Chogyam Trungpa: Don`t Wallow in Self-pity Pema Chodron: Don`t Wallow in Self-pity Jamgon Kongtrul: Don`t Make a Fuss Alan Wallace: Do Not Be Boastful Rabten & Dhargyey: Do Not Be Boastful. Dilgo Khyentse: Don`t Take What You do too Seriously LIBERATE YOURSELF BY EXAMINING AND ANALYZING DON`T BE JEALOUS/B  Guidelines   Chogyam Trungpa

Don't Wallow in Self-pity

 

 
My Book on Tai Chi Imagery
Don't feel sorry for yourself. If somebody else achieves success or inherits a million dollars, don't waste time feeling bad because it wasn't you.

From Training the Mind & Cultivating Loving-Kindness by Chogyam Trungpa , copyright 1993 by Diana Mukpo.
(Official Chogyam Trungpa Website)
Published by arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc., Boston.

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This site provides an on-line database of commentaries on the Tibetan Buddhist meditation practices of lojong (Mind Training) and tonglen.


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A contemporary reinterpretation of the proverbs, building on Jamgon Kongtrul's 19th century commentary, by the first man to teach Mind Training extensively in the West.
Fascinating autobiographical account of Trungpa's early life and training in Tibet, his daring escape to India, and his teaching in the West.
Instructions for the Bardo (intermediate state between lives) from the Tibetan tradition. Also applicable to all periods of uncertainty and life transitions.
Extracts from Trungpa's key teachings.
'The problem is that the ego can convert anything to its own use, even spirituality'. His incisive, compassionate teachings serve to wake us up from this trick that we all play on ourselves, and to offer us a far brighter reality: the true and joyous liberation that inevitably involves letting go of the self rather than working to improve it.
Incisive teachings by one of the most influential Tibetan Buddhist teachers in the West. A central theme: giving up our hopes that meditation will bring us bliss or tranquility or make us better or wiser people or otherwise serve our ego's purposes, and realizing the liberation that is right here within our pain and confusion and neurosis.