It is realized when the mind ceases to define itself through attachments and places, embodying unbound consciousness free from the confines of space and time.
I can't believe this video happened to me today! You have no idea what it means to me; it organized a confusion that has bothered me for so long. You are truly a Mary Poppins for my mind. Thank you, sincerely and have a great New Year!
To those who are watching this video: Happy New Year 2025! May this year bring you joy, prosperity, and boundless opportunities. Wishing you a year filled with success and happiness, and may all your dreams come true.
The Buddha taught: "Ragakkhayo nibbānaṃ, dosakkhayo nibbānaṃ, mohakkhayo nibbānaṃ" Its simple meaning: - The complete cutting off (khaya) of rāga is nibbāna - The complete cutting off (khaya) of dosa is nibbāna - The complete cutting off (khaya) of moha is nibbāna Note: It's not just cessation, but 'khaya' means complete cutting off/uprooting. This is clearly shown in the Nibbāna Saṃyutta of Saṃyutta Nikāya (SN 38.1). This is not some mysterious state, but rather the natural result of completely cutting off the defilements of the mind. The later terms like "nirvāṇa" or "nirvana" and their attributed mysterious meanings are not found in the original Buddhist teachings. It is simply the state of complete cutting off, the total uprooting (khaya) of rāga, dosa, and moha. May you be well! 🙏🙏
This presentation is quite good but not very definitive, much like the suttas. Perhaps too much has been read into the "fire clinging to the wood" analogies with the hot and cold embers and such. And yet the conclusions of those analogies seem to get more and more vague throughout the presentation. "Unbinding" is a good term. "Disentanglement" is a good alternative. "Nirvana" is undoubtedly the most enigmatic aspect of the Buddha's teaching ... followed by "emptiness."
"Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without." - Buddha
It is realized when the mind ceases to define itself through attachments and places, embodying unbound consciousness free from the confines of space and time.
I can't believe this video happened to me today! You have no idea what it means to me; it organized a confusion that has bothered me for so long. You are truly a Mary Poppins for my mind. Thank you, sincerely and have a great New Year!
Sadhu ❤️
To those who are watching this video: Happy New Year 2025! May this year bring you joy, prosperity, and boundless opportunities. Wishing you a year filled with success and happiness, and may all your dreams come true.
3:52 stop... I get it now. It only took me 20 years to make the same conclusion that was just explained in 3 min. 51 seconds.
Wow 🤝
The Buddha taught: "Ragakkhayo nibbānaṃ, dosakkhayo nibbānaṃ, mohakkhayo nibbānaṃ"
Its simple meaning:
- The complete cutting off (khaya) of rāga is nibbāna
- The complete cutting off (khaya) of dosa is nibbāna
- The complete cutting off (khaya) of moha is nibbāna
Note: It's not just cessation, but 'khaya' means complete cutting off/uprooting.
This is clearly shown in the Nibbāna Saṃyutta of Saṃyutta Nikāya (SN 38.1). This is not some mysterious state, but rather the natural result of completely cutting off the defilements of the mind.
The later terms like "nirvāṇa" or "nirvana" and their attributed mysterious meanings are not found in the original Buddhist teachings. It is simply the state of complete cutting off, the total uprooting (khaya) of rāga, dosa, and moha.
May you be well! 🙏🙏
Its not nibbutti,it is nirvitti..ceasation.
This presentation is quite good but not very definitive, much like the suttas. Perhaps too much has been read into the "fire clinging to the wood" analogies with the hot and cold embers and such. And yet the conclusions of those analogies seem to get more and more vague throughout the presentation. "Unbinding" is a good term. "Disentanglement" is a good alternative. "Nirvana" is undoubtedly the most enigmatic aspect of the Buddha's teaching ... followed by "emptiness."