Different Ngondro
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| A student wrote to Rinpoche saying she
had decided to do another lama’s ngondro and wanted
to be clear about her commitments regarding the preliminary
practices that Rinpoche had given her. She had asked for
some preliminary practices and Rinpoche had given her
a number prostrations, mandala offerings, and Dorje Khadro
fire offerings to do. Her question was whether she had
a commitment or not to still do those preliminaries while
doing the other lama’s ngondro. Rinpoche responded
as follows. |
[Rinpoche laughed when he read the question.]
Now it’s up to you, not me. [Rinpoche smiled.]
If you can live for 100 or 200 years you can do the preliminaries
of all four traditions. [Rinpoche smiled again.]
As long as you are taking refuge in the guru, Buddha, Dharma,
and Sangha, it is OK.
The path to enlightenment is the same in all traditions,
without the root it is not possible. In regards to the three
principles of the path, it is the same in all four traditions,
but some have a little difference in presentation.
However, it is very important in daily life to pray to have
realizations and complete the path.
As far as the preliminaries go, do whatever you can, but
remember preliminaries are not just to be done one time, and
then not again. Even eighth and tenth-level bodhisattvas,
who have vast amounts of qualities, continue with the preliminaries,
performing them with countless manifest bodies. Even one so
close to enlightenment is still performing preliminaries.
You need to create merit and do purification to achieve enlightenment.
With much love and prayers...
Which Preliminaries
to Do
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| A student wrote asking Rinpoche for
advice about her preliminary practices. In the past, Rinpoche
had given her preliminary practices to do throughout her
life, but she started practicing with another lama, who
asked her to finish particular preliminaries in order
to receive Dzogchen teachings. She wrote to Rinpoche asking
if she could focus on these preliminaries so that she
could receive these teachings. |
My very dear Charlotte,
Thank you very much for your kind letter. I just want to tell
you frankly that when I heard you are now practicing in another
tradition it did disturb me in the beginning. Not trusting
Lama Tsongkhapa’s teachings or thinking that Lama Tsongkhapa’s
teachings are not complete or missing something did affect
my mind, but now it’s OK. Of course, you should understand
I have gurus from other traditions like Trulshik Rinpoche,
His Holiness Chobgye Trichen Rinpoche, and Sakya Trizen. I
took initiations and teachings from these lamas. I am just
letting you know what I felt and thought. Anyway, I am not
holding a grudge. I am very happy that you have been able
to develop a good heart these past years; that is a great
thing. Of course, I wanted to meet you very very much in Arizona,
but couldn’t because of the lack of time. It is great
news to hear that you have been able to develop a good heart,
so please continue.
So, as you are already doing the preliminary practices,
go ahead and finish the Dzogchen preliminaries. If you become
enlightened before you finish the preliminaries, that’s
OK, it is not a rejection. You will become the first champion
in history. Also, you can do preliminaries after you become
enlightened as well.
With much love and prayers...
Preliminary Practices
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Translation
in Vietnamese: The following advice was translated
into Vietnamese and combined with other advices from Rinpoche
on Daily Practices by Anh Ho; it is available
as a pdf file, and online at http://nalanda.batnha.org/. |
| Rinpoche gave the following instructions
on the preliminary practices. |
Welcome to the journey to enlightenment. The aim of life
is to benefit others and the highest benefit is to liberate
sentient beings from suffering and its causes. For that one
needs to achieve enlightenment. For that, one needs to achieve
the gradual path to enlightenment. To make that possible,
one needs to purify negative karma and defilements collected
since beginningless rebirths, and collect extensive merit,
which are the necessary conditions to actualize the path.
Life is like last night's dream. Don't hold onto it as too
solid or inherently existent. This practice advice is to make
life as meaningful as possible—this most precious human
life, which we have received this one time. We have sacrificed
our life and died countless times, creating the cause for
suffering in samsara. But we have sacrificed our life for
Dharma so little, especially bringing sentient beings to enlightenment.
So, do as much as you can…and don't worry, be happy.
Read Liberation
in the Palm of Your Hand for detailed information
and a background understanding on lamrim meditations. Then,
every day use Essential Nectar by Geshe Rabten for
daily guided meditation instructions on how to do lamrim meditations.
The other way to do the daily meditations is to follow the
Lam-rim
Chen-mo guideline or the guideline at the back of
Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand. It is best if
one can memorize this outline. Many Tibetan meditators, those
who really meditated, memorized the outline. This is the basis
upon which to meditate. Meditate daily for two hours, one
hour, half an hour, 15 minutes, whatever you can do, according
to how your situation is. You can do four sessions a day,
three, two, or one. The length of time is up to the individual.
The most important thing is continuity, as this really helps.
If one day you meditate a lot and then take a break or holiday
from the lamrim, it won't develop the mind continuously. Whatever
the length of time you can spend meditating on the lamrim
is good. Just don't stop meditating.
The meditation focus can rotate, i.e. three months on guru
devotion, then three months on the lower path, etc. Do this
all the way up to emptiness, then start again with guru devotion.
Continue these cycles until you have achieved the realization
of each stage. For guru devotion, continuously do the daily
meditations until you have a stable realization, when you
can see all the buddhas spontaneously. Then, meditate on the
lower graduated path, from precious human rebirth up to karma,
but mainly on impermanence and death. This is the most important
meditation since it helps one gain all the other realizations.
After this realization, when you don’t have even the
slightest interest in the happiness of this life, no clinging,
only interest in the happiness of future lives, liberation,
or the happiness of others, and true renunciation, which could
take weeks, months, years, then meditate on the middle path.
When you have this feeling arising spontaneously, with renunciation
of the whole of samsara, then dedicate your life to realizing
bodhicitta, where you don’t have even the slightest
thought of seeking happiness for yourself, only for others.
You should have this day and night, with the thought to achieve
enlightenment. Also, meditate on emptiness a little each day,
using any unmistaken text, like the Heart
Sutra or Mahamudra. Meanwhile, continue
to train the mind in the other lamrim steps. After some time,
you can try to achieve shine by focusing on a meditation object.
Reciting a lamrim prayer every day is the fundamental practice
of everyday life that renders each day of your life most meaningful.
When you recite a lamrim prayer mindfully from beginning to
end, your recitation becomes a direct meditation on the entire
path to enlightenment. This practice leaves imprints, or seeds,
of the realizations of the whole path to enlightenment on
your mental continuum. This means that you come closer to
enlightenment, which, in turn, means that you come closer
to enlightening all sentient beings. And this is the main
goal of your life, the purpose of living. So, by doing the
direct meditation on the lamrim, this is what happens in your
life every day. There are various lamrim prayers: The
Three Principal Aspects of the Path, Foundation
of All Good Qualities, and Hymns of Spiritual
Experience are all by Lama
Tsong Khapa. There is also Pabongka
Dechen Nyingpo's long version of Calling
the Guru from Afar. You can also meditate on any
other prayers that contain the essence of the whole path to
enlightenment. If the practice of tantra is also mentioned
at the end of the prayer, that too is good. According to the
number of times you do the direct meditation of the lamrim
prayer each day, you will receive that many advantages each
time, each day. If you have received a highest yoga tantra
initiation, then it is also good to recite the prayer of the
graduated path of tantra. Again, if you recite it mindfully,
it plants the seed of the whole path to enlightenment.
There are two different glance meditations: one is the direct
meditation on the lamrim, which is the foundation of the common
path; the other is the direct meditation on the tantric path,
which is the extraordinary path. This helps one to prepare
for all the realizations of the path, in this life or definitely
in a future life. When you meditate on the lamrim, you can
bring in the teachings and information you have learned from
reading other authentic Buddhist texts to add to your meditation
and make it more effective. By reading and studying various
teachings on guru devotion, you can add what you learned to
the outlines of your meditation on guru devotion. You can
do the same with many other teachings, such as the teachings
on the nature of samsara, bodhicitta, emptiness, and so on.
By adding material you have learned from other teachings,
you can make your meditation more effective.
It is your guru's instructions that enable you to make your
practice most productive and to gain quick realizations. During
break time, during life between your sitting meditations—not
breaks from your Dharma practice—while you're standing,
walking, or sleeping, you should try to live your life with
the experience that you generated in your morning meditation.
Live your life with the mind that has been transformed in
the lamrim, whether it was transformed by meditation on guru
devotion, impermanence and death, on how this life's human
body is highly meaningful, on the suffering nature of samsara,
on bodhicitta, or on emptiness. In this way, not only do you
make your life highly meaningful during the sessions, but
your life also becomes most productive and highly meaningful
even during the break times. This is because with that positive
attitude, with the experience of the lamrim, all your actions,
first and foremost, do not become negative karma. This helps
you always to be mindful to practice Dharma, to avoid engaging
in negative karma, and thus, negative karma doesn't happen.
By helping you to not create negative karma, then all your
actions become causes of liberation and enlightenment, and
therefore, the remedy to samsara.
This instruction about practicing in the break times is
extremely important—it means that your meditation sessions
help your life during the break times and that your break
times become meaningful and fruitful. Lama Tsongkhapa, in
the Foundation of All Good Qualities, was referring
specifically to this practice when he talked about taking
the essence of the precious human body all day and all night.
This is also recommended and explained as the meaning by His
Holiness the Dalai Lama: to live one's life in the experience
that is generated in one's morning meditation session. Thus,
your working life also becomes meditation, becomes unified
with Dharma and with your meditations on the lamrim, especially
the lamrim. In this way, you can keep your mind peaceful and
stable always, your mind is no longer up and down; you have
peace, satisfaction, and fulfillment in your life. You can
benefit others better and benefit them more with your positive
Dharma mind, which is always a peaceful mind.
PROSTRATIONS TO THE 35 BUDDHAS IN THE MORNING
If possible you should recite the 35 Buddhas of Confession
three times with prostrations (so that it becomes 105 prostrations)
every morning or whenever you can.
You can see how urgently we need to practice the 35 Buddhas
of Confession. Reciting these names while remembering our
past negative karmas purifies this karma. If we do not purify
this negative karma we will not be able to achieve a perfect
human rebirth with the eight freedoms and ten richnesses and
instead will have to experience the opposite of these.
The 35 Buddhas exist in order to purify the various negative
karmas created by sentient beings. Even just reciting the
names of these 35 Buddhas one time purifies so many eons of
negative karma. It is like an atomic bomb—so quick and
powerful to destroy negative karma. You can see how urgent
and important it is to purify negative karma in our in daily
life, and, not only that, but by not purifying negative karma
it increases (see Vajrasattva).
Lama Tsongkhapa did many hundreds of thousands of prostrations
to the 35 Buddhas with the practice of confession in the cave
in Olga. Lama Atisha also did many prostrations every day,
even when he was very old. Many of the lineage lamas of the
lamrim did prostrations every day and achieved many realizations
through this practice. So, this is essential for our daily
life practice. It is very healthy and the best thing we can
do in order to not have regret in the future.
[For more information, see the 35
Buddhas pages in the Practice Advice section of the Advice
Book.]
VAJRASATTVA RECITATIONS AT NIGHT
In the evening recite Vajrasattva mantra to stop whatever
negative karma was created that day from multiplying. If you
don’t do that then the negative karma doubles by the
next day, then doubles again the third day, and so on. This
way negative karma left unpurified by Vajrasattva practice
multiplies so much that by the end of the week, month, year,
and so on till the end of your life, even one day’s
one negative karma becomes huge like a mountain and so heavy.
Since negative karma increases, just one atom of negative
karma multiplies to become the size of the earth. So, even
though you didn’t commit a heavy negative karma, because
negative karma multiplies day by day, even ONE small negative
karma becomes unbearable and causes you to be reborn in the
lower realms and experience so much suffering for many eons.
Then, because of continually creating more negative karma
in the lower realms, it becomes so difficult to reincarnate
back into the higher realms, and this makes it so difficult
to practice Dharma.
Doing Vajrasattva recitation at the end of the day stops negative
karma from multiplying the next day, week, month, year, and
so on. So, this is unbelievably powerful and makes your life
so light, so easy. It really makes you happy and peaceful
inside—in your heart and your inner life.
Vajrasattva not only purifies today’s negative karma
but also this life’s negative karma and the negative
karma from yesterday, last week, last month, last year, and
so on. It purifies the negative karma that has been created
from birth until now and also the negative karma created in
past lives.
Purifying negative karma makes it so easy to achieve liberation
and to actualize the path to enlightenment. Purifying negative
karma also means you don’t have to suffer, or you have
very little suffering and very few obstacles. By purifying,
you don’t have to experience all those eons of suffering
in the lower realms, which are the result of not purifying
even one negative karma, and you don’t have to experience
again and again without end the four suffering results that
arise from each negative karma that is not purified.
Therefore, the conclusion is that even if you finish your
preliminary practice of Vajrasattva you can’t just relax
and stop reciting Vajrasattva mantra, saying “I have
finished my preliminary practice of Vajrasattva”. You
still need to do the long Vajrasattva mantra at least 21 times
(or the short Vajrasattva mantra at least 28 times) every
day in order to purify negative karma and stop it from multiplying.
MEDICINE BUDDHA MANTRA
Medicine Buddha's mantra is recited for success.
Since we have so many problems—of course we need success.
Since we don’t want to have problems, unhappiness, or
suffering and what we do want is to have success, happiness,
inner growth, and all the realizations of the path to enlightenment
(lamrim), we need to recite Medicine Buddha mantra every day.
Buddha advised Ananda, his attendant, that even animals who
hear Medicine Buddha’s mantra will never be reborn in
the lower realms. The highly attained Kyabje Choden Rinpoche,
who has completed the whole path to enlightenment, said recently
that by reciting Medicine Buddha’s mantra at the time
of death one is reborn in the pure land. So, Medicine Buddha’s
mantra is not only for healing, but also to recite for animals
and people all the time, whether they are alive or dying.
If you recite Medicine Buddha mantra every day, it will purify
your negative karma and help you to never be reborn in the
lower realms. If you don’t purify negative karma, then
when death comes you will be reborn in the lower realms as
a hell being, hungry ghost, or animal, and you will have to
suffer again and again without end. Therefore, you need to
purify negative karma right now. If you cannot bear the present
suffering of the human realm—which is incredible joy
compared to the suffering of the lower realms—then how
will you be able to bear the suffering of the lower realms,
which is unbearable and lasts for an incredible length of
time? The suffering of the lower realms is a billion times
worse than all the human realm sufferings put together.
Medicine Buddha’s mantra saves you from having to experience
all these things, so it is much more precious than vast amounts
of gold and diamonds, wish-fulfilling jewels, and zillions
of dollars. All this wealth means nothing because it can't
purify negative karma. Even if you were to own that much wealth
it is far more precious to recite Medicine Buddha’s
mantra just once or even to hear the mantra just once because
by doing so it leaves the imprint of the whole path to enlightenment
on your mind, helps you to have realizations of the whole
path to enlightenment, eliminates all the gross and subtle
defilements, and causes you to achieve enlightenment.
With Medicine Buddha mantra you can liberate so many sentient
beings from suffering and bring them to enlightenment. So,
you should recite the mantra with full trust in Medicine Buddha—
knowing that Medicine Buddha will completely take care of
your life and heal you. With full trust, know that Medicine
Buddha is always with you—in your heart, on your crown,
in front of you. There is not one second that Medicine Buddha
does not see you or have compassion for you.
CHENREZIG, COMPASSIONATE-EYE LOOKING ONE
Everybody, old and new students alike, should practice Chenrezig.
The practice of the recitation-meditation of Chenrezig Compassionate-Eye
Looking One is to cause all happiness, temporary and ultimate—happiness
in this and all future lives and the ultimate happiness of
liberation and enlightenment—for all sentient beings.
Then, your own happiness, temporary and ultimate, comes by
the way. The mantra has so many benefits, especially if one
recites it with bodhicitta. The practice and realization of
bodhicitta is the most important thing in life because it
fulfils the wishes of so many sentient beings for happiness—each
and every one of them—as well as your own.
With bodhicitta you can eliminate samsaric suffering as well
as its causes and achieve liberation and enlightenment, because
bodhicitta helps you to have the wisdom directly realizing
emptiness that eliminates the gross and subtle defilements.
Bodhicitta is what makes the Arya bodhisattva able to abandon
the suffering of samsara, rebirth, old age, sickness, and
death by achieving the right-seeing path. Even though the
arhats of the lesser vehicle path have wisdom directly perceiving
emptiness and many other inconceivable qualities, they still
have the remainder of the suffering aggregates.
Bodhicitta is the door to the Mahayana path to enlightenment
and the root of the limitless qualities of Buddha’s
holy body, speech, and mind. The courageous bodhisattvas are
able to bear all the hardships of working for sentient beings,
no matter how hard it is and even if it costs their life.
As bodhisattvas see how beneficial it is to work for others,
even if they are going to be killed by other sentient beings,
they are able to bear it, and on top of that they experience
and enjoy limitless joy by bearing hardships for sentient
beings, even being killed. For them, it is like drinking nectar,
or like a swan that is so happy to swim on the water after
the heat of the day. The bodhisattva abandons the thought
of achieving liberation from samsaric suffering, the cause
of delusions and karma, for oneself as one would discard used
toilet paper, having not the slightest interest, not even
an atom, and only has aversion to actualizing ultimate happiness,
nirvana, for oneself.
Bodhicitta causes a bodhisattva to complete the two types
of merit—the merit of transcendental wisdom and the
merit of virtue—and bodhicitta is the cause for achieving
the two kayas, the holy body and holy mind, Rupakaya and Dharmakaya,
which is the ultimate goal. The whole purpose of achieving
the two holy bodies is only to do perfect work for sentient
beings. That is also because of the bodhicitta motivation.
There are so many sentient beings, and even if it takes three
countless great eons to complete the merit to bring every
single one to enlightenment, what causes one to make the determination
to do this is bodhicitta.
No matter how many eons it takes to generate one single
virtuous thought in one sentient being’s heart, the
bodhisattva will go for it, will do that, without being discouraged.
It is said in the Ornament of Sutras by Maitreya:
“The bodhisattva, the child of the Victorious Ones,
whose mind is stabilized in supreme perseverance for ripening
sentient beings, in order to ripen even one virtuous thought,
does not get discouraged even if it takes thousands of ten
million eons.”
So, you can see that what drives bodhisattvas to bear hardships
and to continuously work for sentient beings is derived from
bodhicitta, and bodhicitta comes from the root—great
compassion. So, the root, the compassion, is like the fuel,
the electric power station—all the vast benefits come
from this.
And it is great compassion that has made so many sentient
beings already become enlightened, as well as that which is
making so many sentient beings in this present time become
enlightened and that which will make so many sentient beings
be enlightened in the future. It is great compassion that
makes so many buddhas work for sentient beings, without any
error, doing perfect work for sentient beings until they achieve
enlightenment.
It is great compassion that causes buddhas to have omniscient
mind and perfect power to benefit all sentient beings. And
your great compassion is the source of peace and happiness
for so many sentient beings—the source of all their
temporary and ultimate happiness as well as your own. That
includes this world, the country where you live, your family,
parents, companion, children, and yourself. Without compassion
in your heart there is only ego, which harms directly and
indirectly all sentient beings, including the world, your
country, family, parents, relatives, companion, and yourself.
Depending on how much you are able to practice compassion,
you have that much peace and happiness in your life and in
your heart.
Your compassion is the source of happiness even for animals
and people that you meet in everyday life. Without compassion
there are personality-ego clashes and many other problems,
such as anger and jealousy. Without compassion life gets trapped
in problems, like a mouse trapped in a cage, or an elephant
drowning in mud and unable to get out, or a fly getting caught
in a spider’s web and then being eaten by the spider,
or a fly who lands on a candle and gets completely covered
with hot wax and drowns. Life gets completely caught up in
problems and continues like that, and then you die—just
like the fly. This is the main reason why one needs to practice
compassion. So, compassion is the most important Dharma practice
in life and the most important meditation.
Living life with compassion and working with compassion is
the best thing you can do. Then, when you experience problems
you can experience them for others, which means using your
own problems to develop compassion for others. That means
you are using your problems to achieve enlightenment—your
problem becomes the path to enlightenment. It is the same
when you have sicknesses, such as cancer or AIDS, you can
experience these with compassion. That means experiencing
them for other sentient beings—to cause them all happiness,
including enlightenment. This way your sickness becomes the
path to enlightenment. All your problems—relationship
problems, sickness, lost business, lost job—become very
important and useful. This becomes a very special, champion
practice. Before you practice Dharma, these are things to
be abandoned and that you dislike, but now they become something
that you need to develop your mind in the path—very
powerful and special.
Also, when you die, dying with compassion is the best way
to die. His Holiness the Dalai Lama often makes the comment
that dying with bodhicitta is “self-supporting.”
You don’t need anybody around you to help because you
have no need—you guide yourself. You become the leader,
leading yourself to the happiness of future lives.
In order to develop great compassion you need an understanding
of the Buddha’s teachings on how to develop compassion,
but even if you are able to say these by heart and meditate
on them, that alone is not enough in order to achieve realization.
You also need to have realization with the support of the
Deity of Compassion’s blessing. Therefore, you must
practice the Deity of Compassion Avalokiteshvara and do the
meditation-recitation of the Compassionate Buddha. If you
want to know more benefits of this practice, you can read
Teachings from the
Mani Retreat.
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