LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 3: April, 2003
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Dear Friend,
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We apologize for the delay in sending you our April e-letter,
but we wanted to be sure that our new website and associated
software were working properly. We now hope they are!
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Welcome to our third e-letter, and thank you for being on
our list. Please find below another short, previously unpublished
teaching by Lama Yeshe, as we promised.
The big news for us is that we have
totally revamped our Web site, with the kind and expert help
of the indefatigable
Tony Simmons, proprietor of Darshanweb and
the hard, dedicated work of our own Jennifer Barlow. Thank
you both. Please, everybody, check it out: www.LamaYeshe.com.
We have added several new teachings
during the past couple of months, with more to come. Read,
for example, two teachings
by the great bodhisattva Tenzin Gyaltsen, Khunu
Lama Rinpoche,
and Gomchen Khampala’s "Advice
on Guru Practice." We
have also expanded our archive of photos of Lama Yeshe
and Lama Zopa Rinpoche, and this will continue to grow
rapidly. If you have photos of the Lamas that we could
add to our gallery, please let us know.
Completely new features are "Ask
the Lamas" and "Reminiscences
of Lama Yeshe." With the former, please send us your
Dharma question and we will search our Archive of tens of
thousands of unedited teachings to see if we can find what
Lama Yeshe or Lama Zopa Rinpoche have said on that point.
We will then post your question and the Lamas’ answer;
no guarantees how long it will take us, but we’ll try
to do it soon.
For "Reminiscences of Lama Yeshe," we would love
those of you who knew Lama to share your memories with others.
Write as much as you like. We will probably copy-edit your
reflections but will show you what we have done before posting
them on the site.
We would also like to draw your kind attention to the fact
that a couple of our popular titles are out of print and
another couple are running very low. We would like to reprint
Lama Yeshe’s "The Essence of Tibetan Buddhism," "Becoming
Your Own Therapist" and "Make Your Mind an Ocean," and
Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s "Virtue and Reality," but
need $5,000 per title in order to print 10,000 of each.
If you can help find us these funds, many people will be
extremely grateful.
Thank you so much for your kind interest and for your support
for the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
WHY WE NEED MEDITATION
From the beginning of human evolution
on this planet, people have tried their best to be happy
and to enjoy their lives.
And, over this time, they have developed an incredible
number of different methods in pursuit of these goals.
Among these methods we find different interests, different
jobs, different technologies and different religions. From
the manufacture of the tiniest piece of candy to the most
sophisticated spaceship, the underlying motivation is to
find happiness. People haven’t made these things
for nothing, have they? So, we’re all familiar with
the course of human history; beneath it all is the constant
pursuit of happiness.
However--and Buddhist philosophy
is extremely clear on this--no matter how much progress
you make in material development,
you’ll never find lasting happiness and satisfaction;
it’s impossible. Lord Buddha stated this quite categorically.
It’s impossible to find happiness and satisfaction
through material means alone.
When Lord Buddha stated this, he wasn’t just putting
it out as an intellectual skeptic, as some kind of theory.
He learned this through his own experience. He tried it all: "Maybe
this will make me happy; maybe this will make me happy; maybe
this will make me happy." He thoroughly checked out
every trip, came to a conclusion and then outlined his philosophy.
None of his teachings are dry, intellectual statements.
Of course, we know that modern technological advances can
solve physical problems, like broken bones and bodily pain.
Lord Buddha would never say these methods are ridiculous,
that we don’t need doctors or medicine. He was never
extreme in that way. But whatever pain or pleasure we experience,
any sensation, is extremely transitory. We know this ourselves;
it’s not just theory. We’ve experienced the
ups and downs of physical existence ever since we were
born. Sometimes we’re weak; sometimes we’re
strong. It’s always changing. But while modern medicine
can definitely help alleviate physical ailments, you’ll
never ever find anything you can take to cure the dissatisfied,
undisciplined mind. There’s no medicine known that
can bring satisfaction.
Physical matter is impermanent in nature; it’s transitory,
it never lasts. Therefore, trying to feed desire, to satisfy
the dissatisfied mind, with something that’s constantly
changing is hopeless, impossible. There’s no way to
satisfy the uncontrolled, undisciplined mind through material
means.
In order to do this, we need meditation; meditation is the
right medicine for treating the uncontrolled, undisciplined
mind. Meditation is the way to perfect satisfaction. The
nature of the uncontrolled mind is sick; dissatisfaction
is mental illness. What is the right antidote to that illness?
It’s knowledge wisdom; understanding the nature of
psychological phenomena; knowing how the internal world
functions. Many people understand how machinery operates
but they have no idea about the mind; very few understand
how their psychological world works. Knowledge-wisdom is
the medicine that brings that understanding.
Lama Yeshe gave this teaching at Anzac House, Sydney, Australia,
in April 1975. Edited by Nicholas Ribush.
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Weston, MA 02493 · USA
Telephone: (781) 259-4466
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