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+ | ====== Old News Archive: April-May 2005 ====== | ||
+ | <span hide>Old News Archive</ | ||
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+ | <span hlist> [[news0503|Earlier]] | [[news0506|Later]] | [[old|Index]] | [[index|Current]] </ | ||
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+ | Obsolete and unsupported links have been disabled and are <span news_retired> | ||
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+ | A collection of short anecdotes and quotations from Ajaan Dune, as recalled by one of his long-time monastic comrades. Ajaan Dune's straightforward words are rich with deceptively simple insights that reflect a profound grasp of Dhamma. His unique presentation of the four noble truths, which echoes through these pages, is breathtakingly clear: "The mind sent outside is the origination of suffering; the result of the mind sent outside is suffering; the mind seeing the mind is the path; and the result of the mind seeing the mind is the cessation of suffering." | ||
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+ | The short essays in this book explore the role in Buddhist practice of one of the most often overlooked of the four sublime states // | ||
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+ | Viewing peace of mind as a skillful strategy helps the meditator settle the mind down into concentration. But its uses also extend to more advanced stages of meditation, by helping one disengage from all involvement with the aggregates, thereby bringing the meditator to the threshold of Awakening. In this remarkable talk Ajaan Suwat weaves together teachings for beginning and advanced meditators, alike. | ||
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+ | A link to the current uposatha calendar will henceforth always appear at the bottom of this " | ||
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+ | Three more talks from the " | ||
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+ | As long as we think of Nirvana (Nibbana) as a //place// — as a destination localized somewhere in space and time — we misunderstand its fundamental significance. In this essay (backed by a selection of sutta excerpts) the author shows that Nirvana is the ending of the entire samsaric process of becoming that creates time and space in the first place. Upon enlightenment one doesn' | ||
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