LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 51: July 2007 |
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Dear Friends,
Thank you for receiving and reading our monthly e-letter.
What’s going on here
First,
there’s a great deal of excitement here as we prepare
for a last-minute visit to Boston by our precious spiritual
director, Lama
Zopa Rinpoche. On Friday July 27 he will be signing
copies of his new book, Dear
Lama Zopa, which contains edited versions of some
of his advices from our online
Advice Book. He will also be at Kurukulla Center Saturday
July 28 for an animal
blessing.
We’re also busy here continuing work on the projects
we mentioned in our June e-letter.
In addition, we are working with digital imaging specialist
David Zinn, who prepared our beautiful Lama
Yeshe portraits, to scan and make available thousands
of photos, slides and negatives of Lama Yeshe, Lama Zopa Rinpoche,
other lamas, and early FPMT places and events. People have
very kindly sent us some amazing stuff and we really look
forward to sharing them with you via our Web site in due course.
Getting Advice From Rinpoche
Sometimes people write to us wanting to get in touch with
our great teacher, Lama Zopa Rinpoche. Recently the
FPMT clarified this process on their Web site. Please
note, however, that Rinpoche is extremely busy and the time
he has to attend to personal correspondence is very limited.
Many of the topics that people often write to Rinpoche about
can be found in our online
Advice Book, such as questions about various
illnesses, how to develop a daily
practice, the challenges and benefits of working
for the dharma, and more. This month, in honor of Rinpoche's
animal blessing event in Boston, we've updated the page on
benefitting
animals. Also see the page with Rinpoche's advice to avoid
killing animals.
We've just finished posting the audio of Rinpoche's lectures
during the month-long
meditation course from Kopan Monastery in November 1995.
Watch
and Listen to Lama Yeshe
We have just posted some Lama
Yeshe video clips on YouTube. Please check them out and
share them with others. Of course, you can always buy the
complete DVD from our
online store.
This month's podcast is the 5th chapter from Lama Yeshe's
Ego, Attachment
and Liberation. It is a series of questions and answers
between Lama Yeshe and the students of the 5-day meditation
course that this book chronicles. You can listen to this lecture
and more on our online
recordings page.
Prayer that Spontaneously Fulfills All Wishes
Lama Zopa Rinpoche has recently translated and started
using the Prayer that Spontaneously Fulfills All Wishes.
This prayer was spontaneously composed by the Dalai Lama when
the great Nyingma master Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche requested
a prayer that he could recite daily for the fulfillment of
His Holiness’s holy wishes. Rinpoche has translated
this prayer and made it available for all of us to recite.
It is available for download on the Essential
Buddhist Prayers update page.
It has been formatted two to a page to make for easy copying
and insertion into the prayer books.
Transforming stock into Dharma
At this time of record market highs we thought you
might like to take advantage of the tax benefits of donating
stock directly to the Archive. For example, if you wanted
to donate $10,000 to LYWA by selling stock first, you’d
have to sell around $13,000-14,000 and then donate what was
left after tax. By directly giving us stock worth $10,000
you’d be able to claim a deduction for $10,000 without
having to sell more than that amount.
If you would like to donate any amount of stock to the Archive,
please contact us.
Thank you again for your kind interest and support. This
month we leave you with a teaching on compassion by Lama Zopa
Rinpoche. Next month I’ll be in retreat so the next
e-letter will come to you in September.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
The
power of compassion
All beings, we humans and even the tiniest creatures that
can be seen only through a microscope, are exactly the same
in wanting happiness and not wanting suffering, or problems.
It doesn’t matter whether we are from the East or the
West or from another planet—we are exactly the same
in this. It is for this reason that practice of the good heart,
of compassion, is the most important thing in our everyday
life.
First of all, no matter how many friends we have—even
hundreds or thousands of them—if we don’t have
a warm, kind heart, there’s no satisfaction or peace
of mind in our everyday life. As we need friends, we also
need to develop our mind, especially our compassion. Compassion,
which is the essence of the right path, brings the greatest
benefit to us and to all other beings.
Without compassion, even if we find a friend, that friend
can become our enemy. It depends on our attitude in everyday
life, on whether our mind is compassionate in nature or self-centered,
thinking about nothing but ourselves and our own happiness
day and night.
If we have compassion, we have better, more harmonious relationships
and more peace. With compassion, everyone becomes our friend.
Wherever we go and whomever we live with, everyone becomes
our friend. We find friends everywhere. If we have compassion,
even someone who is normally cruel and selfish is kind to
us. That’s a result of our compassion. It is a common
experience that even someone who is normally mean to others
is kind to a person who is warm-hearted, who is kind, loving,
and compassionate, with much concern for others.
Take my teacher, Lama Yeshe, for example. Many people here
knew or know about Lama Yeshe. Those of you who didn’t
meet him might have heard about him. Lama Yeshe saw everyone
as very kind. From my observation, because of Lama’s
own good heart, other people also became kind and good-hearted.
The other person’s mind was also transformed or, in
other words, blessed. Blessed means their mind was
transformed from a negative attitude into a positive one,
from a selfish, cruel mind into a kind mind.
Another example is the famous Italian saint, St. Francis
of Assisi. I think St. Francis lived at the same time as the
great Tibetan yogi, Milarepa, who achieved full enlightenment
within a few years by meditating in hermitages in the Himalayan
mountains according to the instructions of his guru, Marpa.
At that time, in a forest in Italy, there lived a dangerous
wolf that had harmed and killed many people. St. Francis told
the local people, “Don’t worry about the wolf.
I’ll go into the forest and ask him not to harm anyone.”
The people begged St. Francis not to go into the forest
because the wolf would attack him, but he went anyway. When
the wolf saw St. Francis, it immediately became subdued. It
was completely transformed, or blessed. Instead of attacking
St. Francis, the wolf licked his feet. It behaved the way
a dog does with its master, showing humility and affection.
St. Francis then told the wolf, “Don’t harm
people. I’ll beg for food in the city and give it to
you.” From that day, the wolf stopped attacking people.
St. Francis begged for food in the streets and fed the wolf.
There are many other such stories of human beings who were
exactly the same as we are, with all the problems that we
have, but who put effort into developing their mind and were
able to train their mind in compassion for all beings. Shakyamuni
Buddha and all the buddhas of the three times, as well as
all the great saints in the various religions, were originally
like us. They had ignorance, anger, desire, jealousy, pride,
ill will, and all the other mental faults, as well as all
the other problems in life, but they didn’t just leave
their life in problems. They became different from us by putting
effort into developing their inner qualities, the qualities
of their mind. They reduced their faults of mind and made
an effort to developing its good qualities, the essence of
which is compassion for all beings.
If we have compassion in our heart, everyone becomes our
friend, even someone who is cruel to other beings, and even
poisonous snakes, tigers, and other wild animals. No matter
how wild or violent beings are, they cannot harm the compassionate
person because of the power of his or her positive attitude
and, because of the vibration of that person, the blessing
of his or her positive mind, their attitude even changes for
the better and they stop giving harm to others.
In Lhasa, Tibet, there were three great monasteries—Sera,
Ganden, and Drepung—which were like universities except
that they didn’t have the wide variety of subjects that
Western universities have but concentrated on the study and
practice of the Buddha’s teachings. While study of the
philosophy of other religions, particularly Indian religions,
was included, it was mainly the entirety of the Buddha’s
teachings that was studied. Study and practice were combined
for the development of the mind.
Sera Monastery has two colleges: Sera Je, the college to
which I belong, and Sera Me. One of the abbots of Sera Je,
very learned and well-known in Tibet, was able to escape from
Tibet to India. This abbot had a cat. Usually when a cat sees
a mouse it immediately runs to attack it. That’s the
normal way a cat acts. Even though this cat had been killing
mice before, its mind changed once it came to stay with the
abbot and he started to take care of it. Even when a mouse
ran around the room, the cat would never attempt to catch
it. It would just stay relaxed.
This happened because a person’s development of mind
can affect the environment; it can transform the environment.
It stops negativities and transforms a negative environment
into a positive one. The negative energy of the environment
is transformed, and the negative thoughts of living beings
are transformed to become compassionate. It’s very important
to understand this point that a negative or positive environment
doesn’t come from its own side. It comes from the mind.
Whether an environment is negative or positive, harmful or
beneficial to health, is related to the minds of the people
living in that environment.
Excerpted from a talk Lama Zopa Rinpoche gave at Columbia
University, New York, September 6, 1990, and edited from the
Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive by Ven. Ailsa Cameron.
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