Osho: Drive All Blame Into One Chogyam Trungpa: Drive All Blames Into One Pema Chodron: Drive All Blames Into One Jamgon Kongtrul: Drive All Blame Into One Alan Wallace: Blame Everything on One Thing Rabten & Dhargyey: Banish the One Object of Every Blame. Dilgo Khyentse: Lay the Blame for Everything on One WHEN EVIL FILLS THE WORLD AND ITS INHABITANTS, CHANGE ADVERSE CONDITIONS INTO THE PATH OF AWAKENING BE GRATEFUL TO EVERYONE  Using Adversity   Jamgon Kongtrul

Drive All Blame Into One
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Whether you are physically ill, troubled in your mind, insulted by others, or bothered by enemies and disputes, in short, whatever annoyance, major or minor, comes up in your life or affairs, do not lay the blame on anything else, thinking that such-and-such caused this or that problem. Rather, you should consider:

This mind grasps at a self where there is no self. From time without beginning until now, it has, in following its own whims in samsara, perpetrated various nonvirtuous actions. All the sufferings I now experience are the results of those actions. No one else is to blame; this egocherishing attitude is to blame. I shall do whatever I can to subdue it.

Skillfully and vigorously direct all dharma at egoclinging. As Shantideva writes in Entering the Way of Awakening:

What troubles there are in the world,
How much fear and suffering there is.
If all of these arise from ego-clinging,
What will this great demon do to me?

and

For hundreds of lives in samsara
He has caused me trouble.
Now I recollect all my grudges
And shall destroy you, you selfish mind.

From The Great Path of Awakening : An Easily Accessible Introduction for Ordinary People by Jamgon Kongtrul, translated by Ken McLeod. Copyright 1993 by Ken McLeod.
Published by arrangement with Shambhala Publications, Inc., Boston.

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Source of the biography of Jamgon Kongtrul given in the text. A delightful introduction to the deepest understanding of visualization, a particular way of cultivating religious imagination and full-bodied practice. Jamgon Kongtrul, a master practitioner and one of Tibet's most prolific writers, composed this text as a guide to the effective practice of tantric Buddhist meditation. Written in the style of the Tibetan songs of realization, the text leads a way along a clear path of meditative self-transformation; this revised and updated edition includes a commentary by Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche
The first modern (19th century) commentary on the root text, and the primary source for all subsequent commentaries. Timeless, honest, straightforward and always insightful about our human nature. A must-have for any Mind Training practitioner.