The Therīgāthā Festival is an international celebration of the Poems of the Elder Nuns, the world’s oldest collection of literature composed by women. These poems are a testament to women’s empowerment and a celebration of their spiritual awakening.
From May 3– 16, join events from Buddhist organisations around the world to discover the richness of these ancient women’s verses and support the living legacy of inspiring female practitioners.
https://therigathafestival.net/
Mike
Therigatha Festival - Celebrate the Wisdom of the Ancient Bhikkhunis
Re: Therigatha Festival - Celebrate the Wisdom of the Ancient Bhikkhunis
I found it interesting that one of the suttas I chose here as particularly resonating with me: here 3.4 Dantika was picked by Ayya Munissara. See: https://therigathafestival.net/events/
Ayya Munissara grew up in Thailand, where you do still commonly see elephants, her comments about the elephant simile were a little different from how I had originally read it. As she says, due to their size, an elephant is inherently dangerous, even when it's tame. Also, elephants tend to always be in motion, even when standing still, swaying, flicking their ears and tail, and so on. It gave a different slant on the comparison with the mind...
Prerecorded, and live-recorded events here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnnkCI ... W3yiUSDSsQ
Mike
Ayya Munissara grew up in Thailand, where you do still commonly see elephants, her comments about the elephant simile were a little different from how I had originally read it. As she says, due to their size, an elephant is inherently dangerous, even when it's tame. Also, elephants tend to always be in motion, even when standing still, swaying, flicking their ears and tail, and so on. It gave a different slant on the comparison with the mind...
Prerecorded, and live-recorded events here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnnkCI ... W3yiUSDSsQ
Mike
Re: Therigatha Festival - Celebrate the Wisdom of the Ancient Bhikkhunis
That just gave it a whole new depth. Thank you for sharing.mikenz66 wrote: ↑Fri May 14, 2021 9:49 pm I found it interesting that one of the suttas I chose here as particularly resonating with me: here 3.4 Dantika was picked by Ayya Munissara. See: https://therigathafestival.net/events/
Ayya Munissara grew up in Thailand, where you do still commonly see elephants, her comments about the elephant simile were a little different from how I had originally read it. As she says, due to their size, an elephant is inherently dangerous, even when it's tame. Also, elephants tend to always be in motion, even when standing still, swaying, flicking their ears and tail, and so on. It gave a different slant on the comparison with the mind...
Prerecorded, and live-recorded events here:
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCnnkCI ... W3yiUSDSsQ
Mike
“Knowing that this body is just like foam,
understanding it has the nature of a mirage,
cutting off Māra’s flower-tipped arrows,
one should go beyond the King of Death’s sight.”
understanding it has the nature of a mirage,
cutting off Māra’s flower-tipped arrows,
one should go beyond the King of Death’s sight.”