Guest guest Posted October 3, 2005 Report Share Posted October 3, 2005 Namaste _/\_ all. An excerpt from a good book - 'The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying': "Compassion is a far greater and nobler thing than pity. Pity has its roots in fear, and a sense of arrogance and condescension, sometimes even a smug feeling of "I'm glad it's not me." As Stephen Levine says: "When your fear touches someone's pain it becomes pity; when your love touches someone's pain, it becomes compassion." To train in compassion, then, is to know all beings are the same and suffer in similar ways, to honor all those who suffer, and to know you are neither separate from nor superior to anyone. So your first response on seeing someone suffer becomes not mere pity, but deep compassion. You feel for that person, respect and even gratitude, because you now know that whoever prompts you to develop compassion by their suffering is in fact giving you one of the greatest gifts of all, because they are helping you to develop that very quality you need most in your progress toward enlightenment. That is why we say in Tibet that the beggar who is asking you for money, or the sick old woman wringing your heart, may be the buddhas in disguise, manifesting on your path to help you grow in compassion and so move towards buddhahood." Jaya Sri Radhey! , "Baba ji" <beirut_ka_baba> wrote: > Is charity not a sort of pampering our own Ego?? When we see a > begger or a person in pains, do we not feel ourselves having upper > hand ? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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