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Title: Being Dharma: The Essence of the Buddha's Teachings
ISBN: 1570628084
Author:
Ajahn Chah
Publicate Date: 2001-10-09 Publish: 2001-10-09
List Price: $16.95
Average Customer Rating: 5.0
Format: Paperback
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Amazon Lowest New Price: $9.73
Amazon Lowest Used Price: $6.97
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| Customer Review: |
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1: Probably the best thing I've ever come across..
Ajahn Chah is my favorite monk and in this book, are his most profound wisdoms. Hands down, this is something I could live by and read again and again. Every page is deep and insightful and written in a language we can all understand. You don't have to be of a certain class or of a certain education to be able to grab these concepts. Ajahn Chah's words rings with truth that will keep you turning the pages. It will change the way you see yourself, the world and life. It really will change your life.
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2: A good book about Dharma
This book covers many different topics. Ajahn Chah adresses many common difficulties and straightens some common wrong views. The style this book is written in is easy to understand, although there is deep meaning in the words. Ajahn Chah speaks from his heart, from what he knows to be true himself as apposed to something that he just believes. I think anyone could learn from this book.
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3: Yes, but I'd have liked more context
With a foreword by Vipassana teacher Jack Kornfield this is a presentation of talks and discussion from the famous Thai master and one of the first to be released following his death as a commercial effort since "A still forest pool" by the same translator.
Many in the West will be no strangers to the Forest Sangha lineage established by A. Chah and the numerous short compendiums of Venerable Chah's teachings made available freely through branch monasteries. The release of his talks in a wider context as a commercial venture presents significant challenges, especially in relating them to those unfamiliar with Theravada Buddhist monasticism. Unlike printed editions of his teachings including "A Still Forest Pool" where speeches are sectionalised with introductory remarks on each incident the dialogues in Being Dharma from several contexts link together to form an apparent whole with no obvious contrast between sections or adequate contextual explanation. There are six chapters (e.g. Hearing Dharma, Practising Dharma, Teaching Dharma) with sub-chapter headings and one interesting dialogue between the monk and a layman that stands out in an otherwise essay like format with varying emphases between the main chapters.
Due to the strength of editing and the eclectical approach, whether we get a balanced portrait of the teachings remains to be answered. Whereas Ven. Chah is known to have taught a mixture of Samatha-Vipassana meditation, the book leans towards Vipassana and is quite ascetic in its approach. One irritating aspect of the style was the obvious genderisation of third person pronouns in referring to hypothetical individuals (e.g. "he or she") firmly in favour of "she" of which 13 examples were noted (with two uses of he). Asian languages do possess neutral terms equivalent to "their" and this fashion in translation seems to mar its precision and veracity, raising questions on other issues of substance in the work. Pali terms Ajhan Chah would have used are rendered in Sanskrit.
The most valuable aspect of the book is Ajahn Chah's rustic yet resonant style of teaching providing hope and instruction: "What exactly is Dhamma? Everything in this world.", "Merit is like raw meat, which will go bad ... Wisdom is the salt that preserves it.", "So the Buddha still exists ... But some ... feel frustrated and say, Oh man, if the Buddha were still here ..." Ajahn Chah draws interesting comparisons between humans and animals stating that many humans can be at the level of animals. A constant refrain is the importance of not being eager to train or teach others and there are sections on meditation, scepticism and the importance of self-reliance and the dangers inherent in modern day comforts and conveniences which can engender laziness. Ajahn Chah emphasises the basics and practical concerns such as keeping surroundings neat and tidy.
A great deal of this book is about mortality and impermanence and I don't think these sentiments are adequately balanced with aspects on joy and freedom to suite lay people new to Dhamma teaching. On the whole, this is a valuable and fairly comprehensive distillation of teachings from the Thai master which would be most suited to those already familiar with Buddhism.
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4: The Great Thai Master Alive In This Work
Ajahn Chah devoted some 25 years to the teaching of Buddhism to Thai monastics up until the time of his death in 1992, as well as various laypersons. He always had an uncanny ability to explain the Dharma in a way that made your belly move with laughter, while at the same time helping to open your mind, too. His ambition was to always present the Dharma in a way that even the most uneducated could derive something from, and he succeeded 10-fold. Paul Breiter has done an excellent job here translating this beloved teachers most profound dharma talks encompassing a wide range of Buddhist topics: ethical conduct, impermanence, right view and right action, among others. Ajahn Chah instructs us all to steer completely clear from recklessness in our lives, be that with our awareness of life itself or in regards to other people. He gives us the practice and plan of what the very title of this book suggests, "being dharma." Likewise, as texts like The Tao Te Ching have asserted throughout the ages (in addition to countless keen eyed teachers), Chah speaks of the problems relating to the sense of ownership; how since we don't really own anything, one should not get caught up in sentiments of greed which always follows from a clinging to possessions. This book addresses all of us in the modern era, in a world so caught up in a seeming epidemic of self serving, heedless, and all around oftentimes very foolish lifestyle. It doesn't matter which sect of Buddhism you might practice (if any) to take something beneficial from this current text, for it was written for us all. Enjoy.
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5: Dzogchen Demystified
Paul Breiter's wonderful and timely translation of the teachings of the late Thai Dharma master Ajahn Cha provides western dharma students access to a straight path toward the gate of Dzogchenpo. Are we westerners culturally pre-disposed to dispense with preliminaries in hopes of vanquishing suffering through rapid apprehension of the ultimate? Living Dzogchen masters have begun reminding students that Samatha concentration is the door to the spaciousness of Vipassana, and that Vipassana is the entryway to unexecelled Dzogchen/ Mahamudra view. Ajahn Cha communicates this in the simplest terms. He provides guidance for students seeking to progress toward the jettison of conceptualization and grasping. Terms such as "accumulation of merit," sometimes difficult for western students to fully comprehend, are de-mystified. Ajahn Cha's instructions enable readers to disentagle from complexity and superstitious beliefs, and to practice Dharma purely, easily and confidently. Great teachers remind us that the Dharma Essence is so simple, it is difficult to apprehend. Luang Paw (Venerable Father) Cha provides down-to-earth advice for how to accomplish the results of merit and wisdom through everyday life/practice. Here in Laos, it seems fair to suggest that Laotian people remain among the "simplest", kindest and most down-to-earth. Suffused with his own Laotian heritage, Ajahn Cha provides lucid, compassionate and accesssible explanations of the mystical Path of Dharma. Western Dharma students are fortunate to have access to many of the great Dharma texts and treatises. "Being Dharma" is among the best now available. Its instructions for how to "live Dharma", ease the mind, and help attenuate further elaboration of confusion in our troubled world. To the translator, could you provide us please with more of Ajahn Cha's Dharma Nectar?
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