In Search of a Meaningful Life
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche |
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| This teaching was
given at Tushita
Mahayana Meditation Centre, New Delhi, on July 4,
1979. First published in Teachings at Tushita,
edited by Nicholas Ribush with Glenn H. Mullin, Mahayana
Publications, New Delhi, 1981. Now appears in the 2005
LYWA publication Teachings
From Tibet. |
Inner
development and materialism
It is extremely important that we make an effort to lead
a spiritual life while, as human beings, we have the opportunity
to pursue inner methods that bring peace of mind.
It is common experience that happiness does not arise from
external factors alone. If we check carefully into our own
daily lives, we will easily see that this is true. In addition
to external factors, there are also inner factors that come
into play to establish happiness within us.
If external development were all it took to produce lasting
peace within us, then those who were rich in material possessions
would have more peace and happiness while those who were poor
would have less. But life is not always like this. There are
many happy people with few riches and many wealthy people
who are very unhappy.
In India, for example, there are many pandits, highly realized
yogis and even simple Dharma practitioners who live humble
lives but have great peace of mind. The more they have renounced
the unsubdued mind, the greater is their peace; the more they
have renounced self-cherishing, anger, ignorance, attachment
and so forth, the greater is their happiness.
Great masters such as the Indian pandit Naropa and the Tibetan
yogi Jetsun Milarepa owned nothing yet had incredible peace
of mind. They were able to renounce the unsubdued mind, the
source of all problems, and thus transcended all suffering.
By actualizing the path to enlightenment they achieved a superior
happiness. Thus, even though they often had to go days without
food—the great yogi Milarepa lived for years in a cave
subsisting only on wild nettles—they rank among the
happiest people on Earth. Because they abandoned the three
poisonous minds of ignorance, attachment and anger, their
peace and happiness was indeed great. The more they renounced
the unsubdued mind, the greater was their peace.
If happiness depended on only material development, rich
countries such as America would be very happy places. Many
people try to follow the American way of life, thinking it
will bring them happiness, but personally, I find greater
peace in more spiritually-minded countries such as India and
Nepal. These are much happier countries, more peaceful for
the mind. When I return to India after traveling in the West,
it’s like coming home. There are so many differences.
India is actually a very spiritual country and this makes
a great difference to the mind.
When you look at materialistic societies and the way people
live, your own mind gets disturbed. The people there are increasingly
busy, and new and different problems continually arise; they’re
tense and nervous and have no time to relax. In India, you
see people relaxing all over the place, but in the West, you
pick up the vibration of the population’s agitated minds
and finish up feeling nervous yourself. If happiness depended
solely on external development, countries like Switzerland
and America would be the most peaceful places on Earth, with
less quarreling, fighting and violence, but they’re
not like that.
This proves that there is something lacking in the way the
West seeks happiness. Materially, developed countries may
be on top of the world but many problems continue to destroy
their peace and happiness. What is missing? It is inner development;
external development is pursued to the exclusion of inner
development, development of the mind. It’s a huge mistake
to focus solely on material progress while ignoring development
of the mind, the good heart. This is the world’s greatest
mistake.
In itself, material progress is not bad and is to be encouraged,
but inner development is much more important. You can’t
even compare the two—inner development is a trillion
times more effective than external development in producing
lasting happiness. You’ll find neither peace nor happiness
if you neglect to develop the mind. The good heart brings
peace of mind. By all means, develop the material world, but
at the same time, develop the mind. If you compare the peace
of mind gained through material things to that generated by
the good heart—by compassion, love, patience, and the
elimination of the violent, unsubdued mind—the superior
value of the latter is overwhelming.
Patience vs. anger
Even if you owned a pile of diamonds the size of this Earth,
the peace you’d get from that would be minimal and could
never compare with that afforded by inner development. No
matter how many jewels you own, you’re still beset by
mental problems such as anger, attachment and so forth. If
somebody insults you, for example, you immediately get angry
and start to think of ways to harm, insult or hurt that person.
If you are a person of inner development, you react quite
differently. You think, “How would I feel if he got
angry with me, insulted me and hurt my mind? I’d be
really upset and unhappy. Therefore, I shouldn’t be
negative towards him. If I get angry and insult him, he’ll
get terribly upset and unhappy, just as I would in the same
situation. How can I do that to him?” This is the way
you should think; this is the way of inner development, the
true path to peace.
When my friend says or does something to me that I dislike
and discomfort and anger start to grow in my mind, I may want
to retaliate by saying something hurtful. But instead, I should
gather my awareness, be skillful and brave, and think, “How
can I be angry with my friend? How can I say painful things
to her? How can I bring her harm? If she got violent with
me, how unhappy I would be, how it would disturb my mind,
how it would hurt me. Therefore, to harm this friend who,
just like me, wants happiness and does not want suffering,
would be most shameful. What kind of person would I be if
I acted like that?”
When you think like that, your anger, which at first seems
to be as solid as stone, disappears like a popped water bubble.
At first it seems that there’s no way you can change
your mind, but when you use the right method, when you meditate
like this, your anger vanishes, just like that. You don’t
see the point of getting angry.
When you practice patience, you try not to let your anger
arise; you try to remember how it disturbs your mind, destroys
your happiness, disturbs others’ minds and happiness,
and doesn’t help at all. As you practice patience, your
face becomes beautiful. Anger makes you really ugly. When
anger enters a beautiful face, no amount of make-up can hide
the complete ugliness that manifests. You can see anger in
people’s faces; you can recognize it. You become afraid
of anger just by looking at the terrifying face of an angry
person. That is the reflection of anger. It’s a very
bad vibration to give off. It makes everybody unhappy.
The real practice of Dharma, the real meditation, is never
to harm others. This protects both your own peace of mind
and that of other beings. This is true religious practice;
it brings benefit to both yourself and others. Practicing
patience in this way even once is worth more than any amount
of diamonds. What kind of inner peace can you derive from
diamonds? All you do is run the risk of being killed for them.
The value of the good heart is beyond compare with that of
any material possession.
Since we want only happiness and no suffering, it is extremely
important for us to practice Dharma. Dharma is not chanting,
doing rituals or wearing uniforms; it’s developing the
mind, the inner factor. We have many different inner factors:
negative ones, such as the unsubdued mind, ignorance, delusions
and so forth; and positive ones, such as love, compassion,
wisdom and the like. Dharma practice is the destruction of
our negative mental factors and the cultivation of our positive
ones.
Linguistically, the word “dharma” means “existent
phenomenon,” but when we say, “the practice of
Dharma,” or “holy Dharma,” it means that
which protects us from suffering. That is the meaning of the
holy Dharma; that is the Dharma we should practice.
There are many different levels of suffering from which
we require protection. Dharma is like a rope thrown to somebody
about to fall over a precipice. It protects and holds us from
falling into the realms of suffering—the worlds of the
hell beings, hungry ghosts and animals.
A second level of suffering from which the holy Dharma protects
us is that of the entirety of samsaric suffering—that
of all six realms—and its cause: the disturbing negative
minds and the karma they cause us to create.
Finally, the holy Dharma also protects us from the self-cherishing
thought and the subtle obscurations that prevent us from attaining
enlightenment, the state of buddhahood—the highest sublime
happiness. As long as the self-cherishing thought remains
in our mind there’s no way we can achieve buddhahood;
the path to sublime happiness is blocked. Self-cherishing
is the greatest hindrance to happiness and enlightenment.
If we practice Dharma, we’ll find protection from the
disturbances that the self-cherishing thought creates and
will quickly receive enlightenment.
Death is followed by the intermediate state, after which
we take rebirth in one of the six realms. Rebirth, life, death,
intermediate state, rebirth again: we constantly circle on
this wheel of life, repeatedly experiencing confusion and
suffering because of impure conceptions and views. When we
practice Dharma, we’re guided and protected from the
impure conceptions and views that constantly keep us bound
to samsaric suffering. Dharma practice helps us at many levels.
Identifying the problem
The problem is that our body and mind are in the nature of
suffering; they are not beyond suffering. This is the whole
problem. As a result, we are constantly busy. Why is our body
in the nature of suffering? It’s because our mind is
in the nature of suffering; our mind is not liberated from
suffering because it is not liberated from the unsubdued minds
of ignorance, attachment, anger and their actions, karma.
Therefore, its nature is one of suffering. Thus, in turn,
our body suffers.
Without choice, our body is subject to the sufferings of
heat, cold, hunger, thirst, birth, old age, sickness and so
forth. We don’t have to seek out these sufferings; they
come to us naturally and we have to experience them. All this
is because we have not liberated our mind from suffering.
Our country is not samsara; our city is not samsara; our family
is not samsara—samsara is the body and mind that are
in the nature of suffering; the body and mind that constantly
make us worry and keep us busy. Samsara is the body and mind
that are bound by the delusion and karma.
Samsara is a cycle, a wheel. Its function is to circle.
How does it circle? Our aggregates—our body and mind—continue
from this life into the next; they connect our past life to
this one and this life to the future one. They always continue,
always join one life to the next. They create an ongoing circle;
like the wheels of a bicycle, they always take us to different
places. We are the subject who circles, like the person who
rides the bike. Our self is like that. We circle on and on,
from life to life, taking rebirth in accordance with how we
have lived our life, the karma we have created and our general
state of mind. Dependent upon these factors, we take rebirth
as an animal, a human, a god, a hell being and so forth. Our
aggregates carry us like a horse carries a rider.
The problem is that from beginningless time throughout all
our previous lifetimes we did not do the work necessary to
liberate our mind from the unsubdued minds and karma. Therefore,
our mind and body are still in the nature of suffering; we’re
still experiencing the same problems over and over again.
Had we liberated ourselves from the unsubdued minds and karma
we would never have to suffer again; it would be impossible.
Once we’re free from samsaric suffering, from the bondage
of karma and the unsubdued mind, we can never suffer again;
no cause remains for us to experience further suffering. If
we’d liberated ourselves before, there’d be no
reason for us to suffer now; our mind and body would not be
in the nature of suffering.
If we didn’t have a samsaric body, we wouldn’t
need a house, clothing, food or other temporal needs. There’d
be no need to worry, make preparations, collect many possessions,
chase money, have hundreds of different clothes to wear in
the different seasons, have hundreds of shoes, make business
and so forth. We’d have none of these problems. But
we do have a samsaric body, therefore our entire life, from
rebirth to death, is kept busy taking care of it.
Lama Tsong Khapa, a highly realized Tibetan
yogi recognized as an embodiment of Manjushri, the Buddha
of Wisdom, wrote from his personal experience of the path,
If you do not think of the evolution of samsara, you will
not know how to sever its root.
For example, let’s say there’s a person who is
always sick because he eats the wrong food. As long as he
doesn’t recognize the mistake in his diet, the cause
of his sickness, he will continue to be sick no matter how
much medicine he takes. Similarly, if we don’t understand
the evolutionary patterns of samsara, there’ll be no
way for us to receive the peace of nirvana that we seek. To
do this, we must cut the root of samsara; to do that, we must
know the correct methods; to know the methods, we must recognize
what causes us to be bound to samsara. By realizing what binds
us to samsara, we can generate aversion for and renunciation
of the causes of samsaric existence. Lama Tsong Khapa concludes
the above verse by saying,
I, the yogi, have practiced just that. You who also seek
liberation, please cultivate yourself in the same way.
This great yogi, who achieved enlightenment
by actualizing the path, advises us to do what he did: first,
it is very important that we desire liberation from samsara;
then we must recognize its evolutionary laws; finally, we
have to sever its root.
To understand the evolution of samsara we must understand
the twelve links of interdependent origination, or dependent
arising [Skt: pratityasamutpada], that clearly explain
how we circle in samsara.
How did our present samsara—these aggregates in the
nature of suffering—come into being? In a past life,
out of ignorance, we accumulated the karma to be born in this
human body. A split second before our previous life’s
death, craving and grasping—not wanting to leave the
body, not wanting to separate from that life—arose.
We were then born in the intermediate state, and after that
our consciousness entered our mother’s womb. The resultant
embryo grew and our senses gradually developed. Then contact
and responsive feelings came into existence. Now our rebirth
has occurred, we are aging, and all that remains for us to
experience is death.
In this life there is no peace, from the time we are born
until we die. We continually go through much suffering as
human beings: the pain of birth; dissatisfaction with our
situation; undesirable experiences; worries; fear of separation
from desirable objects, friends, relatives, and possessions;
sickness; old age and death. All these problems come from
karma, and karma comes from ignorance. Therefore, the one
root of samsara is ignorance, the ignorance of mistaking the
nature of “I,” the self, which is empty of true
existence—although our “I” is empty of true
existence, we completely believe that it is truly existent,
as we project. By totally eradicating this ignorance, we put
a final end to our beginningless suffering and attain nirvana.
The path that repays the kindness of all sentient
beings
In order to do this, we must follow a true path. However,
it is not enough that we ourselves attain nirvana because
that benefits only one person. There are numberless sentient
beings, all of whom have been our mother, father, sister and
brother in our infinite previous lives. There is not one single
sentient being who has not been kind to us in one life or
another. Even in this life, much of our happiness is received
in dependence upon the kindness of others, not only humans—many
animals work hard and suffer for our happiness; many die or
are killed for us. For example, in order to produce rice in
a field, many people work and suffer under the sun, many creatures
are killed and so forth. The happiness of each day of our
life completely depends on the kindness of other sentient
beings.
As human beings, we have a great opportunity to repay their
kindness. They are ignorant of and blind to Dharma wisdom
but since we have met the holy Dharma, we’re able to
understand the nature of reality and help all sentient beings
by reaching enlightenment and liberating them from suffering.
Therefore, we should always think as follows:
“I must attain enlightenment in order to benefit all
sentient beings. Sentient beings have been extremely kind
and benefited me very much. They are suffering. These sentient
beings, all of whom have been my mother in many previous lives,
are suffering. Therefore, I, their child, must help. If I
don’t help them, who will? Who else will help them gain
liberation from suffering? Who else will lead them to enlightenment?
But for me to do that, I must first reach enlightenment myself;
I must become a buddha; I must actualize the omniscient mind.
Then my holy body, speech and mind will become most effective.
Each ray of light from the aura of the enlightened holy body
can liberate many sentient beings and inspire them on the
path to happiness, nirvana and full enlightenment. I must
become buddha in order to liberate all sentient beings.”
The path is the holy Dharma and the essence of the path
is the good heart. The greatest, highest good heart is bodhicitta—the
determination to become a buddha in order to liberate all
sentient beings from suffering. This is the supreme good heart.
This is what we should generate.
Notes
1. Lama Tsong Khapa, Lines
of Experience, verse 13.
2. See Geshe Rabten's teaching
on the twelve links.
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