LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 12: February-March 2004
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Dear Friends,
I hope you are well and happy in the Dharma. I find it hard
to remember, but, as Lama Zopa Rinpoche often says, the purpose
of our lives, the reason we are human, is to lead all sentient
beings from suffering into the bliss of enlightenment. This
is our underlying motivation for doing what we do here at
the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. Thank you so much for your
kind support of and interest in our work.
I was in Singapore and Australia most of February and didn’t
have time to prepare a February e-letter, so this is a combined
February-March one, containing a slightly longer teaching
than usual. On my way back I stopped in California and had
a chance to visit one of my teachers, Venerable Ribur Rinpoche.
Rinpoche was very happy to receive details of what we’re
doing here at the Archive, and spontaneously offered the
following advice:
“We are not at the level where we can receive teachings
from holy images. There will come a time when we can, but
by then we’ll be quite well advanced on the path
to enlightenment. Consequently, at the moment we have to
rely
on books rather than statues for teachings. Therefore,
it is more important to publish books than to make statues.
“Also, His Holiness the Dalai Lama often tells Tibetans going back to Tibet
that although the Chinese now permit the restoration of monasteries and the construction
of statues, it’s more important to print books because books talk to
people directly.
“Since Lama Yeshe and Lama Zopa Rinpoche have experienced Dharma in their
minds, their teachings are very effective. Furthermore, since their teachings
are given in English with knowledge of the psychology of the people they are
teaching, they are full of advice suitable for the Western mind.
“There are many Dharma publications in English but these are still a drop
in the ocean compared to what is available in Tibetan. Therefore, the job of
publishing Dharma in Western languages is even more important.”
I felt very grateful for Rinpoche’s
kindness and encouragement. In California I also spent a little time with Ven. Bob Alcorn,
who has begun creating DVDs of our collection of rare archival
video of Lama Yeshe. It’s quite a lot of work to enhance
the sound and picture quality of these old videos and to
subtitle them with a transcript of the teaching being given.
The end result is amazing, however, and we hope to start
making these DVDs available soon. Watch this space!
Our new book, Lama Yeshe’s The Peaceful Stillness
of the Silent Mind is now available and we’ve
started mailing it out to our benefactors, FPMT centers and
so forth. Please let us know if you would like a copy. In
the meantime, you can
see it on line.
Please find another teaching by Lama Zopa Rinpoche below.
This one is from the Fifth Kopan Meditation Course, the complete
transcript of which can be found in the members’ area
of our Web site. For more information about our membership
program—which helps us edit more teachings for publication
and gives you access to a growing number of teachings not
available elsewhere—please
go here.
And thank you again for your kind support.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
Giving up the eight worldly dharmas
The highly realized pandit and Madhyamaka philosopher Nagarjuna,
who restored the sutra and tantra teachings of the Mahayana
and caused them to prevail extensively in India when they
had degenerated, said, “It’s better not to have
the itching than to have the pleasure of scratching.”
In the example, he’s saying that if you don’t
itch, you won’t scratch and damage your skin. What
he means is that it’s better not to desire worldly
objects than to have them.
The point is that if your mind is free of desire, you don’t
have any problem with objects, such as the attachment that
arises when you contact an object of desire. Conflict arises
because there’s desire in your mind. If there’s
no desire in your mind, there’s no way for problems
to arise when you encounter an object.
Therefore, when I talk about giving up the eight worldly
dharmas, I don’t mean you have to make the eight types
of object nonexistent. Abandoning the eight worldly dharmas
means abandoning the evil thought of the eight worldly dharmas.
If you abandon the thought of the eight worldly dharmas,
you’ll have no problem with any object: when you experience
pleasure, no problem; when the pleasure decreases, again,
no problem; when somebody praises you, no attachment to that
praise; if you’re surrounded by all kinds of material
objects, no problem of craving or conflict in your mind.
Those who abandon the eight worldly dharmas never suffer
from attachment. Even if the great yogi Milarepa, for example,
was offered every material object in the world, he would
never experience the kinds of problem that ordinary people
would in that situation. His mind would never change. The
minds of beings like Milarepa are always in a state of happiness
and peace that cannot be destroyed by external conditions.
When people like us are happy—whether it’s for
an hour or a day—it always changes, it never lasts. This
is
because our happiness arises from the situation, not from
mental control. For example, if we meet someone who praises
and compliments us, our mind feels uplifted and happy. But
later, if that person blames or criticizes us, our mind suffers.
This is because we have no mental control; our happiness
and suffering derive from the situation we’re in. Our
minds’ power is limited, so our happiness never lasts.
The happiness of pure practitioners like Milarepa is completely
different. Their happiness arises from mental control, and
their fundamental practice is abandoning and controlling
the evil thought of the eight worldly dharmas. This is their
root, most basic practice. Since their happiness arises from
mental control, instead of changing into suffering, their
mental peace develops more and more, gets higher and higher.
And it all start with their abandoning the evil thought of
the eight worldly dharmas; this is their very first practice—the
practice that makes them pure practitioners.
As this is what they did, we should do the same. As long
as we spend our lives following the evil thought of the eight
worldly dharmas, our life is not a pure Dharma life; we are
not Dharma practitioners. The definition is made according
to practice.
People all over the world are meditating without understanding
what real Dharma actually is. So even though they do all
that meditation, their lives are wasted. Why is it not Dharma
even though they spend most of their time in meditation?
It’s because they don’t have a real understanding
of the nature of suffering, of what suffering and its cause
actually are; they don’t know the difference between
positive and negative actions. Their minds are not aware
of these subjects, which are actually the most important
things for those seeking ultimate peace to discover. They
think that simply meditating, just sitting in some position,
is a good action, that it brings peace, but in fact it’s
the opposite.
Why do people who meditate without the wisdom understanding
these important subjects waste their time and life? It’s
because most of their daily life—even the meditation
they do, which they think is the cause of ultimate peace—is
servant
to the eight worldly dharmas.
When moths see a candle flame, they think it’s a good
place to go. They don’t think that it will burn their
body; they have no fear. If they were afraid, they wouldn’t
so purposefully fly right into it. The more you try to stop
them, the harder they try to enter the flame. This shows
the nature of the animal mind. Anyway, when those moths fly
into the flame they’re expecting only peace and happiness.
They have no desire to suffer; they don’t plan on getting
burnt. So why do they go there? It’s because they have
no fear. Their lack of fear is due to their lack of understanding
that if they go there they will suffer. What happens is the
complete opposite to what those ignorant creatures think
will happen—they get burnt; they die.
It’s very important to understand why they force themselves
to experience this suffering, what makes them do it. This
is the real science; this is the best way of studying science.
Why do the moths intentionally fly into the flame? Why do
they try their hardest to get into it as quickly as possible?
It’s because of their own ignorance—the mental obscuration
that prevents them from discovering the actual nature of
the situation: that the fire is hot and will burn them. Their
ignorance makes them perceive the situation differently from
the fact of it. Some people might think that moths are happy
to be in there, but they’re not. If they knew what
was going to happen they would avoid it at all costs.
Kopan Monastery, 22 November 1973. Edited from the Lama
Yeshe Wisdom Archive by Nicholas Ribush. A transcript of
the entire course is in our
members' area.
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