• conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    My favorite Buddhist tale is that of the Chinese monk Birdsnest, so called because he always hung out in a tree.

    Now, Birdsnest was famous and highly regarded, and a governor heard of him and decided to seek him out. The governor travelled for days to reach birdsnest, and when he arrived, he asked “hey, birdsnest, what was it that all the Buddhas taught?” Basically, dude was asking for a one sentence summary of religion, like the famous tale of economic study resulting in the one sentence summary of “no such thing as a free lunch”.

    Birdsnest answered “Don’t do bad things, only do good things.”

    The governor scoffed, and said “my three year old nephew knows that!”

    “Easy enough for the three year old to understand,” Birdsnest retorted, “but still very difficult for the sixty year old to do.”

    • FenderStratocaster@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      A monkey was in a tree above a river and plunged into it. He came out with a fish and scurried up a tree. Once safe in its branches he said to the fish, “Holy shit, good thing I was here. You were about to drown!”

      Intention without awareness can be harmful.

      Another one is the two monks.

      Two monks are traveling. Their sect of Buddhism doesn’t allow them to touch women. They came across a river and when they crossed it they saw a woman who capsized her canoe. The elder Monk swam to the woman and helped her to the shore. She hurt her leg so he carried her to the rest of her party.

      Once they were traveling again, the younger monk continued to badger the elder Monk on why he thought it was okay to touch that woman. The elder Monk said, “I am no longer carrying that woman. Why do you insist on continuing to carry her?”

      • gcheliotis@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        Finally some good ones, so far down the list, relayed by Fender Rinpoche no less. The best of these parables should be a bit of a brain teaser imo, have an element of surprise at least. Open up new ways of thinking about the world, and leave some room for contemplation.

      • conditional_soup@lemm.ee
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        1 day ago

        I’d never heard the former, but I adore the latter. I also really enjoy the tale of the horse that came back.

    • rainrain@sh.itjust.works
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      1 day ago

      Add meditation and thats the succinct version of the 8fold path.

      Meditation might be implicit tho, and therefore not worth mentioning.