LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 1: February 12, 2003
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Dear Friend,
Thanks for joining the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive monthly
e-letter list. Every month we would like to send a short,
previously unpublished teaching by Lama Yeshe or Lama Zopa
Rinpoche, like the one below, to your email address, along
with any Archive news that we think may be of interest to
you.
For example, we have just published a fantastic new free
book that we are making available around the world: His Holiness
the Dalai Lama's "Illuminating the Path to Enlightenment,"
a 250-page commentary on Atisha's "Lamp for the Path"
and Lama Tsong Khapa's "Lines of Experience." You
can see and order it on our Web site, where you will also
find many other wonderful teachings and links to other great
Dharma sites.
If you would like to let others know about this excellent
opportunity, please forward them this message and ask them
to contact us at info@LamaYeshe.com or send us their email
address.
Thank you so much for your kind interest.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
What Buddhism's About
Some people think they know all about Buddhism and Buddhists
just because they've read a couple of books. They pick one
up, "Hmm. Let's see what this book says. Well, according
to this it seems that Buddhists are really extreme. They believe
in all sorts of strange stuff." They pick up another:
"My goodness, Buddhists are completely nihilistic."
They draw all sorts of wrong conclusions based on extremely
limited information; they don't see anything like the whole
picture. This is very dangerous.
Perhaps they read something from the Madhyamaka school of
Buddhist philosophy, which is known for its rigorous intellectual
approach to the subject of emptiness, the ultimate nature
of reality, and can be very difficult to understand. This
can lead them to think, "Oh, Buddhists aren't religious;
they're atheists. They don't believe anything; they think
that nothing exists. How can they consider themselves religious?"
This too can be very dangerous. Other people might conclude,
"Wow! Buddhists believe in three Gods. They say Buddha
is one God; Dharma is another; Sangha a third. They must be
super-believers. That's too much. In the West, we've never
heard of such a thing as three Gods; only one. We're religious,
but we only have one God. We can't even agree with the Buddhists
on how many Gods there are."
If you look at just one tiny aspect of Buddhism, of course
it might appear too much for you. But Buddhism is not just
about one or two small things; it is not some tiny philosophy.
Lord Buddha explained the nature of every single phenomenon
in the universe.
At this stage, I have had about nine or ten years' experience
teaching Buddhist philosophy to Westerners and experimenting
with how it fits their minds, mainly in the one-month meditation
courses we hold each year at Kopan Monastery in Nepal. In
these courses we try to explain everything, but I have found
that if we talk too much about the negative side of things,
students completely freak out. Not all of them, but many do.
They say, "These lamas emphasize the negative too much.
Why don't they talk more about the positive? Buddhism isn't
only about delusion and suffering. Why do they teach us this
negative stuff day after day?" But the thing about Buddhism
is that before you can put yourself into the positive path
to liberation, enlightenment or God--whatever you want to
call it, the name doesn't matter--you have to know how your
negative mind works.
If you don't understand how the two extreme negative views
of overestimation and underestimation function within you,
how can you correct your actions and put yourself into the
right path? Therefore, it is crucial to know the negative
aspects of your nature. Actually, if you comprehend the evolution
of your negative mind from beginning to end, you'll feel very
comfortable. Conversely, if you don't know how it works, you'll
finish up thinking that negative actions are positive.
Moreover, if you try to practice the path to liberation without
a solid grounding in what is positive and what is negative,
a simple question from someone challenging what you are doing
can completely derail you. You might get confused and give
up. That's the sign of a weak mind. You have to see the totality
of the evolution of both the negative and the positive mind.
Some people assume that Buddhism is probably a nice religion
that always talks diplomatically and sweetly about holy things.
When we start teaching Buddhism to beginners, we don't begin
by talking about holy things. The first thing we explain is
the basic nature of your present mind--what's going on down
here, right now--not Buddha up there.
Lama Yeshe gave this teaching at Melbourne University
in April 1975. Edited by Nicholas Ribush.
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