One.' Still, I do not recall any mental exultation arising because deities come to me or because I converse with deities."
Ajahn JayasΔro
2 198
The Way to the Far Shore
Alone, the dispeller of darkness
is brilliant, a beacon:
Gotama, vast in wisdom,
Gotama, vast in intelligence.
He is the one who taught me Dhamma,
apparent in the present life, immediately effective,
the untroubled, the end of craving, to which there is no compare.
Being diligent, I see him in my mindβs eye day and night.
I spend the night in homage to him,
hence I think I dwell with him.
My faith and joy and intent and mindfulness
never stray from Gotamaβs teaching.
I bow to whatever direction the one of vast wisdom heads.
Lying floundering in the mud,
I drifted from island to island.
Then I saw the Buddha,
the undefiled one who has crossed the flood.
The unfaltering, the unshakable:
that to which there is no compare.
For sure I will go there,
I have no doubt of that.
Remember me as one whose mind is made up.
- PΔrΔyanΔnugΔ«tigΔthΔ Snp 5.19
2 198
To Be a Person Is to Be a MΔra - Phra Ajaan Funn ΔcΔro
When you see all four of these noble truths, thatβs when you truly become a monk. If you donβt see them, then no matter how much else you may know, itβs all just book-knowledge. But once you see the four noble truths, you see the Dhamma. You canβt keep on living in this world anymore. What would you live for? Thereβd be nothing at all that you would gain. Think about it. Birth and aging: Theyβre nothing but suffering.
Birth is suffering. When you arise in your motherβs womb, itβs painfulβas I explained last night.
When you get old, worn down, and decrepit, itβs another heap of suffering. That makes two heaps.
Pains and illnesses are a third heap of suffering.
And then thereβs the fourth: death. You suffer to the point where you have to die. You canβt live in this world any longer.
People for the most part donβt make the effort to contemplate how to escape from these sufferings. They just keep spinning back in, looking for more suffering, looking for status, looking for wealth, looking for something to depend on, looking for a place to live. They build this and that, they build homes, they build mansions: Theyβre just looking for suffering.
The Buddha didnβt build. He let goβbecause he had seen through these things, that they lead to enormous sufferings, sufferings beyond measure.
https://www.dhammatalks.org/Archive/Writings/Ebooks/ComeAndSee_251113.pdf
2 198
Do not find fault with others.
Do not worry about what others do or not do.
Rather, look within yourself to find out what you yourself have done or left undone.
Stop doing evil; do good.
- Buddha, Dhammapada 50
2 198
Topic of anger and hatred:
AαΉ
guttara NikΔya 4.164 Khama Sutta:
Tolerant (1)
βMonks, there are these four modes of practice. Which four? Intolerant practice, tolerant practice, self-controlled practice, and even practice.
βAnd which is intolerant practice? There is the case where a certain individual, when insulted, returns the insult; when abused, returns the abuse; when bickered with, bickers in return. This is called intolerant practice.
βAnd which is tolerant practice? There is the case where a certain individual, when insulted, doesnβt return the insult; when abused, doesnβt return the abuse; when bickered with, doesnβt bicker in return. This is called tolerant practice.
βAnd which is self-controlled practice? There is the case where a monk, on seeing a form with the eye, doesnβt grasp at any theme or variations by whichβif he were to dwell without restraint over the faculty of the eyeβevil, unskillful qualities such as greed or distress might assail him. He practices with restraint. He guards the faculty of the eye. He achieves restraint with regard to the faculty of the eye.
βOn hearing a sound with the ear.β¦
βOn smelling an aroma with the nose.β¦
βOn tasting a flavor with the tongue.β¦
βOn touching a tactile sensation with the body.β¦
βOn cognizing an idea with the intellect, he doesnβt grasp at any theme or variations by whichβif he were to dwell without restraint over the faculty of the intellectβevil, unskillful qualities such as greed or distress might assail him. He practices with restraint. He guards the faculty of the intellect. He achieves restraint with regard to the faculty of the intellect.
βThis is called self-controlled practice.
βAnd which is even practice? There is the case where a monk doesnβt acquiesce to an arisen thought of sensuality. He abandons it, destroys it, dispels it, wipes it out of existence.
βHe doesnβt acquiesce to an arisen thought of ill will. He abandons it, destroys it, dispels it, wipes it out of existence.
βHe doesnβt acquiesce to an arisen thought of harmfulness. He abandons it, destroys it, dispels it, wipes it out of existence.
βHe doesnβt acquiesce to any arisen evil, unskillful qualities. He abandons them, destroys them, dispels them, wipes them out of existence.
βThis is called even practice.
βThese, monks, are four modes of practice.β
https://www.dhammatalks.org/suttas/AN/AN4_164.html
2 198
Your Biggest Enemy is Your Untrained Mind.
Whatever an enemy might do to an enemy,
or a foe to a foe,
the ill-directed mind
can do to you even worse.
Whatever a mother, father
or other kinsman
might do for you,
the well-directed mind
can do for you even better.
Buddha, Dhp III : The Mind
2 198
Ultimate reality as taught by Buddha β tilakkaΕa of the aggregates and sense bases
βWhat do you think, bhikkhus, is form permanent or impermanent?β
β βImpermanent, Venerable Sir.β β
βIs what is impermanent suffering or happiness?β
β βSuffering, Venerable Sir.β β
βIs what is impermanent, suffering, and subject to change fit to be regarded thus: βThis is mine, this I am, this is my selfβ?β
β βNo, Venerable Sir.β
βIs feeling (perception, volitional formations, consciousness) permanent or impermanent? β¦ βImpermanent, Venerable Sir.β β
βIs what is impermanent suffering or happiness?β β βSuffering, Venerable Sir.β β
βIs what is impermanent, suffering, and subject to change fit to be regarded thus: βThis is mine, this I am, this is my selfβ?β β βNo, Venerable Sir.β
(SN 22.59 The Characteristic of Non-Self)
2 198
Repost from πππ±π±π΅πΆππ ππΆπππΌπΏπ & ππΏπ°π΅π²πΌπΉπΌπ΄π
Through the power of refuge in the Triple Gem: May all your diseases, griefs, misfortunes, pains, distresses, & despairs be destroyed.
2 198
Cultivate an all-embracing mind of love
For all throughout the universe,
In all its height, depth and breadthβ
Love that is untroubled
And beyond hatred or enmity.
May all be well and secure,
May all beings be happy!
-Buddha, MettΔsutta
