Things derive their being and nature by mutual dependence and are nothing in themselves.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNAThe misery which follows pleasure is the pleasure which follows misery.
More Akkineni Nagarjuna Quotes
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Imagine a magician Who creates a creature Who creates other creatures. Acts I perform are creatures Who create others.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Without hope of reward Provide help to others. Bear suffering alone, And share your pleasures with beggars.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
So, to praise others for their virtues – Can but encourage one’s own efforts
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Great compassion penetrates into the marrow of the bone. It is the support of all living beings.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
A Buddha teaches according to the tolerance of his students; Some he urges to refrain from sins, others to do good,
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Such inevitable parting Should not be the cause of misery.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Although you may spend your life killing, You will not exhaust all your foes. But if you quell your own anger, your real enemy will be slain.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
The logs of wood which move down the river together Are driven apart by every wave.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
There is pleasure when a sore is scratched, But to be without sores is more pleasurable still.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Some to rely on dualism, other on non-dualism; And to some he teaches the profound, The terrifying, the practice of enlightenment, Whose essence is emptiness that is compassion
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Like the love of a parent for an only child, the tenderness of the Compassionate One is all-pervasive.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
All philosophies are mental fabrications. There has never been a single doctrine by which one could enter the true essence of things.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Someone who has acted carelessly, But later becomes careful and attentive, Is as beautiful as the bright moon emerging from the clouds.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Spring water free of impurity, entering the ocean, becomes undrinkable.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA -
Just so, there are pleasures in worldly desires, But to be without desires is more pleasurable still.
AKKINENI NAGARJUNA