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daily dharma

  • Seeking That Which is...

    Ariyapariyesana Sutta on Nibbana

    “Bhikkhus [Monks], before my enlightenment, while I was still only an unenlightened Bodhisattva, I too, being myself subject to birth, sought what was also subject to birth; being myself subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow, and defilement, I sought what was also subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow and defilement. Then I considered thus: "Why, being myself subject to birth, do I seek what is also subject to birth? Why, being myself subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow and defilement, do I seek what is also subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow and defilement? Suppose that, being myself subject to birth, having understood the danger in what is subject to birth, I seek the unborn supreme security from bondage, Nibbana [Nirvana]. Suppose that, being myself subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow and defilement, having understood the danger in what is subject to aging, sickness, death, sorrow and defilement, I seek the unaging, unailing, deathless, sorrowless, and undefiled supreme security from bondage, Nibbana."

    --Ariyapariyesana Sutta, in The Middle Length Discourses of the Buddha, trans. By Bhikkhu Bodhi

    from Everyday Mind, edited by Jean Smith, a Tricycle book

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Tricycle Winter 2008

Winter 2008
Vol. 18 No.2

Karma in Action
Andrew Olendzki reminds us that we are what we do.

Peace on the Street
How a Harlem zendo is fighting to save lives, by Joan Duncan Oliver

tricycle editors' blog

Posts from Tricycle's editors on Burma and other Buddhist issues of the day.

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Read Sylvia Boorstein's answers to your questions!

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