Seventy Aspirations: Difference between revisions

From Rigpa Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
mNo edit summary
(Removed External Link entry as it was a generic Google search)
 
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown)
Line 3: Line 3:
One day Ashvaghosha was travelling through a forest, and he met a tiger. The tiger ate his limbs, but not completely, and Ashvaghosha continued to crawl along although he was losing blood and dying. Every time he saw a stone, he wrote a poem, and after seventy verses, he died. This poem is called Seventy Aspirations, and they are prayers you can recite.
One day Ashvaghosha was travelling through a forest, and he met a tiger. The tiger ate his limbs, but not completely, and Ashvaghosha continued to crawl along although he was losing blood and dying. Every time he saw a stone, he wrote a poem, and after seventy verses, he died. This poem is called Seventy Aspirations, and they are prayers you can recite.


==External Link==
Translation http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&&sa=X&ei=OFwkTIjaFM7KjAf3qtFq&ved=0CBEQBSgA&q=seventy+aspirations+of+ashvaghosha&spell=1


[[Category: Aspiration Prayers]]
[[Category: Aspiration Prayers]]

Latest revision as of 08:46, 20 November 2017

The Seventy Aspirations is a prayer composed by Ashvaghosha. Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche tells the story of this prayer:

One day Ashvaghosha was travelling through a forest, and he met a tiger. The tiger ate his limbs, but not completely, and Ashvaghosha continued to crawl along although he was losing blood and dying. Every time he saw a stone, he wrote a poem, and after seventy verses, he died. This poem is called Seventy Aspirations, and they are prayers you can recite.