1. I would like to recite the Heart Sutra ten times a day, and repay my parents for this merit and kindness.
Second, I would like to recite the Heart Sutra ten times a day for the rest of my life, and I would like to pray for world peace with this merit;
Third, I would like to read the Heart Sutra ten times a day.
Fourth, this year I will read the Heart Sutra ten times every morning;
I will recite the Heart Sutra ten times a day this year to bless my family.
6. I would like to recite the Heart Sutra for a thousand times and pray for XXX's illness to recover soon.
Ladies and gentlemen, who wants to say, which of these six wishes do you want to make the most? (Someone answered: the third wish. ) very good! Very good!
Please remember: if a wish has a deadline, it is not a big wish. Therefore, "this year", "living fully" and "a thousand times" are all deadlines, not big wishes.
It is not a big wish to have a purpose, hope, or limit the object. Therefore, "keep your family safe", "repay your parents", "world peace" and "get well soon" all have goals, photos and restrictions, and they are not endless, nor are they big wishes.
So among the six wishes, the biggest wish is the simplest one:
I am willing to recite the Heart Sutra ten times a day.
This wish, you can always read it in this life, next life and next life. This wish has no end, so it is called greatness.
This wish has no goal, that is to say, the goal is boundless, and returning to merit is like endless emptiness, so it is called greatness.
This wish has no object, which means that it belongs to all sentient beings in the legal circles, and there are endless sentient beings, so it is called great. You must have realized the secret of how to make a big wish. You can make this wish, but the most important thing is not to interrupt.
The second rowing method I want to introduce is:
Among the great wishes of the great bodhisattvas, choose one that you are most happy with, and gradually realize it according to what you can do now.
There are many great wishes of Buddhists and Bodhisattvas, among which Pu Xian's Ten Wishes are the easiest to choose in the Buddhist tradition of China. These ten things are all great wishes, and their merits are boundless. I'll read it now. If you feel happy when you hear a wish, you might as well choose this wish as the beginning:
Respect Buddha, praise Tathagata, practice extensively, support, regret one's career, and like merits and demerits.
Please turn the dharma wheel and ask the Buddha to live. Always follow the dharma, and all beings will return.