LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 53: October 2007 |
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Dear Friends,
Thank you for reading our latest e-letter. Don’t forget
to pass it on! Thank you.
What's Been Happening
It’s
been a great couple of weeks. LYWA staff from our Boston (Lincoln,
actually) office—myself, Jen, Wendy and Sonal—went
to New York for His Holiness the Dalai Lama’s wonderful
teachings
on emptiness and then watched him receive the Congressional
Gold Medal live on C-Span (which you can watch
on YouTube).
A couple of days later, Wendy and I went to DC for Lama Zopa
Rinpoche’s amazing teachings at Guhyasamaja
Center.
Speaking of our office staff, we have some changes heading
our way. Our dear Sonal has begun her maternity leave as she
and her husband Deva await the birth or their baby. Sonal
will most likely continue to work for us on a consulting basis
from home, helping us with our web site redesign and various
other technical projects.
And we are pleased to announce that we will soon have Ani
Tenzin Desal joining our office staff in January 2008. She
most recently was the SPC at Mahamudra Centre on New Zealand,
and she is currently on retreat before tackling the challenges
of a new home and two new jobs: Ani Desal will also be taking
on role of SPC at Kurukulla Center. You may have read Ani
Desal's article in a recent Mandala Magazine titled
Heart to Heart.
Golden Light Advice
On
May 4th 2007 Lama Zopa Rinpoche gave this advice:
Please recite the Golden Light Sutra for world
peace. Anybody who wants peace in the world should read
the Golden Light Sutra. This is a very important
practice to stop violence and wars in the world. The Golden
Light Sutra is one of the most beneficial ways to bring
peace. This is something that everyone can do, no matter
how busy you are, even if you can read one page a day, or
a few lines and in this way continually read the Golden
Light Sutra.
Our parent organization, the FPMT
has created a special
Web site for the Golden Light Sutra where you
can read more of what Rinpoche says about it, download the
Sutra itself, report your recitations and share your experiences
with the sutra. We have a few hard copies of the book and
would be happy to send you one free if you promise to recite
it!
New from Lama Zopa Rinpoche
Last month Lama Zopa Rinpoche requested that a recitation
of the Manjushri-nama-samgiti (the names of Manjushri)
be made available for people to listen to and download, particularly
in places where other people and animals could hear it. You
can listen online
to this oral transmission (lung) and commentary.
We have also added new advices to Rinpoche's Online
Advice Book. There are three new advices regarding
practicing
in prison; many additions to the section on relics
and holy objects; and new advices in the Dharma
and Worldy Activities section, including advice about
the popular mantra hat that Rinpoche has designed.
In Translation
Many of Lama Yeshe's and Lama Zopa Rinpoche's books have been
translated into foreign languages. On the LYWA website we
have provided links to the publishers of these translations
as well to a pdf if we have it. Scroll down to the bottoms
of the Lama Yeshe Teachings
page and the Lama
Zopa Rinpoche Teachings page to find these links.
Most recently we have posted a number of Chinese translations
of Lama Zopa Rinpoche teachings: Ganden
Lha Gyäma Commentary, Perfect
Freedom: The Great Value of Being Human and Burning
Offering to Dorje Khadro. Our sincere thanks to translator
Lobsang Dhargyey.
Teachings on Emptiness
To celebrate His Holiness’s New York teachings
on emptiness and Rinpoche’s Washington teachings, which
also included a fantastic teaching on emptiness, here’s
an excerpt of a teaching on emptiness by Rinpoche from a forthcoming
free book from the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
How A Table Exists
Things are empty of existing from
their own side. To give a clearer idea of this, I often use
the simple example of a table. Even though this way of analyzing
is not the correct way to meditate on emptiness, it gives
you an idea of the correct way to meditate. Especially if
you’re a beginner, it will give you some idea of how
the table exists in reality, of what the table is.
When a person first enters this hall, they see that there
is a table here in front of me. But what makes the person
decide to give the name “table” to this particular
object and not to the steps or to the throne? What makes the
person decide to give this object the label “table”?
There has to be a reason before deciding on the label “table.”
The reason is that the person sees, first of all, a material
object that performs the function of supporting things, or
of allowing things to be put on top of it. The person first
seeing that becomes the reason to label “table.”
That is what makes the person decide, among the numberless
labels, on this particular label, “table.”
Seeing this object that performs the function of supporting
things is the reason in the mind of the person for applying
the label “table.” There has to be a reason before
the label is applied, and the reason is seeing the basis for
the label. You see the base first, then you apply the label,
“It’s a table.” Therefore, this material
object that you first see, which can perform the function
of supporting things, is not table. This is the base. You
see the base first, which is the reason to give the label
“table.”
Otherwise, if seeing the base doesn’t come first,
you haven’t got any reason to label “table.”
There’s no reason in your mind for you to label this
“table,” that “steps,” or that “throne.”
There’s no reason to make you decide to give a particular
label.
If the first thing you see is the table, if you see the
table before giving the label “table,” there would
be no reason to label “table.” Since it’s
already table, why would you label “table” on
the table? There would be no reason to do that.
For example, when parents name their child Jeff, they label
on something that is not Jeff. Labeling “Jeff”
on something that is not Jeff has meaning. But if the base,
the aggregates, were already Jeff, there would be no purpose
in labeling “Jeff” on Jeff. You would then again
have to label “Jeff” on Jeff; then you would again
have to label “Jeff” on Jeff…. It would
become endless.
This is one logical reasoning used in the four-point analysis.*
The first of the four points is recognizing the object to
be refuted. The second point is that of ascertaining the pervasion,
that if anything exists it should exist either one with its
base or separately from its base. If the I is truly existent,
it has to exist either one with the aggregates or separately
from the aggregates.
If the I is one with the aggregates, various mistakes arise.
The I is the receiver and the aggregates, this body and mind,
are what is received. So, the receiver and what is received
would then become one. In other words, the I, the possessor,
and the aggregates, the possession, would become one. So,
there is no way that the possessor and the possession can
be one. They have to be different.
Anyway, if you see the table first, what reason do you have
to label it “table”? There’s no reason to
label “table” on that which is already table.
It has no meaning, no purpose. Normally, you see the base
and then say, “I see the table.” In order to see
the table, you have to see the base of the table first. Otherwise,
there’s no reason for you to say, “I see the table.”
By seeing the base, this object that you can put things on
top of, you then label “I see the table” and believe
in that label.
By seeing the base of these steps, you say, “I see
the steps,” and by seeing the base of this throne, you
say, “I see the throne.” By seeing a particular
object and the particular function that it performs, you then
label, “I see the table,” “I see the steps”
or “I see the throne.”
Seeing the base has to come first. This thing that performs
the function of supporting things is not the table. This thing
that you climb up is not the steps. This thing that you sit
on is not the throne. The thing that performs the function
of supporting things is the base to be labeled “table.”
This is one point to meditate on to find out what the table
is. Since you use this base as a reason to label “table,”
it’s not the table, just as this is not the steps and
this is not the throne.
Even from this analysis, you can see that the table and
the base to be labeled “table,” the steps and
the base to be labeled “steps” and the throne
and the base to be labeled “throne” are different.
They don’t exist in the way we normally think they do,
which is that this concrete thing itself is the table and
that is the steps and that is the throne.
Another point is that you talk about the parts of a table.
When you say “the parts of the table,” it means
the parts of the table are not the table. This top is not
the table, this leg is not the table, this leg is not the
table, that leg is not the table, and that leg is not the
table. Just from the language, you can tell that saying “the
parts of the table” means they’re not the table.
Even the whole group of all these parts gathered together
is not the table. What is it? It is the base to be labeled
“table.” None of these parts is the table, and
even the whole group of all the parts is not the table. This
is clear.
Another point is that the table is nowhere on this. There’s
no table here or there or there. There’s no table on
this base.
The first point is that the base is not the table. When
you come into the room, how do you come to apply labels to
things? You can see that the reason you use to apply a label
to something is not that thing. You use seeing the base of
the table as the reason to label “table,” but
this object that can be used to put things on is not table.
You apply the label “table” after seeing the base.
It’s clear that the base and the label are different.
The second point is that none of the parts of the table
is the table. And even the whole group of all the parts is
not the table. It is the base to be labeled “table.”
It now becomes clearer that the table is different from its
base.
The third point is that you cannot find the table anywhere
on this base. But that doesn’t mean there’s no
table in this room; it doesn’t mean the table doesn’t
exist. The table exists in this room—there are actually
many tables here in this room. There’s no table here
on this, but there is a table in this room. This makes clear
what the table is.
This is not the correct way to meditate on emptiness, since
this way of searching for the table is related to the merely
imputed table and leaves out the truly existent table. We
haven’t touched the object to be refuted, the truly
existent table, which we are supposed to realize is empty.
Therefore, according to Lama Tsongkhapa and many other great
pundits, this is not the correct way of analyzing.
In this way of analyzing, when you search for the table
among all its parts, you find that none of the parts is the
table, and even the whole group of all the parts is not the
table but the base to be labeled table. But it doesn’t
mean that the table doesn’t exist. The table exists.
So, what is that table? Because we see this object that
performs the function of allowing things to be put on top
of it, we merely impute “table” and believe it
is a table. Because this object is here in this room, we believe
that there is a table in this room. By seeing this object,
we believe, “I see a table.” It is a concept.
By seeing this object in this room, we merely impute, “There
is a table.” We leave it just at that; we are satisfied
just by that. There’s no table anywhere on this, but
there is a table in this room.
You can see now that the way the table exists is extremely
subtle. When you really analyze what the table is, it is extremely
subtle. It is not that the table is nonexistent, but it is
like it is nonexistent. It is not nonexistent because
you can make the table, use the table, break the table. If
you make this base, you believe, “I made a table”;
you simply believe, “I made a table.” If you use
the table, you believe, “I’m using the table”;
you simply believe, “I’m using the table.”
And if you break the table, you believe, “I broke the
table.”
The table is not nonexistent, but it is not the concrete
thing that we normally think it is. We normally think of the
table as something concrete that is oneness with its base,
undifferentiable from its base. We can’t split the base
and the label “table.” There is something concrete
there. So, that is not table. There’s no table on this,
but there is a table in this room.
You can now see how the table is completely empty. It has
no existence from its own side. There’s no real, concrete
table from its own side. From this you can get an idea of
how the table exists. It is extremely subtle.
After this analysis, you know that none of the parts is
the table and even the whole group of the parts is not the
table. There’s no table anywhere here on this base,
but there is a table in this room. By analyzing like this,
you see that the way the table exists is extremely fine, extremely
subtle, but when you check what is appearing to you, you find
that a real, concrete table is left there, oneness with its
base. This is what is called the object to be refuted.
That real table appearing from its own side, that truly existent
table, that independent table, is the object to be refuted.
That concrete thing left there is the object to be refuted,
and it is a hallucination. In reality it is completely empty.
This is the correct way to meditate on the emptiness of
the table. By recognizing that the table appears to you to
be independent, unlabeled, real from its own side, you then
search for that table to see whether or not it exists. When
you don’t find it and you see that it’s empty,
at that time you’re seeing the emptiness, or ultimate
nature, of the table. By seeing the ultimate truth of the
table, that it is completely empty of existing from its own
side, as a result you then realize the conventional truth
of the table, that the table exists in mere name, being merely
imputed by the mind. This is subtle dependent arising.
The fourth of the four schools of Buddhist philosophy, the
Madhyamaka, has two divisions, Svatantrika and Prasangika.
This is the Prasangika view of the subtle dependent arising
of the table, the conventional truth of the table: the table
exists in mere name, being merely imputed by the mind
*Note: That is, if the I were one with the
aggregates, labeling “I” would be superfluous.
It would simply be one more name for the aggregates. The four
points are (1) recognizing the object to be refuted, (2) ascertaining
the pervasion of the two possibilities of oneness and difference,
(3) ascertaining the lack of oneness of the I and the aggregates,
and (4) ascertaining the lack of difference of the I and the
aggregates.
Lama Zopa Rinpoche gave this teaching at the Great Enlightenment
Temple, New York, in 1991. It appears in the forthcoming book
How Things Exist, edited from the Lama Yeshe Wisdom
Archive by Ven. Ailsa Cameron.
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