Becoming a Child of the Buddhas
Book
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Description
The aphorisms of the Seven-Point Mind Training present a powerful and counter-intuitive call to Buddhist practice—view reality as dreamlike, contemplate the kindness of your enemies, give up expectations of reward, change yourself but remain as you are! When he fled Tibet, Gomo Tulku carried in his heart this widely studied Tibetan text, which he turned to time and again when faced with difficulties in life. Having relied on this practice to transform his own hardships, he shares here an inspired commentary to help us get through ours. (Source: Wisdom Publications)
Citation
Gomo Tulku. Becoming a Child of the Buddhas: A Simple Clarification of the Root Verses of Seven Point Mind Training.Translated by Joan Nicell. Somerville: Wisdom Publications, 1998.
Publisher Link
Texts Translated
- sgo mo sprul sku. blo sbyong rtsa tshig la mchan 'grel. No source found.
Blo sbyong don bdun ma
Blo sbyong don bdun ma. (Lojong Döndünma). In Tibetan, "Seven Points of Mind Training"; an influential Tibetan work in the blo sbyong ("mind training") genre. The work was composed by the Bka' gdams scholar 'Chad ka ba ye shes rdo rje, often known as Dge bshes Mchad kha ba, based on the tradition of generating bodhicitta known as "mind training" transmitted by the Bengali master Atiśa Dīpaṃkaraśrījñāna. It also follows the system laid out previously by Glang ri thang pa (Langri Tangpa) in his Blo sbyong tshig brgyad ma ("Eight Verses on Mind Training"). Comprised of a series of pithy instructions and meditative techniques, the Blo sbyong don bdun ma became influential in Tibet, with scholars from numerous traditions writing commentaries to it. According to the commentary of the nineteenth-century Tibetan polymath 'Jam mgon kong sprul, the seven points covered in the treatise are: (1) the preliminaries to mind training, which include the contemplations on the preciousness of human rebirth, the reality of death and impermanence, the shortcomings of saṃsāra, and the effects of karman; (2) the actual practice of training in bodhicitta; (3) transforming adverse conditions into the path of awakening; (4) utilizing the practice in one's entire life; (5) the evaluation of mind training; (6) the commitments of mind training; and (7) guidelines for mind training. (Source: "Blo sbyong don bdun ma." In The Princeton Dictionary of Buddhism, 126–27. Princeton University Press, 2014. http://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46n41q.27.)
Text
- Foreword vii
- Editor's Acknowledgements ix
- Technical Note x
- Preface xi
- The Root Verses of Seven Point Mind Training 1
- A Prologue to Mind Training 5
- 1. Preliminary Supporting Dharma Practices 13
- 2. Training the Mind in the Path to Enlightenment 25
- 3. Bringing Unfavorable Conditions into the Path to Enlightenment 35
- 4. Integrating the Practices in a Single Lifetime 43
- 5. The Measure of a Trained Mind 51
- 6. The Commitments of Mind Training 57
- 7. Advice Regarding Mind Training 65
- Colophon 77
- Appendix: Tibetan Text
- Root Verses of Seven Point Mind Training 79
- Notes 81
- Bibliography 83
- About the Author 87
- Index 93
