The Dzongsar Jamyang Khyentse wrote (DJK) is a work of public health, remarkable for its clarity, its educational concerns, the need for accuracy and precision in the definition of concepts, outstanding prospects for Buddhism pulsed sources authentic human experience ... He departs as politically correct as mystifying habits that are commonplace in home, sectarianism and idolaters even Asia ... The writing and the illustrations are very simple, but many carry a rich spirit of knowledge and experience ... It seems to me that we have here all practical dimension of this philosophy in religious respect ... But DJK, not writing to convert, conscript young or not so young, restless souls to find a cure for existential angst ... It simply offers accessible way to express that to be a Buddhist means, reveals the individual who really lives ... And it "costs" something, a fundamental change of perspective, a refusal of easy compromises, a deep work in itself, sincere and genuine, but not heavy, never definitively accomplished ...
In made, reading as much cleared me ideas, the spirit as much as the thought that the great and famous "Chemin de la perfection" Patrul Rinpoche (the Padmakara editions) in its time ... A pure vision and especially adjusted to the existence of the necessary unpredictability of the future of consciousness as anything ...
DJK explicit, not trying to convince, gives to feel. He does not try to defend the concepts but to put them in perspective, no offense to all specialists of something that bombard truths without engaging in a critical and studious mind. It raises questions as Prince Siddhartha Gautama (Sakyamuni Buddha) was able to do, because if there is light, it will not come from submission devotion to a god, but perhaps much of the excavated 'stripped humanity of our cognitive veils in raw view of what is ...
I recommend this book quite affordable, paradoxically, not ideological ...