It’s fantastic that she was able to do that. It’s true that the attitude of using your own suffering to take on the pain of others definitely helps you to bear pain and make it less. The more you can think that you are experiencing the suffering for others, the better and more powerful it is. Even before you perform the actual meditation, just from the arising of that intention to use the pain to take on the suffering for others, there is an effect. It changes things. Sometimes when I have pain in my eyes, I try to think that I am taking on the suffering of other beings and experiencing it for them. I noticed that it helps; the pain decreases. When you have a strong enough intention, it can not only make the pain decrease but even stop it. But, of course, that shouldn’t be the motivation. The motivation shouldn’t be to stop the pain. It should be a genuine feeling that you want to experience the pain for others. I’m not sure what my motivation was, but one should try to generate a pure motivation without any thought of wanting the pain to decrease. Then it becomes very useful. If the pain continues, then you can use it to develop the mind in compassion and bodhicitta. If you are practising thought transformation, this is the most useful thing, because you have the chance to train the mind. If the pain ceases then you lose the opportunity. You lose the benefit of having the pain.
The student had also asked a question about taking on suffering. She said that when she experienced her own pain, it was so unbearable that she couldn’t imagine how she could take on the suffering of all beings. But she also mentioned joy. The student relating this story asked Rinpoche whether a person whose mind is well-prepared experiences so much joy at being able to actually take on the suffering of other beings that the pain is no longer experienced as suffering. Rinpoche replied as follows:
Yes, it depends how much compassion is in the mind. The more compassion there is in the mind, the more pain a person is able to bear for others. For example, Shantideva mentions that normally the suffering of the hell realms is the greatest suffering that exists, so nobody wants that, but the bodhisattva who has developed great compassion is happy to bear that suffering for others. For him or her, it is great happiness and bliss to experience that for others. This is because there is so much compassion in the mind. The more compassion, the easier it is to bear the sufferings of others.
It is like a mother who is happy to take on the suffering of her child. The mother sees her beloved son or daughter as the most precious thing in the world, and that child sees his or her mother as the kindest being. Because the mother sees the child as so precious, she is very happy to take on the child’s sufferings. It is very easy for her. And the more the child sees the mother as kind, the easier it is to bear suffering for her. So, it depends on how much compassion we have and how much we are able to see others as precious and kind. The more one can see others as precious and kind, the greater one’s compassion and loving kindness, and then the more we can bear suffering for others.
So please say “Thank you” to her. Tell her I would like to thank her for having that thought. Not only did she remember to do the practice when she had pain, and it helped her to bear the pain, but even if she had died, because she had this thought in her mind of bearing the pain for other sentient beings, she would have died in the best way. So, tell her I am very happy. I will write a card for her. I will send her a card as big as this world.