Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind: Difference between revisions
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'''Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind''' (Tib. སེམས་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་, ''Semnyi Ngalso''; [[Wyl.]] ''sems nyid ngal gso'') — part of the [[Trilogy of Finding Comfort and Ease]] by [[Longchenpa]]. | '''Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind''' (Tib. སེམས་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་, ''Semnyi Ngalso''; [[Wyl.]] ''sems nyid ngal gso'') — part of the [[Trilogy of Finding Comfort and Ease]] by [[Longchenpa]]. | ||
* {{TBRCW|O00EGS1015846|O00EGS101584615850$W23760| | * {{TBRCW|O00EGS1015846|O00EGS101584615850$W23760|རྫོགས་པ་ཆེན་པོ་སེམས་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་, ''rdzogs pa chen po sems nyid ngal gso''}} | ||
==Related Texts== | ==Related Texts== |
Revision as of 12:21, 21 March 2015
Finding Comfort and Ease in the Nature of Mind (Tib. སེམས་ཉིད་ངལ་གསོ་, Semnyi Ngalso; Wyl. sems nyid ngal gso) — part of the Trilogy of Finding Comfort and Ease by Longchenpa.
Related Texts
Aside from the root text, there are three other texts on the same topic:
- 1. A Large Commentary called the Great Chariot.
- 2. White Lotus Garland: A Summary of the Great Chariot
- 3. Guided Meditative Instructions called The Excellent Path to Enlightenment (partially translated as 'Twenty-Seven Courses of Training in Dzogpa Chenpo' in Longchen Rabjam, The Practice of Dzogchen, translated by Tulku Thondup, Snow Lion, 2nd edition 1996, pages 303-315)
Translations
- H.V. Guenther, Kindly Bent to Ease Us, Part 1: Mind, Dharma Publishing, 1975
- Longchen Rapjampa, The Great Chariot: A Treatise on the Great Perfection, translated by Ives Waldo and edited by Connie Miller, Library of Tibetan Classics, Wisdom, forthcoming