How to see yourself as you really are

Bstan-ʼdzin-rgya-mtsho, 1935-

Book - 2006

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

294.3444/Dalai Lama
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 294.3444/Dalai Lama Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Atria Books 2006.
Language
English
Tibetan
Main Author
Bstan-ʼdzin-rgya-mtsho, 1935- (-)
Other Authors
Jeffrey Hopkins (-)
Edition
1st Atria Books hardcover ed
Item Description
Published in paperback by Atria Books in 2007.
Physical Description
xii, 274 p. ; 19 cm
ISBN
9780743290463
9780743290456
  • Foreword
  • Introduction: My Perspective
  • Part I. The Need for Insight
  • 1. Laying the Ground for Insight to Grow
  • 2. Discovering the Source of Problems
  • 3. Why Understanding the Truth Is Needed
  • Part II. How to Undermine Ignorance
  • 4. Feeling the Impact of Interrelatedness
  • 5. Appreciating the Reasoning of Dependent-Arising
  • 6. Seeing the Interdependence of Phenomena
  • 7. Valuing Dependent-Arising and Emptiness
  • Part III. Harnessing the Power of Concentration and Insight
  • 8. Focusing Your Mind
  • 9. Tuning Your Mind for Meditation
  • Part IV. How to End Self-Deception
  • 10. Meditating on Yourself First
  • 11. Realizing That You Do Not Exist in and of Yourself
  • 12. Determining the Choices
  • 13. Analyzing Oneness
  • 14. Analyzing Difference
  • 15. Coming to a Conclusion
  • 16. Testing Your Realization
  • 17. Extending This Insight to What You Own
  • 18. Balancing Calm and Insight
  • Part V. How Persons and Things Actually Exist
  • 19. Viewing Yourself As Like an Illusion
  • 20. Noticing How Everything Depends on Thought
  • Part VI. Deepening Love with Insight
  • 21. Feeling Empathy
  • 22. Reflecting on Impermanence
  • 23. Absorbing Yourself in Ultimate Love
  • Appendix. Reviewing the Meditative Reflections
  • Selected Readings
Review by Library Journal Review

More than inspiration, this practical book has exercises to help us drop our misconceptions and live lovingly in the world. (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Foreword This book by His Holiness the Dalai Lama stems from a basic Buddhist notion that love and insight work cooperatively to bring about enlightenment, like the two wings of a bird. The overarching theme is that self-knowledge is the key to personal development and positive relationships. The Dalai Lama shows us how, in the absence of true self-knowledge, we hurt ourselves through misguided, exaggerated notions of self, others, external events, and physical things. Even our senses deceive us, drawing us into attachment and negative actions that can only come back to haunt us in the future. The book details how to overcome these mistakes in order to live from a realistic knowledge of our healthy interdependence. The first part of this book shows how to draw back the deceptive aspect of our experience like a curtain; other approaches, such as suppressing lust and hatred, may be helpful, but they do not address this root problem. By directing our attention to the false veneer that so bedazzles our senses and our thoughts, His Holiness sets the stage for discovering the reality behind appearances. Our tacit acceptance of things as they seem is called ignorance, which is not just a lack of knowledge about how people and things actually exist but an active mistaking of their fundamental nature. True self-knowledge involves exposing and facing misconceptions about ourselves. The aim here is to find out how we get ourselves into trouble, then learn how to intervene on the ground floor of our counterproductive ideas. Buddhist psychology is known for its detailed descriptions of the mind's workings, and His Holiness uses these insights in a practical way by helping readers catch hold of these processes through their own experience. His central theme is that our skewed perceptions of body and mind lead to disastrous mistakes, ranging from lust at the one extreme to raging hatred at the other, so that we are consistently being led into trouble as if pulled by a ring in our nose. By developing insight into this process, we can free ourselves, and those around us, from these endless scenarios of pain. This part provides step-by-step exercises to develop our ability to recognize the disparity between how we appear to ourselves and how we actually are. Once we have recognized our warped assumptions for what they are, the second part of the book shows how to undermine them. The tools used to accomplish this transformation are renowned Buddhist reflections for questioning appearances, which the Dalai Lama illustrates with his own experiences. His Holiness guides readers through a variety of practical exercises to help us break down the illusions we have superimposed over and beyond what actually exists, and learn how to act in the world from a more realistic framework. This calls for valuing the interdependence of all things and appreciating the latticework of our relationships for the meaningful contribution it makes to our lives. The book's third part describes how to harness the power of meditative concentration with insight to achieve immersion in our own ultimate nature, which undermines our problems at their very foundation. The fourth and fifth parts discuss how people and things actually do exist, since they do not exist in the way we assume. The Dalai Lama draws readers into noticing how everything depends on thought -- how thought itself organizes what we perceive. His goal is to develop in us a clear sense of what it means to exist without misconception. Then the final part of the book explains the way this profound state of being enhances love by revealing how unnecessary destructive emotions and suffering actually are. In this way self-knowledge is seen as the key to personal development and positive relationships. Once we know how to put insight in the service of love and love in the service of insight, we come to the book's appendix, an overview of the steps for achieving altruistic enlightenment. This book itself is an illustration of Tibet's contribution to world culture, reminding us of the importance of maintaining a homeland for its preservation. The light shining through the Dalai Lama's teachings has its source in that culture, offering insights and practices that so many of us need in ours. Jeffrey Hopkins, Ph.D. Emeritus Professor of Tibetan Studies University of Virginia Excerpted from How to See Yourself as You Really Are by The Dalai Lama All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.