Self-grasping: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
mNo edit summary
 
Line 2: Line 2:


[[Sogyal Rinpoche]] writes<ref>[[The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying]], pages 120-121.</ref>:
[[Sogyal Rinpoche]] writes<ref>[[The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying]], pages 120-121.</ref>:
:[...] Ego [...] is the absence of true knowledge of who we really are, together with its result: a doomed clutching on, at all costs, to a cobbled together and makeshift image of ourselves, an inevitably chameleon charlatan self that keeps changing and has to, to keep alive the fiction of its existence. This is what is known as the ‘ego’ or ''dak dzin'' in Tibetan, which means ‘grasping at a self’. Ego is defined as incessant movements of grasping at a delusory notion of ‘I’ and ‘mine’, self and other, and all the concepts, ideas, desires, and activity that sustain this false construction.
:[...] Ego [...] is the absence of true knowledge of who we really are, together with its result: a doomed clutching on, at all costs, to a cobbled together and makeshift image of ourselves, an inevitably chameleon charlatan self that keeps changing and has to, to keep alive the fiction of its existence. This is what is known as the ‘ego’ or ''dak dzin'' in Tibetan, which means ‘grasping at a [[self]]’. Ego is defined as incessant movements of grasping at a delusory notion of ‘I’ and ‘mine’, self and other, and all the concepts, ideas, desires, and activity that sustain this false construction.


==Notes==
==Notes==

Latest revision as of 10:40, 11 December 2017

Self-grasping (Skt. ātmagrāha; Tib. བདག་འཛིན་, dak dzin; Wyl. bdag 'dzin) — often translated as 'ego'.

Sogyal Rinpoche writes[1]:

[...] Ego [...] is the absence of true knowledge of who we really are, together with its result: a doomed clutching on, at all costs, to a cobbled together and makeshift image of ourselves, an inevitably chameleon charlatan self that keeps changing and has to, to keep alive the fiction of its existence. This is what is known as the ‘ego’ or dak dzin in Tibetan, which means ‘grasping at a self’. Ego is defined as incessant movements of grasping at a delusory notion of ‘I’ and ‘mine’, self and other, and all the concepts, ideas, desires, and activity that sustain this false construction.

Notes

Internal Links