tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6232195.post2811558317059012005..comments2024-02-19T14:46:23.841-06:00Comments on Feringhee: The India Diaries: Mysterious waysSirensongs: Indologist At Largehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15101429745244414871noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6232195.post-67795346402773886382008-02-08T13:33:00.000-06:002008-02-08T13:33:00.000-06:00very cool. I will have to link this to my blog. ...very cool. I will have to link this to my blog. I'm all for kick-ass, hardcore longhaired female yoginis since I am one myself...:);)<BR/><BR/>BTW, seeing HHDL twice this year, of course, not for free -- in April and July he'll be in the good old Midwest. My teacher, Gelek Rimpoche, is sponsoring his visit in April. Rimpoche is the grand-nephew (great-nephew? can never keep those straight) of the 13th DL.Linda-Samahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07664989345039365084noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6232195.post-10905704404085249042008-02-08T09:41:00.000-06:002008-02-08T09:41:00.000-06:00This is a long quote. feel free to delete/edit.Thi...This is a long quote. feel free to delete/edit.<BR/><BR/>This is from the garuda purana, and explains the same thing as the above, although a brahman is in reality is an idealogical opposite of budhhist shunyata..<BR/><BR/>"45-48. This individual, leaving his own body, goes to the abode of Yama. What is the good of association with wife, mother, father, son and others?<BR/><BR/>The world of change is verily the root of misery. He who is in it is afflicted with misery. He who abandons it becomes happy,--otherwise never.<BR/><BR/>This world of change, which is the source of all misery, the seat of all calamities, and the refuge of all sins, should be abandoned at once.<BR/><BR/>A man bound in fetters of iron or wood may be released, but from the fetters of son and wife can never be freed.<BR/><BR/>p. 160<BR/><BR/>49-51. So long as the being makes attachments pleasant to the mind, so long shall the dagger of sorrow pierce his heart.<BR/><BR/>People are destroyed every day by the desire for great wealth. Alas! Fie upon the foods of the senses, which steal away the senses of the body.<BR/><BR/>Just as the fish, covetous of flesh, does not see the iron hook, so the embodied, covetous of pleasure, does not see the torments of Yama.<BR/><BR/>52-55. Those men who do not understand what is good and what is not good for them, who constantly pursue evil courses, and are intent on the filling of the belly, are destined for hell, O Bird.<BR/><BR/>Sleep, sexual pleasure, and eating are common to all creatures. Who possesses knowledge is called a man, who is devoid of it is called a beast.<BR/><BR/>Foolish men are tormented at break of day by nature's calls; when the sun is in the meridian by hunger and thirst; in the night by passion and sleep.<BR/><BR/>All those beings who are attached to their bodies, wealth, wife and other things, are born and die deluded by ignorance, alas!<BR/><BR/>56-57. Therefore should attachment be shunned always, It is not possible to give up everything. therefore should friendship with the great be cultivated, as a remedy for attachment.<BR/><BR/>p. 161<BR/><BR/>Attachment to the good, discrimination, and purity of the eyes--the man who has not these is blind. How shall he not tread evil ways?<BR/><BR/>58. All those deluded men who turn away from the duties of their respective castes and orders, and do not understand the highest righteousness, perish fruitlessly.<BR/><BR/>59-60. Some are intent upon ceremonies, attached to the practice of vows; with self enveloped in ignorance the imposters go about.<BR/><BR/>The men who are attached to the ceremonial alone are satisfied with mere names, deluded by the repetitions of mantras, oblations and other things, and by elaborate rituals.<BR/><BR/>61-62. The fools, bewildered by My magic, desire to obtain the invisible by single meals, fasts and other restraints, and by the emaciation of the body.<BR/><BR/>Of those who have no discrimination, what liberation can there be by bodily tortures alone? What great serpent is killed by beating the anthill alone? 1"chttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00557968394370176590noreply@blogger.com