Becoming Kuan Yin Quotes

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Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion by Stephen Levine
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Becoming Kuan Yin Quotes Showing 1-7 of 7
“When being loving becomes even more important than being loved, true devotion is experienced. A loving that does not depend on getting what we want but on offering what the world and our hearts cry out for.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“Healing is to reoccupy those parts of ourselves abandoned to pain; to enter with mercy and awareness those areas withdrawn from in fear.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“You could look the whole world over and never find anyone more deserving of love than yourself.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“she wept and revived its meaning in the teachings of her way.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“To become Kuan Yin is to recognize the extreme toil and commitment that brings fruition. Her accomplishment not bestowed on her by some celestial prize committee, Zeus, or the Holy Ghost, but by the hard-earned forgoing of all earthly pleasure, to complete what Buddha called “the work to be done.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“In almost every spiritual prototype we have to go through hell on our way to pure awareness, indistinguishable from unconditional love, the Pure Land of our illuminated nature. For some, that process of awakening and “enlightening” is the experience the Taoists call “self ablaze.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion
“Pouring mercy into the darkness, Miao Shan becoming the bodhisattva Kuan Yin. She liberated hell, singing: Old stories, legends of creation, won't keep Hades from becoming paradise. Rumi said for the person who loves the truth “Their water is fire.” He made spring out of winter. He learned from his mistakes. There were moments when numb from thinking we forget we pass through hell on our way to heaven. And if that heavenly glow does not distract us too much, dehypnotized by grace, we continue past heaven into the boundless enormity which dwarfs it.”
Stephen Levine, Becoming Kuan Yin: The Evolution of Compassion