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    _B2SPIRIT_BUDDHISMUS
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    IOM_NUKSO: no self. This is the only true awakening
    IOM_NUKSO
    IOM_NUKSO --- ---
    KOCOURMIKES: to mi pripomina

    More self, more problem. Less self, less problem. No self, no problem.

    ~ Chamtrul Rinpoche
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    No Self, No Problem

    Quotes of Tibetan Dzogchen teacher, Anam Thubten:

    “In Buddhism this is called no self. This is the only true awakening.”
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    follow Dawa Gyaltsen’s approach
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    0nly this is true Ati. Nothing else is needed.

    From Longchenpa:

    “In this case what makes perfect sense in the Ati approach is the superior realization whereby one directly experiences the unobstructed state in it's nakedness, without relying on anything whatsoever. Since one does not experience separation from the essence of Awareness even for an instant, to say that is realized or perceived is merely to use a conventional expression."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    IOM_NUKSO: Vesakh !!!!
    IOM_NUKSO
    IOM_NUKSO --- ---
    dnes je SAGA DAWA DÜCHEN
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    KILLIAN: nemodli se...
    KILLIAN
    KILLIAN --- ---
    "Confess your hidden faults.
    Approach what you find repulsive.
    Help those you think you cannot help.
    Anything you are attached to, give that.
    Go to the places that scare you."

    ~ Machig Labdron
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    From the "Unwritten Tantra", the first of the 17 Tantras of the Mangagde section of Dzogchen. Just translated for the first time by our translator Chris Wilkinson:

    "Then, again, from out of that invisible space, the awareness that has no teacher gives instructions:

    Kye Ma! Kye Ma!

    O Entourage of Visionaries who Seem to be Non-existent,
    Listen well!

    I have no intention of delineating the view of self-originating wisdom.

    There is nothing that has gone into the past. There is nothing that will appear in the future. There is nothing whatever that is apparent in the present.

    There is no karma. There are no habitual tendencies. There is no ignorance. There is no mind. There is no thought. There is no knowledge. There is no samsara. There is no nirvana. Even awareness itself does not exist."
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    The Absolute Realizing the Absolute

    When the Absolute is one’s cognizant state, it can later be noticed that any thoughts about “no longer being in the Absolute state” is itself the Absolute generating that thought, and it is the Absolute state that is knowing that thought.

    You are always the Absolute manifesting your own thoughts, sense of self and inner states, even when those cognitions describe “being apart from your Absolute state”.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    The absolute expanse = the Great Expanse = Longchen Rabjam
    KILLIAN
    KILLIAN --- ---
    Disengaged from the six senses’ domains,
    Not thinking is the path of transcendence.
    The absolute expanse has no concepts.
    Freedom from mental activity is Great Seal.

    Don’t meditate! Don’t meditate! Don’t meditate with the mind!
    The mind’s meditation amounts to deluded thoughts.
    Thoughts bind you to cyclic existence.
    With release from the mind, there is no meditation.

    In space, emptiness without awareness,
    Tame the root of the mind endowed with awareness.
    Tame its root and relax.

    ~ The Song of Sukhasiddhi
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    The Perfection of the Great Perfection

    Dzogchen and all the great mystical traditions concur; the universe and all that happens in it, is infinitely perfect. All is the movement of those perfect energies.

    All experiences, thoughts, intentions, feelings, perceptions,actions and sensations are infinitely perfect because their source is perfect.

    Without suffering most would never look deeper. We are all in the oven, being cooked at the right temperature. Sometimes it feels too hot or sometimes taking too long, but all conditions are EXACTLY what’s required.

    This is why the main principle in Dzogchen is “no effort to change or correct any aspect”; chozhag (let be). How useful is it to try to correct something that is always already perfect?
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    How to Immediately Discover the Original Buddha Mind

    Close your eyes. Notice where thoughts are appearing. They are appearing right in the middle of the empty Buddha Mind. It’s the empty Buddha Mind appearing AS those thoughts and every thought.
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Unveiling the Absolute

    Pure Awareness, as the Absolute Nature, is known when the “my” is dropped from “my awareness”.

    Awareness is not personal, only the addition of “my” makes it seem so.

    Thoughts without the “my” of “my thoughts”, are liberated into their own empty space of meaning and release.

    By releasing the “my” in “my self”, what Self would remain?

    By releasing one’s grip upon the thought “my”, hasn’t grasping lost its grasp thereby? Hasn’t attachment lost its hold?

    Taking away the ”my” in “my suffering”, to whom could suffering pretend to pertain?

    Taking away the “my” in “my life and death” who was ever born? Who is the one who died?

    Taking away the “my” in “my love”, wouldn’t that leave more than enough love for all to share?
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Buddhistické myšlení fascinuje svět tisíce let  – Novinky.cz
    https://www.novinky.cz/kultura/471841-buddhisticke-mysleni-fascinuje-svet-tisice-let.html
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    Ok... am a lay practitioner with limited benefit of instructions... yet my "assumption" is to stop further accumulation of negativity and cleanse the past karmic debts by only remaining in mind's essence???
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
    No Self, No Problem

    Quotes of Tibetan Dzogchen teacher, Anam Thubten:

    “In Buddhism this is called no self. This is the only true awakening.”

    “As we begin to rest and pay attention, we begin to see everything clearly. We see that the self has no basis or solidity. It is a complete mental fabrication. We also realize that everything we believe to be true about our life is nothing but stories, fabricated around false identifications.”

    “Who is the one being angry or disappointed?” In such inquiry, inner serenity can effortlessly manifest.”

    “When all the layers of false identity have been stripped off, there is no longer any version of that old self. What is left behind is pure consciousness.”

    “... we come to this one powerful understanding, that ultimately there is no samsara to be rejected. There is no misery to be transcended. There is not even a self to be liberated. Everything is just our own concepts and nothing more. My misery, my enemy, my life, they are all my concepts. That’s it.”

    “We just get rid of all of our concepts, all of our painful concepts, whatever concepts we are having an affair with. We are always having an affair with concepts and there are plenty of them. Every concept has a story line. Think about it. “I am poor.” That is a concept. “I am stupid.” That is a concept. “I am a woman.” That is a concept. “I am a man.” That is a concept too. They are all concepts. “I don’t have enough money, but if I had a million dollars, then I would be happy.” That is a concept. They are all concepts. Get rid of them in a single moment without even taking the time to meditate, without taking the time to analyze them. Transcend all limiting concepts as soon as they arise.”

    “When the self completely collapses, there is this inexpressible, simple yet profound and ecstatic, compassionate awareness. Nobody is there. “I” is completely nonexistent in that place.”

    “The “I” who doesn’t like what is unfolding is completely gone and that is all that matters in the ultimate sense.”

    “When we try to get rid of it, it doesn’t work. It backfires because who is trying to get rid of it? There is nobody there in the ultimate sense.”

    “I remember a very short quote from a Buddhist teacher: “No self, no problem.” It is really short but true and very effective too.”

    “My ego is struggling. “Well, I want to be enlightened. I want to have that bliss that he is talking about right now. I want to feel good. I want to have rapture but it’s not there. Time is running out.”

    “There is struggle when we are meditating and there is struggle when we are not meditating, as long as the self is being perceived as real. When the self goes away, then we are already in paradise and there is nothing to do.”

    “Karma is actually nothing more than thought.”

    “Buddha taught this wisdom, and in his tradition it is called anatman, or “no self.” “

    “This old version of self is the sense of an “I” that believes that it is inextricably bound to conditions. For example, when we feel that “I am going to die, and it scares the daylights out of me,” that is the old version of self. We know that it seems real to all of us. It seems as real as the sun and moon in the sky, as real as the coffee table in front of us. But remember that we once believed in many things that we no longer believe are real. When we were children Santa Claus was real to many of us. How could anybody dare tell a child that Santa is not real? But one day we figured it out all by ourselves. We simply knew that Santa was not real and that he had never been real. When we realize that this old version of self is no longer real, then we are no longer bound to conditions. Death is no longer a terrorizing threat. We have literally transcended death. Our body might decay and collapse but that is not death to us. This deathlessness has nothing to do with the idea that our soul or mind keeps reincarnating again and again when we lose our body. Rather we know that our true nature is one with everything, so it goes beyond birth and death as well as beyond reincarnation. Does the sky die? Our true nature is one with the sky.”

    “When we suffer it means that we are attached to a thought. When we feel happy that means that we are experiencing another thought. The very sense of “I” is a thought too. The “I” that I believe to be so real and concrete doesn’t exist in the ultimate sense. It is just a thought.”

    “The only thing that we must transcend is our thoughts. Beyond our own thoughts there is no suffering. There is only thought. This is not simply theory. But what does it mean to transcend our thoughts? It simply means not to believe in our thoughts. When we don’t believe in our thoughts we are always awakened. When we believe in our thoughts we are unawakened.”

    “Look. Who is searching for enlightenment? If we bring about awareness in our mind right now, we see that it is the same “I” who searches for everything. Who is searching for fame? Who is searching for pleasure? Who is searching for a way to arrive at the truth? It is the same “I.” The “I” who is searching for enlightenment is the same “I.” This “I” is sometimes very holy and sometimes extremely nasty. You see, this “I” has a big closet filled with all kinds of masks. There are masks of being holy and masks of being quite sinister. The “I” who wants to wring somebody’s neck is the same “I” who is searching for enlightenment. You see, it’s all the business of “I.” There is no good “I.” There is no bad “I.” There is only one “I” and it’s called the ego. Ego is a mental construct, a fabrication. It has nothing to do with who we really are.”

    “In the ancient times, spiritual seekers used various methods to practice meditation. Yet, there is only one meditation. That is a state of nondoing. When we stop trying to get somewhere and let go of all of our inner exertions, surprisingly the ineffable truth reveals itself to us. Then that’s it. There is nothing else to be found. The realization of that truth sets us free from the prison of our imaginary self. When we go deeply into meditation, we always witness the dissolution of self. If the self is still sticking around, we have not gone deep enough.”

    “Trying to acquire enlightenment from the outside, from a very impressive teacher or from an exotic practice, is also an illusion. These are simply other ways ego uses to sustain its illusory reality.”

    “One of our biggest problems is the idea of death. Even that doesn’t exist because there has never been anybody there to die in the first place. This sense of “I” is a grand illusion. Life without this illusion is truly beautiful. Without this illusion we feel that we have much love and joy to share with everyone in the world.”

    Amazon.com: No Self, No Problem: Awakening to Our True Nature (9781559394048): Anam Thubten: Books
    https://www.amazon.com/...em&pi=AC_SX236_SY340_QL65&qid=1525690918&ref=plSrch&ref_=mp_s_a_1_1&sr=8-1
    KOCOURMIKES
    KOCOURMIKES --- ---
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