Awakening to Reality
This blog is about spiritual awakening, maps and stages, the blinding effects of our strong momentum/conditioning (karmic propensities), view, realization, experience, etc. If you're new here, I recommend going through the 'Must Reads' articles (see sidebar). For discussions you are welcome to join the Awakening to Reality Facebook group
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  • A. H. Almaas
  • Absorption
  • Ācārya Malcolm Smith
  • Acharya Mahayogi Shridhar Rana Rinpoche
  • Action
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  • Advaita
  • Adyashanti
  • AI Bot (Artificial Intelligence Chat Bot)
  • Ajahn Amaro
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  • Ajahn Nyanamoli Thero
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  • Alan Watts
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  • Alex Weith
  • Alexander Berzin
  • All is Mind
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  • Angelo Gerangelo
  • Anita Moorjani
  • Anxiety
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  • Ch'an Master Hsu Yun
  • Chad
  • Chandrakirti
  • Charles Genoud
  • Charlie Singer
  • Charlotte Joko Beck
  • ChatGPT
  • Chogyal Namkhai Norbu Rinpoche
  • Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
  • Chris Jones
  • Chris Kang
  • Christian Mysticism
  • Christianity
  • Compassion
  • Conceptuality
  • Consciousness Without Feature (Viññanam anidassanam)
  • Conventional
  • Covid-19
  • Creativity
  • Cults
  • Dakpo Tashi Namgyal
  • Dan Berkow
  • Daniel Ingram
  • Dark Night
  • David Carse
  • David Higgins
  • David Loy
  • David Vardy
  • Death
  • Deconstruction
  • Dependent Designation
  • Dependent Origination
  • Depression
  • Determinism
  • Devotion
  • Dharma Protectors
  • Diamond Sutra
  • Diet and Sleep
  • Dieter Vollmuth
  • Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
  • Direct Path
  • Discipline
  • Disease of Non-Conceptuality
  • Dispassion
  • Distance
  • Douglas Harding
  • Dr. Reggie Ray
  • DreamDatum
  • Dropping
  • Dying
  • Dzogchen
  • Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
  • Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche
  • Eckhart Tolle
  • Eight Winds
  • Elias Caprilles
  • Emptiness
  • Empty Clarity
  • Energy
  • Equipoise
  • Ethics
  • Exercise
  • Faith
  • Fearless
  • Federico Faggin
  • Fetters
  • Fishskull3
  • Flow
  • Four Noble Truths
  • Frank Yang
  • Free Will
  • Freedom from Elaborations
  • Freedom from Self-Nature
  • Galen Sharp
  • Gampopa
  • Garchen Rinpoche
  • Gary Weber
  • Generosity
  • Geoff
  • Geovani Geo
  • Gil Fronsdal
  • Global Warming
  • God
  • Godfrey Devereux
  • Google Gemini
  • Gorampa
  • Göran Backlund
  • Greg Goode
  • Guan Yin
  • Guy Newland
  • H.H. The 8th Karmapa Mikyo Dorje
  • H.H. The 9th Karmapa Wangchuk Dorje
  • Habits
  • Hakuun Yasutani
  • Hee-Jin Kim
  • His Eminence The Twelth Zurmang Gharwang Rinpoche
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama
  • His Holiness the HH Drikung Kyabgon Chetsang
  • Huayan
  • Huayan Patriarch Cheng'guan
  • I AM
  • I AMness
  • I-Ching
  • Impermanence
  • Impersonal Living Force
  • Impersonality
  • Insomnia
  • Is Won Buddhism?
  • Islamic Sufism
  • J Krishnamurti
  • Jack Kornfield
  • Jackson Peterson
  • James M. Corrigan
  • Jan Westerhoff
  • Jared K Jones‎
  • Jay L. Garfield
  • Jayson MPaul
  • Jean Klein
  • Jean-Luc Achard
  • Jeff Foster
  • Jesus Christ
  • Jhana
  • Jill Bolte Taylor
  • Joan Tollifson
  • Joel Agee
  • John Astin
  • John Crook
  • John Dunne
  • John Tan
  • John Welwood
  • John Wheeler
  • Judith Blackstone
  • Judith Ragir
  • Jui
  • Julian Baggini
  • Juliette Paul
  • Jundo Cohen
  • Karma
  • Karmapa Rangjung Dorje
  • Karmic Tendencies
  • Ken Wilber
  • Kenneth Folk
  • Khamtrul Rinpoche III
  • Khenpo Gangshar
  • Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso
  • Knowingness
  • Koan
  • Koun Ejo zenji
  • Kubota [Akira] Ji'un
  • Kukai
  • Kwabena Akuamoa
  • Kyle Dixon
  • Lama Jampa Thaye
  • Lama Joe Evans (Jigme Rangdrol)
  • Lama Zopa Rinpoche
  • Law of Attraction
  • Leigh Brasington
  • Li Zhu Lao Shi
  • Longchenpa
  • Love
  • Lucky7Strikes
  • Luminosity
  • Madhyamaka
  • Maha
  • Mahamudra
  • Mahāpratisarā Bodhisattva (大随求菩薩)
  • Mahasi Sayadaw
  • Mahayana
  • Maitripa
  • Mantra
  • Mara
  • Mark Lopez
  • Mason Spransy
  • Master Tu Shun
  • Mausham Ratna Shakya
  • Medicine Buddha
  • Meditation
  • Meister Eckhart
  • Mental Health
  • Mental Illness
  • Merits
  • Michael
  • Michael Everson
  • Michael Langford
  • Middle Way
  • Milarepa
  • Mind Body Drop
  • Mindfulness
  • Mindfulness of Breathing
  • Mipham Rinpoche
  • Morality
  • Movement
  • Mr. JKB
  • Munindra
  • Myriad Objects
  • Nafis Rahman
  • Nagarjuna
  • Nagasena
  • Nancy Neithercut
  • Naropa
  • Nathan Gill
  • Natural State
  • Near Death Experience (NDE)
  • New Age
  • Niguma
  • Nirodha Samapatti vs Nibbana/Nirvana
  • Nirvana
  • Niutou Farong
  • No Mind
  • No Mind Thus Come One (无心如来)
  • Non Doership
  • Non Dual
  • Non-Arising
  • Non-dual
  • Non-Meditation
  • Nyingma
  • Ocean
  • Omniscience
  • One Pointedness
  • One Thought Traveler (一念行者)
  • Openness
  • Ordinariness
  • Original Enlightenment Is Wrong
  • Padmasambhava
  • Palden Sherab
  • Paltrul Rinpoche
  • Pam Tan
  • Paramitas
  • Parents
  • Pawo Rinpoche
  • Perennial Philosophy
  • Peter Brown
  • Peter Dziuban
  • Peter Fenner
  • Phagguna Sutta
  • Philip Kapleau Roshi
  • Phra Kovit Khemananda
  • Piya Tan
  • Post Enlightenment
  • Practice-Enlightenment
  • Prajna
  • Prayers
  • Proliferation
  • Psychedelics
  • Pure Land
  • Purpose and Meaning of Life
  • Rainbow
  • Rainbow Body
  • Ramana Maharshi
  • Rangjung Yeshe
  • Rangtong
  • Rebirth
  • Reginald A. Ray
  • Relationship
  • Release
  • Richard Herman
  • Rizenfenix
  • Rob Burbea
  • Robert Aho
  • Robert Saltzman
  • Robert Thurman
  • Rongzom
  • Ruben Farina
  • Rumi
  • Rupert Spira
  • Ryan Burton
  • S.N.Goenka
  • Sam Harris
  • Samadhi
  • Sariputta
  • Śarīra (Relics)
  • Satsang Nathan
  • Schizophrenia
  • Science
  • Science and Consciousness
  • Search
  • Seeking
  • Self
  • Self Enquiry
  • Self Liberation
  • Shabkar Tsokdrug Rangdrol
  • Shadows
  • Shentong
  • Shi Hengqing
  • Shikantaza
  • Shingon
  • Shinshu Roberts
  • Shohaku Okumura
  • Shunryū Suzuki
  • Siddhi
  • Sim Pern Chong
  • Simplicity
  • Simpo/Longchen
  • Sixth Ch'an Patriarch Hui-Neng
  • Sleep
  • Solipsism
  • Sonam Thakchoe
  • Songs of Mahamudra
  • Space
  • Spell
  • Spontaneous Presence
  • Sri Atmananda
  • Stages of Enlightenment
  • Steve Hagen
  • Stian
  • Stream Entry
  • Suchness
  • Suffering
  • Supreme Master Ching Hai
  • Suzanne Segal
  • Taking Refuge in the Three Jewels
  • Tantra Without Syllables
  • Taoism
  • Tara
  • Tarthang Tulku
  • Tathāgatagarbha
  • Td Unmanifest
  • Tea
  • Teachers
  • Ted Biringer
  • Teleportation
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu
  • The True Enlightenment Practitioners Association (佛教正覺同修會; Zhengjue)
  • Theravada
  • Thought
  • Thrangu Rinpoche
  • Three Natures
  • Thubten Chodron
  • Tilopa
  • Time
  • Tommy M.
  • Toni Packer
  • Tony Parsons
  • Torei Enji
  • Total Exertion
  • Traktung Rinpoche
  • Tranquility
  • Trauma
  • Tsewang Dongyal
  • Tsoknyi Rinpoche
  • Tsongkhapa
  • Two Truths
  • U.G. Krishnamurti
  • Unborn
  • Univer
  • Vajrasattva
  • Vajrayana Empowerment
  • Vasubandhu
  • Vegetarianism
  • Ven Jue Xing
  • Ven. Da Zhao
  • Ven. Jinmyo Renge osho
  • Ven. Yin Shun
  • Venerable Ming Shan (释明山)
  • Venerable Shen Kai
  • View and Path
  • Viewless View
  • Vipassana
  • Virupa
  • Vitality
  • Walpola Rahula
  • Wanderling
  • William Kong
  • Wisdom
  • Wolfgang Smith
  • Xiao Pingshi (蕭平實)
  • Yamada Ryoun
  • Yang Gönpa
  • Yiguandao
  • Yin Ling
  • Yoga
  • Yogacara
  • Yogi Prabodha Jnana
  • Yogini Abhaya Devi
  • Yozan Dirk Mosig
  • Yuan Yin Lao Ren (元音老人)
  • Zazen
  • Zen
  • Zen Master Anzan Hoshin Roshi
  • Zen Master Barry Magid
  • Zen Master Bassui
  • Zen Master Bernie Glassman
  • Zen Master Chi Chern
  • Zen Master Chinul
  • Zen Master Dae Kwang
  • Zen Master Dogen
  • Zen Master Doug Phillips
  • Zen Master Guo Ru (果如法师)
  • Zen Master Hakuin
  • Zen Master Han Shan
  • Zen Master Han-Shan Te Ch'ing
  • Zen Master Hogen
  • Zen Master Hong Wen Liang (洪文亮禅师)
  • Zen Master Hongzhi
  • Zen Master Huang Po
  • Zen Master Hui Lü
  • Zen Master Jeff Shores
  • Zen Master Ma-tsu
  • Zen Master Madelon Bolling
  • Zen Master Meido Moore
  • Zen Master Seung Sahn
  • Zen Master Sheng-yen
  • Zen Master Shodo Harada Roshi
  • Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh
  • Zen Master Torei Zenji
  • Zen Master Tozan Ryokai
  • Zen Patriarch Bodhidharma
  • Zen Patriarch Jianzhi Sengcan
  • Zhitong
  • 顏宏安

Cloud Labels

  • A. H. Almaas
  • Absorption
  • Ācārya Malcolm Smith
  • Acharya Mahayogi Shridhar Rana Rinpoche
  • Action
  • Actual Freedom
  • Advaita
  • Adyashanti
  • AI Bot (Artificial Intelligence Chat Bot)
  • Ajahn Amaro
  • Ajahn Brahmavamso
  • Ajahn Maha Boowa
  • Ajahn Nyanamoli Thero
  • Ajahn Pasanno
  • Alan Watts
  • Albert Hong
  • Alex Weith
  • Alexander Berzin
  • All is Mind
  • Analysis
  • Anatta
  • André A. Pais
  • Andrew Holocek
  • Angelo Gerangelo
  • Anita Moorjani
  • Anxiety
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Asangoham
  • Astral Travel
  • Astus
  • asunthatneversets
  • Audiobook
  • Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva
  • AwakeningToReality-GPT
  • B.K.S Iyengar
  • Barry Magid
  • Bashar
  • Being-Time
  • Bernadette Roberts
  • Bernardo Kastrup
  • Bill Finch
  • Bliss
  • Bodhicitta
  • Bodhisattva Vow
  • Body
  • Books and Websites Recommendations
  • Brad Warner
  • Broasca Om
  • Buddha
  • Buddha Nature
  • Buddhaghosa
  • Buddhahood
  • Buddhas and Bodhisattvas
  • Business
  • Career
  • Carlo Rovelli
  • Carlus Sego
  • Cessation
  • Ch'an Master Guoru
  • Ch'an Master Hsu Yun
  • Chad
  • Chandrakirti
  • Charles Genoud
  • Charlie Singer
  • Charlotte Joko Beck
  • ChatGPT
  • Chogyal Namkhai Norbu Rinpoche
  • Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
  • Chris Jones
  • Chris Kang
  • Christian Mysticism
  • Christianity
  • Compassion
  • Conceptuality
  • Consciousness Without Feature (Viññanam anidassanam)
  • Conventional
  • Covid-19
  • Creativity
  • Cults
  • Dakpo Tashi Namgyal
  • Dan Berkow
  • Daniel Ingram
  • Dark Night
  • David Carse
  • David Higgins
  • David Loy
  • David Vardy
  • Death
  • Deconstruction
  • Dependent Designation
  • Dependent Origination
  • Depression
  • Determinism
  • Devotion
  • Dharma Protectors
  • Diamond Sutra
  • Diet and Sleep
  • Dieter Vollmuth
  • Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche
  • Direct Path
  • Discipline
  • Disease of Non-Conceptuality
  • Dispassion
  • Distance
  • Douglas Harding
  • Dr. Reggie Ray
  • DreamDatum
  • Dropping
  • Dying
  • Dzogchen
  • Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
  • Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche
  • Eckhart Tolle
  • Eight Winds
  • Elias Caprilles
  • Emptiness
  • Empty Clarity
  • Energy
  • Equipoise
  • Ethics
  • Exercise
  • Faith
  • Fearless
  • Federico Faggin
  • Fetters
  • Fishskull3
  • Flow
  • Four Noble Truths
  • Frank Yang
  • Free Will
  • Freedom from Elaborations
  • Freedom from Self-Nature
  • Galen Sharp
  • Gampopa
  • Garchen Rinpoche
  • Gary Weber
  • Generosity
  • Geoff
  • Geovani Geo
  • Gil Fronsdal
  • Global Warming
  • God
  • Godfrey Devereux
  • Google Gemini
  • Gorampa
  • Göran Backlund
  • Greg Goode
  • Guan Yin
  • Guy Newland
  • H.H. The 8th Karmapa Mikyo Dorje
  • H.H. The 9th Karmapa Wangchuk Dorje
  • Habits
  • Hakuun Yasutani
  • Hee-Jin Kim
  • His Eminence The Twelth Zurmang Gharwang Rinpoche
  • His Holiness the Dalai Lama
  • His Holiness the HH Drikung Kyabgon Chetsang
  • Huayan
  • Huayan Patriarch Cheng'guan
  • I AM
  • I AMness
  • I-Ching
  • Impermanence
  • Impersonal Living Force
  • Impersonality
  • Insomnia
  • Is Won Buddhism?
  • Islamic Sufism
  • J Krishnamurti
  • Jack Kornfield
  • Jackson Peterson
  • James M. Corrigan
  • Jan Westerhoff
  • Jared K Jones‎
  • Jay L. Garfield
  • Jayson MPaul
  • Jean Klein
  • Jean-Luc Achard
  • Jeff Foster
  • Jesus Christ
  • Jhana
  • Jill Bolte Taylor
  • Joan Tollifson
  • Joel Agee
  • John Astin
  • John Crook
  • John Dunne
  • John Tan
  • John Welwood
  • John Wheeler
  • Judith Blackstone
  • Judith Ragir
  • Jui
  • Julian Baggini
  • Juliette Paul
  • Jundo Cohen
  • Karma
  • Karmapa Rangjung Dorje
  • Karmic Tendencies
  • Ken Wilber
  • Kenneth Folk
  • Khamtrul Rinpoche III
  • Khenpo Gangshar
  • Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso
  • Knowingness
  • Koan
  • Koun Ejo zenji
  • Kubota [Akira] Ji'un
  • Kukai
  • Kwabena Akuamoa
  • Kyle Dixon
  • Lama Jampa Thaye
  • Lama Joe Evans (Jigme Rangdrol)
  • Lama Zopa Rinpoche
  • Law of Attraction
  • Leigh Brasington
  • Li Zhu Lao Shi
  • Longchenpa
  • Love
  • Lucky7Strikes
  • Luminosity
  • Madhyamaka
  • Maha
  • Mahamudra
  • Mahāpratisarā Bodhisattva (大随求菩薩)
  • Mahasi Sayadaw
  • Mahayana
  • Maitripa
  • Mantra
  • Mara
  • Mark Lopez
  • Mason Spransy
  • Master Tu Shun
  • Mausham Ratna Shakya
  • Medicine Buddha
  • Meditation
  • Meister Eckhart
  • Mental Health
  • Mental Illness
  • Merits
  • Michael
  • Michael Everson
  • Michael Langford
  • Middle Way
  • Milarepa
  • Mind Body Drop
  • Mindfulness
  • Mindfulness of Breathing
  • Mipham Rinpoche
  • Morality
  • Movement
  • Mr. JKB
  • Munindra
  • Myriad Objects
  • Nafis Rahman
  • Nagarjuna
  • Nagasena
  • Nancy Neithercut
  • Naropa
  • Nathan Gill
  • Natural State
  • Near Death Experience (NDE)
  • New Age
  • Niguma
  • Nirodha Samapatti vs Nibbana/Nirvana
  • Nirvana
  • Niutou Farong
  • No Mind
  • No Mind Thus Come One (无心如来)
  • Non Doership
  • Non Dual
  • Non-Arising
  • Non-dual
  • Non-Meditation
  • Nyingma
  • Ocean
  • Omniscience
  • One Pointedness
  • One Thought Traveler (一念行者)
  • Openness
  • Ordinariness
  • Original Enlightenment Is Wrong
  • Padmasambhava
  • Palden Sherab
  • Paltrul Rinpoche
  • Pam Tan
  • Paramitas
  • Parents
  • Pawo Rinpoche
  • Perennial Philosophy
  • Peter Brown
  • Peter Dziuban
  • Peter Fenner
  • Phagguna Sutta
  • Philip Kapleau Roshi
  • Phra Kovit Khemananda
  • Piya Tan
  • Post Enlightenment
  • Practice-Enlightenment
  • Prajna
  • Prayers
  • Proliferation
  • Psychedelics
  • Pure Land
  • Purpose and Meaning of Life
  • Rainbow
  • Rainbow Body
  • Ramana Maharshi
  • Rangjung Yeshe
  • Rangtong
  • Rebirth
  • Reginald A. Ray
  • Relationship
  • Release
  • Richard Herman
  • Rizenfenix
  • Rob Burbea
  • Robert Aho
  • Robert Saltzman
  • Robert Thurman
  • Rongzom
  • Ruben Farina
  • Rumi
  • Rupert Spira
  • Ryan Burton
  • S.N.Goenka
  • Sam Harris
  • Samadhi
  • Sariputta
  • Śarīra (Relics)
  • Satsang Nathan
  • Schizophrenia
  • Science
  • Science and Consciousness
  • Search
  • Seeking
  • Self
  • Self Enquiry
  • Self Liberation
  • Shabkar Tsokdrug Rangdrol
  • Shadows
  • Shentong
  • Shi Hengqing
  • Shikantaza
  • Shingon
  • Shinshu Roberts
  • Shohaku Okumura
  • Shunryū Suzuki
  • Siddhi
  • Sim Pern Chong
  • Simplicity
  • Simpo/Longchen
  • Sixth Ch'an Patriarch Hui-Neng
  • Sleep
  • Solipsism
  • Sonam Thakchoe
  • Songs of Mahamudra
  • Space
  • Spell
  • Spontaneous Presence
  • Sri Atmananda
  • Stages of Enlightenment
  • Steve Hagen
  • Stian
  • Stream Entry
  • Suchness
  • Suffering
  • Supreme Master Ching Hai
  • Suzanne Segal
  • Taking Refuge in the Three Jewels
  • Tantra Without Syllables
  • Taoism
  • Tara
  • Tarthang Tulku
  • Tathāgatagarbha
  • Td Unmanifest
  • Tea
  • Teachers
  • Ted Biringer
  • Teleportation
  • Thanissaro Bhikkhu
  • The True Enlightenment Practitioners Association (佛教正覺同修會; Zhengjue)
  • Theravada
  • Thought
  • Thrangu Rinpoche
  • Three Natures
  • Thubten Chodron
  • Tilopa
  • Time
  • Tommy M.
  • Toni Packer
  • Tony Parsons
  • Torei Enji
  • Total Exertion
  • Traktung Rinpoche
  • Tranquility
  • Trauma
  • Tsewang Dongyal
  • Tsoknyi Rinpoche
  • Tsongkhapa
  • Two Truths
  • U.G. Krishnamurti
  • Unborn
  • Univer
  • Vajrasattva
  • Vajrayana Empowerment
  • Vasubandhu
  • Vegetarianism
  • Ven Jue Xing
  • Ven. Da Zhao
  • Ven. Jinmyo Renge osho
  • Ven. Yin Shun
  • Venerable Ming Shan (释明山)
  • Venerable Shen Kai
  • View and Path
  • Viewless View
  • Vipassana
  • Virupa
  • Vitality
  • Walpola Rahula
  • Wanderling
  • William Kong
  • Wisdom
  • Wolfgang Smith
  • Xiao Pingshi (蕭平實)
  • Yamada Ryoun
  • Yang Gönpa
  • Yiguandao
  • Yin Ling
  • Yoga
  • Yogacara
  • Yogi Prabodha Jnana
  • Yogini Abhaya Devi
  • Yozan Dirk Mosig
  • Yuan Yin Lao Ren (元音老人)
  • Zazen
  • Zen
  • Zen Master Anzan Hoshin Roshi
  • Zen Master Barry Magid
  • Zen Master Bassui
  • Zen Master Bernie Glassman
  • Zen Master Chi Chern
  • Zen Master Chinul
  • Zen Master Dae Kwang
  • Zen Master Dogen
  • Zen Master Doug Phillips
  • Zen Master Guo Ru (果如法师)
  • Zen Master Hakuin
  • Zen Master Han Shan
  • Zen Master Han-Shan Te Ch'ing
  • Zen Master Hogen
  • Zen Master Hong Wen Liang (洪文亮禅师)
  • Zen Master Hongzhi
  • Zen Master Huang Po
  • Zen Master Hui Lü
  • Zen Master Jeff Shores
  • Zen Master Ma-tsu
  • Zen Master Madelon Bolling
  • Zen Master Meido Moore
  • Zen Master Seung Sahn
  • Zen Master Sheng-yen
  • Zen Master Shodo Harada Roshi
  • Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh
  • Zen Master Torei Zenji
  • Zen Master Tozan Ryokai
  • Zen Patriarch Bodhidharma
  • Zen Patriarch Jianzhi Sengcan
  • Zhitong
  • 顏宏安

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Showing posts with label Pure Land. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pure Land. Show all posts
Pure Land Buddhism
Soh

Andrew Holocek: “If someone was to discover that they had less than a year to live, what practice should they concentrate on?”

Thrangu Rinpoche: “They should focus on Pure Land practice.”


This article contains two parts: 1) What John Tan said about Pure Land, and 2) Andrew Holocek's Article on Pure Land Buddhism

Excerpt taken from http://www.awakeningtoreality.com/2022/04/pure-land.html
"
John Tan

Angelo Grr I agree with what u said.
Infact I never talk about zen or anatta to my family members🤦; contrary I encourage my parents to chant Amitabha and visualize pureland according to what their teachers taught them. It is a dedicated daily practice for my parents. These practices are much more skillfull, intuitive and beneficial for them imo. My dad has very fruitful experiences and he even has dreams of clarity of pureland and trigger many valuable insights, he just discussed with me one of his experience and insight yesterday😁.
I know many great zen teachers like Ban Zhan, Han Shan and Tien Tai Chih-I also encourage pureland practice. Even the late zen master Sheng Yen also spoke positively of pureland practices. In China, it is not uncommon to see chan and pureland dual practices 禅净双修 but Japan I m not sure, never heard of any.

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    Angelo GrrAdmin
    John Tan aww that’s great about your father ☺️. Thx for your input.

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  • John Tan
    Yeah. My dad's discipline is superb. At the age of 80, he still want to challenge me certain yoga poses that is even quite challenging for youngsters.🤣 He feared everyone in the family but he makes effort to discipline everyday and work on the pose. 💪😝
  • "


    https://www.andrewholecek.com/pure-land-buddhism/

    Pure Land Buddhism

    by Andrew Holecek | Death and Dying

    In a conversation with the Venerable Thrangu Rinpoche, I had the opportunity to discuss death and dying. In the Tibetan tradition, the teachings on this topic are vast, so I asked Rinpoche what should be emphasized in presenting this material to the West. His immediate response surprised me: “Students need to know more about Pure Lands.” Later in our conversation, I asked him another question: “If someone was to discover that they had less than a year to live, what practice should they concentrate on?” His answer startled me yet again: “They should focus on Pure Land practice.”

    Two weeks after my meeting, I staffed a four-day intensive on death presented by Tulku Thondup Rinpoche. Eighty percent of this program focused on Pure Land Buddhism. In twenty years of involvement with Tibetan Buddhism, I had never been to a single talk on Pure Land Buddhism. Suddenly, within the space of a few weeks, two of the greatest living masters from both the Kagyu and Nyingma traditions were extolling the value of Pure Lands.

    Since then I have interviewed a number of Tibetan masters about the Pure Lands, and was struck by how much emphasis they placed upon them. One meditation master for a three-year retreat in Nepal told me that Pure Land practice comes at the end of their retreat, and is of singular importance. He seemed surprised that Western students didn’t have more experience in Pure Land practice and study.

    Prior to these encounters, I thought that Pure Land Buddhism was for common folk, those who couldn’t handle the rigors of “real Buddhism.” I dismissed it as a kind of lazy Buddhism. But there is genuine profundity behind this noble tradition, and reasons why Tibetan masters are now recommending it for Western students. My study of Pure Land Buddhism has deepened my appreciation for the Tibetan tradition, opened my mind to the power of Pure Land doctrine, and humbled my attitude to other schools altogether.

    Origins of Pure Land Buddhism: Direct from the Buddha

    Pure Land teaching comes directly from the Buddha. At the request of Ananda, and then Shariputra, the Buddha began teaching the three principle sutras that comprise the heart of this tradition: the Larger Sukhavati-vyuha Sutra, the Smaller Sukhavati-vyuha Sutra, and the Amitayur dhyana Sutra. Pure Land teaching is mentioned in 200 other sutras and shastras (commentaries), and in the tantras. The teachings were codified and spread by Ananda, Maitreya, and Manjushri. Other major contributors to pure land doctrine were Nagarjuna, Vasubandhu, Asvaghosa., and the bodhisattva Samantabhadra. In the Larger Sukhavati-vyuha Sutra, the Buddha realized how difficult it would be for people to believe in this “too good to be true” sutra, and said: “The most difficult of all difficulties is to hear this sutra, have faith in it with joy, and hold fast to it. Nothing is more difficult than this.” To further stress the importance of the sutra he went on to say, “After I have passed into nirvana, do not allow doubt to arise. In the future, the Buddhist scriptures and teachings will perish. But, out of pity and compassion, I will especially preserve this sutra and maintain it in the world for a hundred years more.”

    Maitreya (the next historical Buddha after Shakyamuni) studied as a bodhisattva at the side of Shakyamuni, and then ascended to Tushita Heaven where he now teaches. It is taught that nine hundred years after the death of the Buddha, Maitreya descended to north India where he taught for four months to Asanga, and delivered the five treatises that now form a cornerstone in Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism. At the same time, Maitreya also gave Pure Land teachings to Asanga, who then passed these along to Vasubandhu. According to some scholars, this grounds the Pure Land tradition in the same mythohistoric Maitreya-Asanga link that served as the basis for the Yogachara tradition.

    Pureland Buddhism is Contained Within the Two Main Mahayana Buddhist Lineages

    Pure Land doctrine, far from being a parenthetical interjection in the history of Buddhism, is therefore contained within the two principle Mahayana lineages, the Yogachara and the Madhyamika, because Vasubandu is considered a patriarch in both.

    From the Tibetan perspective, Sakya Pandita was a contributor to Pure Land doctrine, as were Karma Chagme, Tsongkhapa (founder of the Gelug), and Dolpopa, (founder of the Shentong). Even Machig Labdronme, who started the Chod tradition, said “It is exceedingly important that you strive in prayer for birth in Sukhavati.” Khyungpo Naljor, father of the Shangpa Kagyu, said upon his death: “Since I am going to be a Buddha in Sukhavati, direct your prayers there. Do not harbor doubts or ambivalence about it.”

    Part of the Tantric Tradition

    Pure Land doctrine is generally considered to be a Mahayana teaching, but in Tibet it was embraced and revealed in the tantras as well. Matthew Kapstein goes one step further when he states: “The crucial development for the popular Pure Land orientation in Tibet was certainly the revelation, in the form of rediscovered treasures (terma), of tantric texts focusing on Sukhavati.” Pure Land teachings are therefore found not only in the sutras and tantras, but in the terma tradition.

    It is important to acknowledge these formidable sources because it helps to verify the power and authenticity of Pure Land doctrine, and to realize that these great masters did not stoop down when propagating these teachings. These are some of the biggest names in Buddhism.

    Sounds Like a Description of Heaven and God But is it “Theistic”

    TheIn the Jodo Shu Pure Land tradition of Japan, Nagarjuna is regarded as its first Indian Patriarch. This is important because one of the central attacks on Pure Land doctrine is that it is theistic, a compromised path for those who can’t handle the harsh reality of emptiness. When you read about the extensive descriptions of Sukhavati (a principal Pure Land discussed below) and the Buddha Amitabha who presides over this realm, it sounds like a Christian description of heaven and God.

    To have Nagarjuna, the king of emptiness, as a patriarch of Pure Land doctrine, helps to melt the theistic attacks. And to put an exclamation point on this, the Buddha himself predicted that “a monk named Naga[rjuna] will take rebirth in the Blissful Pure Land when he leaves his body.” Tulku Thondup Rinpoche stamps it: “So if the most important master of Buddhism’s greatest nontheistic school was to be born in the pure land, any follower of Buddhism, whether theistic or not, could aspire to be reborn there.” Manjushri, Samantabhadra, and Asvaghosha have all vowed to be reborn in the Pure Land, and Chenrezig resides there now.

    From its origins in India, Pure Land doctrine spread to China, Korea, Vietnam, and Japan, where it still remains the principle form of Buddhism. There are over 100,000,000 Pure Land disciples.

    This is the first in a series of talks on the concept of the Pure Land Buddhism I presented at the Shambhala Mountain Center in Colorado.

    In this introduction, some of the topics covered are:

      • Why do pure land practice?
      • Where pure land teachings fit into Tibetan buddhism.
      • Difference between traditional pure land doctrine and Tibetan pure land doctrine.
      • How pure land teachings can help you in the bardos after death.
      • How pure land doctrine is connected to phowa.
      • Qualities of Sukhāvatī and how those in Sukhāvatī can help.
      • Four types of “tulkus”. (Reincarnation of a deceased master.)

     

    Andrewholecek · “Death & the Art of Dying: The Blissful Pure Lands” Audio Talk One
  • Labels: Andrew Holocek, Dying, Pure Land 0 comments | | edit post
    Pure Land
    Soh

     

      Felipe Utiyama

      oprt0c9m1a,r2b1e26 cDeg3 16i45ie  ·
      Dearly beloved! I have a topic I wish to put towards discussion here!
      Noticing my practice suffers from my constant procrastination, I decided to start frequenting a temple, which in my case turned out to be a Jōdoshū temple, a Japanese school of Mahayana, since I speak Japanese and have known the Priest for over a decade.
      Situation is, though, that it seems most Mahayana practice, at least within this school, focuses WAY more in morality and sutra intonation with the specific intent of going to the Pure Land when you die, and THEN dedicating yourself towards liberation, for Amithaba's path is the one towards the liberation of all souls, and that is to be done in the Pure Land.
      This bothers me a little, because it feels quite like the idea of "giving up liberation/moksha/nibbhana because I've been told it takes many lives" even though one has no way of knowing on which live oneself is right now, and giving up because it "feels like the first one". In one specific video I watched, the Japanese monk used the word "foolish" to describe the search for Satori, favouring instead the repetition of "NAMUAMIDABUTSU" with the intent of going to the pure land when you die.
      This, to me, recalls my time as a Catholic, where everyone around me viewed Jesus as someone "bigger than the rest of us", consequently giving up right away on the concept of being "Jesus like" and not evolving much in the spiritual path.
      What are your opinions on the topic? Appreciate your time reading up to here!

      36 Comments


    • Aayush Jain
      I’ve recently begun connecting with Amitabha Buddha and practices surrounding being reborn in his pure land. For me, this doesn’t necessarily mean being reborn in a realm after death that is more conducive to enlightenment, but using Sukhavati as an imaginative exercise to see that the reality we currently find ourselves in is, in fact, already a pure land. This is connected with the idea of pure vision in Vajrayana.
      Soh Wei Yu also mentioned his baseline experience as being similar to descriptions of Amitabha’s pure land in a recent post:
      This is a world where nothing can ever sully and touch that purity and perfection, where the whole of universe/whole of mind is always experienced vividly as that very purity and perfection devoid of any kind of sense of self or perceiver whatsoever that is experiencing the world at a distance from a vantagepoint -- life without ‘self’ is a living paradise free of afflictive/painful emotions, where every color, sound, smell, taste, touch and detail of the world stands out as the very boundless field of pristine awareness, sparkling brilliance/radiance, colorful, high-saturation, HD, luminous, heightened intensity and shining wonderment and magicality, where the surrounding sights, sounds, scents, sensations, smells, thoughts are seen and experienced so clearly down to the tiniest details, vividly and naturally, not just in one sense door but all six, where the world is a fairy-tale like wonderland, revealed anew every moment in its fullest depths as if you are a new-born baby experiencing life for the first time, afresh and never seen before, where life is abundant with peace, joy and fearlessness even amidst the apparent chaos and troubles of life, and everything experienced through all the senses far surpasses any beauty previously experienced, as if the universe is like heaven made of glittering gold and jewels, experienced in complete gapless directness without separation, where life and the universe is experienced in its intense lucidity, clarity, aliveness and vivifying presence not only without intermediary and separation but without center and boundaries - infinitude as vast as an endless night sky is actualized every moment, an infinitude that is simply the vast universe appearing as an empty, distanceless, dimensionless and powerful presencing, where the mountains and stars on the horizon stands out no more distant than one’s breath, and shines forth as intimately as one’s heartbeat, where the cosmic scale of infinitude is actualized even in ordinary activities as the entirety of the universe is always participating as every ordinary activity including walking and breathing and one’s very body (without a trace of an ‘I’ or ‘mine’) is as much the universe/dependent origination in action and there is nothing outside of this boundless exertion/universe, where the purity and infinitude of the marvellous world experienced through being cleansed in all doors of perception is constant. (If the doors of perception were cleansed every thing would appear to man as it is: Infinite. For man has closed himself up, till he sees all things thro' narrow chinks of his cavern. - William Blake)
      You know all the Mahayana Sutras (e.g. Vimalakirti Sutra), old Zen talks about seeing this very earth as pure land and all the Vajrayana talks about the point of tantra as the pure vision of seeing this very world, body, speech and mind in its primordial unfabricated purity as the Buddha field, palace, mandala, mantra and deity? Now you truly get it, you realise everything is really just like that when experienced in its primordial purity and perfection, and that the old sages have not been exaggerating at all. It is as much a literal and precise description of the state of consciousness as it is a metaphor. As I told John Tan before, Amitabha Sutra’s description of pure land resembles my living experience here and now. “To me it just means anatta. When what’s seen, tasted, touched, smelled are in clean purity, everywhere is pure land.” - John Tan, 2019. "If one is free from background self, all manifestations appear in clean purity in taste. Impurities from what I know come from mental constructions." – John Tan, 2020

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Aayush Jain Thank you so much for the insights!
      I had previously decided to take a similar stance towards the religion; my only worry was that THIS view of the Mahayana practice seems like something the priests keep to themselves, favouring the narrative as I described above. I intend on practicing with the intent of furthering myself in the path of realisation, and it already seems my "eagerness" in talking of such is not so much appreciated in this "Sangha" I'm entering now...

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      Aayush Jain
      Felipe Utiyama I see, could be different levels of views that are reserved for practitioners of with sufficient experience. But Garchen Rinpoche, in a recent Amitabha empowerment ,made it clear that both views are true simultaneously. By connecting with Amitabha and praying to be reborn in his pure land, we are generating merit to be reborn in Sukhavati at the relative level. But at the ultimate level, we should see that all sentient beings are Amitabha and that our existence is already a pure land. Perhaps other traditions aren't so vocal about the 'ultimate' view, except for more advanced practitioners.

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    • Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Definitely seems that way!
      I'm lucky enough to have had already been through first awakening, so there was this sense of "everyone is already Buddha" in me from the beginning. Liberation is not "going anywhere", it's staying right here and now, without any filters, leaning into the portals.
      I just hope I don't have to keep those opinions to myself, or to when the Priests give me their attention. Let's see what happens, no matter what, 'namuamidabu'! Hahahah

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    • Aayush Jain
      Rob Burbea also has some interesting talks on the imaginal and connecting with divinities to deepen our experience of the path. This one focuses on practices relating to Amitabha Buddha.
      https://dharmaseed.org/talks/50482/
      I realized this doesn’t directly address your question on Pure Land practitioners saying that devotion can serve as a replacement for insight oriented practices, but hope it helps anyways.
      Dharma Seed - Between Ikon and Eidos: Image & Hermeneutics in Meditation (Part 6 - Amitabha Buddha)
      DHARMASEED.ORG
      Dharma Seed - Between Ikon and Eidos: Image & Hermeneutics in Meditation (Part 6 - Amitabha Buddha)
      Dharma Seed - Between Ikon and Eidos: Image & Hermeneutics in Meditation (Part 6 - Amitabha Buddha)

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Aayush Jain I consider myself a Pantheist (every religion, including the lack thereof, is a valid and "true" way for liberation), so Deities are not only tolerated by me, but I'd even say 'favoured'. I'm very much into chaos magick and Advaita Vedanta, so no problems with THAT. My concern is not finding the support to further my Vipassana practice, for one.

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    • Angelo Grr
      Admin
      I don’t see anything wrong with these types of practices if you authentically resonate with them. Authenticity is key.
      In addition to what I said above you have every right to pursue kensho with or without any one’s permission, be they Buddhist or not.
      I have to say to assert that it is wrong or a waste of time to pursue kensho is not in line with what Buddha/Dogen/etc etc intended. Quite the opposite in my not so humble opinion. Take that as you will 😂.
      Also even if you procrastinate etc that does not preclude kensho 😉. It’s more a matter of whether you are willing to inquire with sincerity (not about what anyone else tells you it’s important to inquire about, rather what is most fundamentally important to you), and what you are willing to let go of.

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      I have had a talk with the temple's Priest before being called in to practice, and I spared no words about my personal experience. Drug use, first awakening happening WHILE on entheogens, etcetera, and he just made questions such as "how old were you when this/that happened", and in the end simply said "Wow, I imagine you're quite unable to talk about this to a regular person, right?", which was absolutely relieving to me. He seems to understand my quest, and allowed me to practice with them, but I do feel like even whilst I'm entering a new Sangha, the TRUE number of people I'll be able to talk with will be about three or four. Nevertheless, it's progress, makes me get out of my house and do something that seems to put me in more direct contact with the Dharma.

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      Angelo Grr
      Admin
      Felipe Utiyama sounds like a good fit!

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    • Angelo Grr
      Admin
      I would be curious about John Tan’s thoughts on this post.

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      John Tan
      Angelo Grr I agree with what u said.
      Infact I never talk about zen or anatta to my family members🤦; contrary I encourage my parents to chant Amitabha and visualize pureland according to what their teachers taught them. It is a dedicated daily practice for my parents. These practices are much more skillfull, intuitive and beneficial for them imo. My dad has very fruitful experiences and he even has dreams of clarity of pureland and trigger many valuable insights, he just discussed with me one of his experience and insight yesterday😁.
      I know many great zen teachers like Ban Zhan, Han Shan and Tien Tai Chih-I also encourage pureland practice. Even the late zen master Sheng Yen also spoke positively of pureland practices. In China, it is not uncommon to see chan and pureland dual practices 禅净双修 but Japan I m not sure, never heard of any.

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      Angelo Grr
      Admin
      John Tan aww that’s great about your father ☺️. Thx for your input.

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    • John Tan
      Yeah. My dad's discipline is superb. At the age of 80, he still want to challenge me certain yoga poses that is even quite challenging for youngsters.🤣 He feared everyone in the family but he makes effort to discipline everyday and work on the pose. 💪😝

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    • Angelo Grr
      Admin
      John Tan incredible. Also fortuitous to have inherited such discipline 🙂

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    • Mr./Ms. JJ
      I personally wouldn't stick around something that doesn't resonate with me.
      I also don't buy their ideas. If there are no other temples near you, you can always look for online groups or create your own meditation group.
      Also I had this cheeky thought: you are procrastinating your practice and now you found a place that procrastinates it till death 😉😂 (don't take this comment too seriously)

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA
      Yea, I'm not necessarily going to expect the same insightful conversations I can have around HERE, but I seem to have become stuck in a loop of thinking about insight and never really putting myself in any situation where I could really concentrate and progress; but I feel comfortable enough with my 'universalist' interpretation of the sutras to have quite a nice time doing it at the ceremonies. As long as I have a Sangha such as this one in here, I can also have some progress with theirs.

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    • Mr./Ms. JJ
      Honestly, I'd check out how you can stop the procrastination. IMO the best way is to build a habit around meditation.
      The way I do it is to stack it onto another habit that I do daily. In this case it's waking up. So every time I wake up I meditate. It could be brushing teeth as well. It's just important that you know that every time you do x you will do y.
      I'd also start with something small like 10 or 15 min of guided meditation. It's more important to build the habit first before trying to increase the time.
      And of course, check in with yourself what's really motivating you to do this. That can help to see how you can strengthen the motivation so you are more likely to follow through when things are a bit tough.

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    • Soh Wei Yu
      Admin
      When you awaken in pure land, Amitabha will tell you to come back and help people. Better to awaken here and help people.
      Traktung Rinpoche:
      Between that death and this birth there was no fracture in the continuity of awareness. Between the two was a moment, a brief moment, spent at Tsog in the pure land of Zangdokpalri. Translucence and joy permeated everything and then Guru Rinpoche told me to return to this place, this time, this circumstance. I was not overjoyed (laughter) and what followed was the conversation which became the Dakini Night Poem.
      In this life my first conscious feeling, for it was long before the brain had acquired language, was “How do I return to that realm of wonder?” This was like a thorn in my heart, a Fisher King Wound, that plagued me throughout my life and pushed me to discover the answer.
      It was only in resolving the duality of awareness appearance into the singularity of AwarenessAppearance …. only in coming to live in the knowing that everything, moment by moment is embraced by and resolves in timeless awareness – the luminous divinity that is Zangdokpalri that this ache was removed.
      That brief, all to brief, moment in Zangdokpalri was 100 years here and then suddenly, all to suddenly, with a whoosh and whirling this life with its encroaching veils of forgetting. Suddenly 9 pounds 14 ounces of flesh and hospital lights. This life has been a game of concealing revealing ….. the movement of a chess piece on the game board. To be a chess piece in the hand of Guru Rinpoche is the greatest of joys – though I did not think so at the moment of birth. – t.k., from A Moments Pause ...interviews forming a autobiography
      …

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    • Soh Wei Yu
      Admin
      https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=DHwcywjXWUA&feature=youtu.be
      Dakini Night Poem
      YOUTUBE.COM
      Dakini Night Poem
      Dakini Night Poem

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    • Soh Wei Yu
      Admin
      I think Greg Goode who wrote books on Advaita and then Madhyamaka and has good insights on these, also went into pure land or jodo shinshu.

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    • Soh Wei Yu
      Admin
      So you can do both practices.
      “Greg is a well-known innovator for having combined the ancient “direct-path” method of self-inquiry with modern electronic media. Nondual inquiry includes the powerful teachings of Advaita Vedanta and Mahayana Buddhism. Greg studied Advaita Vedanta through the Chinmaya Mission, Sri Atmananda, Jean Klein, and Francis Lucille. He studied the Mahayana teachings of Pure Land Buddhism through Jodo-Shinshu, and studied Chinese Middle-Way Buddhism through the lineage of the pre-eminent scholar of Chinese Buddhism, Master Yin-Shun of Taiwan, P.R.C., author of The Way to Buddhahood.”

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Thank you very much for the references!
      It's quite interesting to see this duality in the Mahayana teachings between the laypeople and the monks!

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    • Aditya Prasad
      One thing I've always wondered about chanting mantras in general: they often say it's about how many times you say them, but for me it feels better to do one really authentically than 100 halfheartedly. Is there a consensus view on this? Is one suppose…
      See more

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      I personally prefer voice chanting over internal chanting right now, even though the latter is said to be better; in regards to the number, I like the feeling of doing it "ad infinitum", because there's a moment where the feeling of being "the one chanting the chant" goes away and there's only non-dual"chanting chanting the chanting".

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    • Aayush Jain
      I've heard Garchen Rinpoche say many times that quantity doesn't matter if there is no meaning or devotion behind it, and that counting mantras for the sake of counting is missing the point. That being said, he encourages people to complete the Ngondro accumulations, and has retreats where participants are encouraged to actively keep track of recitations. My interpretation is that counting is important, only in so far as it enables a deeper connection to the practice, and makes one more likely to chant authentically later on. Personally, I count using a mala during formal practice sessions, but don't when I decide to chant spontaneously during the day.

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      • 18w

      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      As with any set of "rules" in the path, I understand the counting as just a way of creating "muscle memory", a means of more reliably getting to the point where you must abandon everything, training/counting included, to achieve liberation.
      Buddhism's purpose, in the end, is to burn even the Buddha, is it not?

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    • Aayush Jain
      Also, it's hard for us as deluded sentient beings to judge what is an authentic recitation and what is driven by impure intent. I remember I would occasionally chant Mani mantras a few years ago when I was in a pretty negative headspace and it seemed like they didn't really do anything. But earlier this year, I randomly started feeling a strong devotion to the path, particularly Vajrayana, which I feel is because of the seeds I planted back when I wasn't as serious about the practice. So that's another super subjective take, I guess.

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      • 18w

      Aditya Prasad
      Aayush Jain This is very interesting. I feel I have a good sense of when I am being authentic and when I am not. Because I was raised in the Advaita tradition, the felt sense of being authentic I describe as like being in the presence of God (or united with Him). The more authentic, the more the tears flow lol. So maybe this is a good indication. Of course, it's also possible that I'm still overlooking something.

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    • Aditya Prasad
      Angelo Grr In your recent video where you talk about "orienting toward the living truth," the above is how that translates for me. I imagine it's related?

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    • Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Amazing example there!
      Sometimes when I pray the rosary with my Catholic grandmother I feel a lot of energy (maybe that's what some schools call "piti") and tears flow naturally. It's a state I've been a handful of times in my life, and I also associat…
      See more

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    • Angelo Grr
      Admin
      Aditya Prasad yes very good example 🙂

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    • Aayush Jain
      Ah, I see. I’ve also heard Malcolm mention that you can use mantras to raise practice to the level of Dharmata, to aid in Dzogchen practice. So they can be chanted while connecting with insights, which I guess is one way to tell if the practice is authentic.
      But the more I learn about and practice mantras the more vast a subject they seem! No wonder the ancient Indians felt it could be an entire science! And of course there are so many different practices involving mantras, so I imagine there is no one size fits all answer. I think Nafis Rahman posted some interesting resources about mantras a while back, I’ll see if I can dig them up when I get a chance.

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    • Aditya Prasad
      Felipe Utiyama Given the above, I wonder if it's worthwhile to recite the nembutsu while holding the intention for Amitabha to help awaken you rather than to be reborn in his pure land. I imagine he'd sort of have to oblige, being a buddha and all. And even if it feels a little weird to go against the intention of the temple, I have a hard time that bodhicitta is ever unethical. Not that I know anything.

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      Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Good sir, you seem to always have some very insightful comments!
      I take an open stance about Nenbutsu. It is said one should 'abandon oneself in Amitabha', so I do it; the difference is that it seems most people surrender in faith/hope of a pure land that comes after death, and I focus on surrendering the feeling inside me that "there is something to be done". For me, that's a very honest way to still 'seek salvation', whilst nevertheless undestanding that the Pure Land is HERE AND NOW, and asking for Amitabha to 'save me' by allowing me to see and feel it, unfiltered.

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    • Felipe Utiyama
      Author
      Also, I feel that, just like in case of emergency depressurisation in an airplane, the most logical way of "liberating every living being" would be to liberate oneself first, no?
      Feels weird to say one should die first and then start worrying about the oxygen masks...

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    • Mr./Ms. AS
      Michael Hernandez - you have some experience with Pure Land, yeah?

    • Reply
    • 18w
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    'Must Reads'

    • 1) Thusness/PasserBy's Seven Stages of Enlightenment (Available in Languages: AR, BO, DA, DE, EN, ES, FR, HI, ID, IT, JA, KO, MS, NE, PL, PT-BR, PT-PT, RU, SR, TA, TH, VI, ZH)
    • 2) On Anatta (No-Self), Emptiness, Maha and Ordinariness, and Spontaneous Perfection (Available in Languages: AR, BO, DA, DE, EN, ES, FR, HI, ID, IT, JA, KO, NE, PL, PT-BR, PT-PT, RU, SR, TA, TH, VI, ZH)
    • 3) Buddha Nature is NOT "I Am" (Available in Languages: AR, BO, DA, DE, EN, ES, FR, HI, ID, IT, JA, KO, NE, PL, PT-BR, PT-PT, RU, SR, TA, TH, VI, ZH)
    • (简体中文)“真如”/PasserBy “过路人”开悟的七个阶段
    • (繁體中文)“真如”/PasserBy “過路人”開悟的七個階段
    • 4) Realization and Experience and Non-Dual Experience from Different Perspectives (Available in Languages: EN, ZH)
    • 5) Different Degress of No-Self: Non-Doership, Non-dual, Anatta, Total Exertion and Dealing with Pitfalls (Available in Languages: EN, ES, DE, FR, HI, JA, KO, PT-BR, PT-PT, TA, ZH)
    • 6) Nice Advice and Expression of Anatta from Yin Ling and Albert Hong + What is Experiential Insight?
    • 7) Differentiating I AM, One Mind, No Mind and Anatta
    • 8) Beyond Awareness: reflections on identity and awareness
    • 9) No Awareness Does Not Mean Non-Existence of Awareness
    • 10) A Summary of Seeing that Frees by Rob Burbea
    • 11) Experience, Realization, View, Practice and Fruition
    • 12) Book Recommendations 2019 and Practice Advices
    • 13) Don't Bombard with our conversations and Don't Stereotype
    • 14) Compilation of Post Anatta Advise
    • 15) Finding An Awakened Spiritual Teacher and Mentor
    • 16) My Commentary on Bahiya Sutta (written shortly by Soh in October 2010 after his Anatman/No-Self breakthrough)
    • 17) Self and phenomena as a learnt, reified concept
    • 18) Working for Sentient Beings
    • 19) The Disease of Non-Conceptuality
    • 20) Self Enquiry, Neti Neti and the Process of Elimination
    • 21) Genuine Realisation is Rare, Most Claimants are Delusional
    • 22) Soh的觉悟之路:2010~2013年的心性体悟录 / Soh's Chinese Articles on Experiential Realizations from 2010 to 2013 (English Translations Also Available)

    Free E-Books

    • The Awakening to Reality Practice Guide and AtR Guide - abridged version
    • Awakening to Reality: A Guide to the Nature of Mind (Long Version)
    • Soh’s Journal and Notes on Spiritual Awakening

    Audio

    • The Awakening to Reality Practice Guide on SoundCloud
    • Awakening to Reality Articles on SoundCloud
    • Dharmawheel Writings by Krodha/Kyle Dixon
    • Reddit Writings by Krodha/Kyle Dixon

    Insightful Materials

    • Great Resource of Buddha's Teachings
    • A Compilation of Yuan Yin Lao Ren's Teachings
    • Measureless Mind (PDF) - Buddha's Nikaya Teachings
    • The Meaning of Stream Entry
    • Buddhahood: The End of All Emotional/Mental Afflictions and Knowledge Obscurations
    • Dzogchen View / Basis by Dzogchen Teacher Acarya Malcolm Smith
    • Marshland Flowers - Overview of Buddhist Teachings in All Three Traditions
    • Marshland Flowers - Overview of Buddhist Teachings in All Three Traditions (PDF)
    • Simply Always Awake - Youtube Pointers by Angelo Dilullo
    • Acarya Malcolm Dharmawheel Posts + Astus, Krodha (Kyle Dixon), Geoff (Jnana), Meido Moore
    • A Compilation of Some of Kyle Dixon (Krodha)'s Wonderful Reddit Postings Part 1 to 8 (Audio Available in SoundCloud)
    • The Universal Door of Miracles: Experiencing Avalokiteśvara/Guanyin’s Responsive Blessings
    • The Heart of Zen by Master Huang Po: The Recorded Discourses of Chan Master Huangbo Xiyun – A Modern, Fresh Translation

    Stickied Posts

    • Thusness “真如”/PasserBy “过路人”开悟的七个阶段 - Chinese Translation of Thusness/PasserBy's Seven Stages of Enlightenment
    • 论无我,空性,摩诃与平凡,和自然圆满 - Chinese Translation of On Anatta (No-Self), Emptiness, Maha and Ordinariness, and Spontaneous Perfection
    • Soh的觉悟之路:2010~2013年的心性体悟录 / Soh's Chinese Articles on Experiential Realizations from 2010 to 2013 (English Translations Also Available)
    • 悟入实相 (AtR Chinese)
    • Marshland Flowers
    • Revealing Nagarjuna Series: All 12 Parts and John Dunne's Free Online Resources
    • The Concept of Sunyata (Emptiness) in Mahayana Sutras
    • The Intertwined Path: Dependent Origination and Emptiness in Buddhadharma – A Unified Perspective
    • Emptiness as Dependent Arising and Causal Efficacy: Distinguishing Water-Moon from Rabbit-Horn

    Recommended Links

    • ZANGTHAL: Arcaya Malcolm Smith's Site
    • Hong Wen Liang's Zen Teachings (Chinese)
    • Way of Bodhi
    • Measureless Mind
    • 84000 - Buddha's Teachings
    • Byoma Kusuma Buddhadharma Sangha
    • James Corrigan's New Site
    • James Corrigan's Articles (Old Link)
    • Integrated Daniel
    • Empy Sky Vipassana Sangha
    • Vimalakirti Buddhist Center
    • Dream Datum: Self discovery paths related articles
    • Sim Pern Chong's New Website
    • Backup of Awakening to Reality Blog

    About Me

    • PasserBy
    • Soh
    • YL

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