Padampa Sangye: Difference between revisions
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:Practise them like a hungry yak eating grass; | :Practise them like a hungry yak eating grass; | ||
:Reach their result, like the sun coming out from behind the clouds. | :Reach their result, like the sun coming out from behind the clouds.<ref>Quoted in ''[[The Words of My Perfect Teacher]]'', p.11, by [[Patrul Rinpoche]]</ref> | ||
==Tibetan== | ==Tibetan== | ||
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:འབྲས་བུའི་དུས་ཉི་མ་སྤྲིན་ལས་གྲོལ་བ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས། | :འབྲས་བུའི་དུས་ཉི་མ་སྤྲིན་ལས་གྲོལ་བ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས། | ||
==References== | |||
<small><references/></small> | |||
==Further Reading== | ==Further Reading== |
Latest revision as of 03:27, 24 July 2022
Padampa Sangye (Tib. ཕ་དམ་པ་སངས་རྒྱས་, Wyl. pha dam pa sangs rgyas; Skt. Paramabuddha) (d.1117) — the great Indian siddha visited Tibet and Bhutan several times. His main disciple was Machik Labdrön (1055-1149) who founded the lineage of Chö in Tibet and Bhutan.
Both he and Machik Labdrön meditated in caves near Taktsang Monastery in Bhutan.
Quotations
- Listen to the teachings like a deer listening to music;
- Contemplate them like a northern nomad shearing sheep;
- Meditate on them like a dumb person savouring food;
- Practise them like a hungry yak eating grass;
- Reach their result, like the sun coming out from behind the clouds.[1]
Tibetan
- ཆོས་ཉན་པའི་དུས་སུ་རི་དྭགས་སྒྲ་ལ་ཉན་པ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས།
- བསམ་པའི་དུས་སུ་བྱང་པས་ལུག་འབྲེག་པ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས།
- བསྒོམ་པའི་དུས་སུ་གླེན་པས་རོ་མྱོང་བ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས།
- བསྒྲུབ་པའི་དུས་སུ་གཡག་ལྟོག་གིས་རྩྭ་ཟ་བ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས།
- འབྲས་བུའི་དུས་ཉི་མ་སྤྲིན་ལས་གྲོལ་བ་ལྟ་བུ་ཞིག་དགོས།
References
- ↑ Quoted in The Words of My Perfect Teacher, p.11, by Patrul Rinpoche
Further Reading
- Padampa Sangye and Chökyi Senge, Lion of Siddhas: The Life and Teachings of Padampa Sangye, translated by David Molk with Lama Tsering Wangdu Rinpoche, Snow Lion Publications, 2008.
- Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche & Padampa Sangye, The Hundred Verses of Advice—Tibetan Buddhist Teachings on What Matters Most, Shambhala, 2006.