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Contents: TRAINING THE MIND IN THE GREAT WAY |
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Foreword by H.H. the Dalai Lama |
11 |
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Translator's Introduction |
17 |
I. |
Atisha and the Lojong Spiritual Legacy |
17 |
II. |
The Nature of the Lojong Practice |
23 |
III. |
The Tibetan Background |
26 |
IV. |
The First Dalai Lama |
30 |
V. |
A Note on the Textual Rendition |
35 |
VI. |
A Concluding Observation |
37 |
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Preamble |
39 |
I. |
The Venerable Source of the Lineage |
39 |
II. |
The Greatness of the Tradition |
42 |
III. |
The Actual Instruction |
43 |
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Point One: The Preliminaries |
45 |
I. |
The Meditation of Guruyoga |
45 |
II. |
Making Oneself into a Proper Vessel |
52 |
A. |
The Preciousness of Human Life |
52 |
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1. The Nature of the Freedoms and Endowments |
52 |
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2. Their Extraordinary Value |
54 |
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3. Their Rarity |
55 |
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4. The Need to Extract Their Essence |
55 |
B. |
Death and Impermanence |
57 |
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1. The Certainty of Death |
58 |
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2. The Uncertainty of the Time of Death |
59 |
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3. How Only Spiritual Realization Helps |
61 |
C. |
The Karmic Laws of Cause and Effect |
61 |
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1. The Nature of Karmic Law |
61 |
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A) Contemplating the Suffering of the Hells |
64 |
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B) Contemplating the Animal Realms |
68 |
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C) Contemplating the Ghost Realms |
69 |
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2. In Search of Spiritual Refuge |
70 |
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A) The Psychological Basis |
71 |
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B) The Objects which Are the Focus |
71 |
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C) The Context of Refuge |
72 |
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(1) Appreciating the excellence of the Three Jewels |
72 |
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(2) Their individual uniqueness |
74 |
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(3) The refuge perspective |
76 |
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(4) Not mistaking the refuge objects |
76 |
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D) Advice for Those Who Have Taken Refuge |
77 |
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(1) The advice as found in The Summary |
77 |
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(2) The advice given in the oral tradition |
78 |
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3. Purifying the Mind of Negative Karma |
88 |
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A) The Force of Regret |
89 |
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B) The Application of the Antidote |
89 |
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C) The Resolve |
90 |
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D) The Force of Reliance |
90 |
D. |
The Unsatisfactory Nature of Cyclic Existence |
92 |
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1. The Human Realm |
92 |
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2. The Realm of the Asuras |
93 |
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3. The Deva Realms |
93 |
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Point Two: The Actual Practice, Cultivating the Two Bodhiminds |
95 |
I. |
Developing the Conventional Bodhimind |
96 |
A. |
The Causes Giving Rise to the Bodhimind |
97 |
B. |
The Actual Steps in the Training |
98 |
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1. The Sevenfold Oral Tradition Technique |
98 |
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A) The Spiritual Character To Be Generated |
98 |
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(1) How compassion is the root |
98 |
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(2) How the seven function as cause and effect |
100 |
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B) The Actual Stages in Practice |
102 |
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(1) Cultivating the mind concerned with others |
102 |
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(a) Preparing the basis for this mind |
102 |
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(i) recognizing all as a mother |
104 |
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(ii) recollecting the kindness of the mother |
104 |
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(iii) generating the wish to repay them |
105 |
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(b) Actually generating concern for others |
106 |
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(iv) meditation upon love |
106 |
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(v) meditation upon compassion |
107 |
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(vi) meditation upon universal responsibility |
108 |
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(2) Cultivating the mind concerned with enlightenment |
108 |
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(3) Integrating the fruit of the training |
108 |
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2. Exchanging Self-awareness for Awareness of Others |
110 |
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A) The Benefits of Doing So and Faults of Not |
110 |
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B) The Ability of the Mind to Transform Egotism |
111 |
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C) The Stages in the Meditation |
113 |
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(1) Identifying the object of all blame |
113 |
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(2) Meditating on the kindness of others |
114 |
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(3) Cherishing others |
114 |
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(4) The actual exchange |
115 |
C. |
The Measure of Progress |
124 |
D. |
The Ritual for Generating the Bodhisattva Resolve |
124 |
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1. The Methods of Generating It |
124 |
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A) The Object Before Which It Is Generated |
124 |
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B) The Basis of the Resolve |
125 |
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C) The Actual Ritual for Doing So |
125 |
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(1) The ritual preliminaries |
125 |
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(a) Taking special refuge |
125 |
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(b) Generating meretorious energy |
127 |
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(c) Purifying one's motivation |
127 |
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(2) The actual body of the rite |
127 |
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(3) The concluding procedures |
128 |
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2. The Methods of Protecting the Bodhisattva Resolve |
128 |
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A) The Causes of Not Weakening It in This Life |
128 |
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(1) Contemplating the beneficial effects |
129 |
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(2) Constantly increasing its strength |
129 |
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(3) Not Abandoning it toward any living being |
131 |
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(4) Augmenting the collections of merit and wisdom |
131 |
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B) The Causes of Not Weakening It in Future Lives |
131 |
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(1) Abandoning the four black dharmas |
131 |
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(2) Cultivating the four white dharmas |
132 |
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3. The Methods of Restoring the Bodhisattva Resolve |
132 |
II. |
Cultivating the Ultimate Bodhimind |
132 |
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Point Three: Transforming Negative Conditions into Aids on the Path |
135 |
I. |
Focusing Contemplation on the Conventional Bodhimind |
135 |
II. |
Focusing Contemplation on the Ultimate Bodhimind |
137 |
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Point Four: The Doctrine of a Practice for One Lifetime |
139 |
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Point Five: The Measure to Which the Mind Has Been Trained |
143 |
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Point Six: The Commitments of this Mind-training System |
147 |
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Point Seven: Advice to Lojong Practitioners |
159 |
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Notes |
165 |
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Selected Bibliography |
173 |