Thursday, April 30, 2015

An Innocent Glance ~~

Can you find Angel  ?  Koh Samui, Thailand

Spring Fashion  at the beach ~~
Let me melt into the Nature ….. while there is only love, serenity and tranquility , nothing does matter …..~~~



Having a private beach dinner at Banyang Tree, one of my favorite vacation resort ~~~~ 




Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Bluegirl Fashion Show in Taipei ~~

Yen Bar ~~~ at W Hotel 

Bluegirl Fashion Show ~~~

It was at the Top of W hotel in Taipei , the Yen Bar, while the Taipei 101 stood in front of us as close as you can immagine ....

The color white purified our mind and clarified our insecurities and obstacles , and this is the reason why I love the color so much !

Smile ~~ Sweetie ~

Buddha's Birth Place ~~

Nepal ~~ Lumbini 


Prince Siddharta , the Buddha 

Thursday, April 2, 2015

Evgeny Kissin - Rachmaninov Piano Concerto No. 2






Today is Rachmnivo's  142th Birthday !!



After the poor reception of his Symphony n.1 (1897) where composer César Cui likened it to a depiction of the ten plagues of Egypt, suggesting it would be admired by the “inmates” of a music conservatory in hell, Rachmaninoff fell into a deep depression, which lasted for almost three years. During that period of time his musical production and composition activity almost ceased. However, In 1900, he began a course of autosuggestive therapy with psychologist Nikolai Dahl, an amateur musician himself. Thanks to the therapy, he began to recover his confidence and, one year later, the Piano Concerto n. 2 saw the light. At the premiere, Rachmaninoff himself was soloist and the piece was received enthusiastically.
Now one of the most popular pieces in Rachmaninoff’s repertoire, The Piano Concerto n. 2 is heavily featured in popular culture and has been quoted also in pop music compositions: as far as the derivative works are concerned, the adagio theme appears in the ballad All By Myself: author Eric Carmen, in fact, explained that Rachmaninoff was “his favourite music.” The Muse’s 2001 song Space Dementia has a lyric line —and tear us apart and make us meaningless again— that follows the melody of the first movement (moderato).

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

How to practice ?



揚唐仁波切︰如何觀修本尊?


格薩爾王,有人說他是本尊, 有人說他是護法。你要把他當護法,他就是護法;把他當守衛,他就是守衛;把他當本尊,他就是本尊;把他當上師,他就是上師。你也可以把他當作上師、 本尊、護法三合一的身份。
  這個灌頂有些人灌了不只一次,基于對上師的信心和對本尊的勝解,多灌幾次頂也可以,五次六次都可以。
  有些人參加很多法會,灌了很多頂。但是心里擔心灌很多頂卻沒辦法一一修,就不敢參加灌頂。不用這樣,那麼多灌頂的本尊,根本修不完的,只要修一個法就可以了。還是可以參加灌頂的。
  有些人還不知格薩爾王的由來,在這里簡單講一講︰
  一千三百多年前,蓮師在人間度化的因緣已經結束,準備到羅剎國去度眾,當時蓮師一干弟子都去送行。藏王赤松德贊的兒子傷心欲絕到昏厥,哭著說以後沒有蓮師不知該怎麼辦。蓮師安慰他,叫他別傷心,說若干年以後,這世界有需要時,他會化身為有血有肉的人出生在人間。後世的西藏國王因為受到苯教影響,對佛法有不以為然的看法。當時藏王是朗達瑪,許多魔王化為西藏鄰國的國王,都要摧毀佛法。于是蓮師化身的格薩王誕生為人,帶著軍隊征討各國魔軍,把魔類的神識遷引到淨土,恢復佛法。
  格薩爾王從十三歲起到八十幾歲都在打仗,他旗下的大將都是印度八十大成就者和蓮師二十五弟子的化身。格薩爾王本身是文殊菩薩的身、觀音菩薩的語、金剛手菩薩的意的化身。所以格薩爾王和他的將軍們都是“出世間的”神祇,不是“世間的”神祇。如果把格薩爾王當作上師來修,可以把格薩爾王想成蓮師,像修上師法那樣觀想蓮師就是格薩爾王,然後持蓮師咒。蓮師是上師本尊護法的總集,修蓮師同時就是修上師本尊護法。
  也可以這樣修格薩爾王,有些人喜歡按照三根本,分別修上師本尊空行。修上師法,就是蓮師;本尊可以選觀音、普巴或威猛蓮師;空行可以選金剛瑜珈女、綠度母或益喜措嘉佛母。
  本尊要觀想得很清楚是很難的,很多人知道有生起次第、圓滿次第。我們觀想本尊的顏色、穿的衣服、身上的飾品、手上的法器,常常想到臉的樣子就忘了身上的服飾;想到身上的服飾就忘了手上的法器;想到手上的法器就忘了臉的樣子,想到這個就忘了那個。
  很多西藏學者研究了很多年典籍,等到要閉關修本尊的時候還是搞不清楚。真正的觀想是很復雜的。要觀想對面虛空本尊所在的無量宮的所有細節本尊和所有眷屬,要把他們觀想得像從鏡子照出來的那樣清楚,又要把他們想成如幻的顯現,才算達到生起次第。在座的沒人能做得到,所以也不用一定要觀想得很清楚。只要想本尊在我們面前的虛空,真的深深相信他就在那里,就達到生起次第了;然後持本尊咒語,完成以後想本尊放光清淨我們,最後本尊化光融入自己,這樣就是圓滿次第了。
  修上師也好,修本尊也好,要深深的相信,自己在天界也好,在地獄也好,不管我在哪里,本尊都知道。這一世要依止他,下一世要依止他,臨終時要依止他。深深的相信!
  供養護法,要把護法當成是自性的一部分自己心性的顯現。如果只把護法當成外在的對象,是可以得到護法的幫助,自己卻無法得到護法的成就。
  要依止出世間的神祇,如果依止的是世間的神祇,比如山神、地神、河神或者土地公這類的神,他們有時會幫助我們,但有時會傷害我們,甚至我們死的時候,把我們引領到黑暗的地方去。
  若供奉世間神祇,不能把他們當作是自己心性的一部分,也不要把任何魔類當作自己心性的一部分。這樣做容易導致錯亂、瘋狂、情緒不穩定。現在很多錯亂、瘋狂、情緒不穩定的情況,都是跟信仰世間的神祇有關。不要依靠世間的神祇,最好是不跟他們打交道。
  大家都很忙,要工作賺錢。財富是基于因果的,如果有福報,不需要怎麼努力就會有錢;沒有福報,再努力也不會多有錢。不然就要花很多精力才能得到。
  吃的穿的夠用就好,還有代步的車子,就可以了。接下來不妨想想,如何多花一點時間修法。
  大家工作很忙沒時間,修法的時候咒語也不用念很多,念一些就好,快快樂樂過日子,沒什麼煩惱,就可以了。

Disaster in 21 century is lacking of Love ……


大寶法王十七世在哈佛大學~
He received a Standing Ovation applause after his speech at Harvard ~~~~
"There are disasters in the world , such as plague , famine , earth quake, and beside these , the Lacking of Love !! " 
(March 26, 2015 – Cambridge, Massachusetts) The spacious interior of Harvard’s Memorial Chapel quietly filled with students, faculty and special guests. Light was streaming in through the tall, arched windows and played off the delicate filigree of the altar gates. In front them an elegant chair had been set up for His Holiness the Karmapa, who appeared right on time, moving easily across the small stage to the waiting chair. This lama with the 900-year-old lineage is lecturing at the 350-year-old university, the oldest institution of higher learning in the US.
Professor David Hempton, the Dean of the Faculty of Divinity, welcomed the Karmapa with warm words and the gift of a silver memorial bowl inscribed to him “with highest appreciation on the occasion of his historic visit to the Harvard Divinity School.” Professor Hempton recalled that the 16th Karmapa had come to the Harvard Divinity School in 1976, and that now the Divinity School hosted a thriving Buddhist studies and ministry program.
Next Professor Janet Gyatso, Associate Dean and the Hershey Professor of Buddhist Studies, introduced the Karmapa as the great hero—a reference to him as bodhisattva (literally “hero of full awakening”). She explained that the Karmapa was the first officially recognized reincarnating lama, or tulku, and then gave a swift history of the main incarnations of the Karmapa down to the present 17th one, Orgyen Trinley Dorje. She noted that the 17th Karmapa is no less exceptional than any of his predecessors, proof that the tulku system in Tibet is alive and well. Professor Gyatso characterized him as bold and intelligent with amazingly honest energy, pursuing his interests beyond traditional areas of study to include the environment, the status of women and social justice. She concluded by saying that his recent commitment to convene a platform for ordaining women in the monastic tradition followed by Tibetan Buddhists is of historical importance.
In his address to the assembly, the Karmapa began by making a link to his previous incarnation, the 16th Karmapa, who was one of the first masters to bring Tibetan Buddhism to the U.S. and came to Harvard. He was glad to be back, His Holiness said. Turning to the topic of how to care for living beings on the earth in this 21st century, he began by stating that the real essence of Buddhist teachings is dependent arising: all things arise by depending one upon the other. It is vital that we do not leave this a mere abstract philosophical idea, but apply it directly to our lives, he said. “How can I embody dependent arising? How do I know it through my emotional life? In this twenty-first century, we can all see that through social media and the Internet, interdependence is even more obvious, but the mere exchange of information is not enough. From one point of view, the more information we have, the clearer things become. On the other hand, sometimes we have too much information and it obscures, preventing us from truly understanding. Furthermore, interdependence is not just about sharing information or our thoughts among ourselves, but sharing the feelings we have in our hearts, our real experience.”
Following his own advice, the Karmapa related a story from his own life, when he was three or four years old and living with his nomad family. Their main food was meat, and so animals had to be killed in the autumn. “I remember clearly,” he said, “that I could not endure this. I still remember the unbearable feeling in my heart. I don’t know if you could call it compassion as described in the texts with precise definitions, but it was a feeling of great love in my heart.
“When I was young, I had no education, but I did have this natural feeling of sorrow and compassion. Then I was recognized as the Karmapa and put on a throne, but when I think back to the genuine, unfabricated feeling I had as a child, in some ways it surpasses the compassion I can have now. I really appreciate the compassion I had then. Children, especially young ones, have an innate capacity for genuine love and kindness. We can see that when one child is crying, another starts crying too, because they recognize the feeling and naturally sympathize with it. In this way our sympathy can extend to all living beings. This does not have to do with whether we recognize ourselves as spiritual or not; it is an inborn part of being human.
“As we grow up, our circumstances change and this can obscure our innate compassion. We are born with our compassion button switched on and then the button is switched off. As adults compassion does not come so easily to us. When we could take care of others, we think about ourselves: Will this harm me? How will it affect me? As we grow older, we become educated and, therefore, careful: even clever. We hesitate and worry about risks, so we lose our sense of connection. All of this obscures our innate compassion.
“Compassion is not a thought, but a feeling, which cannot be inculcated or encouraged. Compassion is something each of us has to volunteer through our natural courage and benevolence, which is the root of compassion.
“Dependent arising is a concept but it must become more than that. It has to be something we actually experience. We need to recognize that the environment and all the beings who inhabit it arise in dependence one upon the other, and further, that individual beings are also interdependent. The food we eat, the clothes we wear, and air we breathe has all come about through others. We cannot survive independently. The more keenly we feel this, the more we will feel that others’ well-being, their happiness and suffering, is very much a part of our own. This awareness will help us to take responsibility for others. And not just begin to take responsibility, but come to feel within us a compassion that is genuinely courageous.”
The Karmapa continued to comment on our present-day situation. “These days we are made extremely comfortable by the way we do things, but this also conceals a great deal from our sight, such as the process that culminates in the meat we eat. We lose the awareness of our connection to things and so there is a great need to deepen our awareness of our interdependence.
In conclusion, the Karmapa said that he wanted to leave the audience with one thought. “When we talk about disasters in this world, we usually think of things like epidemics and famine, but there is one source of disaster that we often fail to recognize—a lack of love. Due to this people have no help when they need it or no friends when friends are wanted. In a sense the most dangerous thing in this world is apathy. We think of weapons, warfare or disease as terrible dangers, and indeed they are, but once apathy takes hold of our mind, we can no longer avoid it.


“I urge you to feel a love that is courageous. Not in the sense of a grudging undertaking of a heavy burden in feeling responsible for the welfare of others, but a joyous acknowledgment of your

interdependence with each and every other living being and with this environment.”