Death of Grandfather
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| A young student wrote to Rinpoche saying
her grandfather had just died and she was very sad. Rinpoche
sent her the following note. |
My very dear Eliza,
What happened to your grandfather is a great teaching for
us; it shows the reality of life. It is telling us what we
need to do with our life. There is nothing more beneficial
than holy Dharma. That doesn’t mean just talking about
Dharma texts, it means one’s mind being transformed
into virtue, and especially transformed into the path to liberation
and enlightenment, which means liberating all sentient beings
from the oceans of suffering and its causes, and bringing
them to enlightenment, which is peerless happiness. This is
something they have been longing for and is the most important
need. This is what everyone is longing for but is not really
aware of. They are not aware that such a thing as the highest,
peerless happiness can be achieved.
With much love and prayers...
Long Life
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| A student’s 13-year-old daughter
died in bed. The doctors could find no cause. She had
an 18-year-old son and asked Rinpoche what she could do
for her son’s long life, as she was afraid he might
have the same destiny as her daughter. |
My very dear Sonia,
Thank you very much for your kind letter. I am very sorry
for the long delay in replying. I am also very sorry for your
loss. I have been making prayers for your daughter and also
for your whole family.
My way of thinking is—so many people in this world
went to bed last night but in the morning did not get up,
they died. The cause can be natural, or a coma, also unknown,
etc. Death does not come when it is expected. Many times,
the doctors do not know the cause of death. Many people die
who are healthy, who are young, and it doesn’t make
sense. Many people who are in perfect health suddenly die.
So many people in this world go to bed and in the morning,
they are dead, without any pain, just passing away in their
sleep, their breath stops. This happens so many times. Actually,
you will find it is not unusual for this to happen, in this
world.
You don’t need to feel superstitious regarding this.
This is karma. How long one lives and having an untimely death
is caused by karma. Death is definite, it’s not like
death won’t happen. When someone dies is not fixed according
to one’s age. It’s not like when one is 100 or
50 then one dies. The time of death is not fixed. Whether
one has a long or short life all depends on past karma.
Regarding what you can do to cause a long life, it is very
good if you practice a long life meditation. This is for your
long life, also you can do it for your son, but not just for
him, also for all other human beings. In the practice you
visualize all beings on the moon disc at the deity’s
heart, so here you can also think of your son.
With this practice you can achieve any happiness you want,
all good things for one’s future lives and especially
ultimate happiness—liberation from samsara, including
great liberation and enlightenment. Then, one is able to liberate
numberless sentient beings from each realm, from all the sufferings
and causes, and one is able to bring all sentient beings to
great liberation and enlightenment.
This practice causes a long life for you, but also for others.
So, it is very good for you to practice one long life meditation
every day, such as White Tara, Amitayus, or Namgyalma, whichever
you choose.
Whatever you practice you can do not only for yourself,
but for your whole family, and also for His Holiness the Dalai
Lama, who is the originator of all sentient beings’
happiness, also all one’s gurus, all other holy beings,
and all sentient beings, especially sentient beings who do
good things for others. Also, do the practice for sentient
beings who live in morality (Sangha).
By doing this practice one can achieve happiness, not only
in this life, but in all future lives. This is what one should
do if one wants to have a long life. Also, one can do the
meditation for others, visualizing others, that they receive
the long life nectar, etc. This is one way to prolong one’s
life and also others’ lives, as well as all sentient
beings’. Also, one can make prayers for all sentient
beings’ happiness, especially sentient beings who by
staying alive can bring more benefit to others, also for sentient
beings who when they die they will be reborn in a lower realm.
In that case, to live even one more minute in this world is
much less suffering for them, so therefore the longer they
can stay alive, the longer their suffering is postponed. In
this way, practice every single long life meditation not only
for yourself, or for the people in your family, but for all
sentient beings.
Other practices and things you can do to cause a long life
include liberating animals, which means liberating animals
that would otherwise be killed, such as worms that will be
used for bait, or insects that will be fed to other animals.
You save and protect the animals from an untimely death. If
you do animal liberations, then please use the
materials that I have put together which explains how
to do them, with mantras, etc., as this makes it most beneficial
for the animals.
Other things you can do for a long life are: helping people
who are sick; giving clothes to people who are poor, also
money; giving medicines to people who are sick; and taking
care of young or old people, who cannot take care of themselves.
Also, you can make light offerings to statues, stupas, scriptures,
and to the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha. For instance, making
a light offering in front of a Tara statue all night long
causes a long life. You can make offerings of beautiful coverings
for Dharma texts or very nice clothes for Buddha statues.
These are all things one can do to cause a long life; these
are just a few examples.
With much love and prayers...
Letter to Steve Irwin's Family
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| Rinpoche sent the following letter
to the family of Steve Irwin, the Australian wildlife
expert, on the occasion of his death. |
My very dear Janine,
I am the spiritual head of the FPMT, which is a worldwide
organization devoted to benefiting society through the practice
and philosophy of Tibetan Buddhism, education, public service,
health, and culture. The FPMT has 141 centers and activities
in 31 countries. We have 21 centers and projects in Australia,
including Chenrezig Institute, which is very close to the
Australian Zoo.
I am from Nepal, near Mount Everest.
I am sending you my condolences for our dear Steve Irwin,
who is known to the world as the crocodile hunter, maybe even
known to the snakes and crocodiles, as well. I watched Steve
Irwin on TV so many times for so many years, catching snakes
and crocodiles, letting them go, and also helping them, with
all his incredible excitement. It made me curious, when I
was watching him, being so active, about how his life would
end, whether one day he would be killed by one of those animals.
When I heard the news I immediately made prayers for him,
chanting many mantras and prayers, purifying anything that
causes suffering. I made prayers for the best thing to happen
to him.
You and your family must be very sad, but since you have
a strong bond with him, then according to Buddhist philosophy,
you have created the cause to meet him again, maybe not in
the same body, but to meet again. He may not reincarnate in
the same shape or body. It is like the flame when you light
another candle from it, but the flame continues.
Please continue having your good heart, bringing peace to
the world, to human beings and animals (that are the largest
number in the world when you compare to humans). Continue
to give your love to them.
Thank you very much.
With much love and prayers...
Dealing with Grief after the Death of a Loved One
I advise some people who don’t have a Dharma background that,
because you lived with the person who died, you have created a strong
connection with him or her. Because of that, you’ll meet again
in a future life. You feel very upset at separation, thinking you will
never meet that person again, but you will definitely meet again in future
because of the strong connection the two of you have established.
The other way is acceptance, accepting that this is the nature
of life, that after birth we have to die. Until you actualize
the spiritual path and cease the delusions and action motivated by
negative karma,
only then are you able to overcome death, rebirth, and sickness
and be free from all the problems you experience between birth and
death.
Among the paths of the three spiritual vehicles, or yanas,
according to the Lesser Vehicle path, the Hinayana, when
you achieve arhatship, you are freed from delusions and karma,
which includes total
freedom from death and all the problems that occur between
birth and death.
According to the Sutrayana division of the Great Vehicle
path, the Mahayana or bodhisattva path, which, like the Hinayana
path has five divisions—the paths of accumulation, preparation, seeing,
meditation and no more learning—when you achieve the fifth of these
you have attained full enlightenment, great liberation, and have also
completely overcome all suffering, sickness, and death.
Then, according to the Secret Mantra path, the Vajrayana,
which at its highest level has two stages—generation and completion—which
can also be divided into five divisions mentioned above or into the stages
of body and speech, isolation of mind, illusory body, clear light of
meaning and learner’s union—when you attain the fifth of
these you are fully enlightened and again completely free from death,
rebirth and all suffering.
Until you achieve any of these spiritual paths, you have
to die. Everybody has to die. Even plants are born, decay,
and die. Even the whole Earth has a beginning. It started,
it decays, and it ends.
The Earth has a certain number of years, months, weeks, days,
hours, minutes, and seconds that it will last. Then, after
that, it ends. Nothing
is left. Even the Rocky Mountains that look so solid now
will be gone. At that time, only space will be left. All
this happens without choice
so we have to accept it.
As the great Buddhist saint Shantideva said: “If something can
be managed, what’s the point of worrying, and if it can’t
be managed, what’s the use of worrying?”
This quote is always useful in this kind of situation. It’s useless
to be upset that you can’t have something. It’s like being
upset that your house is not made of diamonds or that you are not the
ruler of the world.
Some of your grief and suffering at having lost a loved one
is not because your friend had to follow their karma, created
the karma and had to be reborn in the lower realms and suffer;
it’s not that
kind of concern and care for that person but the concern and upset that
comes through cherishing your own comfort and pleasure in having that
person with you. It’s concern for your own pleasure.
This upset is due to cherishing the “I,” cherishing oneself,
and then losing the object of attachment. It’s the self-cherishing
thought in your mind that’s making you upset and unhappy. Then,
because you are following attachment and the self-cherishing thought,
and those minds are unhappy, you feel disturbed, and you believe that
you are disturbed and unhappy.
In reality, what is upset is your attachment, your self-cherishing
thought, not your whole mind. Your wisdom and positive thought
renouncing attachment to samsara, to temporary samsaric pleasures
which are in the
nature of only suffering, are not upset; your loving kindness
and compassion are not upset or depressed because the object
of your attachment and
self-cherishing thought has died.
So, it’s wrong to think that your entire mind is completely depressed
and grieving. You grieve and feel depressed only when you follow the
self-cherishing thought. When you stop following attachment and self-cherishing
and follow wisdom, meditate on emptiness, cultivate the mind that is
opposite to attachment—renunciation—and have the thought
of benefiting others—bodhicitta—then, when you follow those
minds, there’s no grief, there’s no depression; there is
only peace and happiness.
So my suggestion is, rather than being depressed and grief-stricken
out of attachment and self-cherishing, accept the nature
of phenomena as impermanent and let go. Things are transitory.
Everyone has to die.
Accept that, and then, with those positive minds, do something
worthwhile to benefit the dead person. Instead of being attached
and clinging to
that person—which doesn’t help and only increases your pain,
day and night, and can even cause you to commit suicide, to end your
precious, wish-fulfilling human body with which you can achieve all happiness
up to enlightenment—do something worthwhile and beneficial for
that person.
Offer charity to others who are needy, homeless or sick.
Help old people, save them from problems; help the young,
save them from problems. Educate others to develop the inner
good heart and wisdom.
Even if you have nothing material to give, offer service
to others. Do something to benefit others. Volunteer your
service. Dedicate all your
positive actions and merit to the person who died for them
not to suffer but to achieve ultimate happiness, the total
cessation of all suffering
and its cause, and to actualize the peerless happiness of
enlightenment.
There is so much you can do in this world to offer service.
So many people are needy. So much is needed. If you can understand
the benefits there are so many spiritual Dharma projects
that offer so much
good, that purify other beings’ past negative karma and defilements
so that they don’t have to experience the result, suffering, caused
by their past negative karma, and that also develop their minds on the
spiritual path, in method and wisdom, causing them not only to have happiness
in future lives but also total liberation, freedom from suffering and
its causes, and full enlightenment.
You can also perform meditation practice or recite mantras
of powerful purification buddhas to help your loved one
who died, to save him or her from suffering. There are so many
things you can do to
benefit that person. This way, there will be so much joy
in your heart. Otherwise you just grieve, cherishing yourself,
which is useless.
Unexpected Death in the Family
The father of a very
devoted student in Singapore died suddenly one morning, shaking
the family deeply. The other family members were particularly
upset with “God” for taking their father away.
My very dear Mother and family,
It is not God’s fault. It is your father’s karma to pass
away. Life is not permanent. The Buddha said it is impermanent in nature.
That is the reality we experience. It is also not the fault of Buddha.
He taught that life is impermanent.
The most important thing is that Father didn’t die with much pain.
It is good that it happened suddenly.
We should pray for him: to have a good rebirth in the next
life, to be born in a pure land where he can become enlightened
(or you can say, where he can be with God), or receive a
perfect human rebirth
so he can achieve enlightenment in that life by meeting a
perfect Mahayana guru and putting the teachings into practice
correctly.
We are all on the same journey as Father. This is the reality
of life. It is very important to realize this, and remember
it every day. The benefit of doing this is that we prepare
for death and future
lives’ happiness. More important than this is liberation from samsara,
which is called nirvana. Most important is achieving enlightenment for
the benefit of all sentient beings. The only way is through Dharma practice:
pure mind and pure action. The best Dharma is bodhicitta mind and bodhicitta
action.
You can do many virtuous actions to help Father,
by dedicating them to him. This way, we can still help him and continue
to help him, so please be happy!
With much
love and prayer...
After the Death of a Loved One
A former center director and student of many years died of cancer. Rinpoche
wrote this letter is to his wife and child.
My dear Jane and Jim,
I am very sorry that our very dear ex-director
and student passed away. You should not worry. In my divination, some
days before he passed away,
it came out positive that he will have a good rebirth. He
offered service and was very devoted, sincere, and kind-hearted. He was
an easygoing
person, and offered service for many years to sentient beings
and to the teachings of Buddha, as director of the center.
I wanted to let you know that I made prayers to guide
him after hearing that he had passed away. I recited the
short 100,000-verse Prajnaparamita teachings a few times,
and also tried to do powa. We
also made 30 tsa-tsas of the three types of deities. That
came out very beneficial for his future rebirth, and we
also made three stupas and
Mitukpa tsa-tsas for him. After sojong, Choden Rinpoche,
Geshe Ngawang Drakpa, all the Sangha members in the area (about
30) and I recited the
King of Prayers, the Lama Tsongkhapa prayer and Maitreya
Buddha prayer, and dedicated them to him.
In case you are worried or missing him, you should recollect
that we all, those of us who are not free from samsara, have
to die. Since we are born, we have to die, because we are
under the control of
delusion and karma until we are free from samsara. This is
the nature of life. Even this whole earth, which looks so
permanent to us, will
become nonexistent. It decays, and then after some time will
become non-existent. There will be space where the earth
used to be. Nothing that is a causative
phenomenon lasts. It changes and decays, not only from moment
to moment, but even within each moment.
What will benefit him is if you perform positive actions
in your daily life with a good heart, with the thought of
benefiting others: with compassion and loving kindness. By
living your life with
this pure motivation and good heart, your actions become
virtuous, even if you don’t perform any extra positive actions.
From these virtuous actions, you collect merit, and you can dedicate
those merits, offering
them to him, for him to have a good rebirth. Dedicate them
for him not only to achieve just temporal happiness, but most importantly
for him
to be freed as quickly as possible from samsara, from the
cycle of birth and death, and to achieve enlightenment in the quickest
way possible.
Remember him by performing more positive actions for others,
such as giving generously to others and living in morality
by abstaining from harming others and harming oneself. For
his benefit, try to practice
patience when somebody treats you badly, or insults you or
shows disrespect toward you. If you at least manage not to
get angry, that means you don’t
harm others. Even when you practice patience or try to stop
the thought of harming others when it comes, dedicate that to him If
you can, think
that this is also for the happiness and benefit of all sentient
beings, who, like him, also want happiness and do not want suffering.
Dedicate
in this way however many positive actions you are able to
perform each day. At least, when there is a danger of anger arising,
stop that and
practice patience or compassion. And when you start to have
negative thoughts, which are harmful to others, like ill will, jealousy
and so
on, try to stop that and practice their antidotes.
On top of this, benefit others as much as possible, with
a sincere heart, in your daily life. Whether it is a small
or big help to others, this will make your own life of better
quality. It will make
your mind healthier, and that means having a healthier body
and longer life, and you will have inner peace and happiness.
However much more
you are able to practice positive things, and perform good
deeds, there will be that much less suffering for you when
you pass away. There will
be less of a problem or no problem, so you will have a happier
death, a peaceful death, very pleasant and inspiring for
others. You will give
courage to other people to practice Dharma, meditate, and
to do positive things, so you will have a very happy ending
to your life.
Your husband’s passing away is a reminder to us how precious our
human lives are, and for us to practice harder and more purely.
With much love and prayers...
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