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Chöd Quotes

Chöd quote from classy quote

Without discursive thought it is just dharma practice. Hope together with aim obscures. One does not cut through pride by meditatively cultivating the desire for happiness. If there is hope, even the hope for buddhas, it is a negative force. If there is apprehension, even apprehension about hells, it is a negative force.

~ Machik Labdrön

Machik Labdrön Buddhism Chöd Hope Pride Self Attachment Tibetan Buddhism

Chöd is conventionally and misleadingly seen as analogous to, if not derived from, shamanic initiatory dismemberment visions, as well as dualistic anti-body ascetic practices. Two of the elements most commonly referenced by authors in their identification of Chöd and/as shamanism—the dismemberment/sacrifice of the body and demonology—are presented in an oversimplistic fashion. In the first instance, the numerous Buddhist precursors for the offering of the body provide ample testimony to the ethical and meritorious status such acts have in the Buddhist imagination. As for the demonology of Chöd, one must keep in mind the psychology and philosophy of mind that explicitly undergirds the discourse of Düd [Skt: mārā] in Chöd.

~ Michelle Sorensen

Michelle Sorensen 2013 Buddhism Chöd Dehadāna Mara

Without hope, Chöd practitioners are freed from the limits of hope and fear; having cut the ropes of grasping, definitely enlightened, where does one go?

~ Machik Labdrön

Machik Labdrön Buddhism Chöd Enlightenment Fear Hope Tibetan Buddhism

Dharma practice means physical hardship; it means that you shouldn't be pansies about it. You should exert yourselves wholeheartedly to engage in the practice, so that it will affect your body, speech, and mind.

~ Ngagpa Yeshe Dorje

Ngagpa Yeshe Dorje Buddhism Chöd Dharma Practice Tantra

If we lack the proper antidotes of emptiness and bodhichitta, we will not be able to control our minds when frightening appearances manifest. It is considered a sign of progress in this practice if we go unconscious, and then, when we wake up, have forgotten our names and whose bodies we have! This is the ceasing of clinging to the body.

~ Zongtrul Losang Tsöndru

Zongtrul Losang Tsöndru Buddhism Chöd Emptiness Mahayana Selflessness Tibetan Buddhism

When we are meditating in a haunted graveyard, or even in our rooms, frightening external and internal appearances may arise during Chöd practice. If this happens, check the two 'superstitions'—the external, frightening appearance, and the internal appearance of the inherently existent 'I' that is frightened. Do they exist from their own sides? With determination, check for the 'I' that experiences fear, whether of a sight or a sound. Recalling that our purpose is to compassionately sacrifice ourselves to the spirits, and remembering emptiness of the three spheres of giving, we mix our minds with space and visualize the spirits consuming our bodies as well as our sense of an inherently existent self. After the spirits have eaten the body, again investigate the two superstitions. It is by checking for the independent 'I' that we come to realize emptiness.

~ Zongtrul Losang Tsöndru

Zongtrul Losang Tsöndru Anatman Buddhism Chöd Emptiness Sacrifice Fear Mahayana Selflessness Superstition
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