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'''Renunciation''' (Skt. ''niḥsaraṇa''; Tib. ''ngé jung''; [[Wyl.]] ''nges 'byung'') — the determination to be free from [[samsara]].
'''Renunciation''' (Skt. ''niḥsaraṇa''; Tib. ''ngé jung''; [[Wyl.]] ''nges 'byung'') — the determination to be free from [[samsara]].
[[Sogyal Rinpoche]] writes in ''[[The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying]]'':
:''Ngé'' means "actually" or "definitely," and ''jung'' means to "come out," "emerge," or "be born." The fruit of frequent and deep reflection on death will be that you will find yourself "emerging," often with a sense of disgust, from your habitual patterns. You will find yourself increasingly ready to let go of them, and in the end you will be able to free yourself from them as smoothly, the masters say, "as drawing a hair from a slab of butter."
:This renunciation that you will come to has both sadness and joy in it: sadness because you realize the futility of your old ways, and joy because of the greater vision that begins to unfold when you are able to let go of them. This is no ordinary joy. It is a joy that gives birth to a new and profound strength, a confidence, an abiding inspiration that comes from the realization that you are not condemned to your habits, that you can indeed emerge from them, that you can change, and grow more and more free.<ref>page 33</ref>
==References==
<small><references/></small>


[[Category:Key Terms]]
[[Category:Key Terms]]

Revision as of 19:57, 12 January 2013

Renunciation (Skt. niḥsaraṇa; Tib. ngé jung; Wyl. nges 'byung) — the determination to be free from samsara.

Sogyal Rinpoche writes in The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying:

Ngé means "actually" or "definitely," and jung means to "come out," "emerge," or "be born." The fruit of frequent and deep reflection on death will be that you will find yourself "emerging," often with a sense of disgust, from your habitual patterns. You will find yourself increasingly ready to let go of them, and in the end you will be able to free yourself from them as smoothly, the masters say, "as drawing a hair from a slab of butter."
This renunciation that you will come to has both sadness and joy in it: sadness because you realize the futility of your old ways, and joy because of the greater vision that begins to unfold when you are able to let go of them. This is no ordinary joy. It is a joy that gives birth to a new and profound strength, a confidence, an abiding inspiration that comes from the realization that you are not condemned to your habits, that you can indeed emerge from them, that you can change, and grow more and more free.[1]

References

  1. page 33