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Advice on Dying: And Living a Better Life
Advice on Dying: And Living a Better Life

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Authors: Dalai Lama, Jeffrey Hopkins
Publisher: Atria
Category: Book

List Price: $20.00  (47.08 RON)
Buy New: $15.30  (36.02 RON)
You Save: $4.70  (11.06 RON) (24%)



Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars 6 reviews
Sales Rank: 85116

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 240
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7
Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.2 x 1

ISBN: 0743463021
Dewey Decimal Number: 294.3423
EAN: 9780743463027
ASIN: 0743463021

Publication Date: November 19, 2002
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 6
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5 out of 5 stars Scarce information presented clearly and concisely.   August 1, 2008
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

This particular text contains very hard to find information on the inner structure,
presented in a clear, straightforward, concise and comprehensive manner:
included are descriptions of the symbols for, and the actions of, the various
levels of consciousness, chakras, channels and winds and the results of prana movement through the body.
This information is just not easily findable or accessible elsewhere in any one place.
You could even use this information to accurately decipher ancient teaching thankas.
His Holiness has written many books and there is, of necessity I think, a great deal of similar information overlap
amongst them, however he always manages to insert into each work some truly unique gem of information
not readily found elsewhere. It's rather like the old children's visual game of
Find The Precious Objects Hidden Somewhere In This Picture.
These unique additions in the midst of familiar territory are tiny hints
at the profound depth of wisdom inherent in this great teacher. Don't fret over this book's details.
Read it once through whether or not you like it, then just be patient and go back,
and read it again, and yet again, and eventually, you will find it easy.



5 out of 5 stars Amazing Technical Manual on Physical and Spiritual Reality of Death and Living a Better Life   February 10, 2007
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

Did you know that Tibetan Buddhism is tantric? That is just one of the revelations of this book. It is obvious that, through the ages, the meditation masters have been observing the physical symptons of death and dying. This book explains the physical symptoms one experiences at each stage of the process of dying, described in a thick context of a metaphor of energies and levels of mind. (If you are a spiritual mystic, you'll love this! I must admit, I have had to read it a couple of times to get my Western mind to surrender -- but the journey is worth the concentration.) When I get to my death bead, instead of allowing the people around me to mourn, I have written instructions for my family to have someone read this book to me (over and over if I last that long) -- whether I'm apparently conscious or not (and I will invite the others to read Hesse's Siddhartha and go home and forgive someone they hate). Along with physical symptons of dying, this book details the journey of the mind and consciousness as the traveler experiences the only event we are all born to experience. Many thanks to the Dalai Lama and his teachers.


3 out of 5 stars Fizzles out   April 9, 2005
 6 out of 11 found this review helpful

This book can be divided up into smaller parts. The first part is a forward by Jeffrey Hopkins which discusses in part the Panchen Lama and also the Dalai Lama. He talks about the identification of these figures and how the Chinese who supposedly have "liberated" Tibet have started their own identification processes. Hopkins is very critical of Chinese politics and their involvement in Tibet. The second part of the book deals with a 17 stanza poem written by the first Panchen Lama of Tibet. The present Dalai Lama goes on to break down this poem and comment on certain aspects of it.

I enjoyed the first half of this book because of its historical and practical information. The Dalai Lama gives practical advice on how we all need to practice daily and how it's best to have an awareness of death. When we are aware of reality we can conquer any fears we may have about life or the death process. He elaborates on the advantages and the disadvantages of being mindful during the time of death. However, the latter part of the book in my opinion got bogged down in mysticism and myth and was a lot less interesting. It seemed as if I was reading about blind ritual with no practical advice but instead endless comments about esoteric subjects. I found my eyes glossing over more than once. Therefore, the book was okay for some simple wisdom and inspirational advice but it's a chore to keep yourself motivated all the way thru.



4 out of 5 stars A Book About Life   March 30, 2005
 4 out of 4 found this review helpful

After having received this book along with another book by The Dalai Lama, How to Practice:The Way to a Meaningful Life, I read the other one first since based on the titles alone I thought that it would have more application to little ol secular me than a very narrow book about death. After having read both of them though I am shocked to see that I was wrong - despite what I had initially though I got more out of this book as a non-Buddhist that I got out of the first one.

While I have long been familiar with the idea that the specter of death can give one their driving force in life - when tomorrow isn't promised to you today is all that you have - I have never heard it more eloquently expressed than here.

Certainly there were parts of this book that I did not find applicable except from an academic standpoint since I myself am not Buddhist but on the whole I was surprised by just how much of this book could be seen as important for the Buddhist and non-Buddhist alike. And as with the earlier book I had read by him one of the main treats of this one was to get to experience what a remarkable man The Dalai Lama comes across as through his writings - not only as a sincerely religious man but also a truly modern man embracing science as another way to probe the divine rather than shunning it.

The only thing that really stands out in my mind as something that I didn't like in this book was the translator, Jeffrey Hopkins. I don't remember his forward in the previous book I read as being notable but his one in this book seems to serve no other purpose than to express his deep contempt for the Chinese government - naturally there is a reason for this but it can't help but put a bad taste in your mouth when you read something like that before starting a book about Buddhism. The forward did contain interesting information about how the Panchen Lama and Dalai Lama are selected but I still think the reading experience would be better off without it.

All in all though I must say that The Dalai Lama, as an author and as a person, has greatly exceeded any initial expectations that I came to his books with. No doubt his other works would prove as enjoyable and I am sure I will make my way to them before too long.



4 out of 5 stars Much concentrated wisdom here   July 6, 2003
 13 out of 19 found this review helpful

The Buddhist preoccupation with death almost borders on the morbid. In fact the awareness of your impermanence and the inevitability of your own death is the cornerstone of the whole religion. There is almost no concept of an omipotent, omnipresent God and the focus is really on attaining an ever present, compassionate and wisdom filled state of mind. This is what draws me to Buddhism.

This book by Jeffrey Hopkins is a translation of the Dalai Lama's interpretation of a poem by the first Panchen Lama. The poem is quite cryptic by itself but the Dalai Lama's interpretation and Hopkins's skillful translation draw out the many gems of knowledge embedded in its seventeen stanzas. Iam convinced after reading this book that the Tibetans knew more about death and rebirth than anyone else.

In an age of self help books to fix every problem of your life in isolation, this book addresses the fundamental source of all our anxieties, fears and unhappiness. The Dalai Lama states boldly and simply that the only good way to live life to its fullest is to meditate on our own impermanence and impending mortality until we can accept it fully and be prepared to utilize our deaths to propel us and other sentient beings in the path of enlightenment.

We have no way of verifying the correctness of the descriptions of the several stages of death, the intermediate state and rebirth but this book is filled with so much compassion and wisdom that all that is said there can only be true.

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