Tibetan Book of the Dead

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Tri-me
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Post by Tri-me »

She was a very difficult woman, jealous, hateful, she probably killed spiders, I am not exactly sure. Her daughter in law went to rescue her.
Cheers & DLight
Tri-me (tree-mite) Sheldrön
"Doorhinge rhymes with orange" Leonard Cohen
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lizzytysh
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Post by lizzytysh »

Her daughter in law went to rescue her.
As many married or formerly-married women know, this tends to speak well of her :D .


~ Lizzy
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sturgess66
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Re: Tibetan Book of the Dead

Post by sturgess66 »

At "Dangerous Minds" - by Amber Frost
http://dangerousminds.net/comments/let_ ... =pulsenews
Let Leonard Cohen Give You A Fascinating Primer On Tibetan Buddhism
01.14.2014
06:27 am

Image
Cohen in Buddhist regalia

Celebrities and artists discussing religion is always a tricky business. Fame tends to be a of a very worldly nature and often threatens to cheapen the subject, or distract from the gravity of spiritual matters. This can go doubly awry when westerners project their exotic fantasies on Asian religions—the fantastic book, Karma Cola, by Gita Mehta is an insightful look at the phenomenon of American and European “pilgrims” traveling to India, hoping to find enlightenment. (Since people are people, anywhere you go, many of those pilgrims were defrauded by fake yogis—India’s snake oil salesman and televangelist swindler equivalent.)

However, Leonard Cohen’s narration of the 1994 documentary pair, The Tibetan Book of the Dead: A Way of Life and The Tibetan Book of the Dead: The Great Liberation, is both understated and dignified (with the first film featuring The Dalai Lama himself). Cohen, who was ordained as a Rinzai Zen Buddhist monk in 1996, is staid in his narration of Tibetan Buddhist theory and practice, but the films are neither dry nor academic—a scene with a man in a hospice dealing with his own mortality is particularly affecting. I have to say, I initially just checked this out looking for something on Cohen’s Buddhism; what I found was an extremely respectful and compelling documentary, devoid of voyeurism, and mindful of the humanity of its subjects.

The series in its entirety is divided into five segments below, four being about 20 minutes long, with a two-minute clip in the middle.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?list=PLLU6 ... fdFoINVdoQ
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