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THE FOUR SEALS OF DHARMA
•Foreword by Sogyal Rinpoche
•Foreword by Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche
•A Note about the Author
•Translator’s Note
•SUMMATION
•All Composite Phenomena are Impermanent
•All Contaminated Things are Unsatisfactory
•All Phenomena Lack Self-Existence
•Nirvana Is True Peace
•The Importance of Practice
•Preparing for the Preliminaries
•The Practice of Realizing Emptiness
•The Practice of Impermanence
•The Practice of Suffering
•The Practice of No-Self
•The Final Review

CHAPTER OVERVIEW

Foreword by Sogyal Rinpoche

Khenpo Tsultrim Lodrö is one of the most important Tibetan Buddhist masters alive today. As demonstrated by his many writings, he is not only exceptionally learned in the traditional Buddhist te...

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Foreword by Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse Rinpoche

I would like to thank the directors not only for creating this opportunity to honour Khen Rinpoche, but also for giving me the chance to write a few introductory words for this auspicious occasi...

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A Note about the Author

Khenpo Tsultrim Lodrö was born in 1962 in Drango (Luhuo) County in Sichuan Province’s Garze Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. In 1984, he received monastic ordination at the world-renowned Larung F...

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Translator’s Note

I have always been impressed by the strong sense of purpose and urgency in which Khenpo Tsultrim Lodro Rinpoche communicates the timeless wisdom of the Dharma. His lectures invariably begin with...

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SUMMATION

WHAT IS A DHARMA SEAL? The Three Dharma Seals are the axioms that distinguish the Dharma from non-Dharma, Buddhism from non-Buddhism. They are essential to establishing what the Dharma...

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All Composite Phenomena are Impermanent

In the Nirvana Sutra, it is said: Of all plantings, the autumn planting i...

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All Contaminated Things are Unsatisfactory

In the Treatise of Four Hundred Verses, it is said: There is...

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All Phenomena Lack Self-Existence

In the Samyuktagama Sutra, it is said: If it were not, it would not be fo...

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Nirvana Is True Peace

In the Samyuktagama Sutra, it is said: When desire is exhausted, anger is exhausted, delusion is ex- hausted, and all afflictions are exhausted — this is called nirvana.

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The Importance of Practice

To every practitioner, actual methods are extremely important. One must truly practice in order to achieve liberation. By reciting the name of the Buddha one-pointedly, we can go to Western Pure...

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Preparing for the Preliminaries

CHOOSING THE ENVIRONMENT When our practice reaches a certain level, the external environment will not have much of an effect on us; at that point, there is no difference where we pract...

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The Practice of Realizing Emptiness

In Abhidharmakosa, all composite phenomena are summed up as the five aggregates – form, feeling, perception, volition, and consciousness. The so-called “aggregate” means the coming together of a...

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The Practice of Impermanence

The practice of impermanence is of two kinds: one is impermanence at the microscopic level; the other is impermanence at the macroscopic level. In The Words of My Perfect Teacher, the discussion...

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The Practice of Suffering

The practice of seeing contaminated phenomena as unsatisfactory is the same as that taught in The Words of My Perfect Teacher. In general, it is divided into two stages. First, contemplate the t...

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The Practice of No-Self

Although the practice of no-self and the practice of emptiness are treated separately here, the practice of no-self is actually a part of the practice of emptiness.

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The Final Review

The process of coming out of meditative concentration can also be called “getting up from a sitting.” After completing our practice at a sitting, we should not get up immediately but rather look...

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In this and every future lifetime, may I aspire to uphold the authentic dharma.

 

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