Refining Our Perception of Reality
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**** {{i|Pervasive Insubstantial Evenness|127}} | **** {{i|Pervasive Insubstantial Evenness|127}} | ||
**** {{i|Spontaneous Presence|156}} | **** {{i|Spontaneous Presence|156}} | ||
− | II. The Spiritual Path, How to Cultivate Experience in Meditation 216 | + | *** {{i|II. The Spiritual Path, How to Cultivate Experience in Meditation|216}} |
− | III. The Conduct That Accompanies the View and Meditation 225 | + | *** {{i|III. The Conduct That Accompanies the View and Meditation|225}} |
− | IV. The Final Result, Arrival at the Stage of Eternal Liberation 241 | + | *** {{i|IV. The Final Result, Arrival at the Stage of Eternal Liberation|241}} |
− | Acknowledgments 257 | + | * {{i|Acknowledgments|257}} |
− | Appendix: The Excellent Path of Devotion 259 | + | * {{i|Appendix: The Excellent Path of Devotion|259}} |
− | An autobiography by Sera Khandro | + | **** ''An autobiography by Sera Khandro'' |
− | Index 299 | + | * {{i|Index|299}} |
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|PublisherLogo=File:Shambhala logo.jpg | |PublisherLogo=File:Shambhala logo.jpg | ||
|BookParentPage=Library | |BookParentPage=Library | ||
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Revision as of 12:54, 11 February 2020
Dakini Sukha Vajra, widely known as Sera Khandro, wrote this commentary of an account by the great Dudjom Lingpa of visions he had of enlightened beings and the teachings he received from them regarding our perception of reality.
This book contains four Tibetan texts in translation. First, The Excellent Path to Liberation explains how to give our attention to the teachings, and how to ground our spiritual practice in harmonious relationships with others and the world at large. Second, Dudjom Lingpa’s account of his visionary journey, Enlightenment without Meditation, teaches by example that as practitioners we should ask ourselves sincere questions concerning our perception of reality, and that we should not be content with superficial answers.
In the third book, Sera Khandro’s commentary, she presents Dudjom Lingpa’s work within two frameworks. She first clarifies the view on which the spiritual path is founded, the path of meditation; the ensuing conduct that reflects and enriches meditative experience; and the path’s result—awakening and enlightenment. Next she illuminates the subtleties of the great perfection view, the four tantric bonds: nonexistence, a single nature, pervasive insubstantial evenness, and spontaneous presence.
Source: Shambhala Publications
Citation | Zangpo, Ngawang (Hugh Leslie Thompson), trans. Refining Our Perception of Reality: Sera Khandro's Commentary on Dudjom Lingpa's Account of His Visionary Journey. Boston: Snow Lion Publications, 2013. |
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