Life is Short, Train Hard Now

Our lives are short and we only have limited time to bring about any real and lasting change. If we fail to separate the essential from the nonessential, we will lose ourselves in everyday preoccupations and petty pursuits, and when the time comes to die, it will be too late to change. While we have time, instead of harping on our dissatisfactions, we should reflect on the favorable conditions for practice and resolve to make the most of our opportunities by inscribing the following thought permanently in our minds:

“I have wasted enough time. Why waste any more? From now on, I’ll do something constructive and beneficial with my life, instead of squandering it in meaningless activities.”

Precious Human Body

We begin by recognizing that our human body is the basis for enlightenment, because it provides a genuine opportunity for spiritual practice. Normally we take our human body for granted, allowing the negativities in our lives to overwhelm us. Our all-consuming preoccupations mostly consist of worrying about life’s many minor irritations without ever thinking how fortunate we are just to have a body that functions. Instead of thinking,

“How terrible, I put on another two pounds!” or getting up in the morning to see three more lines around our eyes, only to go back to bed, we need to capitalize on our opportunities to reap the benefits of spiritual practice while we can. The renowned yogi Milarepa (1040–1123), admonishes his listeners about this in the following verse:

Oh you confused and worldly beings, You always waste your leisure, letting time slip by. Though your mind is ever saying, “I must practice Dharma,” Your life is wasted as the hours slip by.

One of our biggest faults is the tendency to overlook the things that are important to us while we still have them. We only realize how precious something is once it’s gone, but by then it’s too late. According to the traditional Mahayana teachings, a human body is very precious and hard to obtain. We may think this is just a rhetorical statement, but if we look at the vast multitudes of insects in the natural world and compare that to the number of human beings, we can see that a human life is relatively rare. In this way, we need to broaden the way we think about possible states of existence. Shantideva (685–763) makes this point in the following verse from the Bodhicharyavatara (spyod ‘jug):

This is why Lord Buddha has declared That like a turtle that perchance can place Its head within a yoke adrift upon a shoreless sea, This human birth is difficult to find!

Notes:

Folksonomies: buddhism momento mori

Taxonomies:
/religion and spirituality/buddhism (0.911161)
/religion and spirituality/hinduism (0.748820)
/style and fashion/body art (0.740906)

Concepts:
Mind (0.968758): dbpedia_resource
Gautama Buddha (0.916285): dbpedia_resource
Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra (0.896423): dbpedia_resource
Being (0.876452): dbpedia_resource
Human body (0.804455): dbpedia_resource
Human (0.799569): dbpedia_resource
Dharma (0.780110): dbpedia_resource
Buddhism (0.723408): dbpedia_resource

 he Practice of Lojong: Cultivating Compassion through Training the Mind
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  Kyabgon, Traleg (April 10, 2007), he Practice of Lojong: Cultivating Compassion through Training the Mind, Retrieved on 2025-10-27
Folksonomies: meditation practice buddhism


Triples

27 OCT 2025

 The Brevity of Life and the Urgency of Training Now

Life is Short, Train Hard Now > Similarity > Meditation Strengthens Focus
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 Stoic and Buddhist Philosophies Stress Productivity Now

Your Productive Life is Only as Long as You Retain Your Mental Faculties > Similarity > Life is Short, Train Hard Now
We must be productive now while we have the faculties to do so.