Wishing for “happily ever after” is nothing more than a desire for permanence in disguise. Fabricating concepts such as “eternal love,” “everlasting happiness,” and “salvation” generates more evidence of impermanence. Our intention and the result are at odds. We intend to establish ourselves and our world, but we forget that the corrosion begins as soon as creation begins. What we aim for is not decay, but what we do leads directly to decay.
Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche
from the book What Makes You Not a Buddhist
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Further quotes from the book What Makes You Not a Buddhist:
- Products and parts
- I don’t give a damn
- Your own ignorance betrays you
- Like monkeys
- The spiritual path is a temporary solution
- Emptiness
- A practicing Buddhist
- Beyond nonviolence and meditation
- Relationships
- Emotionally not possible
- What is in the mind of a Buddhist
- Buying into emotions
- The primordial absence of defilements
- Four seals
- Acts of Generosity
- Living fully
- Not paranoid but prepared
- Primordial purity
- Buddhist renunciation
- The impossible is possible