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Tasting Birth and Death
Tasting Birth and Death
Tasting Birth and Death
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Tasting Birth and Death

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An introduction to the foundational meditation system of Tibetan Buddhism, this booklet gives comprehensive instructions on four essential contemplations - precious human birth, impermanence and death, karma, and suffering.  Through practicing this meditation system, one will truly engage with the Buddhist path and develop qualities of spaciousness and non-attachment.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateJan 18, 2016
ISBN9781524203900
Tasting Birth and Death

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    Book preview

    Tasting Birth and Death - Jampa Thaye

    Tasting Birth and Death

    An Introduction to the Meditation System called ‘The Four Thoughts that Turn the Mind to Dharma’

    Jampa Thaye

    Dechen Foundation

    Copyright © 2001 Lama Jampa Thaye

    First printed in the UK, 2001 by Ganesha Press. eBook edition by Dechen Foundation 2019.

    All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher. The author’s moral rights have been asserted.

    Dechen Foundation is an association of Sakya and Karma Kagyu Buddhist centres founded by Lama Jampa Thaye under the authority of Karma Thinley Rinpoche.

    Contents

    Introduction

    The Four Thoughts

    Precious Human Birth

    Impermanence

    Karma, Action and Result

    The Defects of Samsara

    Meditation on the Four Thoughts

    Appendix: A Brief Guide to Buddhist Masters Referred to

    Introduction

    The practice of dharma, the teachings of the Buddha, strips away the delusions that obscure the true nature of our mind and keep us locked in suffering. Meditation is the essence of the Buddha’s teachings and this booklet gives some guidance on the system of meditation known as ‘The Four Thoughts that Turn the Mind to Dharma.’ These meditations especially bring about the quality of renunciation. Renunciation means letting go of attachment to worldly things and is the essential foundation of all dharma practices.

    The concept of renunciation is very important in dharma since it is easy for us to mistake the meaning of this term. We may think of it merely as external renunciation, such as the taking of monastic vows. Whilst such vows may be very beneficial if we have the right aptitudes and circumstances in our life, we must not confuse the adoption of external patterns of behaviour with real renunciation. Dharma is essentially a process of stripping away all that is obscuring our potential for enlightenment, our buddha nature. Therefore adoption of any special kind of lifestyle or characteristics may, in some cases, actually create a further level of obscuration.

    What is true renunciation? It is the simplification of our life and attitudes. As the great Atisha says, ‘Always shed complexity, always simplify your life in order to keep your dharma practice alive’. Therefore renunciation is actually about letting go. Before we seriously engage with the dharma teachings, we have many pursuits, many ambitions and many objects with which we surround ourselves, all of which we feel to be absolutely necessary to our security and happiness. In fact, not only are these things unnecessary for happiness, they are actually entanglements which further alienate us from buddha nature. We have to let go of these things.

    This letting go should be understood in a very joyful way. If one realises that one has been unnecessarily tying oneself up in knots over something that is completely useless, one’s feeling when released is one of delight and pleasure. So it should not be understood as something grim or artificial, or the imposition of some very hard task upon us, but as something extremely pleasing, light and spacious. This is the simplicity of renunciation.

    The Four Thoughts

    The many dharma teachings may be categorised into three ‘vehicles’ or ‘yanas’: the hinayana (lesser vehicle), mahayana (great vehicle) and vajrayana (indestructible vehicle). The Four Thoughts are the fundamental teachings of the first of these, the hinayana, and as such are the foundation of the entire dharma. Ultimately they come from the discourses (sutras) of Lord Buddha, but the particular form explained here derives from the teachings of such masters as Nagarjuna and Shantideva. These were great Buddhist masters who lived after the passing of Lord Buddha and gave many teachings that made the dharma easier to understand and practise.

    The true nature of our mind is buddha nature, which bears the

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