///////////////////MANTRA COUNT MNDFULNSS
/////////////////////ALL MAYA=Everything is impermanent, marked by birth, aging, death, joy, sorrow, pain, grief and despair.
/////////////////////////Satipatthana Sutta describes decomposition of a dead body in vividly graphic forms, 'a corpse...bloated, livid, oozing matter...a fleshless skeleton smeared with blood, held together with sinews...disconnected bones scattered in all directions
////////////////////////, "maranam, maranam or death, death". This will serve to remind us that we must certainly die someday.
//////////////////////Buddha regularly exhorted, "make haste in doing good"
/////////////////////////following three factors be considered:
1. Maintain mindfulness during recollections of death (keeping the mind fully alert);
2. Have a sense of urgency about death and its inevitability;
3. have a clear understanding (nana) that one is sure to die.
//////////////////////////////that life is uncertain because you cannot know the time of death; you know that you will die, death is certain, but one cannot know the day of one's death. However, at the moment of death, one would not have time enough for spiritual practice; cultivating mindfulness of death while we are alive is very important.
//////////////////////////
/////////////////////ALL MAYA=Everything is impermanent, marked by birth, aging, death, joy, sorrow, pain, grief and despair.
/////////////////////////Satipatthana Sutta describes decomposition of a dead body in vividly graphic forms, 'a corpse...bloated, livid, oozing matter...a fleshless skeleton smeared with blood, held together with sinews...disconnected bones scattered in all directions
////////////////////////, "maranam, maranam or death, death". This will serve to remind us that we must certainly die someday.
//////////////////////Buddha regularly exhorted, "make haste in doing good"
/////////////////////////following three factors be considered:
1. Maintain mindfulness during recollections of death (keeping the mind fully alert);
2. Have a sense of urgency about death and its inevitability;
3. have a clear understanding (nana) that one is sure to die.
//////////////////////////////that life is uncertain because you cannot know the time of death; you know that you will die, death is certain, but one cannot know the day of one's death. However, at the moment of death, one would not have time enough for spiritual practice; cultivating mindfulness of death while we are alive is very important.
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