Sample Essay on Reading the Next Blossom
A lonely fish
2023-11-29 22:03:56
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I was able to get to know Shia Rongbo Khenpo, and had the opportunity to read his spiritual essays "The Second Blossom", because I consulted him on cardiovascular health and disease prevention last spring. I believe that face comes from heart. When I first met Kanbu and talked with him, I felt that he was very kind.

Before the book was completed, The Second Blossom was widely spread in different formats and texts. In the book, Khenpo, with his wise and simple words, helps the readers to be frank with their heart nature, and advocates and leads the people to be good and spiritual. The most profound experience of reading "The Second Blossom" is that doctors and Buddhists are bound together, and doctors and Buddhists are united.

In today's diversified values, we should vigorously promote people's aspiration. And doctors should have a kind heart. It is often said that a doctor should have a heart of Bodhi. Doctors need to fear life most, and they need to have compassion and sense of responsibility most.

Khenpo first talked about "impermanence of life". Because "he is facing impermanence every day", he "urgently feels the importance of practice". Through his own experience of illness, Khenpo shared with others how to correctly face troubles and pains. He believes that to relieve pain is not to escape, but to learn to face it squarely.

Take diseases for example, many myocardial infarction or sudden cardiac death occur suddenly without warning, and at least 25% of myocardial infarction cannot be predicted and evaluated with known risk factors. But if we have some pathological knowledge, we will know how to adjust our living habits accordingly, so that we can "prevent problems before they occur" or reduce the disease.

When you are alive, you should learn to think about "one or two", not "__", and deal with life problems with a positive attitude. We should not only admit and face up to the universality of life pain, but also not be pessimistic and negative. We should not always treat pain as a negative experience and complain about it. In fact, as long as people have spiritual beliefs and do not abandon themselves, the pain in life, especially the pain in their youth, will be transformed into wealth and the best memories of life.

When Khenpo talked about self-discipline, I was deeply educated as a doctor. He said: "The practice I understand is not to pursue mysterious experiences or obtain some extraordinary functions. It is to cultivate the spiritual qualities of kindness, tolerance, humility, and kindness that can bring happiness to oneself and others, that is, to pay attention to the well-being of other lives, and consciously adjust their own behavior to make other beings feel comfortable and happy." Therefore, the first purpose of practice is to think for all beings, and the second is to take practical actions to transform their hearts. As doctors, we are faced with patients who have physical and mental difficulties and hope to be helped and treated every day. We should think in terms of the patient's position.

Throughout the book, the values advocated by the author are different from the core values advocated by today's society, but the connotation is highly consistent.