Gate Eighty-six
Read the following, place it in your heart and sleep on it. Then, tomorrow, live it until evening when you can leave a brief comment on what you may have received during the process.
Development is a gate of Dharma illumination; for [with it] we realize all dharmas concerning the root of good.
Development : the act or process of growth; progress.
By “Dharma Gate”, We mean a teaching or practice that can lead to spiritual growth: some kind of positive outcome in terms of our practice. A way to approach the truth.
Koan: "All of us are born with the potential to be compassionate, where we wish for others to be free of suffering and its causes. We can develop that capacity to bring incredible benefit to ourselves and others.
The best way to start developing compassion is to limit our scope to the people we encounter in real life and online, and maybe some animals. Slowly, we train to extend our compassion to include everyone: those we like, strangers, and even people we really don’t like at all. We continue until our compassion includes the entire world – yes, even cockroaches!
Compassion has both an emotional and rational component. Emotionally, we need to appreciate the interdependence of all life on this planet. The global economy and everything we enjoy – food, clothing, gadgets, homes, vehicles and so on – comes about through the hard work of others. Without others, we’d have no roads, electricity, fuel, water or food. This alone naturally makes us grateful, a happy state of mind that leads to what we call “heart-warming love.” The more we reflect on this sense of gratitude, the stronger we’ll cherish others, like a mother who’d feel terrible if something awful happened to her only child. We feel sad at others’ misfortune, but we don’t pity or feel sorry for them. We empathize, as if their problems were our own. The rational basis for extending our compassion equally to everyone is so obvious, yet it’s something that many people don’t even consider: everyone is equal in wanting to be happy, and everyone is also equal in wanting to be free of unhappiness and suffering. These two facts remain true regardless of whether someone is close or distant from us, and regardless of what they might do. Even if someone causes a great deal of harm, they’re doing it out of ignorance, confusion and delusion, thinking mistakenly that it will benefit them or society. It’s not because they’re inherently bad; no one is inherently “bad.” Therefore, it’s reasonable and appropriate to have compassion for them, because just as we don’t want to suffer, neither do they."
合掌 仁道 生開 - gassho, Jindo Shokai
stlah
Read the following, place it in your heart and sleep on it. Then, tomorrow, live it until evening when you can leave a brief comment on what you may have received during the process.
Development is a gate of Dharma illumination; for [with it] we realize all dharmas concerning the root of good.
Development : the act or process of growth; progress.
By “Dharma Gate”, We mean a teaching or practice that can lead to spiritual growth: some kind of positive outcome in terms of our practice. A way to approach the truth.
Koan: "All of us are born with the potential to be compassionate, where we wish for others to be free of suffering and its causes. We can develop that capacity to bring incredible benefit to ourselves and others.
The best way to start developing compassion is to limit our scope to the people we encounter in real life and online, and maybe some animals. Slowly, we train to extend our compassion to include everyone: those we like, strangers, and even people we really don’t like at all. We continue until our compassion includes the entire world – yes, even cockroaches!
Compassion has both an emotional and rational component. Emotionally, we need to appreciate the interdependence of all life on this planet. The global economy and everything we enjoy – food, clothing, gadgets, homes, vehicles and so on – comes about through the hard work of others. Without others, we’d have no roads, electricity, fuel, water or food. This alone naturally makes us grateful, a happy state of mind that leads to what we call “heart-warming love.” The more we reflect on this sense of gratitude, the stronger we’ll cherish others, like a mother who’d feel terrible if something awful happened to her only child. We feel sad at others’ misfortune, but we don’t pity or feel sorry for them. We empathize, as if their problems were our own. The rational basis for extending our compassion equally to everyone is so obvious, yet it’s something that many people don’t even consider: everyone is equal in wanting to be happy, and everyone is also equal in wanting to be free of unhappiness and suffering. These two facts remain true regardless of whether someone is close or distant from us, and regardless of what they might do. Even if someone causes a great deal of harm, they’re doing it out of ignorance, confusion and delusion, thinking mistakenly that it will benefit them or society. It’s not because they’re inherently bad; no one is inherently “bad.” Therefore, it’s reasonable and appropriate to have compassion for them, because just as we don’t want to suffer, neither do they."
- Study buddhism; link here
Most note worthy replies :
What I know now
That I didn't know then
Is the importance of the right soil, the right sun, the right water.
Flowers grow and bloom
Flowers grow and bloom
By being
Nothing but themselves
合掌 仁道 生開 - gassho, Jindo Shokai
stlah
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