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What the warrior renounces is anything in his experience that is a barrier between himself and others. In other words, renunciation is making yourself more available, more gentle and open to others.
Chogyam Trungpa
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Chogyam Trungpa
Age: 47 †
Born: 1940
Born: January 1
Died: 1987
Died: April 4
Erudite
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Painter
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Peking
Trungpa
Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
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Renounces
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Anything
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Gentle
More quotes by Chogyam Trungpa
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Habit is formed out of memory... We often shape our present situation according to those habitual memories. Instead of starting fresh, we go back to what we've done in the past... easier for us than fighting our way through foreign territory.
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Warriorship does not refer to making war on others. Aggression is the source of our problems, not the solution. Warriorship is the tradition of human bravery, or the tradition of fearlessness.
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The challenge of warriorship is to live fully in the world as it is and to find within this world, with all its paradoxes, the essence of nowness. If we open our eyes, if we open our minds, if we open our hearts, we will find that this world is a magical place.
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The courage to work with ourselves comes as basic trust in ourselves, as a sort of fundamental optimism.
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Sanity is permanent, neurosis is temporary.
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When you have a brilliant sun, which is a source of vision, the light from the sun shines through every window of the house, and the brightness of its light inspires you to open all the curtains. In the vision of the Great Eastern Sun, no human being is a lost cause.
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Anything that is created must sooner or later die. Enlightenment is permanent because we have not produced it we have merely discovered it.
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We are threatened by the now so we jump to the past or the future.
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Artistic vision comes from a mind clear enough to fall in love with what we see.
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Our path is sometimes rough and sometimes smooth nonetheless, life is a constant journey... whatever we do is regarded as our journey, our path. That path consists of opening oneself to the road, opening oneself to the steps we are about to take.
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The problem is that ego can convert anything to its own use, even spirituality.
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As long as a person is involved with warfare, trying to defend or attack, then his action is not sacred it is mundane, dualistic, a battlefield situation.
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Disappointment results from the removal of illusion.
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There seems to be a hypnotic quality to ambition and speed, so that you feel that you are standing still just because you want to go so fast. You might actually be getting close to your goal.
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I am alone and my spiritual journey is my experience.' This is the real experience of freedom and independence. Then we begin to see that being alone is a very beautiful thing. Nobody is obstructing our vision. We have complete panoramic vision.
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There is no need to struggle to be free the absence of struggle is in itself freedom.
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If you must begin then go all the way, because if you begin and quit, the unfinished business you have left behind begins to haunt you all the time.
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Whether we eat, sleep, work, play, whatever we do life contains dissatisfaction, pain. If we enjoy pleasure, we are afraid to lose it we strive for more and more pleasure or try to contain it. If we suffer pain we want to escape it. We experience dissatisfaction all the time. All activities contain dissatisfaction or pain, continuously.
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When we talk about compassion we talk in terms of being kind. But compassion is not so much being kind it is being creative [enough] to wake a person up
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