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As a student of Chögyam Trungpa, I heard the phrase “back to square one” quite a lot • he implied that doing something over and over again is very important — in our dharma practice, in our meditation, and in our studies • throughout his teachings, Trungpa Rinpoche put a great deal of emphasis on building a strong foundation, and on going back to the very earliest teachings of the Buddha, in particular to the teachings of the Four Noble Truths: the reality of suffering, the causes of suffering, the possibility of the cessation of suffering, and various pathways to do so • in a more immediate sense, going back to square one can mean going back to your very first personal inspiration to embark on the path of dharma • why are you doing this? what is the point? what inspired you from the very beginning? • going back to square one means to always touch back on the foundation • no matter how “advanced” you may feel, you always have to check back and ask: are you actually working on yourself, are you actually dealing with your own neuroses, your own habits, your own obstacles? • and as you extend your practice to working with others to cultivate wisdom and compassion and skillful means, how are you working with that? • so you go back to the beginning; you start from square one, over and over and over • this practice of going back to square one keeps things fresh and honest; it keeps us in tune with the fundamental questions that we need to look into.
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As a student of Chögyam Trungpa, I heard the phrase “back to square one” quite a lot • he implied that doing something over and over again is very important — in our dharma practice, in our meditation, and in our studies • throughout his teachings, Trungpa Rinpoche put a great deal of emphasis on building a strong foundation, and on going back to the very earliest teachings of the Buddha, in particular to the teachings of the Four Noble Truths: the reality of suffering, the causes of suffering, the possibility of the cessation of suffering, and various pathways to do so • in a more immediate sense, going back to square one can mean going back to your very first personal inspiration to embark on the path of dharma • why are you doing this? what is the point? what inspired you from the very beginning? • going back to square one means to always touch back on the foundation • no matter how “advanced” you may feel, you always have to check back and ask: are you actually working on yourself, are you actually dealing with your own neuroses, your own habits, your own obstacles? • and as you extend your practice to working with others to cultivate wisdom and compassion and skillful means, how are you working with that? • so you go back to the beginning; you start from square one, over and over and over • this practice of going back to square one keeps things fresh and honest; it keeps us in tune with the fundamental questions that we need to look into.
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