When he was twelve
years old, the great Sakyapa lama spent six months doing the practice of Arya Manjushri, and as a result, on one occasion
he had a direct vision of the deity. The glorious Manjughosha, orange in colour, was surrounded by a mass of brilliant light
and seated resplendently upon a jewelled throne. He was displaying the mudra of teaching the Dharma, and was flanked on either
side by two bodhisattvas. He spoke the following words:
“If you are attached to
this life, you are not a true spiritual practitioner.
If you are attached to samsāra,
you do not have renunciation.
If you are attached to your own
self-interest, you have no bodhichitta.
If there is grasping, you do
not have the View.”
Reflecting on the meaning of
this statement, Kunga Nyingpo realized that this mind training of ‘parting from the four attachments’ incorporates
all the practices of the path of the transcendent perfections, and he felt an extraordinary confidence in all the teachings
of the Dharma. Samāptamithi.
| Translated
by Adam
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