LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 34: January 2006 |
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Dear Friends,
Welcome to our first e-letter for 2006, the year we celebrate
our tenth anniversary. From all of us here at the Lama Yeshe
Wisdom Archive we wish you and your families a happy, peaceful
and prosperous new year. May all your wishes be fulfilled
according to Dharma.
So, in the ten years since Lama Zopa Rinpoche kindly established
the Archive we have worked out of three locations in and around
Boston, each owned by generous supporters of our work, each
offered to us at well below market rent. Now, unexpectedly,
we have to move again, but this time it seems we’re
out there with everybody else!
But it’s OK. Thanks to your own kind and generous support
of the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive and what we do, we’re
financially stable and able to afford market rents, so thank
you so much for that. Nevertheless, this is a plea for you
to keep your compassionate contributions coming so that we
can continue to grow and benefit all sentient beings by making
available the actual cause of happiness—the teachings
of the Buddha. Thank you so much.
The photo above is of Lama Yeshe and Song Rinpoche at the
6th Kopan Course in April 1974. You can read
the transcript of the talk Song Rinpoche gave at that
time, which was translated by Lama Yeshe. Also, you can read
the transcript of Lama Zopa Rinpoche's teachings from this
course in our members
area. (If you'd like to find out more about our membership
program—which directly supports editors who are preparing
more of Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche's teachings for
publication—see
our Membership page.)
We have more Kopan Course transcripts published in our members
area, and on Lama Zopa
Rinpoche's Teachings page.
We’re delighted to report that we have three more books
going to the printer this week, two new ones and a reprint:
Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s The Joy of Compassion,
Geshe Jampa Tegchok’s The Kindness of Others,
and a reprint of Lama Yeshe’s ever-popular The
Essence of Tibetan Buddhism.
More new teachings added to the website this past month include
Lama Yeshe's two-day talk on the Buddhist attitude toward
life titled Light
of Dharma; these talks were given in September 1983
in Sweden. Also, you can read Lama Zopa Rinpoche's Thoughts
on the Future of Buddhism. And remember that new
advices are always being added to Rinpoche's Online
Advice Book. We now have over 235 advices on a wide variety
of topics. To find what's new, search for the phrase "Jan.
2006" using our Advanced
Search page.
Our Online Recordings
Library keep growing. This month's podcast is Lama Yeshe's
talk titled A Glimpse of Buddhist Psychology, which
is published in the free book Becoming
Your Own Therapist. We've posted both the edited
and unedited transcripts of Lama's talk on our website,
so you can read along as you listen.
And we continue working on more Lama Yeshe DVDs, for example,
his Heruka Vajrasattva Tsok commentary, the teaching on transference
of consciousness that appeared in our recent e-letters, a
couple of talks on anxiety in the nuclear age, and more. While
you're waiting, you can listen to the audio of some of these
on our Online Recordings
page.
So, as we start packing for the move to our new location,
still in the town of Lincoln, Massachusetts, where we presently
are, let us again wish you all the best for the new year,
thank you for your support and leave you with a wonderful
teaching by Lama Zopa Rinpoche.
Much love
Nick Ribush
Director
Peaceful Mind, Peaceful World
If you can practice bodhicitta, renouncing yourself and cherishing
others, then keep this as your heart practice. Bodhicitta is
the essential practice, like the foundation of a house. Whether
you are happy or sick, dying or healthy, young or old, working
or too old to work, living at a Dharma center or in a city where
there is no Dharma center and no Dharma friends having the same
faith and doing the same practice as you, whether you are depressed
or excited, practice bodhicitta. As the great bodhisattva
Khunu Lama Tenzin Gyaltsen said, “When you eat, eat
with bodhicitta. When you stand, stand with bodhicitta. When
you sleep, lay down with the good heart, bodhicitta. When
you are happy, remember bodhicitta. When you are sick, remember
bodhicitta. When you are feeling unhappy, depressed or aggressive,
remember bodhicitta. When death comes, remember bodhicitta.”
Like this, always remember bodhicitta.
Bodhicitta is the essential practice, the very first of all
practices. When you wake from sleep, instead of remembering
the office, job, money or coffee, if you want peace of mind,
the first thing to remember is bodhicitta, the ultimate good
heart. If you can practice bodhicitta, plan your life in this
way. Then, wherever you are living, whether in the city or
in the countryside, in a Dharma center or wherever, you will
always be happy, so incredibly happy, because there will always
be much peace in your mind.
Otherwise you will always have many problems. You may be
living in a monastery or a Dharma center where there is the
sound of Dharma twenty four hours a day—teachings coming
from all ten directions, people reciting texts on the incredibly
profound teachings of Buddha, which are to subdue the mind,
to control the mind and eliminate the disturbing thought that
harms both others and ourselves by binding us to samsara.
You may be living in a Dharma center, in a monastery, in a
cave on the highest mountain or even on the moon, but however
far you may be from people or animals, if there is no change
in your mind, if you allow your self-cherishing thought to
keep on functioning as it always has, you will never have
any real peace.
As long as you keep your self-cherishing thought in your
heart, cherishing it like a wish-granting jewel or a precious
treasure, you remain a servant to and completely enslaved
by this enemy. If you follow self-cherishing you will never
find any peace of mind. Taking the side of self-cherishing
instead of that of cherishing others blocks any kind peace.
As long as you do not exchange yourself for others, renouncing
yourself and cherishing others, since you have not changed
your mind, no matter how many weapons or how many millions
of bodyguards you have, they cannot protect your life from
danger. You can see from the example of presidents or prime
ministers that no matter how many weapons or external protection
they have, it just increases the danger they’re in.
Instead of protecting their life, these things can even endanger
it—even their own bodyguards can finish up killing them.
In his Guide
to the Bodhisattva Way of Life, Shantideva said,
By destroying your inner enemy, the disturbing thoughts,
you destroy all your outer enemies as well. The work is
accomplished at the same time.
Once the inner enemies of disturbing negative thoughts and
self-cherishing are destroyed, all outer enemies are automatically
destroyed as well. You don’t have to shoot or insult
them. You don’t need to use any weapons to harm the
outside enemies, not even a needle! Destroying the inner enemy
destroys all outer enemies simultaneously because all outer
enemies come from the self-cherishing thought.
This is very easy to understand if you relate it to your
everyday life. Even today, if you check your life, the nature
of the mind, how it has been today—peaceful, happy or
confused—you can see that when you cherish yourself
more, whether at home or at work, there’s more confusion,
more pain, more problems and more disharmony, but when you
have more loving kindness and compassion, when you care more
for others than yourself, there’s more harmony, more
peace and better relationships; things are more successful.
Right now you can understand by analyzing what happens when
you change your attitude towards another person. First you’re
cherishing only yourself, then, remembering the precious teachings
on Mahayana thought transformation, you suddenly give yourself
up and cherish the other person more, thinking, “She
has as much right to be happy as I do; her wants and happiness
are more important than mine,” and immediately, in that
very moment, you experience incredible peace. The pain of
self-cherishing abates and you’re liberated at that
very moment.
When self-cherishing is strong it’s very easy for you
to get angry. The stronger your self-cherishing thought, the
more impatient and jealous you become. Many problems arise,
quickly and easily, one after the other, and you can’t
relax or find the peace that comes from weakening the self-cherishing
thought.
Thus you can see how cherishing yourself and renouncing others
gives rise to all the other delusions and makes you create
many different kinds of negative karma. Then, because of this
and the vast amount of negative karma you have accumulated
in past lives, you experience many problems in this one.
But when you practice bodhicitta, even if you’re alone,
you’re happy. Even if you’re happy, your mind
remains controlled and you don’t experience the dissatisfaction
and attachment that arise from too much excitement. Even if
you’re experiencing pain, your mind is happy; even if
you’re dying, your mind is happy. All the time, whatever
circumstances or people you meet, your mind is constantly
happy.
Even if you meet an enemy, someone who treats you badly and
criticizes you, you’re happy, extremely happy. You remember
his kindness from the depth of your heart, how he’s
helping you develop compassion, loving kindness, patience
and bodhicitta. It’s the same with friends and strangers.
Whether you’re living alone or with others, you’re
so happy—at home or at work, East or the West, wherever.
Sometimes people think, “I’m so fed up living
in a family with lots of people. I just want to go off into
the forest alone, keep on walking and see what happens.”
One of my students in Australia once told me this. There’s
much bush and thick forest there and you can see from an airplane
that there are no houses, nothing. He said that one day he
just wants to go out into the bush and walk for days, thinking
that something might happen. He doesn’t want to go walkabout
to find suffering but to find peace, to experience something
new in his life, something pleasant. But as long as the practice
of the good heart is missing, one can find no real peace or
satisfaction.
Practicing the good heart makes you and whoever else you
meet happy; it makes everybody happy. Also, it’s a great
purification. When you cherish others more than yourself you
think of yourself as their servant, that you are living for
others. “My life is for others; the purpose of my breathing
is for them; everything I do is for others, to serve them,
to free them from all their suffering and lead them to enlightenment.”
Even if you don’t think about enlightenment, you still
want to benefit others, give them happiness and eliminate
their problems and suffering.
When you’re more concerned for others and less for
yourself, when you have less self-cherishing, your other delusions—anger,
pride, jealousy and so forth—are weaker and you create
less negative karma, which is the cause of sickness. Therefore,
in this and future lives, you experience less sickness. You’re
also more successful and your wishes in this and future lives
are fulfilled. Whether you wish to be wealthy, successful
or anything else, you succeed in even the worldly activities
of this and future lives.
Thus you can see that renouncing yourself and cherishing
others cuts off the root of self-cherishing and plants the
root from which all the branches, flowers and fruit of happiness
come. Success depends on how much you cherish others.
No matter how many meditations or different techniques there
are, as long as you do not practice the good heart, even if
you say many prayers and practice hundreds of different meditations,
you won’t find peace. Cherishing others is the most
important thing, the first thing, the most beneficial practice
for yourself and others. It is most precious because with
it you can achieve enlightenment, the highest, peerless happiness.
Without cherishing others, even if you can explain what enlightenment
is and recite all the Prajnaparamita texts by heart
for months and years, enlightenment will remain a dream, hopeless.
As long as you do not change your mind you will find no peace,
no matter how many hundreds of meditations or practices you
know.
With bodhicitta, you not only accumulate less negative karma
twenty-four hours a day—thereby causing less harm and
fewer problems for yourself and others—but you also
purify those from previous lives. Bodhicitta is the greatest,
most powerful method of purification.
As long as you don’t have bodhicitta, no matter how
many meetings for world peace you attend, nothing happens.
Bodhicitta is the foundation. Nobody hates those who have
a good heart, who renounce themselves and cherish others.
Everybody likes people like that. We all like to be helped
by and receive benefit and kindness from others. Even animals
like people who feed, protect and cherish them.
If you renounce yourself and cherish others, you generate
bodhicitta. Even if you don’t actually realize it, at
least you get closer by being less concerned with yourself
and more concerned for others. That’s the foundation
of real peace.
When you realize bodhicitta, renouncing yourself and cherishing
others, naturally, without effort, you stop harming others.
The nature of bodhicitta is to cherish and single-pointedly
want to benefit others, so with bodhicitta you not only stop
harming others but also become concerned to help and benefit
them, doing whatever is needed. You are no longer a cause
for others to get angry and create negative karma. Instead,
you become an example for them to learn from; you make it
easier for them to develop more compassion, loving kindness
and peace of mind and to even generate bodhicitta themselves.
In this way even one person can bring much peace to the minds
of others and benefit so many of them. Just by being a good
example you can help others generate bodhicitta, transform
their minds and develop examples for others. Having generated
bodhicitta they in turn become good examples to help others
develop the good heart, change their minds and establish peace
in their own minds and the world. And again, they in turn
become further examples for others.
This is how we bring true peace into our family, our workplace
and the world. By generating the good heart, bodhicitta, cherishing
others more than ourselves, those around us get peace. So,
that many people become happy and there is that much more
peace. Then more and more people get peace, until all those
in the country, all those in the world, have peace. In this
way, even if the whole world is filled with atomic bombs,
since the self-cherishing thought—the real enemy and
the greatest danger of all—has been transformed into
the thought cherishing others, no matter how many weapons
there are, none of them can endanger people’s lives.
Therefore it is extremely important to study and always keep
bodhicitta in mind. Study the teachings on bodhicitta as extensively
as possible, then meditate, practice and learn to recite the
texts. Then, when you have studied and have acquired some
knowledge, you should explain to others even the little that
you know. Teach them whatever you know about meditation and
the good heart.
By doing this you give others the opportunity to understand
that there is a way to transform the self-cherishing attitude
and disturbing thoughts. You show them that self-cherishing
and delusion are not one with the mind so that they no longer
think, “It’s impossible to live without attachment,
dissatisfaction, impatience, depression, aggression and all
these things. That’s what life is about.”
When I meet speak with people who have not met Dharma—shopkeepers,
business people and so forth—they say, “You can’t
live without attachment. It’s part of life.” What
they are actually saying is that the mind is oneness with
attachment so there’s no way to transform the mind,
it’s not possible to change the mind. That’s what
they believe and it serves only to make them depressed. Neither
does it help at all nor is it realistic.
Therefore it’s very important to help others understand
the incredible practice of bodhicitta because bodhicitta makes
you and others happy in this life and all future lives. It
fulfills all your wishes and those of others and enables you
to accumulate extensive merit, purify all your obscurations
and achieve the peerless happiness of enlightenment. If you
explain the teachings on bodhicitta to others, it gives them
an opportunity to practice.
By being a good example to others, talking to them and telling
them with good heart even the little you know about bodhicitta,
you begin to stop the harm, problems and dangers of this life.
This is the way to bring peace to the world and to really
help others.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche gave this teaching at Tushita Retreat
Center, Dharamsala, 18 June 1985. Edited from the Lama Yeshe
Wisdom Archive by Ven. Sarah Thresher and Nicholas Ribush.
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