[无量香光 · 显密文库 · 手机站]
fowap.goodweb.top
{返回首页}


The Decisive Moment
 
{返回 Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche 文集}
{返回网页版}
点击:1982

The Decisive Moment

byElizabeth Mattis Namgyel

The way we respond to the stream of momentary experiences we call “our life” determines our move toward our habitual search for security or toward awakening. The Buddhist tradition has many ways of explaining our tendencies to shrink from experience, but all these explanations have one thing in common: pain and suffering proliferate when we can’t stay present with what we encounter. When we get overwhelmed by the rich energy of experience, we put a lid on it, try to consume it, embellish it, or react to it in one way or another.

The Buddhist tradition uses a poignant image of an old blind woman to illustrate this decisive moment. Her blindness symbolizes that the truth overwhelms her. In fact, this blindness, or ignorance serves as her means of escape from resting naturally in the open fullness of experience. Does this tendency have a beginning? We can’t say. But this example indicates that we can recognize this tendency in each moment of our lives and know that we have a choice.

Unless we engage situations that challenge habitual mind, such as meditation practice and retreats where most of our usual distractions aren’t present, we often don’t experience this choice. My friend Rosemary went into her first retreat many years ago. The minute she entered her cabin, the prospect of facing the rawness of her undistracted mind posed an excruciating threat. She bolted out the door and just started running. As she ran deeper into the woods and farther from her cabin, a question arose: “Where can I possibly go?” Unable to answer, she went back to her cabin. Thus began her venture into the exploration of mind, the unknown, and the rest.

To see that we have a choice either to stay present or to run is a powerful thing. It gives us the option of reclaiming our life, which means responding intelligently to what we encounter. What would happen if we made a conscious choice to rest in open stillness instead of panicking? What would happen if, like Rosemary, we went back to our cabin to sit?

The example of the old blind woman raises an important question: if our struggle finds its genesis in our habit of turning away from the open state, what would happen if we habituated ourselves to staying open?

This excerpt is from The Power of An Open Question, Introduction, pp. 3-4.


{返回 Dzigar Kongtrul Rinpoche 文集}
{返回网页版}
{返回首页}

上一篇:Take Charge of your Practice
下一篇:The Haunted Dominion of Mind
 Being A Lamp For Others
 Considering, What Serves? Instead o..
 The Practice of Loving-Kindness and..
 What are the Karmic Implications of..
 Finding Freedom from Lenchak: Exami..
 Big Self - Small Self: A Matter of ..
 Take Charge of your Practice
 Attaining Enlightenment – A Childs ..
 The Question of Euthanasia of Anima..
 Taking Refuge: Buddha as the Guide..
全文 标题
 
【佛教文章随机阅读】
 我执是一种贪心,他执是一种嗔心。如果对他人执着的是一种爱,这也是嗔恨心吗?[栏目:达真堪布·学修问答]
 三十八世 睦州道明禅师[栏目:佛祖道影·再增订版]
 静夜思语(无华)[栏目:佛教期刊文章选摘]
 知恩感恩报恩是人生第一法[栏目:仁焕法师]
 念大悲咒感应(宣化上人)[栏目:大悲咒感应事迹]
 唯识甄微[栏目:巨赞法师]
 法海集一 第二部分:菩提心与空正见 3 实执诤论[栏目:法海集]
 真正的放生[栏目:实修教言]
 14.四婆罗门得道[栏目:菩萨与罗汉的故事]
 二 施带者[栏目:长老尼之譬喻]


{返回首页}

△TOP

- 手机版 -
[无量香光·显密文库·佛教文集]
教育、非赢利、公益性的佛教文化传播
白玛若拙佛教文化传播工作室制作
www.goodweb.top Copyrights reserved
(2003-2015)
站长信箱:yjp990@163.com