We have been taught to spend our lives chasing our thoughts and projections. Even when the “mind” is talked about, it is only thoughts and emotions that are referred to; and when our researchers study what they imagine to be the mind, they look only at its projections. No one ever really looks into the mind itself, the ground from which all these expressions arise; and this has tragic consequences.
Confined in the dark, narrow cage of our own making that we take for the whole universe, very few of us can even begin to imagine another dimension of mind. Patrul Rinpoche tells the story of an old frog who had lived all his life in a dank well. One day a frog from the sea paid him a visit.
“Where  do you come from?” asked the frog in the well.
“From  the great ocean,” he  replied.
“How  big is your  ocean?”
“It’s  gigantic.”
“You  mean about a quarter of the size of my well  here?”
“Bigger.”
“Bigger?  You mean half as  big?”
“No,  even  bigger.”
“Is  it . . . as big as this  well?”
“There’s  no comparison.”
“That’s impossible! I’ve got to see this  for myself.”
They  set off together. When the frog from the well saw the ocean, it was such a shock  that his head just exploded into pieces.
- Sogyal Rinpoche, from Glimpse of the Day
 
 
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