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Self Improvement and Self Cultivation
Self Improvement and Self Cultivation
  • Inevitability
  • The Eighteen Inevitable Factors
  • The 18 Unmanageable Aspects of Life
  • The Road Map of Life and LIFE
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅰ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅱ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅲ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅳ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅴ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅵ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅶ)
  • Standards of Perfect Human Nature (Ⅷ)
  • Elementary Self-improvement
  • 51 Elementary Self-improvement Practices
  • Intermediate Self-improvement
  • Advanced Self-improvement
  • The Cultivation Chapter
  • Elementary Cultivation
  • Intermediate Cultivation
  • Advanced Cultivation
  • Morning Sutra, Noon Sutra, Evening Sutra, Night Sutra
  • The Symbol of a Perfect Soul (Non-material Structure of LIFE)
  • The Only Purpose of Becoming a Chanyuan Celestial Is to Accomplish the Spiritual State of Immortalit
  • Our Primary Prayer
  • Our Intermediate Prayer
  • Transcendence in Love
  • Resurrection in Love
  • Transcendence and Resurrection in Love
  • Evidence of Self-Directed Death
  • Always Remain in the Zero State (Advanced Cultivation)
  • Advanced Cultivation – Expressing Yourself Clearly
  • Advanced Cultivation: Creating the Super Celestial Structure to Absorb Special Energy
  • Advanced Cultivation – Practicing Dialogue with the Greatest Creator
  • Why Does One Encounter Oneself?
  • Cultivate True Essence and True Spirit, Great Talent and Virtue Will Manifest
  • Anywhere, Anytime, Fully Accounted
  • Inner Cultivation or Outer Cultivation
  • Measure Your Levels of Self-Improvement and Self-Cultivation
  • Formless Thinking (Part One)
  • Time and Space Transformation — Formless Thinking (Part Two)
  • 1+1=0 — Formless Thinking (Three)
  • The Marvel of Zero — Formless Thinking (Part Four)
  • Using Consciousness to Transform Cause and Effect
  • Now We Must Be Superhuman
  • New Perspective: Chanyuan Celestials Are Superhumans
  • The Concept and Connotation of Chanyuan Superhumans
  • Essence of Sexuality—In Response to Tiangong Celestial's Question
  • Cultivation and Practice Should Align with Nature
  • Constantly Dying, Constantly Reborn
  • On Sexuality Again: My Outrage at the Term “Immoral Lust”
  • What’s the Point of Meditating?
  • How to Cultivate and Improve From the Practice of the Second Home
  • Soul Purification Mantra for Chanyuan Celestials
  • Perfect Human Nature Is the Premise and Guarantee of a Perfect Life
  • Flexibility and Tact Are Also Essential for Chanyuan Celestials’ Cultivation
  • Chanyuan Celestials Permanently Residing in the Second Home Must Not Fall Ill
  • These Are Truly the Words of Jesus
  • Solidly Cultivate and Live Clearly
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (1)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (2)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (3)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (4)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (5)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (6)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (7)
  • Thinking Self-Cultivation (8)
  • Here Is the Cradle of Celestial Being
  • See How Far You Are From Becoming a Celestial Being
  • Cultivating the Skill of Stillness
  • Perceiving the Substance of Tao, Transcending Karma —Gaining from the Wisdom of Master Qiankun
  • Summary of Reincarnation
  • The Path of the Practitioner
  • The Heart of the Cultivator
  • Totally Lose the Self, Attain a State of Blissful Openness
  • Heart, Mind, Thinking, and Consciousness
  • Three Celestial Cultivation Games for Everyone
  • 181 Guidelines for Buddhist Practice (Part One)
  • 181 Guidelines for Buddhist Practice (Part Two)
  • Entering Others' Minds — Advanced Cultivation One
  • Learning the Transformation of Divine Powers — Advanced Cultivation Two
  • Seeing the World with Closed Eyes — Advanced Cultivation Three
  • Concealment — Advanced Cultivation Four
  • Navigating the Paradoxes of Thinking — Advanced Cultivation (5)
  • Playing the Five Elements Game — Advanced Cultivation (6)
  • Breaking Through Form — Advanced Practice (part 2)
  • What is the Ultimate Goal of Cultivation and Practice?
  • The law of Gravitation of LIFE
  • Osho's Meditation Method — Doesn’t Work
  • How to Transcend the Mundane
  • Strive for an Unshakable State
  • The Ancestor of Buddha’s Revelation
  • Self-improve and Self-cultivate According to the Scientific Outlook on Development
  • Freedom is the Passport to Heaven
  • The Practitioner’s Confusion for Thousands of Years
  • Abandoning the Boat After You Reach the Shore
  • How to Transform from Human to Super Celestial Being
  • Self-Improvement And Self-Cultivation Is a Science
  • Only By Leaving Everything Behind Can We Go Far
  • The Highest Realm of Cultivation
  • Testing Whether You Live in the Spiritual World
  • Being Free from Material Constraints, You Become a Celestial Being
  • External Manifestations of Those Living in the Spiritual World
  • You Have Achieved the Ultimate Fruit
  • The Connotations of Selflessness, Unselfishness, and Non-Attachment
  • Selflessness is the Advanced State of LIFE
  • Non-Attachment is a Path to Being Unrestrained and Free
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Formless Thinking (Part One)

Xuefeng

April 11, 2008

The eight levels of thinking are: material thinking, image thinking, associative thinking, illusory thinking, visualized thinking, Tai Chi thinking, formless thinking, and holographic thinking. These levels progress in depth and complexity. Ordinary people typically engage in material thinking; artists and writers employ image thinking; scientists use associative thinking; most religious followers operate within illusory thinking; practitioners of mystical arts, such as wizards, engage in visualized thinking; sages engage in Tai Chi thinking; Bodhisattvas and Buddhas practice formless thinking; while gods and the Greatest Creator employ holographic thinking.

A person’s LIFE level is determined by their way of thinking. In other words, the type of thinking one possesses corresponds to the life level one attains.

I have already explained the first six types of thinking, so I won’t repeat them here. Now, let’s delve into formless thinking.

Formless thinking, as the name implies, involves understanding and contemplating the origin of the universe, the principles underlying all phenomena, and the essence of life itself—without relying on appearances or forms.

Here, "form" refers to all visible objects and structured movements. Anything that can be seen, heard, smelled, tasted, or touched is a form. The laws and principles discovered and defined by humans are also forms, known as "Characteristics of Dharma"; even concepts like "emptiness" and "nothingness" are forms, called "Characteristics of Non-dharma."

Formless thinking is the thinking of Bodhisattvas and Buddhas. It moves beyond color, sound, smell, taste, touch, dharma, and non-dharma concepts, directly approaching the universe’s origin and the true nature of things. This thinking "sees the essence through the appearance," transcending the material world to understand the realm of nonmaterial and the nonmaterial world. It observes the Tathāgata (the 'Thus-Come One') directly, using the Buddha eye to view the world.

“The Tao that can be spoken of is not the eternal Way; the name that can be named is not the eternal name. The law that can be spoken of is not the eternal law; the form that can be seen is not the eternal form.”

When time and space transform, everything else changes accordingly. In one time and space, a principle may be universally true, but in another, it may no longer apply. What is true today may become false tomorrow; the lover bound by promises today may become an enemy tomorrow; the fragrant meal today may sour and spoil by tomorrow. Thus, “all things are impermanent.” If one clings to any particular form, fixing it rigidly in their consciousness without adaptation, they will experience endless suffering and confusion.

Are all things truly impermanent? No! “In all changes, the fundamental remains constant,” but where is this “fundamental”? How can it be found? By observing the myriad forms, one will not find the “fundamental.” Only in formlessness, by clearing all forms from one’s consciousness, can one find the “fundamental,” recognize the Tathāgata, achieve Buddhahood, and escape the sea of suffering to reach the world of ultimate bliss.

To guide people toward formless thinking, Buddha Shakyamuni provided the following teachings:

“If a Bodhisattva retains concepts of self, person, sentient beings, or lifespan, they are not a Bodhisattva.” “A Bodhisattva should practice giving without attachment to forms—not clinging to color, sound, smell, taste, touch, or law. Bodhisattvas should give without attachment to forms.” “All forms are illusory. If one sees that all forms are non-forms, they see the Tathāgata.”

“If the mind clings to forms, it clings to the concepts of self, others, sentient beings, and lifespan.” “If one clings to the characteristics of dharma, they cling to the concepts of self, others, sentient beings, and lifespan.” “If one clings to the characteristics of non-dharma, they cling to the concepts of self, others, sentient beings, and lifespan.”

“One should cultivate a tranquil mind like this, not generating thoughts based on form, sound, smell, taste, touch, or dharma. The mind should arise unattached.”

“To be free from all forms is to be called a Buddha.”

“If one sees me through form or seeks me through sound, they follow a deviant path and cannot see the Tathāgata.”

“Those who have resolved to attain Anuttara Samyak Sambodhi should understand, perceive, believe, and understand all dharmas in this way, without generating the characteristics of dharma.”

“How does one explain this to others? By remaining unattached to form, thus unmoved.”

Buddha Shakyamuni has clearly shown us that only through formlessness can one see the Tathāgata and become a Bodhisattva or Buddha. So, how can we practice formless thinking? What can we perceive once we have achieved formlessness? How can we reach the wondrous state of formless thinking? In the next part, Transformation of Time and Space: Formless Thinking (Part Two), we will explore these questions...

PreviousMeasure Your Levels of Self-Improvement and Self-CultivationNextTime and Space Transformation — Formless Thinking (Part Two)

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