Thursday, January 31, 2019

We CAN stop ALL war. It isn't difficult.





Thank God the President is a stable Genius. - American Intelligence Media



The 20th century was a century of war, therefore the 21st century should be the age of peace. - Dalai Lama

Saturday, January 26, 2019

After Islamic terror plot foiled media promptly report hate crime agains...

Made in China - portrait of the Dalai Lama


Made in China - portrait of the Dalai Lama

Without knowing, 16 artists in China painted a part of the Dalai Lama. They were invited to produce ‘abstract’ impressionistic oil paintings, based on photos uploaded onto their websites. The pictures were pieces of the portrait, but were rotated an named ‘Curtains’, ‘Mango’, ‘Hills’, ‘Grandpa’ and the like. Together the Chinese painters created an illegal painting, symbolizing peace and unity in many different ways.

July 5 & 6: Cycling Art Gallery

Airco Caravan’s Cycling Art Gallery is cycling to the Chinese embassy in The Hague, The Netherlands Friday morning July 5 and through Amsterdam Saturday July 6 2013 to celebrate the birthday of His Holiness.
http://www.aircocaravan.com/

PS photo after launching of painting with Thom of Tibet Support Groep and Brigitte UNFFT.

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THE TRUMP/Q PLAN FOR THE D33P STAT3

Roger Stone Arrested on Minor Charges- And Someone May Have Leaked His I...

Wednesday, January 9, 2019

British Use Psychological Warfare to Control the World

Webjournal de Radio-Québec 9 janvier

Garuda


Related image

khyung

1) [deity in the form of a] garuda; 2) large bird; 3) sacred lord; 4) a clan; 5) herd, multitude [IW]
garuda. 1) chief of the feathered race, garuda, deity in the form of a garuda sacred lord. Syn mkha' ldingnam mkha' lding. 2) n. of a family clan. 3) herd, multitude; a garuda [RY]
garuda, enemy of klu, roc, mythical bird of great size, eagle, herd, multitude, mythical chief of the feathered race, golden eagle, corresponds to zhung in the ancient language of zhang zhung [JV]
1) garuḍa; 2) the deity named Garuḍa, who takes the form of a garuḍa; 3) the Khyung clan (ancient Tibetan family); 4) herd. From the New World Encyclopedia: Garuḍa (from the Sanskrit: Garuḍa गरुड or "devourer") is a large mythical bird or bird-like creature that appears in both Hindu and Buddhist mythology. In Hindu myth, Garuḍa is a lesser divinity, usually the vehicle (or vahana) of Vishnu, the supreme preserver deity. Hindus have bestowed various names of veneration upon him, including Amritaharana ("stealer of ambrosial nectar") Gaganeshvara ("lord of the sky"), and Suparna ("having beautiful wings"), among others. Although considered a minor deity, Garuḍa has an independent Upanishad, the Garudopanidad, and a Purana, the Garuḍa Purana, devoted specifically to him. In Buddhism, meanwhile, the garuḍas are an entire race of winged beings who exist in rivalry with the nāgas, serpentine sea creatures... In Buddhist mythology, the garuḍa-s (Pāli: garuḷā) are a race of enormous predatory birds of great intelligence and social organization. Another name for the garuḍa is suparṇa (Pāli: supaṇṇa), meaning "well-winged" or "having good wings." Garuḍa is occasionally depicted as the vehicle of Amoghasiddhi, one of the five Dhyani or "self-born" Buddhas [and lord of the Karma Family]. The term 'Garuḍa' is sometimes even used as an epithet for the Buddha himself. Like the nāgas, garuḍas combine the characteristics of animals and divine beings, and so they are considered to be among the lowest devas or gods in Buddhism. Just as in Hinduism, the garuḍas are enemies to the nāgas, whom they hunt. The garuḍas at one time caught the nāgas by seizing them by their heads, although the nāgas quickly learned that by swallowing large stones, they could make themselves too heavy to be carried in the garuḍas talons, wearing them out and eventually killing them from exhaustion. According to the Pandara Jātaka (J.518), this secret was divulged to one of the garuḍas by the ascetic Karambiya, who subsequently taught him how to seize a nāga by the tail and force him to vomit up the stone he had swallowed. In the Mahasamyatta Sutta, the Buddha is shown making temporary peace between the nāgas and the garuḍas. The exact size of a garuḍa is uncertain, but its wings are said to have a span of many miles. Buddhist mythology claims that when a garuḍas wings flap, they create hurricane-like winds that blow down houses and darken the sky. According to the Kākātī Jātaka, J.327, a human being is so tiny in comparison to a garuḍa that a man can hide inside the plumage of a garuḍa's wings without being noticed. Garuḍas are also capable of tearing up entire banyan trees from their roots and carrying them off. The garuḍas are ruled by kings and live together in large cities. Their dwellings are in groves of the simbalī, or silk-cotton trees. They are apt protectors of wherever it is they reside, and garuḍas were among the beings appointed by Śakra to guard Mount Sumeru and the Trayastrimsa heaven from the attacks of the asuras. At least some of them have the magical power of changing into human form when they wish to have dealings with people. On some occasions garuḍa kings have had romances with human women in this form. From Rigpa Wiki: Garuda (Skt. garuḍa; Tib. ཁྱུང་, khyung, Wyl. khyung) – a mythical bird-like creature which features in both Buddhist and Hindu lore. They also symbolize various elements of the Buddhist path. The garuḍa symbol can have the following meanings: 1) a mythical creature, 2) one of the four dignities associated with the Wind Horse or rlung rta, 3) a deity of protection, 4) our primordial nature, 5) a mythical creature. On the outer level, the garuḍa is a mythical semi-divine bird-like creature that is the enemy of the nāgas. It is represented in both Hindu and Buddhist traditions (especially in Tibetan, Cham, Khmer and Javan art). They appear in many tales recounting the Buddha's previous lives, and are said to pay homage to the Buddha. In the Tibetan Vajrayana tradition, the garuḍa was associated with the khyung, which are important deities of the Bön pantheon, and practised during healing rituals in order to counter certain illnesses provoked by nāgas. The garuḍais also one of the four dignities associated with the Wind Horse. In this context, the garuḍa represents the fire element, and it is said to to symbolize freedom from hopes and fears. Garuḍa is also [the name of] an important deity of protection. It is one of the Three Deities of the Great Master Vajrapani. It is depicted above Vajrakilaya in Vajrakilaya thangkas. The practice of Takhyung Barwa combines the practices of Hayagriva, Guru Drakpo, and Garuda. In the Dzogchen teachings, the garuḍa represents our primordial nature. [Erick Tsiknopoulos]

http://rywiki.tsadra.org/index.php/khyung?fbclid=IwAR0MztPNAAXNleA1Qx4MZgIXmcO8mNPuvCk4hvVHj0E8YDYfaJ9C0ABPGnI

Tuesday, January 1, 2019

The blessings of Guru Rinpoche in this dark age ~ Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche :

The blessings of Guru Rinpoche in this dark age ~ Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche :
In this dark age, the dregs of time, when beings are immersed in constant suffering from the three poisons of ignorance, aggression and attachment, when the five negative emotions are more turbulent than ever before, and when terrible sufferings from illness, poverty, famine, hunger, and the threat of war, the blessings of Guru Rinpoche are even quicker to act. He himself has pledged that in such an age, whenever a person prays for him, he will respond immediately with his blessings. And these are not just sweet words meant to please, but the true, undeceiving words of Guru Rinpoche.
#gururinpoche #padmasambhava #dilgokyenntse

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