BF: You’ve mentioned the Pali canon and you cite it in your book. Why did you go to it, what attracted you to it?
KYR: When I finished my formal studies I spent time, as I said, looking back at points that resonated with me and points that didn’t. I kept coming up with discrepancies in the commentaries, and I saw that most of what I learnt was not actually from the Buddha himself. So I started reading through the Pali canon, which is the nearest we’re ever gonna get to the Buddha’s words. Some parts didn’t make a lot of sense but others were excellent. Things started dropping into place for me. I’d suggest to everybody that they spend some time reading the Pali canon.
The Mahayana sutras are a little bit flowery – there’s a hundred thousand bodhisattvas to the left, and a million trillion dakinis to the right, and petals falling from the sky… For me, it’s a little bit over the top. So I tend to quote from the Pali canon. A lot of the quotes from my first book and all of the quotes of the second are from the Pali canon.
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