Description
The Tripitaka is a lofty labyrinth of words compiled to soothe the flames of desire. Readers are promised salvation, yet its weighty volume devours both mind and time. The ancient monks’ prayers woven into its pages serve as an ironic litmus test of modern attention span and life planning.
Definitions
- A scholarly despot justifying violence with words under the guise of organizing human desires.
- A purported beacon to liberation that mass-produces failures through its impenetrable complexity.
- An idealistic contraption that professes disregard for worldly gains, trampling on readers’ economic efficiency.
- Acclaimed as a miraculous elixir for copying by hand, it drains practitioners’ lifeforce in the process.
- A paradoxical hypnosis program promising enlightenment but luring readers into slumber.
- A measure of faith depth whose scale loops infinitely, trapping both believers and skeptics.
- A dual-structured torture device—an intellectual ordeal book for laypeople and an annotated hell for experts.
- Acts as a guide to nirvana while presenting an ideal schematic impossible to actualize.
- A time capsule offering a one-way ticket to oblivion, despite its mission to convey ancient words to modernity.
- Revered as a sacred tome imbued with monks’ prayers, yet serves as an ironic arbiter mocking human limits.
Examples
- “They say reading the Tripitaka will extinguish desire? Hmm, first extinguish my rent and overtime desires.”
- “The shortest path to nirvana? I’d rather see the budget approved for the Tripitaka.”
- “I watched monks diligently hand-copy the Tripitaka while I despaired at its sheer thickness.”
- “I want to savor its teachings… first, I must brace myself to digest its heft.”
- “Seek peace of mind? Touch the Tripitaka—just train your arm strength first.”
- “Enlightenment by skimming? Then finish it by next week, please.”
- “He quoted a passage from the Tripitaka, yet no one remembered its meaning.”
- “A sutra that burns away desire? It couldn’t handle the cravings on my smartphone.”
- “Closing the Tripitaka mid-copy is rude… yet its word count beats me every time.”
- “He’s a devoted reader of the Tripitaka, but actually nodded off in the café.”
- “When the Tripitaka’s words fall, your vision narrows—it’s like reading glasses turning weighty.”
- “Learning doctrine took a back seat to the sticker shock of the Tripitaka’s deluxe edition.”
- “The monks’ study room piled with reams of paper, all to transcribe the Tripitaka.”
- “The essence of the Tripitaka resides in its final punctuation—at least someone said so.”
- “They say he consulted the Tripitaka on love, then got his heart broken.”
- “The Buddha’s teachings? The Tripitaka’s thickness is a lesson in fear itself.”
- “Monks carrying the Tripitaka—think of it as arm day at the gym.”
- “They say the key to nirvana lies in the Tripitaka, but no one explains how to turn it.”
- “Those who wrestle with the Tripitaka and dogear pages earn the right to speak its truths.”
- “Readers of the Tripitaka: masters of all, companions in defeat.”
Narratives
- The moment one grasps the Tripitaka is the moment one confronts both personal impotence and dread of its thickness.
- At midnight, the copying monk bears not just the weight of the Tripitaka but the imprinted regret of his own choices.
- With each verse, instead of purifying worldly distractions, they paradoxically intensify and return like a boomerang.
- In a dusty library corner, the Tripitaka quietly mocks readers trapped between hope and anxiety.
- The preacher of the Tripitaka should understand its depths best, yet fails to truly convince any soul.
- Enlightenment awaits only those who question the very reason for the Tripitaka’s existence before reading it.
- Manuscript copying becomes a shadow trial, casting doubt on whether oblivion, not retention, is true liberation.
- Every word in the Tripitaka is a time machine, most lethal to devotees of modern speed.
- Pointing at the door to nirvana reveals only an ocean of page counts.
- A monk descending the temple gate with the Tripitaka shows mastery of weight adaptation more than enlightenment.
- In the ceremony of classical reading, participants confront the limits of their eyesight and concentration.
- Upon completion, people discuss not the teachings, but the futility of the act of reading itself.
- Commentaries on the Tripitaka outsize the main volume, turning knowledge into a living funeral fest.
- Masters whisper, “He who bears the Tripitaka may evade trials in the next life.”
- The pages are stained with monks’ blood, tears, and countless corrections.
- They say the closed-stack key unlocks only for one who chants the Sanskrit spell on the Tripitaka’s cover.
- He who embraces the Tripitaka is deemed worthy of enduring both gravity and faith.
- By lamplight, the Tripitaka’s shadow on the copying desk mirrors the reader’s past and future.
- Pilgrims claiming to journey through the Tripitaka merely traverse desks and restless nights.
- When closing the Tripitaka, readers unwittingly seal away their own time.
Related Terms
Aliases
- Desire Binder
- Enlightenment Encyclopedia
- Prison of Words
- Copying Harasser
- Sutra Marathon
- Spiritual Trainer
- Edification Torture Device
- Time Thief Tome
- Somnolence Ledger
- Scripture Complainer
- Void-Seeking Box
- Paradox Percussionist
- Word Bandit
- Paper Riverbank
- Temple Weight
- Classical Gym
- Mind Mirror Machine
- Wisdom Bargain Sale
- Transcendence Stopper
- Faith Strangler
Synonyms
- Pressure Device of Enlightenment
- Torture Book of Scripture
- Agony Word Apparatus
- Spiritual Pathway
- Desire Incinerator
- Textual Ascetic Machine
- Paper Torture Publication
- Verse Trap
- Endless Footnotes
- Coffin of Time
- Scholar’s Shackles
- Mindpeace Loss Box
- Otherworldly Catalog
- Annotation Hell
- Copying Minefield
- Faith Stressor
- Word Prison
- Wording Mortician
- Nirvana Q&A
- Insomnia Guarantee

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