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How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life by Dalai Lama XIV
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How to Practice Quotes Showing 1-30 of 54
“True change is within; leave the outside as it is.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“My earnest request is that you practice love and kindness whether you believe in a religion or not.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“more dangerous than guns or bombs are hatred, lack of compassion, and lack of respect for the rights of others. As long as hatred dwells in the human mind, real peace is impossible.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“If with a warm heart and patience we can consider the views of others, and exchange ideas in calm discussion, we will find points of agreement.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“To train the mind, you must exercise the patience and determination it takes to shape that steel.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“He told me that while he was in a Chinese Communist gulag for almost eighteen years, he faced danger on a few occasions. I thought he was referencing a threat to his own life. But when I asked, "What danger?" he answered, "Losing compassion toward the Chinese.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Though my own knowledge is limited and my experience is also very poor, I have tried my best to help you understand the full breadth of the Buddha’s teaching. Please implement whatever in these pages appears to be helpful. If you follow another religion, please adopt whatever might assist you. If you do not think it would be helpful, just leave it alone.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Real compassion is based on reason. Ordinary compassion or love is limited by desire or attachment.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Enemies provide us some of the best opportunities to practice patience, tolerance, and compassion.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Rather, spend more on health and education for poor people. This is not forced socialism but voluntary compassion.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“In fact ants, to cite just one example, work unselfishly for the community; we humans sometimes do not look good by comparison. We are supposed to be higher beings, so we must act according to our higher selves.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“I accept everyone as a friend. In truth, we already know one another, profoundly, as human beings who share the same basic goals: We all seek happiness and do not want suffering.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“As long as the sky exists And as long as there are sentient beings, May I remain to help Relieve them of all their pain.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“In the frenzy of modern life we lose sight of the real value of humanity. People become the sum total of what they produce. Human beings act like machines whose function is to make money. This is absolutely wrong. The purpose of making money is the happiness of humankind, not the other way round. Humans are not for money, money is for humans. We need enough to live, so money is necessary, but we also need to realize that if there is too much attachment to wealth, it does not help at all. As the saints of India and Tibet tell us, the wealthier one becomes, the more suffering one endures.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Neither a space station nor an enlightened mind can be realized in a day.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“By helping one another, with concern and respect, we can solve many problems easily. Harmony cannot thrive in a climate of mistrust, cheating, bullying and mean-spirited competition. Success through intimidation and violence is temporary at best; its trifling gains only create new problems.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“May all the ill deeds, obstructions, and sufferings of beings Be transferred to me, without exception, at this moment, And my happiness and merit be sent to others. May all creatures be imbued with happiness! Just”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Shantideva’s prayer: As long as the sky exists And as long as there are sentient beings, May I remain to help Relieve them of all their pain.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“For a practitioner of love and compassion, an enemy is one of the most important teachers. Without an enemy you cannot practice tolerance, and without tolerance you cannot build a sound basis of compassion. So in order to practice compassion, you should have an enemy.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Under no circumstances should you lose hope. Hopelessness is a real cause of failure. Remember, you can overcome any problem.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Of course, I fail sometimes. Sometimes I get irritated. Occasionally I use a harsh word, but when I do, immediately I feel “Oh, this is wrong.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“On every level—as individuals, and as members of a family, a community, a nation, and a planet—the most mischievous troublemakers we face are anger and egoism.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“When I was young and living high above the city of Lhasa in the Potala Palace, I frequently looked at the life of the city through a telescope. I also learned a lot from the gossip of the sweepers in the palace. They were like my newspaper, relating what the Regent was doing, and what corruption and scandals were going on. I was always happy to listen, and they were proud to be telling the Dalai Lama about what was happening in the streets. The harsh events that unfolded after the invasion in 1950 forced me to become directly involved in issues that otherwise would have been kept at a distance. As a result I have come to prefer a life of committed social action in this world of suffering.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Your mind itself turns into a still more subtle, vividly black state; nothing else appears. This is called “near-attainment” because you are close to manifesting the mind of clear light. The mind of black vastness is like a moonless, very dark sky just after dusk when no stars are seen. In the beginning of this phase you are aware, but then you lose awareness as you slip into even thicker darkness. 8. When the mind of black appearance ceases, your mind itself turns into the fully aware mind of clear light. Called the fundamental innate mind of clear light, this is the most subtle, profound, and powerful level of consciousness. It is like the sky’s natural state at dawn (not sunrise)—without moonlight, sunlight, or darkness. The passage through to the mind of clear light can be fast or slow. Some people remain in the final stage, the mind of clear light of death, for only several minutes; others stay for as long as a week or two. Since the mind of clear light is so powerful, it is valuable to practice, so many Tibetan practitioners rehearse these stages of dying on a daily basis. I myself practice them six times daily by imagining the eight levels of mind one by one (without, of course, the physical changes in the first four stages). The eight levels of mind are: 1. mirage 2. smoke 3. fireflies 4. flame of a candle 5. vivid white sky-mind 6. vivid red or orange sky-mind 7. vivid black sky-mind 8. clear light”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Analyze. Think, think, think. When you do you will recognize that our ordinary way of life is almost meaningless. Do not be discouraged. It would be very foolish to give up now. On those occasions when you feel most hopeless, you must make a powerful effort. We are so accustomed to faulty states of mind that it is difficult to change with just a little practice. Just a drop of something sweet cannot change a taste that is powerfully bitter. We must persist in the face of failure.

In difficult personal circumstances the best recourse is to try to remain as honest and sincere as possible. Otherwise, by responding harshly or selfishly, you simply make matters worse. This is especially apparent in painful family situations. You should realize that difficult present circumstances are entirely due to your own past undisciplined actions, so when you experience a difficult period, do your best to avoid behavior that will add to your burden later on.

It is important to diminish undisciplined states of mind, but it is even more important to meet adversity with a positive attitude. Keep this in mind: By greeting trouble with optimism and hope, you are undermining worse troubles down the line. Beyond that, imagine that you are easing the burden of everyone suffering problems of that kind. This practice--imagining that by accepting your pain you are using up the negative karma of everyone destined to feel such pain--is very helpful.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“The purpose of making money is the happiness of humankind, not the other way round. Humans are not for money, money is for humans. We need enough to live, so money is necessary, but we also need to realize that if there is too much attachment to wealth, it does not help at all.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practise: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“On those occasions when you feel most hopeless, you must make a powerful effort. We are so accustomed to faulty states of mind that it is difficult to change with just a little practice. Just a drop of something sweet cannot change a taste that is powerfully bitter. We must persist in the face of failure.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“I believe that the practice of compassion and love—a genuine sense of brotherhood and sisterhood—is the universal religion. It does not matter whether you are Buddhist or Christian, Moslem or Hindu, or whether you practice religion at all. What matters is your feeling of oneness with humankind.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“Form is Emptiness, Emptiness is Form.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How to Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life
“My earnest request is that you practice love and kindness whether you believe in a religion or not. Through this practice you will come to realize the value of compassion and kindness for your own peace of mind.”
Dalai Lama XIV, How To Practice: The Way to a Meaningful Life

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