Cangyang Gyatso's poem "I was worried about hurting Sanskrit, and I was afraid to leave the city when I entered the mountains." The world is safe and steady, and it does not bear the burden of Tathagata. "This sentence is adapted from" Don't be a Tathagata "and" Don't be a Qing Dynasty ".
This poem means that I used to think that amorous feelings would be harmful to my practice, but I'm going to practice and I'm afraid of parting with you. Well, is there a way to kill two birds with one stone? I can love you very much without violating the Tathagata's statutes!
This is a line from a poem written by the 6th Dalai Lama Cangyang Gyatso. As the sixth Dalai Lama, Cangyang Gyatso can't have love, but he fell in love with a girl, so he has always been in contradiction, and he will feel that "the world is safe and the Tathagata is not clear." The "Tathagata" here refers to Buddhism, and the "love" refers to the girl he loves.
Extended data
Character evaluation of Cangyang Jiacuo
The eminent monk of Tibetan Buddhism commented on him: Vader, by virtue of secular law, made the common people see a broad spiritual world in the birth law, and his poems and songs purified the hearts of generations. With his most sincere compassion, he made the people feel that Buddhism was not out of reach, and his maverick gave us real education. It is precisely because of this that Cangyang Gyatso has always been regarded as VI in Tibetan Buddhism, and the Dalai Lama, who was later designated as VI, was called VII.
Du Qi's History of Tibet in the Middle Ages: The young Cangyang Jiacuo became a victim in some incidents, but his ending was a prophecy displayed by the guardian gods, all of which made people forgive his weakness. Now people generally like him again, and his strange behavior is interpreted as a vague and obscure behavior of God.
Zhang Songcao: Cangyang Jiacuo is the god who was created, but his rebellion denied the creation movement itself. ?
Rong, a professor of literature at Nankai University: Cangyang Jiacuo is the most outstanding poet in the history of Tibetan literature. His poems have been told by families in Tibetan areas for more than 300 years, and are deeply rooted in people's hearts and household names.
Li Xueqin: Cangyang Jiacuo used this meter to write the love songs of Cangyang Jiacuo, a moxibustion population, which promoted the vigorous development of' He' style love songs, making it a poetic meter with great influence and wide spread among Tibetan love songs, competing with many' Lu' style love songs.
Resources Baidu Encyclopedia-Live up to the Tathagata, Live up to your purity.