Kopan Courses No. 3 (Fall 1972) and No. 4 (Spring
1973)
Lama Zopa Rinpoche |
|
022107
THE EIGHT FREEDOMS AND TEN ENDOWMENTS
The Eight Freedoms (Page 46)
The eight freedoms are also sometimes termed the eight “rests”—the
human is “resting” from these restless states.
We may be born in one of the second four and the situation
changes to a perfect human rebirth.
The Ten Endowments (Page 47)
1. The first of the ten endowments is birth as a human being.
But this is not enough: check how many humans lack the other
endowments.
2. The second of the ten is being born in a religious country,
which means a country in which Buddhism is present. If we
are born in a place where there is no Buddhism, it means
that there are no fully ordained monks, and therefore we
cannot become ordained. Ordination is a discipline for the
mind at a high level. In Tibetan we say dom pa, which means
protecting the mind from negative actions, keeping it away
from delusions, freeing the mind. This is a quick and profitable
way to practice Dharma and reach enlightenment. As the number
of monks increase, so the teaching of the Dharma increases.
In the center of a religious country there are people—monks
and nuns—keeping the different levels of ordinations
and precepts. This enables us to practice morality, as these
are the people who grant the ordinations. We are extremely
lucky to be born in a country where there are such people.
Some may think that this has nothing to do with them, that
it’s only a tradition or custom, but the person who
receives ordinations is very fortunate, because keeping the
different precepts is a quick way to be led to enlightenment
and freed from suffering. People who observe such precepts
are in the safest place; it protects them against the outside
enemies and their harmful actions, like a protective fence
surrounding them. The enemies are outside interferences and
dangers, and the ordinations protect from these. If we go
outside and break the ordination, there are too many problems.
If we have no fence then there is no protection from danger,
and it is so easy to be disturbed by living beings, elements,
and so forth. Ordination protects us from ignorance, and
creates positive action.
3. The third freedom is being born with perfect organs.
4. The fourth is avoiding the five inexpiable sins. Avoidance
of the five inexpiable sins is necessary for ordination.
The deaf can’t hear the teachings or the sound of Dharma—there
is much suffering, and no freedom. If one is born with an
ugly body, no one will like it. One cannot be ordained. The
extreme negatives are very difficult to purity. An arhat
is one out of ignorance, who doesn’t himself suffer
from death, but it creates very bad karma for the killer;
the tathagata has full realization of absolute truth, and
there are different levels of tathagata.
5. Fifth, if you are born with no belief in the three divisions
of the teachings, you cannot develop your wisdom. Realizations
depend on the complete understanding and practice of those
teachings. Within the three divisions, Abhidharma contains
the explanations on the evolution of the universe, both about
the mind and the outer universe. Sutra explains much about
the path and the absolute true nature of reality. Vinaya
gives the details of the precepts and ordinations, the necessity
of taking them, and many other things.
6. Sixth is being born during a non-dark period. This is
a non-dark period because there are still highly realized
beings in the world who have the continued lineage of the
teachings from Buddha.
7. Seventh is being shown the teachings of Buddha or his
followers.
8. The eighth is the existence of the experiential teachings
in the world. Our present gurus have received the teachings
from other gurus back to Guru Shakyamuni continuously, without
a break in the linage. The Tibetan Dharma practitioners look
upon the present teachers as representatives of Guru Shakyamuni.
If there is no existence of the experience of the teachings
in the minds of beings, then something is missing—it
is not enough for the teachings alone to exist; there must
be realized beings.
9. The ninth is following the path of Buddha’s teachings.
We must follow the path of Buddha’s teachings as our
future enlightenment is only a creation of our own mind,
and so our suffering is the same. There would be no suffering
for all sentient beings if there were no reason for it, but
all suffering is a creation of the mind. It is important
to know this at the beginning. Without looking for ourselves
we will not find the solution to our problems for hundreds
of eons. Yet as sentient beings become their own worst enemy
they can also become their own best friend and helper. Through
the purification of the mind, each human being can achieve
enlightenment—the time it takes depends entirely on
the person. Enlightenment is a creation of each being’s
own mind. If suffering were not our own creation there would
be no need to create our own enlightenment—but there
is no suffering that is not a creation of mind, and if we
don’t try from our side we shall not find the solution
to our problems.
However, when we try to perform positive actions there is
often much interference from the negative mind. That is why
there are fewer holy beings than non-holy beings. It is difficult
to be a holy person, with peace in the mind, the mind well-subdued,
because there are so many disturbances to our good actions.
So today, a short method to be able to prevent those interferences
as much as possible is to practice and talk about Dharma.
As we have more negative than positive minds, so that much
easily the outside interferences can disturb us. Our negative
minds interfere in the development of our Dharma practice.
Even outside evil spirits and non-living outside interferences
such as elements afflict us. But when there is pure positive
mind, there is no way that interferences can disturb us,
because these things themselves arise from the negative mind.
Consider two countries, India and China for example, who
want to create war. India had some kind of negative aim towards
China—they wanted to get some goods—so they put
a bridge across the border. Then they had a disagreement
and because of the bridge the Chinese were able to cross
easily and cause many problems. So the bridge that was fixed
by the Indians for that negative reason now causes the great
problem of war. If those negative aims hadn’t been
there, there wouldn’t have been the bridge, and there
wouldn’t have been the problem. This is an example
of how the negative mind creates problems. None of the interferences
are the fault of the interference itself, but are only a
creation of the negative mind, which makes the passage through
which we receive interference.
Each topic in Dharma practice is correlated. This is why
it is such a vast, profound, and deep subject. There are
two perfect guides. One is internal—who you become,
and one is external—the one who gives you the teachings.
The outer guide is the causal guide, and the inner guide
is the resultant guide. When we talk about an enlightened
one we should not think that we are talking about something
separate from ourselves. It is within.
10. The tenth of the ten endowments is receiving the kindness
and compassion of others. We must have a compassionate guru,
and someone to help with food, clothes, and so forth. In
Tibet the practitioner’s life was easy as far as begging
goes, because all the people greatly respected anybody who
observed the precepts. Some benefactors gave food with faith
and others with compassion, so there were no distracting
problems of temporal needs. In most parts of the world this
is more difficult.
So there are the chances to practice Dharma.
The purpose of meditating on these eight freedoms and ten
endowments is to experience the suffering of these unhappy
states, to feel beyond words, and to understand what it is
to be a heretic—to see how ignorant we are, and what
bad karma we can create. There is no such definite suffering
as that of the narak realms—in these realms is as if
the earth itself were made of red-hot burning iron with no
escape and no control. In the cold hell it is as if we are
on an ice foundation; the body is one with either fire or
ice.
So we can discover how precious and useful the perfect human
rebirth really is, to help us to understand and develop the
mind, and to escape from suffering. The human birth has great
freedom compared to the other states. And we can see how
lazy we are, following ignorance. Even if we receive the
teachings, we don’t follow them.
This meditation destroys laziness. We can prepare to not
be born in these states. It gives an answer to the question
of the purpose of the human life—its great freedom
to practice Dharma and to escape from suffering.
It is important to see the benefits of the human rebirth
so that when we come into contact with the teachings we use
them and are not lazy. Therefore, this meditation comes first.
If we don’t understand the sufferings of other rebirths,
laziness will stop us from using the method. The Enlightened
Being’s method is like this—it stops many dangers
with the discovery that this present human birth is extremely
precious. We can gain enlightenment and escape ignorance.
This is the technique of such highly realized pandits as
Nagarjuna and Tsong Khapa; this is their method.
Meditating on the eight freedoms and ten endowments is not
just counting numbers—it has great purpose. By realizing
the previous examples we come to realize the value of the
human rebirth. If we don’t know about these lower realms
then we don’t see the importance of this human realm.
This is due to our lack of checking with wisdom, not realizing
the mental state of the beings in other realms, and deep
ignorance.
We should check up and feel pleased—if we can sacrifice
our lives for our possessions, why can’t we work for
all sentient beings who have served and helped us since beginningless
time? We should check up and feel joyful for as much as we
have. And we should prepare to receive whatever is missing
in the future—we should create good karma so as to
be reborn with perfect organs for the development of Dharma
practice. During our meditation time we should remember it
all.
In this meditation we should feel joyful for our perfect
human rebirth. Then in the true dharma way we should take
care of it and not waste it. On this basis we can develop
Dharma practice, and without it there is no possibility of
following the true path. It was from this basis of the perfect
human rebirth that the great yogis such as Milarepa gained
enlightenment.
THE PERFECT HUMAN REBIRTH: HOW IS IT USEFUL? (Page 47)
When we really check up to see how useful the perfect human
rebirth can be, we see that it stops the ignorance of using
our lives as if we were animals. We should also compare our
precious human rebirths to the lives of those humans who
can’t practice Dharma. It is a sad thing to consider
an animal born as a human.
The selfish mind suffers from the self-caring conception
based on the delusion of the false self. This ignorant, impure
mind prevents everlasting happiness. These mental hindrances
must be destroyed—samsaric happiness cannot be everlasting.
The clever person does not care for the present, small suffering
because he knows that the future suffering is great. But
the future cannot happen without the present suffering. Greed,
ignorance, and hatred are not useful, even for a moment—this
is the most important thing to realize. Kaka is better than
chocolate since it doesn’t create greed and negative
mind, and so is less of a hindrance to existence.
The great yogi Milarepa, Guru Tsong Khapa, and other ascetic
lamas lived in the essential practice of Dharma by begging,
under great temporal difficulties, before their powers were
well developed. But they got great energy from understanding
the nature of ignorance, which causes suffering. Also, by
taking themselves as examples, they understood great numbers
of other beings. They renounced their own greed, ignorance,
and hatred, and had the great will to clear out their own
negativities. In this way their compassion became energetic—the
knowing of their own suffering to understand that of others—and
so they could help other beings more quickly.
Temporal illnesses will continue to arise while the person
is concerned only with these—we should control the
future great suffering by eliminating ignorance. For the
great yogis, each time a mental or physical temporal trouble
arose, it helped their realizations and practice, since they
deeply understood the cause as rooted in ignorance, which
they further tried to control. Instead of feeling hatred
towards other people, they would feel it towards their own
ignorance, the enemy.
The Reasons the Perfect Human Rebirth is Highly Useful
1. The perfect human rebirth is highly useful because this
is our chance to end the round of samsara and end all the
mental sufferings and worries that we don’t desire.
Yet still we keep on suffering as we have been from beginningless
time. We often think that this suffering is new, but this
is only due to our lack of understanding—each experience
of suffering has no beginning, yet still we haven’t
stopped it completely. We have always had imperfect births,
births in irreligious countries where there is no Buddhadharma,
thus creating more bad karma. So this time, having attained
the opportunities of the eight freedoms and ten endowments,
we have the possibility to extinguish suffering because we
have so much freedom to practice Dharma. This is the life
with the chance we didn’t have before—as this
life we have the freedom to break the continuity of suffering.
If there was no suffering mind there would be no suffering
body. Through Dharma practice we work to stop suffering by
realizing the absolute nature of existence. This is the meaning
of life, the reason we are born human having the freedom
to practice Dharma. This is why we do the meditation course,
this is why we came here from the West. An airplane is used
for flying in space, not in the jungle or in bushes. The
perfect human rebirth has been created by past lives for
the same purpose and it is now in our hands to do it, it
is up to us, the pilots of our perfect human rebirths.
We are trying to figure out how to best use our lives. Like
traveling to America, how quickly you go depends on expenses;
the time it takes to reach enlightenment depends on your
will and the strength of your practice. The fewer mistakes
in the practice, the shorter the time—but the practice
must be pure, for purity is its foundation.
Different levels of realization are created by practices
such as circumambulating. A variable amount of good karma
is produced depending on the person’s understanding.
Going around a blessed holy object creates good karma even
for one of low understanding because the object itself is
associated with the holy minds of so many buddhas to guide
sentient beings and to allow them to create good karma. This
is especially true when considering famous stupas such as
that in Bodhgaya—many highly realized beings become
associated with it, having invocated and blessed it, and
such blessings stay with it and can help purify negativity
and create good karma. Such objects remain holy until the
earth is destroyed. And even without pure impulse one can
create good karma by circumambulating these precious holy
objects because of the power from the object’s side.
There are so many ways to create good karma, but without
understanding the Dharma they cannot bring quick enlightenment.
Any action done with the expectation of comfort for this
life is negative. This is the greed that is to be destroyed
by this meditation, and is the purpose of this meditation.
The student of one guru, with strong will and faith, freely
cleaned around the guru’s house for many years. Due
to this good karma he achieved enlightenment, despite difficulties
in receiving teachings.
2. Also, in this lifetime, even if we do not attain enlightenment,
we can become bodhisattvas and gain psychic powers to see
beings of many past and future lives. According to the level
of realization, we can help in the realms of many sentient
beings by transferring our bodies there. As our realizations
become higher, we will see more and more buddhas and great
beings, and hear their teachings. This is also possible in
this lifetime.
3. It is also possible that we might become a lower arhat,
released from rebirth in samsara and having achieved everlasting
happiness without going through the bodhisattva’s path.
4. This perfect human rebirth gives us the opportunity to
realize bodhicitta, the will only to help other sentient
beings.
5. We can also attain other realizations, such as perception
of the absolute truth and the true nature of mind. The knowledge
of Dharma mind arises from practice.
These points above are the higher usefulnesses of the perfect
human rebirth.
6. Also, we can attain the possession of many universes.
7. We can experience worldly benefits that arise from the
creation of good karma. Usually we don’t pay attention
to the usefulness of our human life, due to lack of understanding
the Dharma. So now we are checking it, to see.
The cause of the result of a precious human rebirth can
be created in this lifetime and not necessarily in past lifetimes.
If we look at the sufferings of lower beings, such as animals,
we can discover how precious our human rebirth really is.
This is important to discover, for understanding these differences
causes us to not use our human life as if we were animals.
In this way, we destroy our ignorance and use our human rebirth
for a higher purpose. The more we realize this, the more
energy will come to encourage us to do so.
Generally, such things as sleeping, eating, desiring self-happiness,
killing other beings, and having sexual intercourse are all
done by animals. If we do the same thing as an animal it
makes no sense, and gives no purpose to our birth and life
as a human being. There are more animals suffering than numbers
of men—we are talking in big views, with a broad outlook.
How can an animal perform good deeds?
The mind is beginningless and it takes rebirth in the six
samsaric realms, entering the cycle of death and rebirth
created by ignorance. After one life has finished, the mind
takes another body in the same country or on the same planet,
or in a different realm. This is determined by luck, according
to karma—the positive or negative actions of body,
speech, and mind. As the mind is beginningless, so is the
experience of taking the human, animal, narak, and other
realm bodies and forms. For instance, in one day, month,
or year, a human being creates all kinds of different karmas
for future rebirths in all six samsaric realms—good
and bad karma, and even creates karma at the time of death.
The experience of creating karma is also beginningless. At
the time of death, of all the countless trillions of created
karmas, whichever is the closer, heavier, or more habitual,
brings the result for the next life. If it is the karma for
rebirth as a pig, the craving and grasping of a pig arise
and give strength to the seed of the ability to become a
pig. At the death of the pig, if the karma to be reborn human
is the heaviest, closest, most habitual, or done first, we
take a human rebirth. Usually the good karmas for the human
rebirth were created in the human realm; in the lower realms
it is almost impossible to create such karma. But when human,
we can break the continuous, beginningless chain of bad karma,
so this rebirth is extremely useful and precious for our
escape from samsara.
Meditation without sacrificing ourselves, our possessions,
or our names to sentient beings can never purify us or bring
enlightenment. We are fortunate in that we have a method
of making even our breath beneficial to each sentient being.
This aim we cannot see, it is formless, so each time we exhale
we are sacrificing nothing to sentient beings, yet we are
buying the perfect peace of enlightenment and therefore should
feel fortunate. Many times we have been born human, but have
wasted these many lives, using them for ourselves. So now
we shall use the human life for other sentient beings. Also,
doing this is offering service to the infinite enlightened
beings. We become Buddha’s best servant by working
for sentient beings, because enlightened beings exist only
for the benefit of sentient beings, to lead them from suffering
to enlightenment. So our helping sentient beings is the best
offering to enlightened beings, like the army which fights
to protect the country does service to the king.
We should compare a lot of people, especially those who
don’t have freedom to practice Dharma, whose lives
are not so useful. There are so many human beings on earth
but the perfect human rebirth is very rare. And compared
to non-human beings there are so few humans—they are
rarer than jewels. Try to remember all the possibilities
and compare them to those of beings who don’t have
so much freedom. Then we can see more and more how precious
the human life is. With such experience we can renounce possessions,
we can use our rebirth for sentient beings in contrast to
ordinary people who dedicate their lives to the care of material
possessions and non-living things. With the perfect human
rebirth we can enjoy as we desire—non-humans can’t
enjoy both worldly enjoyments and the practice of Dharma.
There are two ways to see how the human life is useful,
the Dharma way and the worldly way. Beings in the lower realms
can enjoy neither, and those in the upper realms cannot practice
Dharma. If we don’t check the usefulness of the human
life in a Dharma way we may not use it most wisely.
Why are people on earth not yet in peace? Why are we not
released from ignorance? Why are there so few with clean,
well-subdued minds, and so many with suffering minds? The
reason is that the latter do not understand Dharma’s
perfect methods, or the usefulness of the perfect human rebirth
in allowing Dharma practice. As a result they spend their
lives in a low, unskillful way, according to their wisdom
and understanding. We are really lucky that we can recognize
the wise and beneficial alternative way of using this life.
The limited view holds that life has no meaning and is to
be used only in a temporal, worldly way: This is a short,
sad view that brings feelings of loneliness and boredom,
unhappiness and dissatisfaction.
If material possessions were the cause of perfect peace
and happiness, we would already have received it, because
in past lives we have had great wealth and numberless possessions.
But still the mind is ignorant. To change the mind’s
personality from negative to positive is the way to perfect
peace. All the jewels in existence cannot even destroy one
of the thousands of negative minds, cannot cut off even one
of the negative mind’s branches. But the perfect human
rebirth can be used to completely cease the billions of problems
and their foundation—ignorance. Nothing can compare
to one lifetime of a perfect human rebirth, even jewels filling
infinite space, because these jewels do not stop the continuity
of one single type of suffering. Momentary cessation by material
means is not the cure or cessation of suffering. True cessation
from the Dharma point of view is ending the continuity of
suffering.
Unless we can recognize the nature of suffering we cannot
recognize its cause. Nor can we recognize perfect happiness
and the way to attain it. Trying to use temporal means for
the momentary cessation of suffering is only creating the
cause for more suffering; beings that do so are preparing
for the arising of future suffering while thinking that they
are stopping it. Because of attachment to temporal pleasures
by greed, they do such things to fulfill the desire for momentary
freedom from unpleasant things. We have been working for
greed; we are slaves to it. Always check up all of your actions—each
can be clearly seen to be following greed. As the three negative
minds always see the object in the wrong way, not in the
absolute way, they always cause problems.
WASTING THE PERFECT HUMAN REBIRTH (Page 48)
Shantideva said, “There is nothing more foolish or
ignorant than one who does not subdue or train the mind’s
non virtuous actions when he has received the highly meaningful
perfect human rebirth.”
Since animals have no chance to know Dharma, they have limited
opportunity to create positive karma and create negative
karma instead. Many humans, such as barbarians and heretics,
are in the same situation. Therefore, those who have the
perfect human rebirth, with its eight freedoms and ten endowments,
and do not train the mind in Dharma practice are much more
foolish and ignorant. To waste this chance is the worst thing.
To use it for the pursuit of temporal happiness, higher samsaric
happiness, or for our own peace is selfish, and the greatest
waste there is. We must use this time for the purpose of
enlightenment, and not be like the man with great wealth
who dies of starvation because he doesn’t want to spend
any of it.
Shantideva said, “If I have the fortune to lead a
virtuous life and don’t do virtuous work, what will
I do when born in the animal realms, where beings are deeply
ignorant?”
The meaning of this is much the same as that of the previous
quotation. If born an animal, we will be unable even to enjoy
samsaric pleasures, let alone practice Dharma.
A human is reborn as an animal when there is the appropriate
negative karma. As Chandrakirti said; “If one does
not regard a person from whom one receives teachings, even
if just a few words, as a guru, the result will be rebirth
as a dog.”
Nagas are sentient beings living in ignorance. They can
make or stop rain, and they are related to the karma of the
beings living at that place. Special pujas can influence
these beings.
If Buddha sees an object it exists, even if we don’t
see it. If we see an object and Buddha doesn’t, the
object does not exist.
022108
THE EIGHT TEMPORAL DESIRES (Page 49)
Lord Buddha said, “Life continues until death, starting
from the time of conception in the mother’s womb, following
worldly ways without following a new path.”
The sufferings of death and after death are the fault of
not following the new path as shown by the enlightened being
in this lifetime. Any kind of worldly life, in the East or
the West, is the old life, the life experienced countless
times in previous lives; there is nothing new.
“One should not be attached to one’s own body.” Milarepa
said many important things in his teachings, including this.
He also said, “Food is like the spice of devils—as
we enjoy more and more it brings worse and worse effects.
Therefore give up clinging to food and other enjoyments,
which tie one like a rope.” In other words, give up
the eight temporal desires.
The main problem is not the object but the mind, the negative
creator. Control the mind and objects cease to be a problem.
The pure mind, free of illusions and delusions, can change
poison to medicine or kaka to amrita; it can prevent the
penetration of a thorn and can bring infinite happiness.
The senses of touch, hearing, and so forth are limited,
a result of the negative mind, and result from enjoying objects
in the wrong way. By changing the creator (mind) we can definitely
change dirty objects into clean objects, ugly into beautiful.
But the method works at different levels, according to the
level of wisdom, and it can’t just be done straight
away.
Consider a friend who always speaks beautifully. One day,
instead, he speaks angry and ugly words, and he is no longer
seen as beautiful, but now is ugly. His appearance has not
really changed, yet the sight of that same face induces anger.
Then we make up—with words, gifts, and so forth, and
it changes again. Greed sees beauty, anger ugliness. Purification
of the negative mind brings perfect peace.
Milarepa said, “The riding friend is the devil’s
daughter.” As values change we will be betrayed, therefore
be cautious.
Also, “Our own homeland is the devil’s prison;
it is difficult to get out of, so better escape soon.” Milarepa
says that as all these things have to be left at death, better
to do so now—leave those friends, that homeland. Then, “If
one can do all this then one has the fortune of practicing
Dharma.”
The door to the understanding of our own nature, the door
to positive mind, is the recognition of problems created
by the negative mind, such as not wanting to meditate. Of
course ignorance objects to new subjects, new practice. Ignorance
always likes things that are wrong and false. But Dharma
is meditation on ignorance, suffering, death, and so forth,
and therefore not “pleasant.” Since beginningless
time we have taken great care of our greed, ignorance, and
hatred. Suffering will continue in all of the future lives
of the person who continues to work for those things—keeping
ignorance in comfort and out of problems and confusion, out
of positive action. Lord Buddha’s way of helping people
is to make them understand, and to then let the person make
a free choice about following the method. There is no with
force without understanding in the Buddhadharma.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama said, “If we can’t
renounce the momentary life through the practice of meditation
on impermanence, the Dharma actions we perform become a service
to the eight temporal desires.”
Any actions not done under the influence of the eight temporal
desires should be done with a mind living in the practice
of the meditation on impermanence. If the mind can renounce
the temporal life, actions can then become positive, Dharma
actions.
“Dharma” is not just a name. It has great meaning.
It does not only belong to Buddhism, Christianity, Hinduism,
and so on. The pure practice of Dharma belongs only to oneself—it
is created by the mind. It is the method shown by the enlightened
being; it is the method he followed, practiced, and experienced
completely. In the same way, truth and impermanence belong
to no sect.
Literally “Dharma” means “holding” or “guiding” living
being from the suffering of:
1. the three lower realms
2. the total samsaric suffering of ignorance, greed, and
hatred
3. and the subtle obscurations.
Dharma leads from these three states to enlightenment. Each
of us has to create our own essential practice of Dharma
and become a positive guide instead of an enemy to ourselves.
For example, following the negative mind, the ignorance of
the suffering result that will follow, we are led by greed
to steal.
Even if our main aim is not working for the food and clothing
of this temporal life, we still work against enlightenment
unless all of our energy is devoted to achieving this result.
If we live in the pure, essential practice of Dharma we will
get still food and clothing. After death we will not be able
to work for enlightenment. In traveling to another country
we see many things on the way, even though this is not the
main purpose.
Since we don’t know the time of our death, it is most
worthwhile to seek enlightenment soon. For one living in
the essential practice of Dharma there are fewer problems.
Through understanding comes a great mental change, less physical
activity, and as a result less physical worries. We renounce
the eight temporal desires.
All problems depend on mental conception—they don’t
exist by themselves, but arise from the way that we judge
situations. The same person is sometimes a friend, sometimes
an enemy. Avoiding the eight temporal desires cuts off so
many problems. Our conception changes and with deep understanding
comes perfect peace. We must realize the shortcomings of
the eight desires, and be as afraid of them as we are of
even the smell of a poisonous plant.
Attachment to the eight desires brings worry when they can’t
be fulfilled; renunciation means cessation of such worry.
There are more important things to worry about, such as the
creation of bad karma, the suffering of the three lower realms,
and so on. This kind of attachment disturbs meditation.
The peace of renunciation is inexpensive and doesn’t
depend on rockets, factories, weapons, armies, or presidents.
Such peace continues into enlightenment, growing stronger
and greater. It starts with renunciation of the eight desires,
which is like opening a door—a simple step that requires
an understanding mind, and not an ignorant action. We must
know the evolution of such an action—the reasons for
it and the expected results. Most actions are done with ignorance
of their evolution, such as taking drugs—but instead
of making us more and more crazy, renunciation makes us less
and less so. It is like a saw, cutting problems and confusion,
and is opposite to the temporal desires that actually stop
all happiness, including samsaric happiness.
Many people who don’t understand Dharma and have no
experience of it are shocked by those who follow a spiritual
path and give up temporal things. This is especially true
in the case of parents of Westerners. Many of them get a
big shock and think that this is a great suffering and the
action of a limited mind. They think that those who do such
free actions are foolish and leading a nonsensical life.
They think that it is only causing more problems and that
it is not a non self-supporting life. However, all this is
judged with ignorance, without understanding the benefits
of such true actions. Since they have not been through the
experience they cannot know. Besides not seeing the future
benefits of such actions, they think it causes us problems
in the present, which is a view opposite to the true evolution.
In reality, these actions bring future benefits and immediate
help. Renunciation of the eight desires releases us from
the mental troubles of confusion and samsaric worries, bringing
peace. Thus the practice of Dharma brings future happiness,
and peace and happiness to this life.
It is very dangerous to think, “I was happier before
doing this.” Such thoughts destroy the merits of good
actions, are poisonous, disturb the practice, and bring the
good life down. If we have a problem with our practice it
means that there is something wrong with the practice, so
we should check what is wrong and check its cause, which
is some mental action. Until we sort this out continual practice
is difficult.
With renunciation, the power of practice grows stronger,
our future improves, and we get things without trying. But
if we try too hard we might be reborn a preta.
As it is said, “Has there been any great meditator
who dies of starvation or suffered cold through not trying
to collect materials?” This passage refers to the sincere
meditator, and applies to both the present and the future.
There was one Tibetan who had trouble satisfying temporal
needs until he practiced the essential Dharma, after which
it was easy. He said, “Before I practiced Dharma my
mouth had trouble finding food; now the food has trouble
finding my mouth.”
The unenlightened mind is a friend to ignorance. This helps
us to understand how things are created by the mind. Others
might use these troubles to build ignorance and agree, but
the holy beings use temporal problems for enlightenment and
peace.
The eight temporal desires must be renounced—freedom
from them creates real peace. Renunciation is a mental action
arising from a decision. It is difficult; it is harder to
change mental actions. To do so requires a positive mind,
and to not allow it to happen is a creation of the negative
mind. The problems are not the objects or pleasures, but
the desires themselves, the mind—suffering is created
by the mind. We must understand how this works beyond intellectual
knowledge.
The craving desires and our negative mind have caused us
to continue in the samsaric realms. From the smallest animal
to the biggest, from beggar to king, those whose lives are
not focused in the practice of Dharma are concerned only
with present momentary problems, not with future suffering,
and they lack understanding of the nature of suffering. Their
greatest mistake is to always create the cause for greater
sufferings while trying to stop or cure the temporary ones;
they do not understand the nature of suffering nor its cause.
Therefore there is no recognition of true happiness. Actually,
they think of trying to stop temporal problems by temporal
solutions, yet that itself is the real cause of more temporal
problems in the future.
How do we cease this? If we don’t recognize our mistakes
it is important to know this essential Dharma point: temporal
methods never help—if they are checked up those methods
only create the cause for the continuous arising of future
temporal sufferings. And the reason for this is that such
methods are done mostly for the eight temporal needs, done
for greed as this negative mind wants. Greed is attached
to the eight temporal needs, which can all be seen in the
light of greed. They all depend on greed and work for it,
like servants cooking for the master. We are the same, most
of us have been working for greed: check up your own actions
even now. Ask, “What am I doing this action for?” We
can discover how to stop temporal problems by asking, “Is
this what greed needs?” We can discover this greed
more and more. But the result of actions done with greed,
ignorance, or hatred is always suffering and problems.
Greed is the creator of samsara. Love mixed with greed is
love created by ignorance, and one still remains in samsara.
This love is not the same as real love, and its results have
to be experienced in the three lower and three upper realms.
Why doesn’t it bring peace? Because the principal cause
is the unsubdued, untamed mind; the root mind is confused,
is a wrong mind, because the three negative minds always
see the object in the wrong way and not in the absolute way.
They see the object in a way that is not true to an enlightened
mind. So the rest is like this, just as one with a black
mark on his face can’t expect to see a clean face in
the mirror. It is impossible for peace to arise from those
three negative minds, so the whole problem is their fault.
All methods done according to greed for temporal needs are
negative actions. We use all those negative actions to cut
off all those temporal problems that were created by a previous
mind’s karma in a previous lifetime. And that method
of the eight temporal needs is the cause of future temporal
problems. The present methods of solving our problems bring
the same problems because the methods are negative, arising
from a mind that is not well-subdued. It is just a cycle:
to stop that which was created by previous negative karma
we use a method similar to that used before, and so it continues.
Besides the actions that follow greed—for example,
having a job as a butcher where one lives by killing animals—we
may also cause much suffering for other beings. This is like
a double negative action. But a butcher does that job to
keep his life in comfort, this is his method to take care
of the temporal problems that arise. He doesn’t think
of himself as a negative person. However, his life is the
result of previous negative karma whose result has to be
experienced. But as long as he doesn’t try to understand
the method in the Dharma he will definitely have to experience
the suffering result, if not in this lifetime, then in some
other lifetime.
That method doesn’t really take care of all temporal
problems, the physical and mental sufferings—they are
not completely ceased. Furthermore, this method creates negative
karma—simply in order to take care of this life he
is creating the cause of suffering, creating bad karma to
stop bad karma—an impossible thing. This is no one’s
fault, but he will have to suffer in a future life and so
it always circles round. To stop suffering on the temporal
level he is creating the cause of suffering for the animals
he kills.
Also, stealing and telling lies are double negative actions,
because besides the action of our own greed, they create
suffering for others. Such actions are also done by animals.
Any actions—even reciting mantras or making music—done
with greed, hatred, or ignorance only bring the result of
being in the cycle of samsara for a longer time in which
more suffering results.
Buddhadharma has no definite form of action—every
action can be either of the two, Dharma or non-Dharma—eating,
writing, playing, dancing, and so on. No matter how they
look, if any actions are done without involvement in the
eight temporal desires and with bodhicitta motivation, they
are Mahayana actions, and if they are done with attachment
and greed for the sake of the eight temporal desires they
are non-Dharma actions. The method that avoids the eight
desires is a method to stop the continuity of bad karma,
leading to escape from suffering and to enlightenment. This
is a perfect, true method.
What makes a Buddhadharma action? Positive action avoids
the eight temporal needs and opposes them; it is against
greed and attachment. Such action creates good karma and
brings happiness in this and future lives, human rebirth
with better conditions and a religious life, bodhicitta,
perfect peace, and enlightenment.
When one comes to really understand Dharma it can come as
a kind of shock. Many people think it is easy, just imitating
another person—if he closes the eyes, I close mine.
But the real Dharma is the person’s actions that are
pure of the eight temporal needs, positive, against greed,
free of hatred and ignorance. It doesn’t matter what
he is called because the action doesn’t depend on the
title Buddhist, Hindu, Zen, Missionary, or Muslim. He may
even be called “evil,” but if his actions are
pure and positive they have the power to destroy the negative
mind and to create good karma. Such actions arising from
pure motivation are called Buddhadharma because they can
bring enlightenment and escape from ignorance. This must
be created by the mind, not by the actions alone.
The form of Dharma actions is not definite and Buddhadharma
is open to anyone, something that everyone can do as their
freedom to practice allows. But we, sentient beings, close
it off ourselves. It has nothing to do with class, caste,
occupation, titles, color of skin—beings do not create
good karma as a result of ignorance. Any deep, profound subjects,
any deep Dharma teachings difficult to discover, are only
a creation of our mind—they are not something that
the Enlightened Being made deep and profound, but only a
creation of mind. The level of Buddhadharma that can be practiced
depends on the person’s level of wisdom. Why aren’t
more people practicing? Because their ignorance doesn’t
give them a chance. Renunciation and avoidance of the eight
temporal needs is more powerful than the atomic bomb. The
bomb destroys the place and the people, which would end anyway,
but it cannot destroy the mind, which is continual. The bomb
also causes danger to our comfort by causing danger to others.
Even if it were to destroy all other beings and we were left
alone on earth, still other enemies would arise to make us
unhappy. Even if this ended, the body ends, the mind transfers
to another realm because it has not been released from ignorance,
the delusions are not cut off, and the continuity of previous
bad karmas are still present. In other realms we meet other
enemies, and we will always do so until the problem is cut
off. The real cause of the outer enemy is the mind, the real
enemy is the inner enemy, ignorance. As long as we travel
in the six realms behaving as friends with the inner enemy
instead of destroying it there will be no end to the problems
with the outer enemy. Rather than helping, actions such as
destroying our outer enemies with atomic bombs only create
great bad karma.
The action of avoiding the eight temporal needs, however,
doesn’t depend on madness or chemical things for its
practice, and is done in our own mind. This mental action
is the main power, the energy that brings enlightenment and
all the paths. It is like fuel for a rocket and brings quick
escape from ignorance and the illusive mind; it is a direct
method to cut off the continuity of the bad karma and all
branches of the negative mind, bringing perfect happiness.
Guru Shakyamuni became enlightened by completely purifying
his mind of all negativity, and he became the object of respect
and refuge for all sentient beings. All this was the result
of his practice of avoiding the eight temporal desires, allowing
him to work for the happiness of all sentient beings. This
mental practice has great power.
Due to the power of Guru Shakyamuni’s practice and
realizations, many people are able to create much good karma
by keeping statues of him with the knowledge of what this
represents, and making offerings to remember his knowledge.
Now, many Western people are starting to realize what the
mind is, that life is meaningful, and so on—this too
is the power of Guru Shakyamuni’s practice and enlightenment.
The power of the atomic bomb is nowhere, is lost, and has
only negative effects. This is unlike the power of avoidance,
the benefits of which can affect numberless sentient beings,
including those we’ve never heard of. Practice in the
mind, as Guru Shakyamuni did. Even this meditation course
results from the existence of his teachings, the power of
his enlightenment, and his practice of avoiding the eight
temporal needs. The mind that has this practice is shapeless
and cannot be seen, yet this mind has incredible power such
that numberless sentient beings can achieve enlightenment.
The person who says he wants to be exactly like Milarepa
has to practice the avoidance of the eight temporal needs.
This is the fundamental practice of the Mahayana teachings
and meditation. Many ask why should we study these subjects,
why not kundalini yoga? So many people have wasted the perfect
human rebirth without knowing the highest and best purpose
of the human life, so many humans have achieved psychic powers
from such methods only to die and be reborn in the lower
realms. Many people waste their lives like this; they make
mistakes and do not use their lives in the most precious
way.
Practicing Dharma is the wisest way to use the human life
and make it meaningful. We do not do this in order to destroy
the comfort or to miss the happiness of this life. Using
the life in the most beneficial way is for the purpose of
not causing suffering. Dharma practice has the power to give
subdued peace in this life. It can give the happiness of
release, whereas any pleasures that are received from the
action of greed are pleasures of bondage. The happiness from
the practice of avoiding the eight temporal needs is the
peace of release. We must check up, we have to experience
it.
With practice, renounce greed. Renunciation of the eight
temporal needs doesn’t mean physical separation—this
is not the definition of renunciation. A king who has everything
can live in renunciation; the beggar who doesn’t practice
renunciation doesn’t depend on physical separation.
We have to check up—how do we generate renunciation?
What is the definition? Avoiding the creator of suffering
and renouncing the greed that desires the eight temporal
needs is something to do with the mind, the inner mind. Pure
renunciation can never cause problems—as the cause
is pure the result will always be pure—happiness. But
if we make a mistake it can cause hassles for us and for
others. However, correct renunciation brings release. “Release” has
a very tasty meaning. The main problem is not merely the
attachment to the temporal life but the greed and ignorance
that lie in the mind—we have to avoid the negative
mind, and at the same time avoid the actions of the negative
mind, because the negative actions make the negative mind’s
existence continual, like a cycle. This practice helps now
because as it is done, even though we don’t renounce,
is important to know.
Not understanding is ignorance. If someone says bad words
to us, slander, and we have attachment to the eight temporal
needs, we won’t like to hear them, we will suddenly
get angry and at the same time see that person as ugly. All
this creates bad karma of mind and may create bad karma of
body and speech. We have so many problems, why did it all
happen? Anger arises from the greed that is attached to the
temporal life. Greed sees beauty, but it is poisonous, one
of the worst things. A very tricky mind always causing suffering,
created from attachment. Negative karma and the negative
suffering result arises; this continues in a circle. All
of the above arises from attachment to comfort with pleasing
words and from the dislike of displeasing words. For a person
in the essential practice of Dharma—avoiding the eight
temporal needs, not following the action of attachment—there
is no anger, as the mind is opposed to this in the way it
works; there is no reason for anger to arise so the person
doesn’t care. The other’s words are like the
sound of the wind; we see no difference and don’t care
about sounds. Such a mind is really a strong mind—no
anger and no attachment, no bad karma so such peace. That
is something that brings complete perfect happiness; that
mind is very free, loose, and released, but the other is
very tight.
We are all equal in desiring happiness. We all come to this
meditation course seeking happiness, not suffering. We must
make our actions positive so that we create good karma, for
this is the cause of happiness. At least we should have this
small little idea or thought. We must make our motivation
positive, even when listening to Dharma: just taking the
teachings isn’t enough to avoid rebirth in the three
lower realms or to attempt rebirth in the three upper realms.
Even taking the teachings with the thought and will to release
ourselves from suffering is the low and selfish thought of
a self-cherishing mind, despite the fact that it will bring
perfect peace. Not realizing other sentient beings’ sufferings
never helps anyone. All other beings and I are exactly equal
in not desiring suffering and in desiring happiness, so there
is no reason to care more for myself than others. But the
others are unlike me in that they have not met the teachings
and do not have the wisdom to recognize practice and avoidance.
They are always suffering and creating its cause. From them
come all my happiness, realizations and enlightenment, they
have always been kind and always will be, and therefore they
are more precious than any possession. I should repay and
take care of them, dedicate myself to them, for there is
no other way to enlightenment. The best way to take care
of them is to enlighten them, but now I do not have the power
to do so, therefore I must receive this power. To do this
I must destroy all negativity, so I shall listen to the teachings
of the graded path, meditate, and purify myself. In cultivating
such a pure motivation the action of listening to the teachings
becomes that much more powerful, beneficial both to myself
and to all sentient beings.
The knowledge of avoidance of the eight temporal needs is
infinite; the power of this practice of renunciation is such
that we can never finish explaining the value of knowing
it. The more we recognize Dharma the more we recognize the
infinite, transcendental knowledge of the buddhas. At the
same time we discover for ourselves how powerful and precious
this practice is—it is more precious than any jewels
and there is no danger of its ever being lost or stolen.
The more jewels we have, the greater the worry in the mind,
the more the thoughts of them arise—how to use them,
protect them, and so forth. But the more purely we practice
the avoidance of the eight temporal needs, the more quickly
we escape from ignorance and wisdom arises, and the sooner
the problems associated with material possessions disappear.
The more we live in the practice the purer it becomes.
The person living in renunciation of these needs at the
time of death definitely avoids rebirth in the three lower
realms. But anyone who has not renounced greed, despite any
high psychic powers he may have developed, must be reborn
there. In ancient times there was a Tibetan who practiced
tantra without practicing renunciation, and with merely a
look he could kill one hundred people. But when he died he
was reborn in the narak realms. Anything that does not cut
off greed and attachment only keeps us in suffering and cannot
guide us to release.
The power of renunciation can allow us to transform a stone
into a flower. There are three powers in dependence upon
which one can do miraculous things—the powers of medicine,
mantra, and the elements. But the power of this practice
is the safest, firmest power that protects our mind. So many
meditators in past times could protect themselves by this
practice. Take the example of the meditator Kharag Gomchen.
Before his achievement of Dharma practice he was in a greatly
miserable condition, suffering much sickness from leprosy.
Nobody wanted to contact him and so he was always away from
people, which made him very upset. He decided to make this
situation worthwhile, and left his place to stay in a little
cave on the road, live there, beg and recite a mantra—there
was no other practice. One night he dreamed he was in water
and a white man appeared and took him out of it; much water
came out of his body and when he awoke he found he was cured.
This was due to his strong mental condition—the mind
that caused this was the mind working against attachment,
living in the avoidance of the eight temporal needs. Even
momentarily, instantly, mental suffering can be cured by
this practice—it protects and helps even in this temporal
life, helping one with temporal problems and bringing happiness.
The happiness arising through this practice can be developed
until enlightenment. The leper didn’t aim to be cured,
but this came about as a result of his pure practice.
Many people think that Buddhadharma is all about renunciation
and not having a happy life by enjoying things that cause
suffering. Many think that they cannot experience happiness
because they renounce. Such a conception is completely wrong,
completely opposed to the logical experience gained from
this practice. The more the mind works in the opposite way,
the more the mind is put into confusion.
This can be proved clearly by personal practice. If you
want to check up, the observation has to be made by mental
practice. Do not be attached to temporal comforts. As practice
is done it can bring happiness in this and future lives.
The conception that renunciation doesn’t bring happiness
is wrong.
Shantideva said (page 49), “The perfect human rebirth,
the most difficult to find and a greatly beneficial foundation,
is, however, received by good fortune. While having the wisdom
to know practice and avoidance, if one again leads oneself
to the narak realms, one is purposely making oneself ignorant.”
Engaging in any action opposed to the renunciation of the
eight temporal desires is like purposely keeping ourselves
in ignorance, in the cycle of death and rebirth, and will
bring rebirth in the lower suffering realms again. That is
why it is very foolish and nonsensical. The fact that it
is crazy is not recognized by a worldly person because ignorance
does not see ignorance as being crazy, it only sees its own
actions as positive and good. The ignorant mind thinks that
understanding suffering is crazy. This kind of craziness
is worse than temporal craziness, because the latter is the
fault of this ignorance. By not avoiding the ignorant mind,
without purifying the inner craziness, one can never cease
temporal craziness, that which is recognized as craziness
by worldly people.
Many practitioners practice Dharma by surmounting temporal
sufferings. This is a wise action, because such beings are
trying to stop the continuation of suffering—bad karma
and ignorance that arise from past lives. They are also trying
to not create any bad karma for future lives. For this reason
they practice Dharma, not caring about temporal problems,
and thinking that by cutting off the cause of all suffering
they will cut off all temporal difficulties. If you can practice
like that, with such great will, temporal problems will be
overcome. Disturbances will be overcome, and then temporal
problems will be overcome. Disturbances depend on your mind,
how you think, your wisdom. The ignorant mind is a very limited
mind and always gives you the method to continue the cause
of suffering. The Dharma mind is completely opposed to that.
The negative mind is that which is attached to the pleasure
of samsara, and using this human rebirth for these purposes
always creates suffering. The negative mind never helps.
There is not the tiniest bit of help or happiness that can
come from the negative mind, from greed, so how can it be
useful? It is important to know that its effect is always
harmful to the person.
Many people think, “Without greed, how can we enjoy
food and so forth?” If we don’t check up we can
make this mistake, this wrong conception. Perfect peace has
to be achieved by removing the negative mind, greed. Many
think that happiness comes from greed, and without it things
cannot be enjoyed. This represents a lack of understanding
of where greed comes from. Happiness doesn’t arise
from greed, ignorance, and hatred. It arises from the mind
of non-greed, non-hatred—it comes from positive actions
and positive minds.
The happiness that arises from Dharma practice is free and
loose; its nature is release. Samsaric happiness that is
recognized by the limited mind is of a tied or binding nature.
All happiness that is not the suffering of suffering is never
caused by the negative mind. The principal cause of samsaric
happiness is ignorance—not having the realization of
the absolute true nature or the reality of existence—and
any actions that are done without this realization. The mind
living totally in the conception of self-existence intuitively
conceives of charity as self-existent, and due to this ignorance
causes human rebirth and the enjoyments of temporal needs.
The samsaric happiness that comes from this type of ignorance
is suffering from the Dharma point of view, and true happiness
is that which does not arise from the negative mind.
The craving to hear sweet words or sounds, the craving for
praise and admiration, and so forth are defined by ignorance
as happiness. Such pleasures do not continue—in time
they become suffering. As such they are not real happiness.
Attachment to the eight temporal needs is following greed,
as a servant follows his master.
It is stressed in the teachings of the Enlightened Being
that we should not trust desire and that we should not be
attached to samsaric happiness, which is created by the deluded
mind, is suffering in nature, and is not true happiness.
As long as we believe in such pleasures we shall remain in
samsara. The true Dharma happiness is that which arises from
the practice of renunciation of the eight temporal desires.
This kind of happiness can never end, its enjoyments can
never finish, yet the work to achieve this state can be finished.
In the case of samsaric happiness, however, the enjoyment
and happiness always end, so the work to attain them will
never finish. The action of trying to be happy never ends,
and in samsara there is no end to working for temporal enjoyments.
This is like eating and defecating. Until we cut off the
karma created by ignorance we have to go round and round
like this, and as long as we still have the cause to take
rebirth again we die, always cycling around. Until we cut
off the cause it can have no end. The Dharma practice of
renunciation can end in time, but samsaric actions have no
end.
The wise, holy beings who know the meaning of life, comprehend
its best use, and understand the evolution of karma always
try to do the work that can be finished. The peace that arises
from renunciation can be developed at higher and higher levels,
and the experience of it can never end. Samsaric happiness
cannot be developed. We get pleasure from bathing but if
we stay in the water too long it becomes cold and we crave
warmth. We are happy eating food, but if we eat more and
more, we lose the taste, our stomachs fill up, and we vomit.
All this proves that the nature of such “happiness” is
suffering—it cannot be developed, it always turns to
suffering, and it is not permanent. Sherpa people who enjoy
drinking wine drink one cup and then drink another because
they liked the first, and so on until they become very uncontrolled,
with no discipline. Usually they fight and use nonsensical
words, then they break things that were usually obtained
through many difficulties. Their minds are not happy, caused
by the wrong belief that does not see the true nature of
suffering. The same things can be said about the use of drugs.
THE PERFECT HUMAN REBIRTH: IS IT EASY TO RECEIVE? (Page
50)
Shantideva said, “The perfect human rebirth is extremely
difficult to get and brings all good success in the future
life. He who doesn’t create good karma in this lifetime
will not receive a perfect human rebirth in the future.”
This quote explains the cause of the perfect human rebirth,
that is, good karma arising from actions that are beneficial
to the pure mind and not to ignorance. It also emphasizes
that the future life depends on the present life’s
actions. That’s why the present is so important and
precious, and is as useful as the earth itself. There are
so many good things that we can do—especially, in this
lifetime we can cease the cycle of death and rebirth. The
quotation also emphasizes that the present rebirth depends
on causes from the previous life. For the human it usually
results from knowledge of the teachings; there is a logical
reason for the human rebirth—the creation of good karma
through virtuous mental actions and virtuous deeds. But any
actions based on ignorance and done with greed or hatred
for the comfort of this life causes rebirth in the three
lower realms, and such actions are not Dharma actions, for
the fundamental definition of Dharma actions is that they
be done without ignorance, greed or hatred, and with future
lives in mind.
Good karma is Dharma—it should be created with positive
understanding, not by instinct or intuition. It is the aim
or motivation of an action that creates the karma, not the
action itself. Karma is an inner subject, and is something
to be checked with the mind.
“Without the aim of the comfort of the temporal life” doesn’t
mean that we should not eat or wear clothes, and so forth.
If there is no understanding of Dharma, then no matter what
the action, even virtuous behavior is not Dharma practice.
There are many levels of motivation for good actions, but
the ultimate motivation is to consider future lives—for
example, having the motivation to reach enlightenment so
that we can best help others. Other motives have less power,
such as the motivation to attain our own perfect peace. If
we help others expecting a reward in this life, we do not
create good karma.
As we eat fruit and plant the seeds to grow more, in the
same way as we enjoy the results of good karma we should
create the causes to experience more.
Karma is evolution based on cause and effect. If we fully
understand the inner evolution, we can understand the outer
evolution better and more deeply. The best way to study science
is by studying inner evolution. The practice of Dharma clears
obscurations. All depends on karma, therefore all is created
by mind. The earth that we see is created by our minds although
it is not necessarily mental. Mind has the power to perceive
objects, and that which is not mind does not. Samsara is
a creation of mind, but buildings, mountains, and so forth,
which are also created by mind, are not in samsara.
The life related to this rebirth depends on the karma created
by the previous life’s minds. This means that the present
is created by mind. If there is no mind, then there is no
creation.
There are so many ways to understand Dharma—just a
few words can mean many things to those who know.
The great, highly realized Tibetan pandit Atisha said, “As
one has received the perfect human rebirth this time, one
must try to fulfill the cause to achieve it again in the
future.” This cause cannot be created by the negative
minds of greed, ignorance, and hatred. Bad karma is principally
a creation of mind, expressed through actions of body, speech,
and mind. But greatly evil actions can be created in the
mind without the involvement of body or speech. This is one
of the most dangerous things. Even if we stay in silence
in one place for our entire lives, we can still create bad
karma and suffer for countless eons. The mind can be very
dangerous, especially as it is responsible for the actions
of body and speech. Yet every good thing is also created
by mind. The whole object of Dharma practice is to stop the
negative actions of the mind. We do this by increasing the
positive mind so that there is no room for the negative.
And this is the whole point of taking ordination and following
precepts.
The mind is the creator of all suffering and all happiness.
Enlightenment is a matter of time—wisdom requires energy,
and energy comes from the mind, through meditation.
Morality and Charity
Ignorance obscures the purpose of morality and charity so
that there is self-propagation of the negative mind. This
mind that thinks that practicing morality is creating suffering
for itself is extremely lazy. We should understand the evolution
of morality and charity, and also understand the negative
actions so that we can avoid them.
It is extremely rare to find anyone practicing pure morality
and charity not just in action but in reality. We could count
the number easily. There are too many disturbances to practice
this way. There is an explosion of the negative mind and
such practice is very difficult in the West and in the East,
but especially in the West. This is nobody’s fault
but it is created by the negative mind.
We must practice while human if we want a perfect human
rebirth in the future. Shantideva said, “This opportunity,
the perfect human rebirth, is exceedingly difficult to obtain.
The purpose of humanity is the attainment of the bodhisattva’s
performance. If it is not made useful here, how can perfection
be gained hereafter?”
In Lord Buddha’s time there were many nagas living
in the ocean. There was a great increase in their number
at that time, and when a king who was surprised by that increase
asked about it, Lord Buddha explained that this was due to
the fact that these beings did not correctly follow the moral
precepts they taken in previous lives, and failed to purify
themselves after breaking the vows.
It is difficult to create the cause for a perfect human
rebirth in the six samsaric realms (see next page). In the
lower three it is impossible due to the great ignorance and
suffering of these realms. In the upper three it is difficult
due to distractions. Also, at the present time in human existence
it is also difficult, and it is getting increasingly so.
Yet the cause for this present human rebirth was created
in many previous human lives, not just one, so wasting it
wastes so much previous time and effort.
In Dharma practice the level of realizations depends on
the degree of purification of obscurations—it takes
time, and the continual energy required comes from basic
understanding, the result of continual practice. It is not
easy. Yet laziness is not self-existent or intuitive. As
we create it we can destroy it. We must give up samsaric
comforts and the happiness of this life as the holy beings
did.
From the Dharma point of view, morality is abstaining from
negative mind and negative actions, from actions that are
not permitted by the Enlightened Being if one is to achieve
enlightenment. Abstinence is essential for morality and requires
a strong motivation or will. We must want to take care of
ourselves and our minds. Charity also requires the will or
the motivation to dedicate to other beings.
The practice of charity without morality brings rebirth
as a rich animal, like a naga, for example. The breaking
of moral precepts or not observing morality brings an animal
rebirth, the charity of karma brings riches in that rebirth.
But in that animal lifetime one is too ignorant to create
more charity, so that karmic result ends and no further enjoyments
arise. As Chandrakirti says, “One who breaks the leg
of the precepts and is reborn as an animal never receives
enjoyments once the result of charity has finished.”
According to the Mahayana view, charity doesn’t depend
on materials. It is our responsibility to give pleasure to
others, but it is not our responsibility if they are attached
to samsaric pleasures. If you offer drugs in the food of
a person who is living in mental discipline (ordination),
disturbing his practice, it creates bad karma. We must be
careful when we give, and develop skillful wisdom to help
others.
Keeping precepts cleans the mind of created impurities and
helps to not create more.
Difficulty in creating the cause for the perfect human rebirth
in the six samsaric realms is further explained as follows.
In the narak realms there are so many beings. This is a terrible
place, a karmic creation, without escape. Naraks do not die
as we do, and the environment is extremely hot and totally
dark. Their lives last a long time, varying in accordance
with the karma they have created. It does not matter how
much they desire to escape, there is no freedom to do so.
With all this suffering, ignorance, and desperate desire
to escape, there is no opportunity to create good karma,
especially through the practices of morality and charity.
In these realms, the beings cannot create the cause for a
human rebirth. The preta and animal realms are similar.
The beings in the god realms are too preoccupied with enjoyments.
They have bodies of light, drink transcendental nectars,
and enjoy long life. They neither see nor recognize suffering
and can’t practice renunciation.
Even in the human realm it is difficult to practice morality
and charity. Just unthinking abstinence is not enough. There
must be will and motivation, and understanding of the suffering
result of not practicing this way. The person in a cave,
never coming out, isn’t necessarily practicing morality.
One must make the choice. There are few humans creating morality—we
should check up on our own lives.
People following morality are more rare than jewels, and
decreasing in number each year. It is difficult to practice
this way because our minds are more and more obscured by
ignorance. Morality fights the negative mind of ignorance
and greed, which finds it difficult to practice for even
a day. Even when trying to observe morality we break it.
If we think that keeping moral conduct is like being in prison,
then it will be very difficult to achieve the perfect human
rebirth in a future life.
We can now see how difficult it is to create the cause for
a perfect human rebirth. Therefore we must take the most
care of this life since it is so difficult to receive one
again. We can only create the causes for this to happen if
we know what they are.
The cycle of suffering is such that as long as we don’t
seek the truth through continuous Dharma practice, the problems
will continue. If we don’t do this when we have attained
a perfect human rebirth, then when? How long will we have
to wait for another opportunity?
HOW SHOULD I MAKE THIS PERFECT HUMAN REBIRTH HIGHLY
MEANINGFUL? (Page 51)
The highly realized Tibetan Guru Tsong Khapa said, “If
one recognizes that receiving the perfect human rebirth is
difficult and highly meaningful, then one can definitely
avoid any meaningless actions which make the life meaningless.
One must recognize what is meaningful in life through meditation.”
To make the life meaningful, meaningful actions are required.
To create such actions we need to recognize the perfect human
rebirth, therefore we start our meditation with this. This
is the principal cause to build up energy for going long-term,
and receiving all the realizations that lead to enlightenment.
This takes a long time, in dependence on how quickly we purify
negativity and many other things. The long trip requires
many porters.
We must have the interest to create energy. Why does it
depend on energy? Because that trip is the hardest, and that
is why we never made it before, from beginningless lifetimes
until now. Why is it so hard? Because it is solely a mental
trip. There are many obscurations and interruptions concealing
the passage. Therefore we have to prevent and purify the
hindrances that stop us from seeing the path to enlightenment.
We must destroy the self-created mental hindrances. It is
easier to destroy the earth.
In our previous lives we have killed every sentient being
without exception, countless times. Such actions are old
habits, nothing new. Furthermore, each of us has been killed
by every other sentient being countless times. There is no
reason to go on like this—it has not helped. The evolution
of samsara is a very interesting subject, but shocking if
fully understood. Understanding brings wisdom, which brings
method, which leads to perfect peace. Also, the meditation
on death is the greatest solution to the negative mind that
asks, “What does it matter if he or I die today or
tomorrow?”
Shantideva said, “In the human boat one can cross
the great ocean of suffering. Such a boat is difficult to
receive again, so while in ignorance one should not sleep.”
Building ignorance is like sleeping—when asleep we
are unconscious of even large and heavy objects. If we don’t
make the effort to wake the mind from ignorance, to gain
enlightened knowledge, and instead use our efforts for the
comfort of the temporal life, all of our actions only create
ignorance. As long as we work for greed, hatred, pride, jealousy,
and the many other negative minds, we are working for ignorance.
On the contrary, if we help sentient beings, if we have the
great power to do this, we are working to help the buddhas,
the enlightened beings. Helping the branches of the negative
mind is acting as if we are asleep, with unconscious minds,
not seeing objects in the dark. The mind is beginningless
and that is why it has not recognized its true nature, itself.
Recognizing the mind is the mystical point—mystical
until now, but until we clarify this subject we shall make
many more mistakes in our actions. Due to failure to recognize
the true nature of the mind, the results of our actions are
always opposite to those expected, and we are ignorant of
the knowledge of positive and negative evolution. As long
as there are mistakes in our mental actions there will be
mistakes in our actions of body and speech. Until we recognize
the mystical aspect of the mind, no matter how long and how
strongly we desire to cure suffering and receive happiness,
our methods will fail, no matter how hard we try.
Also, as long as we don’t discover this inner mystical
subject, in general we are ignorant of the outer mystical
objects, and the many things that have many different levels.
Such ignorance—we don’t recognize the mind or
ourselves, we have been using the mind from beginningless
time until now, yet still don’t know what it is. If
we don’t recognize it when we are human, how can we
do so when we take rebirth as animals? It will be impossible.
Discovery of the mystical point of the mind is the key to
opening the door to the understanding of every other existence.
This discovery is also like a medicine, for its gives the
solution to and cures all problems.
We should use this perfect human rebirth like a boat, to
cross the ocean of suffering and reach enlightenment. This
is the reason that we received this rebirth.
The mind that wishes to be reborn in an upper realm does
not have the greatest will, but if we can’t receive
enlightenment in this lifetime then it is best to be reborn
in the upper realms, so that we can create the karma to receive
a perfect human rebirth. Then, using that life as a bridge,
as a temporal place, if it is not possible to receive all
realizations then we should create the causes for another
perfect human rebirth. In this way, gradually, we will reach
enlightenment.
Remember the two types of fear: positive fear that results
in preparation for the future life and negative fear that
doesn’t, and arises from ignorance.
Shantideva said, “After receiving such a precious
human rebirth, there is no ignorance greater than not realizing
its purpose—creating merits, developing wisdom, and
receiving realizations, which most other sentient beings
can’t do.”
We who have received the perfect human rebirth have many
freedoms, and if we do not use this life to receive higher
realizations we are more ignorant that any animal, and we
are betraying ourselves.
Therefore, it is important that even our practice of listening
to Dharma be done in the best way, making the most of the
perfect human rebirth. Bodhicitta, this high motivation,
should be especially strong so that the listening becomes
more successful. If we don’t have this, then at least
we should be free of the eight temporal desires and of samsaric
motivation, such as wanting to learn the Dharma to teach
others for the sake of our temporal reputation.
In ancient India and in Tibet the highly realized pandits
had the full experience of the practice and fully saw their
own nature and that of other beings. Yet they never showed
pride. They looked simple, as if they knew nothing, like
beggars, and just slept and ate—but this was just
their outside appearance, and their minds could not be
seen. One could ask them for teachings, but realized teachers
do not teach those who are not ready, for it might disturb
them. Even though such pandits had lifetimes of knowledge,
they had not an atom of pride, and their minds were at
rest and peaceful. They would never say, “I know
Dharma, I have these achievements.” They did not
show their realizations as if in a market and they were
always very humble, losing themselves so that others could
win. This is bodhicitta. They only tried for enlightenment
to benefit sentient beings—and we too are free to
cultivate this motivation.
We should think, “I am going to listen to this teaching
in order to achieve enlightenment only to benefit other sentient
beings.”
This is the motivation that makes an action most beneficial.
How should we make the perfect human rebirth meaningful?
The best, highest way is to work for the achievement of enlightenment
in this lifetime. If not that, then we should work for the
state of a bodhisattva, or the destruction of ignorance as
an arhat, or the realization of bodhicitta, fully renounced
mind, and the understanding of the absolute true nature to
equip the mind before death. At least we should be sure to
avoid a lower rebirth.
If a person develops bodhicitta it is definite that he will
not be reborn in a lower realm. This mind has the power to
protect us from bad karma. It has more power than all the
material possessions on this earth, because those things
cannot protect us from the cycle of suffering and rebirth,
old age and death. But bodhicitta can stop all these problems,
it has incredible power and can be developed in our own mind
through meditation without having to fight, steal, kill,
or destroy.
If, however, we receive the method and don’t use it,
then no matter where we go, run, or travel—even to
the moon—we will never realize bodhicitta. And life
will end before our travels are over, before we have seen
everything. However we travel, it can never been finished,
and without opening the door of wisdom with Buddhadharma
we can never fully understand even one existence. We could
continue to travel and study, yet even on our own bodies
is there too much to learn, and we could study it for our
whole life without realizing our absolute nature. In this
case, it would not be possible to see that of other beings.
We should study Buddhadharma and the absolute nature of
reality and then put it into practice by meditating and purifying.
With the support of purifying our bad karma and not creating
any more, our practice brings realizations, which are impossible
to achieve without doing this. Even now we don’t know
what such basic, relative things such as “I” and “mind” are.
Becoming aware of ourselves in our own nature makes it simple
to realize the nature of other beings’ minds. The more
we understand the inner evolution, the more deeply we understand
the outer evolution. To obtain full knowledge of the outer
evolution we have to make full study of the knowledge of
the inner evolution, and this can only be done by making
ourselves the object of study.
This is the key to the museum of the mind. Receiving all
levels of realization depends on avoiding, fighting, and
purifying the many different types of unsubdued mind. This
is not easy like cleaning the body or sweeping rubbish from
a room. It depends on the continual practice of Dharma, not
being lazy, surmounting many hardships. But any hardship
is well worth surmounting and experiencing for the practice
of Dharma, because the Dharma, which sees the innumerable
sufferings and their cause, can finish the whole thing. By
one action—the completion of Dharma practice—all
those sufferings and their causes can be completely ended.
This can never be accomplished by any samsaric action, by
any action of the negative mind. This is one of the reasons
for the existence of Buddhadharma, why the Enlightened One
showed the teachings—a reason for practice, a reason
for meditation.
It is generally worthwhile to experience any hardship for
the practice of Dharma. So many people undergo incredible
difficulties just for this temporal life, so why not for
the greater cause, for so many future lives? Ordinary people
experience hardships for the one life that may go on for
only five, ten, fifty, or seventy years—why then is
it not possible to experience hardships for the practice
of Dharma? It is so much wiser to take care of all future
lives and cease the cycle of suffering. From the Dharma point
of view this is the wise action. The other action is ignorant.
Furthermore, the many people who work for this temporal
life only have to experience the result of that, which is
suffering due to rebirth in the three lower realms. The temporal
comfort it brings doesn’t last—in this life we
have to work until death, and even then it doesn’t
end; in the next life’s body we have to do the same
thing again. Therefore it is not worthwhile to experience
hardships taking care of this life—experiencing hard
work for the sake of temporal comfort cannot end until we
are out of ignorance. Therefore this kind of activity is
very boring, but due to the evolution of our past lives karma
we don’t get bored, which is the result of ignorance.
The lowest purpose of human life is the avoidance of a lower
rebirth, so we have to make definite preparations before
the time of death. Consideration of the next life is more
important than thinking about how to live tomorrow or next
year. Of course we all have a gross awareness in the mind
that we will die after a time, but most of us will have no
idea when. How many days? Another year? We have complete
darkness in our minds, no wisdom perceiving this. Yet it
is common for everyone to die. Death is definite, the next
life is definite. If we check up we will find that there
is no certainty that we will exist in the future; this is
indefinite. So why should we work for the future of this
life, the existence of which is indefinite? All these actions
are unwise and trivial because we are unsure of receiving
material comfort in the future. But the future life, future
suffering, is definite, and as we create less positive karma
and more negative karma there will be great suffering in
the future. Therefore it is important that before this temporal
life ends we make a definite preparation to never experience
the sufferings of the lower realms.
We may think that in fact there is no existence of future
life, that this is a Tibetan idea. “We Westerners don’t
have a future life, we Westerners, no.” But this fact
does not depend on belief—not having belief cannot
change the true nature of evolution. We think that there
is no future life; yet we prepare for next year, future projects,
and so forth. But can we really see that each of us will
exist next year? Can we see it now? Check up. It is not an
object of our mind—we can’t guess, we can’t
tell if we will exist in three or four years or not. This
is the nature of ignorance. Without knowing clearly we make
arrangements.
You ask, “What are you doing this for? We don’t
want to know about death.” The answer is that you don’t
want to experience suffering; you want to experience happiness
without depending on the cause. You want happiness without
creating it. But you have to understand the evolution of
happiness—you must create the cause, it is your responsibility;
that’s what evolution is. We make arr |