LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 14: May 2004
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Dear Friends,
Thank you for subscribing to our monthly e-letter. It’s
great to be able to communicate with you in this way.
As you know, we recently published Lama Yeshe’s The
Peaceful Stillness of the Silent Mind.
One of the Discovering
Buddhism at Home students recently posted the following
comment on the program’s
bulletin board:
For any of us who is struggling with anxieties or doubts—and
who can say they are not?—the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive
has just published a new booklet by Lama Yeshe: The
Peaceful Stillness of the Silent Mind. It is a miraculous book; more
helpful than a year of psychotherapy, or many anti-anxiety
drugs or antidepressants. The core of it is a meditation
on the silent mind. It is very simple, very deep, very effective…Thank
you, Lama Yeshe and the LYWA for this wonderful, precious
gift.
You can read it on line or ask us to send you a free copy.
Our membership
drive is going well, but
we still have a long way to go to reach our target of 600
members. However, more than 100 have people have signed
up, so I thought I would give you an idea of how their contributions
are being put to work. I am most grateful to the skilled
editors who are putting their life and energy into this important
project.
• Ven. Ailsa Cameron is working on Rinpoche’s
general guru devotion teachings and will then work on his
Ganden Lha Gyäma commentaries.
•
Ven. Tenzin Namdrol is going through all the Kopan course
transcripts, lightly editing them and also breaking them
up electronically into topic “baskets” according
to the major headings of Liberation in the Palm of
Your Hand,
in preparation for final editing of all Rinpoche’s
teachings on each topic to form an amazing series of detailed
lam-rim commentaries as described in Preserving
the FPMT Lineage.
• Ven. Thubten Labdron is checking the accuracy of the course
transcripts in the Archive before Ven. Namdrol starts work
on them and is helping out with other editorial projects.
•
Ven. Lhundub Damchö is preparing Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s
advice to students on an incredible array of topics for
publication in one or more books of consultations.
•
Ven. Sarah Thresher is working on Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s
teachings from the recent mahamudra retreat in Australia.
•
Michelle Bernard is preparing some of Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s
lam-rim teachings for publication as books for the trade,
the first of which will be based on his teachings on the
perfect human rebirth.
•
Trisangma (Elizabeth Heimburg) is editing Rinpoche’s
Vajrayogini commentaries for publication.
• Linda Gatter is working on our anthology
of teachings by
some of the greatest lamas of our time.
•
Two other editors are working on Lama Yeshe’s U-tha-nam-che (Madhyanta-vibhaga) and Chö-dang-chö-nyi-nam-che (Dharmadharmata-vibhaga) teachings.
•
I am working on Lama Yeshe’s Manjushri commentary for
Wisdom Publications (see this month’s teaching, below).
We have several other projects in the works with other editors,
so you can see there’s plenty going on. However, we
are still barely scratching the surface of this incredible
resource that is the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive, and that’s
why we need another 500 members. I know $1,000 is a lot of
money, but what a great investment!
Thank you so much for your support of and interest in the
Archive. Please let me know if we can do anything for you.
In the meantime, here’s another short teaching from
the Archive for you.
Much love, Nick Ribush
Director
Understanding Reality
These days, in the West, we hear a lot about the open heart,
about opening your heart. This is common. From the Buddhist
point of view, in order to open your heart, you have to realize
something. “I want to open my heart, but how?”—this
is the question. Opening has to do with realization; no realization,
nothing opens. It doesn’t matter that you say, emotionally, “I’m
open. I love you; you love me so much.” That doesn’t
mean you’re open. We do that kind of thing, don’t
we? “No matter how much I open myself up to you, you
never open yourself up to me.” It’s a joke. It’s
not true.
Well, perhaps it’s true in one sense, but actually,
true openness implies space—your consciousness embracing
some kind of wide totality. This experience of embracing
totality itself becomes the solution, or antidote, to the
narrow, fanatical, conceptualizing dualistic mind.
But then there’s the danger of the attitude, “Wow!
Universal reality is incredibly special,” arising.
We get the impression that shunyata is a really special,
fantastic phenomenon. This attitude is wrong. Instead of, “Oh,
non-duality is special, up there; the ordinary, relative
bubble of samsara is down here,” which is completely
wrong, our position should be more realistic: whenever there’s
the appearance of the bubble of relativity, we should simultaneously
see non-duality within it.
When we’re in a conducive environment, we find meditation
easier—because we’re free of the vibration of
the conflict of duality. When we’re out and about,
in contact with the objects of the bubble of relativity,
our hearts immediately begin to shake; sense objects make
uncontrolled energy run rampant within us. Because we don’t
see the non-duality of universal reality within the bubble
of relativity, our reactions to objects in the sense world
are fragmented. If we could see reality, we wouldn’t
shake every time there was a change in our external environment.
Why, when the environment changes, does your behavior change
immediately as well? You know, I like talking about this.
For me, this is much more realistic than talking philosophy.
So, why do we change like that? Well, look at what happens
to you here. As soon as you leave the meditation hall and
go into the dining room, you manifest as something else completely.
You’re almost another person. Why? Because you differentiate
between deepest, essential nature of the meditation hall
and that of the dining room. If you could see universal reality
of these two rooms—and essential reality is non-differentiated;
it has a unified quality—you would not change so easily.
You see, we are completely intoxicated by the dualistic mind;
the dualistic mind completely overwhelms us. The vibration
of each different environment too easily influences us. We
think we’re in control; we’re not in control.
When I look at a lovely flower, I’m too influenced.
I’m intoxicated by it. When I look at something else,
that, too, intoxicates me. I’m completely dominated
by my dualistic mind; I have no control. I’m completely
influenced by the external world and from my own side, am
totally helpless. We’re all the same—we’re constantly
under the influence of whatever we see and hear outside.
It’s incredible. The dualistic, relative mind intoxicates
us, while our wisdom realizing universal reality is in a
deep sleep. Now is the time to reveal and activate that wisdom.
Our dualistic minds are so rigid. As soon as the environment
changes, our reality changes. While we’re here at the
center, it’s all Dharma. When we go into town to have
fun, the sense world bubble of the dance club becomes our
reality. Why am I taking this negative approach? Because
it’s more realistic. This is our experience. If I just
talk abstract philosophy, you can’t relate, because
it’s not your experience. I like to talk about experience.
Why, when the environment changes, does your reality change?
That’s all I’m asking.
You must really understand this yo-yo mind. The yo-yo mind
is always up and down, and that’s how you spend whole
life—going up and down. The relative environment changes
automatically; there’s no unchangeable environment.
So as the relative bubble of your external environment constantly
changes, your reality constantly changes, and you really
believe that this is this and that is that. You have no universal
understanding. That’s what makes you and all other
sentient beings suffer.
Lama Yeshe gave this teaching at Manjushri Institute,
England, in August, 1977, as part of a commentary on the
yoga method
of Divine Wisdom Manjushri. Edited from the Lama Yeshe
Wisdom Archive by Nicholas Ribush.
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