Sunday, December 4, 2011

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穷人与乞丐

有个穷人家乡闹灾,走投无路,投奔到一位有钱的远亲家里。这位远亲收留了他,让他帮忙打理花园里的花草,每个月给他一点报酬。
  
  穷人自恃是主人家的亲戚,和仆人不同。于是对其他仆人吆三喝六、很不招人喜欢。
  
  这一天,他指使仆人帮他修剪花枝,自己在边上指手画脚。突然一阵敲门声打断了他的话。他非常恼怒地去开门,门外一位衣衫褴褛的乞丐拿着一只破碗站在门口,祈求他给一点吃的。
  
  穷人看着乞丐,脸上露出鄙夷之色喝道:“去、去、瞧你这一身的恶臭,别弄脏了我这一园子花草。”说完硬把穷人推出门外,关上了大门。
  
  这一切都被远亲看在眼里,他惊讶的说:“你怎么可以这样对待穷苦的人,难道你忘了自己穷困潦倒的时候吗?”
  
  穷人不以为意地说:“那时候早过去了,现在生活这么安逸谁会去想那些。”
  
  远亲听完火冒三丈,一气之下把他赶出了家门,不久他身上的钱都花没了,只好沿街乞讨。
  
  有一天,他又冷又饿,整天没要到吃的,还被人放狗咬伤。他心灰意冷地躺在破庙里等死。这时候一位乞丐走了进来,他手里端着半碗剩菜饭。乞丐看见他凄惨的摸样,拿着他那半碗饭走到他的面前说:“嗨!兄弟饿了吧!这碗饭给你吃吧。”
  
  穷人抬起头,看出正是被自己推出门的乞丐,他别过羞红的脸说:“不,以前我对不住你,现在正是我接受报应的时候。”
  
  乞丐微笑地说:“哎!算了,谁还不能有个错,有错改了就好,何必记在心里。”说完乞丐硬把饭递给了他。
  
  穷人端着碗,眼泪啪嗒啪嗒地掉在了碗里,心里既惭愧又懊悔。
  
  后来穷人找了一份苦工,他时常把辛苦赚来的钱分给比他穷人,最终成为了众人眼里的大善人。

转载自:http://www.07938.com/zheligushi/201112/54610.html

Sunday, September 25, 2011

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善待自己的内心




一叶绿草与其热烈追求沙漠,倒不如去欣赏自己的春天

  

  有一个国王老年得女,将她视若掌上明珠,百般地疼爱。小公主美丽非常,也喜欢向国王撒娇,不时提出许多无理的要求,而国王都毫不犹豫地满足小公主的愿望。

  一场小雨过后,在花园里游玩的小公主无意间看到池面的水泡映着天光,闪着炫人的光彩,她被水泡的华美给迷住了。于是向国王表示,身上的珍珠项链不比水泡花蔓漂亮,要求国王给她一条水泡制成的花蔓。

  世间哪有水泡花蔓呢?可是不论国王怎么向公主说明,公主仍执意要得到水泡花蔓,还大发脾气,说:如果找不到美丽的水泡花蔓,我就永远不吃饭。

  国王明知小公主骄蛮无理,但是一想到绝食的小公主性命恐怕不保,心里着急得不得了,只好召来全国的工匠、艺术家,希望他们帮忙想个办法,捞起水泡,串成一条花蔓。所有的工匠、艺术家一致摇头,异口同声地说:水泡怎么可能做成花蔓呢?简直是天方夜谭。大家你一言我一语,直说不可能。其中,有个老工匠站出来说:尊敬的国王!我有办法把水泡做成花蔓。

  国王满心期待地找来小公主,小公主眼睛发亮,问:老公公,您真的能替我做一串水泡花蔓?

  老工匠微笑回答:现在我们一起到水池边,去做一条美丽的花蔓。

  王宫的花园水池旁,挤满了朝中的大臣们与上万的工匠,每个人都在忖测,要看看这个老工匠到底在玩什么把戏。

  老工匠对小公主说:公主,水面的泡泡很美,但是我不知道公主喜欢的花蔓是什么式样,请公主把水泡捞起来给我,我来串成花蔓。小公主捉着水里的泡泡,任凭她怎么紧抓,水泡还是从她的指缝间消失。当夕阳的余晖照在水面时,小公主终于有所体悟,知晓水上泡沫是捉捞不住的。

  小公主宁可舍命,苦苦地追逐梦幻泡影,其实,我们的生生世世又何尝比故事中的小公主聪明几分?诚如法眼文益禅师告诫世人的诗:艳冶随朝露,馨香逐晚风,何须待零落,然后始知空?当彻知世间有为的无常虚妄,收拾起多年的身心狼藉,才能见到内心原有一塘水碧连天的无限辽阔。

  谁缚了你?是我们迷于眼耳六根梦幻的假象,李白醉里捞月,我们不也是经常如此吗?只要令我们恋着,身心不得自由,都是一场水泡花蔓的逐云追梦。


转载自:http://www.xiaogushi.com/Article/yuyan/20110830104934.htm

Thursday, August 18, 2011

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煩惱一樣多



每个人都有自己的烦恼,与其把时间花在埋怨那些烦恼有多繁重,不如好好地利用那段时间,积极面对和解决问题。
这样,自己不但能从烦恼中学习以及领悟一些新的道理,而且生活也会过得充实,过得快乐。

Monday, August 8, 2011

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尊重与包容

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得不到和已失去


从前,有一座圆音寺,每天都有许多人上香拜佛,香火很旺。在圆音寺庙前的横梁上有个蜘蛛结了张网,由于每天都受到香火和虔诚的祭拜的熏托,蛛蛛便有了佛性。经过了一千多年的修炼,蛛蛛佛性增加了不少。

  忽然有一天,佛主光临了圆音寺,看见这里香火甚旺,十分高兴。离开寺庙的时候,不轻易间地抬头,看见了横梁上的蛛蛛。佛主停下来,问这只蜘蛛:“你我相见总算是有缘,我来问你个问题,看你修炼了这一千多年来,有什么真知拙见。怎么样?”蜘蛛遇见佛主很是高兴,连忙答应了。佛主问到:“世间什么才是最珍贵的?”蜘蛛想了想,回答到:“世间最珍贵的是‘得不到’和‘已失去’。”佛主点了点头,离开了。

  就这样又过了一千年的光景,蜘蛛依旧在圆音寺的横梁上修炼,它的佛性大增。一日,佛主又来到寺前,对蜘蛛说道:“你可还好,一千年前的那个问题,你可有什么更深的认识吗?”蜘蛛说:“我觉得世间最珍贵的是‘得不到’和‘已失去’。”佛主说:“你再好好想想,我会再来找你的。”

  又过了一千年,有一天,刮起了大风,风将一滴甘露吹到了蜘蛛网上。蜘蛛望着甘露,见它晶莹透亮,很漂亮,顿生喜爱之意。蜘蛛每天看着甘露很开心,它觉得这是三千年来最开心的几天。突然,有刮起了一阵大风,将甘露吹走了。蜘蛛一下子觉得失去了什么,感到很寂寞和难过。这时佛主又来了,问蜘蛛:“蜘蛛这一千年,你可好好想过这个问题:世间什么才是最珍贵的?”蜘蛛想到了甘露,对佛主说:“世间最珍贵的是‘得不到’和‘已失去’。”佛主说:“好,既然你有这样的认识,我让你到人间走一朝吧。”

  就这样,蜘蛛投胎到了一个官宦家庭,成了一个富家小姐,父母为她取了个名字叫蛛儿。一晃,蛛儿到了十六岁了,已经成了个婀娜多姿的少女,长的十分漂亮,楚楚动人。
  这一日,新科状元郎甘鹿中士,皇帝决定在后花园为他举行庆功宴席。来了许多妙龄少女,包括蛛儿,还有皇帝的小公主长风公主。状元郎在席间表演诗词歌赋,大献才艺,在场的少女无一不被他折倒。但蛛儿一点也不紧张和吃醋,因为她知道,这是佛主赐予她的姻缘。

  过了些日子,说来很巧,蛛儿陪同母亲上香拜佛的时候,正好甘鹿也陪同母亲而来。上完香拜过佛,二位长者在一边说上了话。蛛儿和甘鹿便来到走廊上聊天,蛛儿很开心,终于可以和喜欢的人在一起了,但是甘鹿并没有表现出对她的喜爱。蛛儿对甘鹿说:“你难道不曾记得十六年前,圆音寺的蜘蛛网上的事情了吗?”甘鹿很诧异,说:“蛛儿姑娘,你漂亮,也很讨人喜欢,但你想象力未免丰富了一点吧。”说罢,和母亲离开了。

  蛛儿回到家,心想,佛主既然安排了这场姻缘,为何不让他记得那件事,甘鹿为何对我没有一点的感觉?

  几天后,皇帝下召,命新科状元甘鹿和长风公主完婚;蛛儿和太子芝草完婚。这一消息对蛛儿如同晴空霹雳,她怎么也想不同,佛主竟然这样对她。几日来,她不吃不喝,穷究急思,灵魂就将出壳,生命危在旦夕。太子芝草知道了,急忙赶来,扑倒在床边,对奄奄一息的蛛儿说道:“那日,在后花园众姑娘中,我对你一见钟情,我苦求父皇,他才答应。如果你死了,那么我也就不活了。”说着就拿起了宝剑准备自刎。

  就在这时,佛主来了,他对快要出壳的蛛儿灵魂说:“蜘蛛,你可曾想过,甘露(甘鹿)是由谁带到你这里来的呢?是风(长风公主)带来的,最后也是风将它带走的。甘鹿是属于长风公主的,他对你不过是生命中的一段插曲。而太子芝草是当年圆音寺门前的一棵小草,他看了你三千年,爱慕了你三千年,但你却从没有低下头看过它。蜘蛛,我再来问你,世间什么才是最珍贵的?”蜘蛛听了这些真相之后,好象一下子大彻大吾了,她对佛主说:“世间最珍贵的不是‘得不到’和‘已失去’,而是现在能把握的幸福。”刚说完,佛主就离开了,蛛儿的灵魂也回位了,睁开眼睛,看到正要自刎的太子芝草,她马上打落宝剑,和太子深深的抱着……

  故事结束了,你能领会蛛儿最后一刻的所说的话吗?“世间最珍贵的不是‘得不到’和‘已失去’,而是现在能把握的幸福。”

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

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假如真的有佛,你损失了什么?


多年前有个中国的学者。一天,他在某大会场向人们讲佛祖绝对不可能存在。

当听众感觉他言之有理时,他便高声向佛祖挑战说:“佛祖假如你果真有灵,请你下来,在这广大的群众面前把我杀死,我们便相信你是存在的了!”他故意静静地等候了几分钟,当然佛祖没有下来杀死他。他便左顾右盼地向听众说:“你们都看见了,佛祖根本不存在!”

怎知有一位妇人,头上裹着一条盘巾,站起来对他说:“先生,你的理论很高明,你是个饱学之士。我只是一个农村妇人,不能向你反驳,只想请你回答我心中的一个问题:我信奉佛多年以来,心中有了佛的教诲,十分快乐;我心中充满佛给我的安慰;因为信奉佛,人生有了最大的快乐。请问:假如我死时发现佛所教诲我的一切根本不存在,我这一辈子信奉佛,会损失了什么呢?”

学者想了好一会儿,全场寂静无声,听众也很同意农村妇人的推理,连学者也惊叹好单纯的逻辑,他低声回答:“女士,我想你一点儿损失也没有。”

农村妇人又向学者说道:“谢谢你这样好的回答。我心中还有一个问题:当你死的时候,假如你发现佛的教诲是千真万确的,也有六道轮回的存在和超出六道佛土的存在,我想请问,你损失了什么?”学者想了许久,竟无言以对。

转载自http://www.xuefo.net/show1_68556.htm

Saturday, July 16, 2011

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鼓励的话


每次开会,都有许多经验想向你们分享,
但因为时间关系,都忘了要怎么说。

佛学会最近出了些状况,相信大家都心里有数。

我不擅言语,但希望接下来的这些话,大家都听得懂。

有句禅语是这么说的,“烦恼即菩提”。
如何转烦恼为菩提,就看你如何运心转境,将所谓的麻烦和不幸转变成,成功的因。

比如说与其悲叹会员不足,而裹足不前,
倒不如设法积极解决眼前问题。

失败并不可怕,可怕的是害怕失败。

我们在日常生活中都讨厌麻烦,
但偏偏办活动就是少不了麻烦,
而偏偏我们也从这些麻烦中体验及学习到最多。

凡事皆有因缘,往往就是这些麻烦成就了我们。

佛教的因果,推翻了命运是注定及无法改变的说法,
因为我们知道没有一样东西是无端端地出现在那里,事出必有其因。

办活动不必太在乎成败,对我而言,只要大家真的尽力了,问心无愧,那就已经是最大的成功了。

即使是只有六个人出席又如何?与其坐在那里叹气佛学会活动难办,
倒不如认真探讨错在了哪里,到底是哪里出错了?怎么通知了会员却没人肯出席?

时间表有冲突吗?那好,下次办活动时再注意便是,
办了一个活动,即使只有一个人来,那就当作接引一个人吧。

如果你认真地对这个人讲解,他真的欢喜了,下次可能会带更多的朋友来,
这些人即使毕业了,出来社会工作了,也会把这法喜与更多人分享,惠及更多人,
这才是我们办佛学会真正的目的,弘扬佛法,利益众生。

妙赞法师曾经在我们学会筹办展览会最艰难的时期,
对我们说过这么一番话,
只要你决定了去做,就别再犹豫了,别被自己空想象的恐惧和困难给摧毁了你要做的事情,
放手去做,问题来了就解决,没什么大不了的,
往往我们的恐惧和自己想象的困难,都比现实的大得多。

执委们,别让自己心里的恐惧,折服了大家的决心,
勇敢地去做,哪怕结果如何,至少你不会给自己生命留下任何遗憾。

当你真的积极起来的时候,你会发现到前路开阔了许多,
你会发现自己之前所定义的“我已经尽力了”是多么地微不足道,
因为原来还有许多等待你去挖掘的机会和资源,都曾经被你的悲观给蒙蔽了。

我知道这些话,帮不了多少,如果它只是停留在这里,被读过就遗忘了,
也是于是无补。

因为最终还是要依赖大家的群策群力,去办好佛学会,
只有行动才可以产生结果,并解决眼前的问题。

一路走来,佛学会都面对过许多危机,但也走到今天了,
我相信佛法的慧灯还会在我们学院继续传承下去。


最后,有请那些认真读完并思考的人,给自己一个热烈的掌声!:D


祐益

Saturday, April 23, 2011

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感恩

终于卸下了主席的重担,职务也总算顺利地移交了给新的执委们。

之前很开心收到Nicholas的信息说在学院图书馆遇见了新的执委团在召开会议,
而且出席人数也有超过十个人。

再看看会议报告,和淑君对这次会议的陈诉,
看见了执委们对于办活动的热诚,心里感到百般的欣慰。

感恩淑君及众新任执委们愿意接下这责任继续让佛法得以传承,
让更多年轻人可以接触佛法并从中受惠。

看到新任执委团这么强大的团队,我相信你们肯定会做得比我们之前更有声有色。


或许大家会心里嘀咕自己的佛学底子不强,在佛学会担任职位似乎会有点不适合,
但只要有心去学习,一切都不怕迟。

还记得以前工作,有个律师曾经和我们说过这么一句话,
“与其说我不懂,倒不如说这些正是我想学懂的事情”。

我本身在和Kenn创立佛学会时,对佛法可以说是一窍不通,
什么是三拜,什么是三宝,我都不懂,
一切的一切都是一路走过,学过来的。


希望大家可以籍活动为一个让大家得以快乐成长的平台,
不只在学业上有过人的成就,在心灵上也得到一定程度的成长。


愿 慧灯永续 法轮常转


祐益

Sunday, April 10, 2011

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Engaging with the Buddha – 1 April 2011 Q&A with Geshe Tenzin Zopa

Engaging with the Buddha – 1 April 2011 Q&A with Geshe Tenzin Zopa on the screening of the documentary “Decoding the Past” on the subject of Death-Bardo-Rebirth

1. After death and during the bardo (the intermeditate state between death and rebirth), does the consciousness choose its own future parents or does it depend on karma?
Ans: For most ordinary people, it will depend on their karma; but for those practitioners who can control their emotions and minds, they will be able to direct themselves towards their future parents while in the bardo.

2. How does powa work? Do we perform this when person passes away?
Ans: In Tibetan Buddhism, there is a practice called powa, where the dying person is assisted through meditation and prayer to a higher rebirth including the Purelands. The best time to do powa is after clinical death (when the gross body ceases) and before spiritual death (when the consciousness departs the body). When a dying person is no longer breathing and all the organs have shut down but yet, there is still some warmth at the spot below middle of chest and no fluids have as yet been discharged from nose or secret parts, this indicates clinical death but not spiritual death (i.e. the consciousness has not yet left the body) – that is the best time to do powa. There are various powa practices which come from the Tantric teachings – e.g. powa in relation to Amitabha Buddha or powa in relation to a Highest Yoga Tantra Buddha-deity like Vajryogini, Yamantaka, etc.. Commissioning the recitation of texts like the Tibetan Book of the Dead (Bardo Thodol) is also a form of powa practice. If one doesn’t get the chance to perform powa at the ideal time, powa can be done during bardo period. If that’s not possible, then doing so after 49 days can still be done but it will not be as effective as when done during the period between clinical death and spiritual death. Through the dedication of merit of such powerful practices, it can benefit the dec’d in the bardo state or even if the dec’d has been reborn, the conditions of wherever the person has been reborn can be improved.

3. If there is no Buddhist master around to do powa, how can we help?
Ans: To perform powa, one requires an initiation from a master who has high realisations on such practices; one should then do retreats in relation to the practice and to be of benefit to the dec’d, the person doing the powa practice should have some level of realisation (at least stable compassion). However, just dedicating one’s prayers –Chenresig Mantra, Medicine Buddha mantra etc... can be of great benefit to the dec’d because prayer dedications influence the mental imprints of the dec’d person.

4. According to the documentary, the Bardo has several stages – from seeing peaceful deities to wrathful deities. Where does throwing karma come in?
Ans: Throwing karma refers to where one is reborn – whether in the suffering lower realms and or in the higher realms. The first stage of the bardo is where the bardo being is influenced by hallucinations based on desire (hence, that consciousness tends to see peaceful yet desirous images). If one gets attached to such images, one’s desire will be enhanced and this will create another formation of karma – so if the dead person was supposed to take rebirth as human being but during bardo was strongly distracted by attachment, it could divert his rebirth into a preta being (a grasping suffering existence). So what one should do when encountering desirous images is that one should tell oneself that these images are mere objects of illusion, so there is no reason to be attached to the images. Instead, think that those images are Guru Vajrasattva or Guru Heruka with Vajrayogini. One can see from this that if one has stable practice in Highest Yoga Tantra, that will help one to perceive the Buddha mother-father deities rather than see ordinary desirous beings – and this could change your rebirth from ordinary human rebirth but into a Pureland rebirth. As for wrathful deities, those images can be quite scary and might trigger fear and agitation in one’s consciousness, which again could affect the realm of rebirth. Through being familiar with Buddhist wrathful deities, one understands that such wrathful images are to subdue negative emotions and not to harm oneself – in this way, when one encounters such images, one’s fear and anger can be transformed into a positive mind. Further, one will see many colours in the bardo state but by understanding emptiness, one realises that all are illusions and this brings the excited or fearful mind back into a calm state and use that calm-mind as a basis for virtuous thoughts and if one is unable to do that, one will at least by hearing prayers being recited, remember the Dharma and this will be a positive influence on one’s future rebirth. This illustrates that while we are alive, we should practice Dharma ourselves and not only rely on family members to help us with that. The Bardo Thodol explains that Yama (Lord of Death) is also a mere hallucination and there is no actual being there to take your life and cause you to suffer. By hearing prayers, the hallucinated mind of the bardo-being will disappear and when that happens, Yama, fear, suffering disappears. The conclusion is that everything is dependent on one’s mind. In terms of the type of prayers to be recited, it will depend on the individual – Buddhist masters often advise to recite the prayer that the dec’d person is most familiar with – e.g. if that person was familiar with Amitabha Buddha prayers, then recite prayers related to Amitabha for him/her. Generally, what is recommended are the 8 great Prayers (which includes the King of Prayers); Prayers related to Maitreya’s Dedications; Shantideva’s Dedication Prayer from the Dedication Chapter of Bodhicaryavatara, Maitreya Buddha’s mantra. Any sutras.

5. Kyabe Lama Zopa Rinpoche advises us to teach children about death. How do we do this for other family members?
Ans: It is a very challenging task. Some people think it is inauspicious to talk about death and some people have strong grasping to death or simply deny death and are thus unwilling to listen/discuss this subject matter. Rinpoche’s teachings constantly remind us about impermanence and death; the Buddha’s first teaching was about impermanence and death and it was his last teaching as well and in-between, this subject was frequently raised. The reason for it is for us to understand well and be fully prepared to overcome death.

6. For people who follow other/different religions, do they experience the bardo too?
Ans: Everyone (any samsaric being) will experience the bardo and its stages but the intensity of the images will depend on the imprints in that person’s mind. If the person had more negative imprints, the fearful quality of the images will be heavier; if the person had more virtuous imprints, the fearful experiences will be lighter. For the successful practitioners, they too go through the stages but they won’t see the images as frightening nor disturbing but feel joy instead. For non-Buddhists, they might have different explanations about death, based on their own understanding and philosophy. Some don’t even believe in rebirth or the bardo. What the Buddha and the realised beings saw was the death process as what was shown here. We need to think and choose a source that is reliable – for us, we choose what the Buddha described as his experience.

7. It was mentioned in the documentary that it is good to be born human because due to the suffering experienced, we will learn from it. Is it better to be born human or in Purelands?
Ans: The best is to be enlightened before death comes; next best is to be born in the Purelands to continue/complete one’s Dharma cultivation; next is the precious human rebirth where one can also continue/complete one’s Dharma cultivation.

8. Is Pureland in 6 realms?
Ans: Pureland is above (and outside) the 6 realms but it is not necessarily an enlightened state, as there are ordinary beings of great virtue who created causes to be born there but they still need to complete their training.

9. If a deceased person is not guided by any prayers and enters into the bardo state and encounters Yama, what happens?
Ans: Even if there were no prayers recited for such a person, if that person had cultivated during his/her lifetime, that cultivation will be the best form of guidance to the consciousness in the bardo. Of course, if one did not practice at all and there are no prayers recited for him/her, then there is the danger of being born in the lower realms. It is not necessary for all deceased beings to encounter Yama. It depends on one’s karma and mental imprints. (See above Answer to Q6)

10. Bardo period is said to last for a max. of 49 days (7x of 7 days periods) . Are these bardo stages “tests”?
Ans: In the bardo, one is meeting the result (of one’s karma); the “test” was during one’s life! If one had good practice during life, the difficulties in the bardo will be overcome. All images will be seen and understood as mere hallucinations. Not everyone has to experience those images in the bardo. For the great practitioners, instead of seeing peaceful and wrathful deities, the entire bardo experience is a wonderful, grand procession of dakas and dakinis (“angel”- like beings). In terms of speeding up rebirth, if one has very heavy negative karma, the bardo experiences become very intense and there would be no need to wait for 49 days – the images can appear right after death and the bardo-being (the consciousness of the deceased person) then enters the hell realm very quickly.

11. Just before my grandmother passed away, she saw holy beings coming and music. What does this mean?
Ans: That sounds like a good sign because if at the time of death, one has images of Buddhas, holy beings, it shows the consciousness has positive imprints and will thus have a positive bardo experience and a possibility of high rebirth. Although all images at death time are hallucinations, such images helps to bring the mind into calm and virtue and thus activates past good karmic imprints and this increases the chance of a good rebirth.

12. Is it true that everyone who has the chance to come here means that they have good karma from the past and also have the chance to be enlightened. For newcomers here, what kind of practice must they do?
Ans: As long as one wishes to be free from the samsaric world and gain enlightenment, one has to practice the 3 principal aspects of the path namely renunciation, bodhicitta and wisdom realising emptiness.

13. It is said that one needs to chant Amitabha prayer 10x before dying; sometimes someone at point of dying remembers the Amitabha prayer once.
Ans: Yes but one needs a strong foundation to even remember that prayer once. Without cultivation, just reciting mantra would not be enough. Otherwise, Buddha wouldn’t have given 84k teachings, he would have just given one mantra. To be born in Pureland, also not easy. The 3 principal aspects of the path.

14. My loved ones are not Buddhists but Christians – what can I do to help them when they pass away ?
Ans: There is no need to chant Buddhist prayers at that time. As one is interdependent with sentient beings, one should engage in virtues and dedicate it to them.

15. In the documentary shown, if one has more negative karma than positive karma at death-time, can one still obtain a precious human rebirth?
Ans: Yes, on one condition – if one can strengthen one’s past virtuous imprints through your own remembrance of virtue at that time or obtain the family’s help in helping you remember virtue. Doing so, it doesn’t mean all of one’s negative karma will be purified but it will create conducive conditions for you to gain a higher rebirth.

16. How does practice of Highest Yoga Tantra (HYT) benefit us at bardo stage?
Ans: HYT has most detailed and profound teaching on the 3 bodies of the Buddha (the 3 kayas). Dharmakaya (Buddha’s wisdom) practice is the most effective in overcoming conventional/relative death; sambogakaya (Buddha’s form visible to only bodhisattvas) practice is the most elaborate practice to overcome conventional/relative intermediate state and actualise higher rebirth or even enlightenment. Nirmanakaya (Buddha’s form visible to ordinary beings) practice serves sentient beings directly. The 3 kayas practice can be used at death time. But this can only be done if one has a firm understanding of the 3 principal aspects of the path and strong guru devotion. One can engage in the causal stage of enlightenment (through self-generation practice) and by remaining in that concentration of divine pride, by focusing all thoughts on the mandala and the deities therein, there will not be even one single space for hallucination or negative emotions to attack oneself. Due to this sustained practice, one will be able to secure one’s rebirth in the higher realms or even attain the enlightened state itself. The Guruyoga practice of seeing oneself, one’s Guru and the Buddha-deity (yidam) as inseparable, is one of the most forceful powa, to transfer consciousness from this suffering state into the enlightenment state. However, many senior practitioners find the meditation on 3 kayas quite challenging as death approaches because one’s body is weakened at that time and the gross mind is declining, making it difficult to remember fine details. Hence for some practitioners, visualising the self, Guru and Yidam as one, is an easier method to use as one approaches death. Once, I met a very senior monk from Tsum - who was over 80 years old and who had a great understanding of Lam Rim and Vajrayogini practices. I visited him as he was dying and he shared his experience of the difficulty of meditating on the 3 kayas due to his physical weakness, which was somehow affecting his energy and ability to remember all aspects of the practice and thus he felt quite disappointed. So I shared with him the advice that Geshe Lama Konchog (GLK) had told a elder monk at Kopan, Geshe Kechog. This old Geshe asked GLK how to condense one’s Dharma/meditative practices when one approaches death and was physically and mentally very weak. GLK advised, “Keep your mind, your Guru’s mind and Yidam’s mind in a state of oneness”. If one is not convinced about HYT practice or that it is too difficult, then one can close one’s eyes and think that whatever light sense in the eye is in fact the fused/joined state of one’s mind with that of one’s Guru and Yidam as one; then as one gets weaker, transfer your mind with the thought that one is already in the enlightenment state. Summary - 1. Familiarise yourself with the thought that oneself, one’s Guru and Buddha-deity are in oneness (if you haven’t taken any HYT initiation, then just visualise oneself as being one with one’s Guru). 2. Think of the light as one’s fused state (oneself, Guru, Buddha as one) 3. Tell yourself that you’re already in the enlightened state (of omniscience, purity and virtue) The above practice is from the HYT tantra. Kriya tantra and Performance tantra don’t have this practice.

17. If a person dies in an accident or disasters or through sudden death or in sleep, how will that person be able to generate a virtuous thought as the last thought?
Ans: It might be difficult although still possible. Those situations are not an ideal way to die. Death in conditions of shock can sometimes cause the person to be born as a spirit (preta realm) but if the person is well-practiced, then a good rebirth is still possible e.g. some Lamas die in accidents but due to their level of practice, they still gain higher rebirths. If one dies with much pain, attachment or anger towards one’s own body or others, it will be difficult to obtain a good rebirth; if one dies without thought at all, it will be a waste because death-time can be a good opportunity to practice and use it to gain a higher rebirth. The End of Q&A **Transcripts of each Engaging with the Buddha session are available on LDC’s website www.fpmt-ldc.org

Saturday, April 9, 2011

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Foundation of All Good Qualities Verse – Geshe Tenzin Zopa

The meaning of life is to develop the compassionate heart. The best gift to oneself, parents, to loved ones, to enemies, is compassion. The most beneficial is the great compassion that is un-biased and wanting all sentient beings to be free from suffering and the causes of suffering (which are the delusions – anger, attachment and ignorance). If one can live in compassion for one minute, it becomes so meaningful; if one can live with this attitude for one year, that whole year is meaningful; if one can do so for the rest of your life, one’s whole life is meaningful. People are difficult sentient beings.
We understand that compassion is good, attractive, brilliant and brings much happiness but we don’t put effort to become compassionate persons. So, we need some kind of alarm, a reminder and that reminder is today’s subject of death and impermanence. This is regarded as part of the supreme Dharma. Buddha taught many teachings and gave 84k teachings after he actualised enlightenment – amongst the key teachings was on death and impermanence; at the end when he passed away, he taught again on death and impermanence. His teachings on compassion and high wisdom all revolved around death and impermanence.
Death is the loudest alarm bell to us to practice Dharma. Why? Because Dharma is the only solution to free us from the entire aspect of suffering. V3 Foundation of All Good Qualities: The verse begins with “ This life is as impermanent as a water bubble”. The example given is the water bubble – you see it and almost immediately, it disappears. The nature of our life and our whole environment is in the nature of impermanence. Remember how quickly it decays and death comes – not just outer objects and surroundings but our own lives are likewise short and impermanent; we believe that we will live up to tomorrow; up to the end of this session, don’t we? In fact, all lie in the nature of impermanence – maybe there is no chance of life beyond this moment or beyond this night. We conclude life, with death.
After death, like a shadow following the body, only our karmic imprints will follow us on our journey from the present life to the next life. Even though there are people who do not believe that there is a next life, the fact remains that consciousness continues from this life to the next. As long as consciousness continues, karma will follow us, just like there is no separation between a body and it shadow. What is meant by the karma will follow? Negative and positive karma, good karma and bad karma; action which is the cause for suffering or the cause for happiness, will follow us through our consciousness. That way it determines our destination/the realm of rebirth. What karma brings happy rebirth? Good karma or merit. Bad karma refers to harmful actions, thoughts, harmful speech bring negative results of suffering rebirth in the lower realms.
Why is the subject of death and impermanence important and urgent for us to understand? The thing is, whether we follow a religion or not, Buddhist or not, the plain fact is that everyone fears death. When we hear about someone dying, we feel uneasy. When we encounter any form of heavy sickness, we have some sense of fear that this might cause death. This is because we know we are no different from them. We start to think “This might happen to me”. Our fear may be obvious or hidden. There are those of us who have no understanding of impermanence or momentary transitions and so, we cling to the permanence of life. Due to this mistaken idea of permanence, we establish many activities on the basis that one will live long life; we enter into relationships with the idea of it being forever; we start a business with the hope it will last and bring in only profit and no loss; we focus on our bodies and engage in activities with the idea that we can make this body always youthful and strong. We grasp onto these ideas which contain some concept of permanence.
On top of that, we have the permanent idea that death is something distant, never thinking that death can come in the very next moment. Even if we don’t think we will live forever, we do think that one will live a long time. Again, a kind of clinging to “permanence”. These are all completely mistaken thoughts. When changes come, then our suffering begins. We have a strong belief in health, so when even small sicknesses come, we suffer. Whereas if we think of impermanence and death as part of life, when those things happen, it doesn’t injure our minds so much. When relationships fall apart, we suffer. We suffer because we have the idea of permanence. Hence, the teaching on impermanence is such a valuable instruction to free us from the frequent tortures of ordinary life and allows us to meet each day with appreciation and happiness.
For non believers or those who have no idea of karma, they are scared of death because when death approaches, it brings the fear of separation from those “permanent” ideas and expectations; it brings the exhaustion of all that is familiar. So even non-believers fear death. Yet, they fear death in a meaningless, superstitious way. For Dharma practitioners, their fear of death is based on understanding how cause and effect works and this makes them practice harder. For non believers who don’t have practice, they fear because they cannot face the separation from life, from relationships and from the world which they perceive with their gross senses and which is dependent on their physical body. So they cannot accept that after death, there is no longer any bodily-sensation nor living in a mansion nor driving a nice car nor eating nasi lemak anymore. Non believers suffer the most when thinking about death. And when actual death comes, it brings intense suffering for them.
Without knowledge about death, their minds becomes blank at death, as if entering into total darkness and hopelessness. That’s a fact. For Buddhists and those followers of faiths who believe in next rebirth, in numberless rebirths, either in samsara or beyond samsara, they know that rebirth will occur. But you might say that spiritual practitioners also fear death. Yes, it’s a natural feeling but the main difference is that there is a belief in the continuation of consciousness; that life goes on and on, which in turn is dependent on imprints from actions we commit.
The practitioner fears death because he simply does not know where he will be reborn. This type of fear of death is useful because it helps us to prepare for death, which in turn means preparing for next rebirth. If we are well-prepared for death, we will be well-prepared for next rebirth. “Well-prepared” means accumulating all the good causes to ensure that death is a happy death, one without regret, a journey to be looked forward to and not dreaded. This happens when one has a lot of merit and virtuous imprints. However, that depends on the present and what we do. If we cultivate or engage in virtue, non-harmful actions and compassion, for sure our death will be a happy one because we know that we have created the causes for a better future rebirth and because of that we are so excited!
Therefore, for Buddhist practitioner, fearing death based on reasons and logic, is good. We need to teach students to gain a sense of fear of death in order to encourage the student to cultivate virtue so as to ensure that death is a happy journey and next life is a happy rebirth. z In order for us to appreciate that, in this moment, right now, we need to understand the impermanent nature of life, as illustrated by the process of life and death. The Buddha and Lama Tsongkhapa taught that death is certain, time of death is uncertain and at the time of death, nothing can help us except Dharma.
When we first came into this world, we came alone and when we leave, we leave alone. What accompanies us is karma/imprints of actions of body, speech and mind. Some people study well but end up with bad jobs; some didn’t study well at all but end up having good jobs; some put effort to being healthy and yet fall sick and the like. This is because karma follows us. It is all due to individual karma one commits and is not due to parents. If there were no karma operating, then 3 children from the same parents should be similar in many ways but we know this is not true. This is because of the karma committed by each one in the past. As we are responsible for our own karma, likewise our enlightenment is also dependent on ourselves; lower realm rebirth or higher realm rebirth is also dependent on ourselves. Human beings can be very difficult.
Even though there are many examples of impermanence out there – e.g. we know that Buddha came, Jesus came and many great saints came to this world – all of them have passed away. This illustrates impermanence. Rich and powerful people with many guards, have all perished without any ability to sustain their lives. We will not be an exception, to be able to live forever. Death is certain. By knowing this, we need to put effort into cultivating Dharma and compassion to secure our future. Time of death is uncertain. A healthy person can suddenly pass away, whilst a very sick person continues to struggle and survive. Some ICU patients recover, whilst those on holiday can pass away suddenly.
We believe that old age is nearer to death than the young ones. This is not the case. Many young people die before the old. Some babies die in the womb. There is no certainty in life. Being healthy today is not a guarantee of being alive tomorrow. Thinking that “ I’m a Buddhist practitioner and protected, so I won’t die tomorrow”, that too is not a valid reason. “Malaysia is safe, not like in Japan with earthquakes and tsunamis” - that too is not valid reason to think that one will live till tomorrow. Rich people living in good houses might die before the beggar on the street. Some people while walking, just pass away; even while sleeping, some pass away. There is no valid basis to prove that one will live beyond the next moment. This shows that the nature of life is one of impermanence.
We don’t see the subtle degeneration occurring within us. We don’t even notice how morning has become night. We are simply not aware of momentary changes. These are all examples of impermanence. We don’t have such awareness and as such, our minds give rise to our assumptions of permanence, which will lead us to disappointment. Thus, it is more beneficial to cultivate the understanding of impermanence, rather than numb ourselves to the mistaken concept of permanence. As there is no certainty about life, health nor wealth, we should resolve to live meaningfully this present moment, every single moment. Then, even if one lives only 1 hour more, that 1 hour is rich with meaning. Perfect. Live every single present moment cultivating compassion, then when death comes, there is no regret and one will have peaceful death and a happy rebirth.
By making every moment meaningful, even if we happen to pass away 100 years later, that would be even better because we would have accumulated virtue over a long period of time. At the time of death, only Dharma can help. This statement is very true because no matter how much one may have accumulated in terms of possessions, without any training of mind, when sickness comes (not to mention death), one cannot accept it well and one suffers so much. Instead, when we are sick, we can make use of sickness to practice e.g. generating compassion for sentient beings or generate the thought that “May my sickness be sufficient to exhaust all the suffering of sentient beings”. When your mind is transformed that way, one suffers less.
If you happen to live your life cultivating compassion, then when death comes, you won’t mind death because you have the conviction that one’s consciousness will continue and that as you have lived a meaningful life, you have the causes and confidence that you will have higher rebirth and born into good family, have good conditions to continue living in virtue. You will even have a smile on your face at death time. Good practitioners gain excitement as they approach death and face death with a sense of confidence and joy. As a minimum, one should aim to die without regret. If you live a life with compassion, there will definitely be no regrets at the end of one’s life.
Such confidence and contentment is very needed at the time of death. Otherwise, the suffering will be intense and one’s mind filled with confusion and delusion – there are many types - first will be the fear of separation from one’s family or wealth. Some dying people don’t worry about themselves but worry for their spouses like whether they will remarry and such irrelevant thoughts at death-time. It is not good to have such clinging – when dying with attachment to wealth or people, the mind is in danger of coming back as a wandering spirit (they are one of the categories of preta beings). When a person dies, his consciousness enters the intermediate state (bardo) before taking rebirth. If a consciousness is destined for a preta rebirth and dies with strong clinging to a person or possessions, they can be swayed and become wandering spirits which return to once again be attached to the object of attachment. Sometimes, such spirits enter into animals.
In Tibet, there was a master who was attached to the small collection of money that he had and had buried it in a hole near his retreat hut, fearing his attendant would steal it. He attendant didn’t know about the hidden money in the hole behind the retreat hut. When this master died, the attendant went to check with another master about where his deceased master had been reborn. He thought his master would be reborn as a high reincarnation.
However, it was revealed that his master was hanging around the retreat hut as a wandering spirit, which had entered into a frog to guard the small pouch of money buried there. The attendant wanted to find out more, so he went to check the area near the retreat hut and true enough, he saw a small dug-out hole that had been covered up. When he cleared this hole of soil, he saw a frog perched on the pouch of money inside this hole, guarding it. That frog was the deceased master’s reincarnation. This was due to that master’s clinging to his money at the time of death, so his consciousness went into a frog who proceeded to return to the pouch of money, as that was his object of attachment. I also remember that in my village, there was an old man who lived in a local temple. We used to see him chanting on his own.
The moment he saw anyone, he would scold. He always recited the mantra but without compassion. He had lent a brass pot to my father. My father forgot to return it. The old man passed away. After that my father started to get sick and there was no cure. The sickness seemed unusual as his sickness would manifest after sunset. He even went to Tibet to see a doctor but couldn’t find the cause for the sickness. One day, he was so sick that he almost died and when his spiritual condition was declining, he would see images of people coming in through the door, calling him to join them. He was very weak but he could identify the names of those people, who were spirit forms wanting his life.
Later, someone noticed the brass pot that belonged to the deceased old man. Because the old man didn’t let go of the brass pot, came back to interfere with my father’s life. While he was alive, the old man liked my father a lot but it is said that wandering spirits don’t realise that by merely thinking about the living-person can cause them to fall ill. They don’t realise the harmful effect they have on the living. When the puja was done, some calm returned and father improved but the cow died. In the end my father died. The point is that if one doesn’t let go of attachments, if one doesn’t detach the mind from them, one can become a wandering spirit. So it is very important for us to accept impermanence; accepting death and letting go. See how strong the mind is – if you think of the pot, you become wandering spirit; if you think of Amitabha, you go to the Pureland.
Hence it is so important to have a virtuous mind at death. When facing death, think of Dharma, think of Buddha, it will help so much. Even when we are sick, think of Buddha. When people are dying, likewise, think of Buddha, everything else will be taken care of. The mind can be so powerful. In my family, there were 6 children. My mother was a simple woman. My father was a trader. He even sold sewing needles to exchange for rice etc.. When he died, the youngest brother was born the same day and father died the day that baby was born. Father couldn’t let go and would have died worrying about the family but from a spiritual point of view, it is harmful to cling in that manner.
Even though the thoughts had concern, care and conventional love, that kind of love was mixed with attachment and thus, father became a spirit and returned home. All the children started to fall ill. The spirit doesn’t know that he is harming them and returned to help in some way but instead, caused their illness. So there is a practice called Jangwa to purify the consciousness of a deceased by showing Dharma to it. My late master Geshe Lama Konchog knew all this was happening and came to my village, despite it being many days’ walk. I was then at the monastery but still very young. All my other siblings were likewise young. Geshe Lama Konchog walked day and night to reach my family home.
He later revealed that he was able to see many spirits attached to their loved ones in the village or attached to their possessions and all the dogs in the village were barking and howling and seemingly wanting to bite invisible forms. Geshe Lama Konchog saw so many suffering dead people who couldn’t let go and had mixed up true love with samsaric love and causing harm to their families. Next day, Geshe Lama Konchog asked whole village to bring the names of all the deceased and he performed Jangwa, based on compassion and gave Refuge and showing them the Dharma path. That night itself, the whole village went quiet. Geshe Lama Konchog then started to teach about the faults of attachment and encouraged everyone to to focus on Buddha. After that puja, mother recovered the very next morning. The conclusion is that at the time of death, it is most crucial to be mindful of virtue and never cling to loved ones or one’s millions of dollars or beautiful possessions. All have to be let go.

1) Q: How to prepare for death ? Ans: We have to make our life meaningful. Right now, our negative imprints are stronger than our virtues. If at the time of death, our virtuous imprints are weak, that will make death difficult and a good rebirth also difficult. Hence every day, one should cultivate good heart, emptiness mind, deity yoga mind.

2) Q: Recently, someone below my condo unit committed suicide. I am now afraid and don’t know what to do. Ans: Be like me, very stubborn. Go back home forget everything and only think of Buddha. First, I would make myself realise that there is no benefit of having fearful thoughts and resolve to set up a powerful positive mind (thinking of Buddha, Dharma etc). Regard the person who died as your object of your compassion by thinking, “May all suffering beings be free from harmful thoughts and sufferings.”
By having this mind in you, no being can harm you. If you have karmic link with that deceased person, then even if you are far away like beyond the ocean, there may be karmic impact on you. But if you don’t have any karmic relationship with that person, that person cannot cause any harm to you. So not much reason to be scared. Karmically, there is long distance between you and the person who passed away. Think of the person in this way “ You are object of compassion; I’m not the object to receive any harm from you”. Then you can chant some mantras, prayers. Think of the teachings – since I’ve not harmed that person, there is no cause for that person to harm me. Think “May all living beings be free from sufferings and harmful thoughts”.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

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[转帖] 净空老法师3月11日全球直播讲话--面对地震灾难应有的态度

告诫大家大难面前要心地清净,起心动念处放下贪、嗔、痴、慢,才能与阿弥陀佛心心相印,利益自己更利益众生。




面对地震瘟疫灾难应有的态度——净空老法师开示
1 学佛者应知,一切众生本无生死,只是不同维次空间的转换。务必要存好心,说好话,行好事,做好人。
2 放下一切怨恨不平,对天地万物,一切人事常存感恩,忏悔之心。忘恩负义者,易遭天地万物报复。
3 面对灾难,万勿惊慌,恐怖,唯一心念佛。若存丝毫惊慌恐怖,极易堕入三途。
4 一切灾难瘟疫,均由众生不善心所感。果能真诚忏悔,断恶修善,持戒念佛,戒杀素食,放下自私自利,名闻利养,五欲六尘,贪嗔痴慢,实为消灾免难根本之道。
5 以至诚心做三时系念,为一切众生,祈祷化解灾难。
6 尽量少出门,唯以清净心在家念佛读经,修善积德。纵使寿命终尽,欢欢喜喜,安详自在,亦有更好去处。

(若能利益大众,敬请转发流布,愿身心和谐,天下和顺,万物和睦...)







净空老法师昨晚(3月11日)全球直播讲话,


人生如戏人生如梦,会修的修自己,修理别人造业

我们知道佛菩萨放光明,天人放光明。我们这些芸芸众生有没有光明?有,不是没有。练气功的人,他能见到每一个人周边这个气的颜色、大小,这光明!外国人称为磁场,中国人常讲的气氛。植物也有气氛,矿物也有气氛,我们讲磁场。凡是物质,没有不放光的。我们见不到,是因为烦恼习气障碍了我们六根的本能,真的叫我们视而不见,听而不闻,我们接触不到。如果我们有这个能力,能力恢复了,我们看这个世界跟现前的感受完全不一样。

佛教导我们没有别的,无非是教导我们恢复本能而已。这一桩事情从理论上来讲不难,为什么?是你自性本具的智慧德能,有什么难处?难在哪里?现在我们自性透不出来是因为有障碍,把这个障碍除掉好像是很困难。障碍是自己造成的,障碍怎么形成的?妄想形成的。佛在经上常讲坚固妄想,不容易放下。什么时候你才会真正放下?开悟了,知道这是虚妄的。什么时候真正明白‘凡所有相,皆是虚妄’,你就放下了,不再执着。


我们现在不知道所有一切现象是虚妄的,把虚妄当作真实,所以在虚妄相上生起坚固执着,这是我们不能恢复性德的真正因素。

这一桩事情只有佛说得出来。佛为什么说得出来?佛是过来人,他放下了,他恢复了。回头再看看我们这些芸芸众生,依然坚固执着,不肯放下。只要你不肯放下,你对于事实真相当然就不明了,这个不明了就是你看不破;看破就是明了,彻底究竟明了叫看破。所以看不破不明了,那你自自然然会随顺你的烦恼习气执着,自以为是,这是你思想错了。

思想错了,接着你的做法就会错,你会做错,你会说错。你会用错误影响你周边的人物,这是佛经里面常讲的造业。业,一定招来果报,这个果报不好,恶业感恶果,把一真法界变成六道。在六道里头不知道回头,不知道断恶修善;六道里面又造成严重的错误。像我们现在,出现在浊恶的世界,浊是染污,恶是恶业,佛常讲的十恶业;我们起心动念,言语造作,自己冷静想想看,是不是跟十恶业相应?念头才起,你要是回光返照一下,你这个念头跟这十条,哪些条相应?这样的业果就是灾难,自己的灾难,不是别人的灾难。

凡夫修行之所以感到非常困难,他不会修。怎么说不会修?会修的人是修自己,凡夫修行都是修别人,都是看到别人错,要修理别人。修理别人,造业!那些佛菩萨们,他们为什么能够成佛菩萨?他不知道修理别人,他知道修理自己。所以佛家常说‘回头是岸’。回头修理自己,不能修理别人,别人没有过失!别人做种种示现,是帮助我修理自己的,这叫修行。

我们许多同修也曾经听古人用比喻讲人生如戏、人生如梦。如戏,一切众生在演戏!看戏的,我一个人,我一个人看,大众都在演。他们表演给我看,叫我学习。他表演正面的,表演善的,我要认真努力跟他学,要反省检点自己有没有善心善行?有,很好,保持,不要失掉;没有,赶紧学,希望自己也跟他一样。

他表演是负面的,表演是个恶相恶行,我们看到了,反省,我有没有?如果有,赶快改!这一种心行,我看了不舒服,我看了不满意,那我有这个心行,别人看到会满意吗?会欢喜吗?赶紧改过,改恶。如果看到人家的恶心恶行,回头想想我自己没有?没有,好,勉励自己不要犯这个过失。你要能这样用心,祖师大德就是说:你会了!会,不会,关键就在此地。你会了没有?我们要在这里学习,要会修,要会学,六根,眼会看,耳会听,这六根逐渐聪明、伶俐、管用,逐渐逐渐恢复到本能。

一切善恶是非邪正都要以经论做标准。具体的标准,我们净宗同学天天遵守的三福、六和,三学、六度、十愿,是我们在经教里面选出来的标准;适合我们现前的生活,我们学习不困难。果然认真学习,你肯定会得到法喜充满,佛在经上常讲的烦恼轻智慧长,这是你修学的成绩。烦恼轻智慧长,不知不觉的你就在转变;最明显的转变,你的相貌转变了,自己看得到。你天天早晚洗脸照镜子,你看到相貌转变,体质转变。为什么?三毒烦恼逐渐逐渐减轻。里面的病毒减轻,外面的感染你就有抵抗力。现在医学里面讲,你有很好的免疫系统,无需要藉助外面药物的帮助,不需要,自己本身具足。

我们一般世间人讲学佛有什么好处?这现前的好处,健康长寿!我们不能讲青春永驻,那是什么?那是明心见性,大菩萨,法身菩萨,行,真的,青春永驻,一点问题都没有。我们六道凡夫做不到,但是可以做到一点,你的老化缓慢。那个烦恼忧虑多的人,老化得很快,五十、六十就是老人了,六根的能力都退化。眼根退化,看东西模糊;耳根退化,重听,要戴助听器。身体的机能衰退。

真正学佛的人当然也衰退,衰退得很缓慢,八十、九十、一百多岁,身体还很灵活,耳目聪明。我们看到虚云老和尚很多照片,很多照片里面都是一百岁以后照的。他一百二十岁的照片,我们没有看到他戴眼镜。这些地方我们要留意。说明什么?说明他眼根很利,不要戴眼镜;是老了,没退化。这些都是现身说法,做出学佛殊胜的形象来给我们看,让我们看了启发信心。世间什么都是假的,中年之后,健康长寿是真的,其他全是假的。如果中年以后很快的退化,你有再大的权势财富又有什么用?真正的享受是健康,是快乐,是身心没有压力,过真正的人生。

为一切众生服务,快乐,助人为快乐之本!帮助一切众生,义务的,绝对没有一念希求众生报答,那就真快乐;做很多好事,希求报答,不快乐。会不会得福报?会得,福报肯定有,不快乐。我们今天看到这个世间,很多大富大贵的人,但是他并不快乐。这什么原因?过去生中喜欢帮助人,但是有求别人回报的意念,就得这样的果报,他不快乐。不希求任何果报,帮助别人种种善行善事,心里头痕迹都不着,那个果报殊胜,果报是佛菩萨,这是我们应当要学习的。

Monday, March 21, 2011

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Engaging With The Buddha (Part 3)

Engaging with the Buddha

Class 3 – V2 of the Foundation of All Good Qualities (FGQ) - with Geshe Tenzin Zopa

Today’s topic is on Verse 2 , which discusses the precious human rebirth.

First, a quick revision of last week’s topic which was on guru devotion. Mundane happiness cannot be achieved without a proper guide/Teacher, let alone spiritual attainments. However, not everyone is qualified to be a spiritual Teacher. The scriptures (Vinaya, Tantra) set out the various criteria for a person to be a qualified teacher. As minimum, to be a teacher, that person must live life with proper discipline and ethics; have a compassionate heart; who cares for others more than himself or herself. The teachings also require the student to have qualities – to be faithful, have a certain level of wisdom to interpret teachings in a right way after accepting the person as a Teacher; try one’s very best to apply the teachings to protect one’s body, speech and thoughts from harming others; seeing the Teacher as emanation of Buddha, in oneness with the Buddha. In short, mentally we should view spiritual Guru as Buddha. Outwardly and conventionally, the spiritual Guru/Teacher appears in an ordinary form like oneself and appears to be subject to birth, sickness, old age and death and even delusions, for many reasons, such as – to serve as a teaching for the student about impermanence; to teach what to avoid and what to adopt; to be able to interact with the student with the pure motivation of seeking to benefit the student and all living beings. Ultimately, the Guru is Buddha; conventionally, they manifest ordinary traits. Therefore, if you see a Teacher misbehaving in front of you, one should interpret that the teacher is teaching oneself not to do such mistaken acts. Conversely, when the Teacher does inspiring acts, the teacher is inspiring students and all beings through example.

What is the main objective in devoting to a Teacher and listening to Dharma? It is to enable us to realise the potential of this precious human rebirth. The full potential of this precious human rebirth is Buddhahood.

V2 FGQ – “Understanding that the precious human rebirth is hard to find and obtained only once....”

The Buddha’s teaching reveals to us the preciousness of this human rebirth, which is qualified by the 8 freedoms and 10 endowments. I will go through these generally – they include our being free from being born as a hell being; as a hungry ghost; as an animal; as a deva being and as demi-gods. Not having wrong views e.g. not believing in compassion.

Not every human rebirth can be said to be the precious human rebirth. It needs to have the above qualities. If you observe, there are many human beings who enjoy violence, bombing others, creating destructive objects and regarding themselves as great and powerful. As long as one has this kind of mind which believes in harming others and not having regard for the consequences, it is regarded as wrong view. Then, there are many human beings who have incomplete faculties e.g. do not possess the mental ability of comprehension, which would have enabled them to receive teachings. There are people who are born with complete faculties but are born in the dark era (a period where there are no Dharma teachings). There are also many people who are born in places where there is no access to Dharma and teachings on loving kindness, enlightenment, emptiness. Our era is called a bright era because the Buddha has come to teach Dharma and we have access to Dharma, books, teachers, meditators, Buddhist practitioners. Even within one family, there may be family members who appreciate Dharma and another family member totally against Dharma/virtue and in such a case, we could say that even within one family, one cannot say for certain that every member there has obtained the precious human rebirth.

By considering the factors above, we can see that we are completely qualified with the freedom to practice Dharma and endowed with the necessary conditions to practice. If whilst obtaining this precious human rebirth, we don’t practice Dharma to put our lives to optimum use, it would be regarded as a great loss. The precious human rebirth with all those qualities is like a flash of lightning in the dark sky i.e. it is brief and as if occurring only once – the rest of the time, we have been born in the lower realms or even if born human, we were born during a dark era or in barbaric lands without access to Dharma. Therefore, we cannot hope and assume that the precious human rebirth will be obtained again in the next life.

Why is it so difficult to obtain the precious human rebirth? The teachings say it is because such a rebirth requires the right causes and conditions. What are the causes and conditions for the precious human rebirth?

First, we need to live an ethical life i.e. avoid the 10 non-virtues (killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, harsh speech, divisive speech, gossip, covetousness, ill-will and holding wrong views). In the past, we have succeeded in not committing those 10 non virtues and thus obtained this precious human rebirth. However, if we observe our present life, we are careless and commit the 10 non-virtues all the time. One’s mind is often in a negative state, having harmful attitudes towards others like jealousy, pride, anger, attachment, disrespect, no compassion and so on. When we look into our own mind, we are very negative. The result of these will not secure us a higher rebirth like the precious human rebirth but instead, a lower realm rebirth. We presently have very wild minds, so the chances of gaining a precious human rebirth (PHR) again is slim. Over and above the ethics, we also require compassion, generosity and pure aspiration to actualise the PHR in the future in order to benefit of others. Thus, to get the PHR, one requires 3 causes i.e. ethics (avoiding the 10 non-virtues), compassion and pure aspiration (to gain the PHR for the sake of others).

Since this PHR is so rare and difficult to find and meaningful, the Buddha taught that there are 3 levels/goals to aspire to, in order for us to extract the essence of life –

1. As a minimum, the lowest level goal is for us to gain the full protection from being reborn in the lower realms. This PHR has the power to prevent our rebirth there, which can easily happen due to our constantly committing the 10 non-virtues. To gain protection from the lower realms., we need to engage into Dharma practice. What is Dharma practice? As a start, one practise Dharma by taking Refuge in the Triple Gem. What is practising Refuge? It means to cultivate virtue and to abandon non-virtue; to refrain from harming others. If we can benefit others by engaging in virtue, then we will avoid the lower realms and gain a higher rebirth.

2. The next level is to aim for liberation/nirvana: Nirvana means freedom from samsara; after all, even a rebirth in the human realm or god realm will also bring sufferings. So it’s not enough to avoid the 3 lower realms; even the higher realm rebirths have suffering, hence the aspiration to be free from rebirth into the whole of samsara. To actualise this, one needs to engage in the practice of the 3 higher trainings namely ethics, concentration and wisdom. Just by abandoning harmful actions and taking refuge alone is not enough to free one from samsara and bring us to nirvana.

What is meant by ethics/morality? As mentioned earlier, it means avoiding the 10 non-virtues of body, speech and mind; refraining from harming others. If one is addicted to non-virtue, work on it and gradually get out of it. If one’s purpose is to actualise freedom from samsara, any form of intoxication has to be gradually eliminated. Avoid being influenced by friends who encourage you to indulge in alcohol, smoking etc. Whatever intoxicates you, will hallucinate you and that hallucination – which may feel like bliss at the beginning - but when that hallucination intensifies, the hallucinated mind becomes like Mara swallowing you. Total confusion. In the Vinaya sutra, the Buddha says not to taste a drop of alcohol even the small amount that could be dropped from a rice strand. There are many stories of how intoxication can bring on all faults. I will tell you a common story on the great harm caused by intoxication : There was once a monk who was very strict in upholding his vows; he never even shook the hand of a woman, let alone be intoxicated. One day, a woman appeared with a goat and a bottle of alcohol and forced the monk to choose one of them i.e. he had to either drink the alcohol, kill the goat or have sexual misconduct with her. The circumstances were such that the monk had no escape. So the monk thought deeply – he didn’t dare commit sexual misconduct as he would be disrobed; to kill the goat would have been extremely negative karma; so he decided that the least harmful of the 3 was to drink the alcohol. After he drank the alcohol, he killed the goat and committed sexual misconduct with the woman. This illustrates how destructive alcohol and intoxication is. Liquor hallucinates the mind. At the time of death, it will dull one’s virtuous imprints, such that even when people chant, one will only hear disturbing, confusing sounds. This is not just me saying this. It is in the teachings. The Director of the movie “Unmistaken Child” was a heavy smoker. He wanted to stay with me in the monastery to film the life at the monastery. I told him that if he wanted to stay with me, he had to quit smoking. He said it was impossible. Whenever he wanted to smoke and didn’t get a cigarette immediately, I could see his hair standing up. So I suggested to him that since I burn incense everyday, whenever he wanted to smoke, he could light a stick of incense instead and hold it in his hand like a cigarette and I would also prepare for him a big Indian sweet for him to chew on. He agreed with my suggestions. So whenever he got into that state, I would bring him to the verandah and bring the incense and sweet to him. I could see him calming down when he “smoked” the incense and had the sweet. After 4-5 days, he didn’t shiver anymore and he soon became less dependent on his cigarettes. After 3 months, he stopped smoking. Even this class, Mr William Khoo was a heavy smoker but through his own determination, he stopped and it has been 5-6 years. He vowed to KLZR that he will stop smoking. Now when he goes with friends who smoke, he finds it offensive smelling. Hence it is important to practice ethics and restraint.

What is meant by concentration – we need to practice mindfulness. Our minds are very wild. When we want to think of something good, the negative mind arises instead; when we want to rejoice, jealousy comes; or want to be patient, anger comes. All this happens due to lack of concentration. Be mindful of what negative thoughts and actions that one should avoid. Be mindful to generate positive thoughts to those in suffering e.g. like the Japanese people now, as well as all living beings. Right now, we are lacking in concentration and overwhelmed by only thinking of oneself, what I should eat, what I should wear, whom I should call, what movie shall I watch? Mindfulness towards oneself benefitting others is also a very good thing to do. We constantly think of oneself only. We never realise that thinking only for one’s own benefit is a harmful attitude. By practising mindfulness this way, we will gain a virtuous mind. When thinking of oneself, think in terms of taking care of one’s welfare and going to work to earn money for the ultimate purpose of benefitting others. Concentration is training one’s mind to focus on virtue. Suffering comes from disturbing thoughts – attachment, anger, jealousy. One can train your mind to be gentle and peaceful.

When fully trained in concentration, one will gain physical pliancy (feeling light, comfortable, free from the baggage of contamination and even able to fly) and mental pliancy (sharp mental ability, clear mind). For that, we have to start from now. When negative thoughts come, recognise that it is not helpful but harmful. Everything that we do must be such that it will not harm people (nor give rise to criticism, etc). Even when eating food – think – to eat this one grain of rice, how many sentient beings have sacrificed their lives? When planting rice and ploughing the ground for it, how many bacteria, worms and bugs have died? We go to the shop, pay for the rice and forget the sacrifice of sentient beings.

Even when we sleep, we can transform that into virtue. Before going to bed – think with compassion of those beings who have no shelter, food and that one has all the comforts due to the kindness of sentient beings. Resolve not to waste 7 hours of sleep. Think of how precious our lives are and how the teachings say that it is as if we gain this life only once. Thus, if I don’t use this life well now, who knows – tomorrow morning might not come. Think this way before going to sleep and upon waking up, one should generate the thought of how fortunate one is to wake up in the morning (no one harmed us in the night) and appreciate one’s precious human rebirth that is able to practice Dharma and make one’s day most meaningful. A meaningful day is one spent in cultivating the 3 higher trainings – morality, concentration and use one’s mind to gain wisdom (of emptiness). To start with, one should know what needs to be eliminated and what is to be adopted, in order to attain liberation/nirvana.

Wisdom: Whenever one wants to cultivate wisdom, Manjushri is the most relevant aspect of the Buddha to cultivate in relation to. Pray to gain the right causes and conditions to accomplish the practices in relation to wisdom; to gain the direct understanding of emptiness. It helps to make supplication and prayer. Deva beings and asura realm beings cannot practice this way; let alone the 3 lower realm beings. Pure Dharma practice supports not only this life but all future lifetimes. Hence the urgency for us to realise this and try our best. Make our days and nights meaningful.

So far we have been talking about the 3 levels/goals to aspire to when seeking to extract the essence of life – the lowest level is to gain protection from the lower realms; the next level is to aim for liberation/nirvana. Now we come to the highest level of aspiration/goal:

The highest purpose we can aim for (to extract the maximum out of life) is to become a Buddha to benefit all living beings. For this, one has to be free from the 2 obscurations to enlightenment: (1) freedom from obscuration to liberation/nirvana and (2) freedom from the obscuration to enlightenment itself. Understand that nirvana is not enlightenment. One should aim for enlightenment. Once shouldn’t be satisfied with liberation/nirvana which is freedom from suffering for oneself alone; instead one should aspire to free all living beings from suffering and only then can one reach Buddhahood. For this, one has to practice great compassion known as Bodhicitta = the compassionate mind which takes full responsibility of liberating all beings to the state of enlightenment. Hence we must resolve to become Buddha solely for the benefit of others. Right now, one cannot help sentient beings much as one is also trapped in samsara but when one becomes a Buddha, one will have the ability to bring numberless beings to Buddhahood. Note that the practitioners of the earlier first 2 levels of aspiration also have compassion but they don’t have great-compassion. It is only the practitioner of this 3rd level of aspiration, that has great compassion and extracts the highest benefit of this human rebirth; extracts the maximum essence from this life. The practice of this 3rd level practitioner is that of the 6 Perfections – morality, generosity, patience, perseverance, concentration and wisdom. When bodhicitta is combined with the 3 higher trainings, it becomes a powerful cause to actualise enlightenment.

In summary:

· The 3 causes for the precious human rebirth is - ethics/morality (avoiding the 10 non-virtues), compassion and pure aspiration for the PHR to benefit others.

· Samsara refers to cycle of suffering of the 6 realms – from the lowest is the hell realms, the hungry ghost/preta realm, the animal realm, human realm, asura (demi-god) realm and the deva realm.

· An Arhat is not nec a Buddha. An Arhat is one who attains liberation but not yet enlightenment. A Bodhisattva is lower than a Buddha but at a higher level than Arhat. Within the term “Bodhisattva” there are ordinary Bodhisattvas and Arya Bodhisattva (Kuan Yin, Tara are Arya Bodhisattva) which means they have realised emptiness directly. The term “Tathagata” refers to the Buddha. The Buddha is the highest of all.

Q: We have been asked to recite the Ksitigarbha practice. What is this practice?

Ans: The earthquake and tsunami are explained as mainly related to harming lives of others, particularly, landlords (earth protectors), nagas - those beings who reside in the water and in the earth. Due to that, one does prayers in relation to Ksitigarbha, who made a pledge to pacify destruction caused by living beings who are karmically related to the depths of the earth and water. Hence it is particularly effective to do Ksitigarbha practice for earthquakes and tsunamis. There are other prayers which can also help. The best antidote is 8 Mahayana Precepts. It is also a powerful purification practice that purifies the harm one has caused to living beings in the past. Kyabje Lama Zopa Rinpoche explained that a place may be experiencing fire but if there is a person who undertaking Precepts, the immediate surrounding area will be protected. There is a story which illustrates how to achieve peace and abundance in a society - During the Buddha’s time, there was famine and drought in the land for a long time but one day, everything went back to normal, including the weather. The villagers were happy and thought it was due to power of the meditator in a nearby cave; some thought it was due to the power of the country’s king; some thought it was due to a Brahmin’s magic. So they went to ask Buddha for the cause of everything being peaceful, with crops flowering at the right time and rains coming in the right amounts etc…The Buddha revealed that in the forest, there lived 4 animals – an elephant, a monkey, a rabbit and a bird (known in Dharma stories as the Four Friends) - who co-habited in perfect harmony and respect for each other . And it was on account of their merits, that the land enjoyed such bounty.

Hence, in any place where there is a conflict, it is good to have the picture of the Four Friends. Even animals who don’t have profound wisdom can bring so much benefit to everyone by living in peace. Imagine what can be achieved by human beings doing the same.

Q: Without refuge, is it possible to take 8 Precepts?

Ans: It would be good to have taken refuge vows but if not, it is also alright to take the 8 Precepts with a sincere heart.

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Engaging With The Buddha (Part 2)

Engaging with the Buddha - Geshe Tenzin Zopa – Session 2

This short text that we will be going through, “Foundation of All Good Qualities” (FGQ) is a Lam Rim text. Lam Rim is Tibetan for the Graduated Path to Enlightenment.

It is a road map, a guide set out by Lord Buddha to lead us from our present lost, samsaric state up to full enlightenment. Buddha learned from, practiced and was blessed by his Gurus including Manjushri, Amitbha over many lifetimes, over many eons in the past. So the text that you are going to study is one which contains the entire path with no contradictions and was practiced by all the past Buddhas – by Amitabha, by Kuan Yin, by Shakyamuni Buddha, by Tara, by Lama Tsongkhapa, by all the great Indian Pandits and all the great mahasiddhas of Tibet, China etc.

The Lam Rim is not new age Dharma created by some ordinary scholar but is the Dharma handed down by the Buddha which enables us to attain full enlightenment. This text was composed by Lama Tsongkapa, whose qualities embodied those of Manjushri and Shakyamuni Buddha himself, based this text on Lama Atisha’s “Lamp for the Path to Enlightenment” which in turn, came from the Kangyur which is the complete collection of all the teachings of the Buddha himself. So it is all connected.

This FGQ text is written in verse form and I will cover one verse in each class – soon there will be a book published by LDC for free distribution, containing the commentary of these verses which you can use as your textbook. If you can manage it, you can also progress to the Lam Rim Chenmo which is a much more detailed Lam Rim text and was also composed by Lama Tsongkhapa. Otherwise, just try to get some understanding from these classes.

The main teaching in this text is the 3 principal aspects of the Path, namely renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness. Other words that are sometimes used for these 3 principles are renunciation, method and wisdom. These teachings help us purify 3 countless eons of obscurations, obstacles and many negative imprints and enable us to accumulate 3 countless eons of merits/good karma. Without learning these 3 principles, it would be as if we have a body but no limbs.

For us to gain realisations on the Dharma, we need to engage in meditation to habituate our body, speech and mind with these 3 principles. All the Buddhas possess the great compassionate bodhi mind (bodhicitta) and this altruistic mind is what we need to cultivate. To do this, we need to make it a habit for to think compassionately. Right now, we have emotional and discriminating minds. We need to transform that into the bodhi mind. For this to happen, we need to familiarise ourselves with compassion and virtue through meditation. However, to be a successful meditator, we need to engage into the cultivation of knowledge obtained through contemplation on the Dharma. Contemplation can only happen after one learns the Dharma.

Studying, contemplating and meditating: The first step is to get the info, learn the correct path. After learning, we need to contemplate and analyse what was taught to see whether those teachings have the power to eliminate negative mind and action or not; after this contemplation, we adopt the key points derived from our contemplation and treat those key points as the object of meditation. The result of meditation is realisations. Realisations of what? Of bodhicitta, of wisdom. What is the measure of successful meditation on bodhicitta? Your heart becomes bodhicitta itself, free from emotional negative states of being, always wanting to benefit others. Through applying these 3 stages of practice onto the teachings on the 3 principal aspects of the path (renunciation, bodhicitta and emptiness), you perfect them within yourself and become a Buddha.

In this text, the first verse is about the Guru. How to find a right Guru and after finding a Guru, how to relate to the teacher. As you already know and saw in the slide show just now even in ordinary life, you require a teacher to develop any knowledge or skill, not to mention the spiritual path. In terms of ordinary life, samsaric activities, we have learned the skills over many lifetimes and yet still need to learn them again in this lifetime, e.g. how to cook; how to drive. Likewise, we may have met Dharma before but we never gained Dharma realisations and that’s why we need a teacher to guide us now.

Verse 1 of FGQ:

Here the word “foundation” refers to your spiritual teacher, Master, Guru, mentor. All these may have different connotations but overall, one’s Guru is all those things. Here one is talking about one spiritual master to whom you have spiritual connection. The advice that the Guru is the foundation of all of one’s good qualities up to the perfect qualities of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas means that if we wish to gain the great qualities of Buddhahood, we need to rely on a Guru. Although one should be grateful to all forms of teachers, the spiritual Guru is special because he/she guides you to attain your highest potential i.e. enlightenment. If you wish to be free from lower realms, you need to rely on a Guru; if you wish liberation from samsara, you need to rely on a Guru; if you wish to become a Buddha, you need to rely on a Guru.

Since the Guru is so important, can one just go out and grab anyone as your Guru? No! You need to search for a guru but there is a method of finding a Guru. First of all, you need to have within yourself, some sense of wishing to be free from suffering; to be free from this confusing samsaric life; wishing to get a genuine and lasting state of happiness. If you have this basic feeling, then you are ready to search for a Guru.

When looking for a Guru, the Teacher should possess 10 qualities. As a minimum, that Teacher must have a compassionate heart; cares for others more than oneself; lives an ethical life (i.e. someone who practices at least the 5 lay vows. If the Teacher is a Sangha member, then that Teacher should be one who abides by the Vinaya Vows and puts maximum effort into upholding them).

Where does one go to look for such a Guru? Do we wait somewhere for the Teacher to come along? Do we go to every temple to search for a Guru? Don’t rush on this. There will be some sense of karmic force to make you to look for a teacher. When you experience this, use your wisdom and tell yourself “I shouldn’t blindly search but observe and seek out a Teacher who has qualities and can teach the entire path and not only partially”. The entire Buddha’s teachings refers to both sutra and tantra and your purpose in finding a teacher is to be able to gain knowledge of that whole path and not only part of it. The student should resolve “ I’m not going to blindly jump into a Guru-disciple relationship after merely listening to one teaching from a master. Let me listen to more of the teachings first and think about them and when I gain conviction that the master is teaching the complete path and the master is ethical & selfless, then at that time, it may be appropriate to enter into a Guru-disciple relationship.

When you are on the search for a Guru, you should keep a questioning mind because establishing faith without wisdom is risky; it can even become an obstacle to your spiritual path. Analyse the qualities of the master before accepting that person as one’s Guru. Ask questions and analyse the answers yourself. Do not merely rely on other people’s comments on the master but whether this master can answer your questions and clear your doubts. One needs this kind of conviction.

So keep some key points in mind when searching for a Guru:

· It is very important to find a spiritual Guru but I wish to say again that one cannot rush into it without analysis.

· Put effort to attend Dharma classes, listen to his teachings or read his books. You need to put some effort. Otherwise, you cannot discover anything.

· Whenever you listen, you should maintain a curious investigative mind, to establish the qualities of the Teacher and the teachings being given.

· Don’t merely rely on other people’s comments and assessments of the teacher. You need to engage directly and observe. Ask yourself when you meet the master or listen to the master or remember the master, does it cause your mind to be subdued or not? If it does, that is one indication that there is some karmic link with that teacher.

· Use your wisdom. After hearing the teacher, read up, check whether there are any contradictions between what the teacher taught and what the Buddha taught. There is no negative karma when doing this checking and analysing the person you are thinking to regard as Guru, it is required. But once you establish the Guru-disciple relationship, no more doubts are to arise in your mind, as that becomes an obstacle to your cultivation and realisations.

· The story of Asanga – when he was searching for his guru Maitreya, to meet him directly and it took him 12 years. He didn’t do it in a simple way – he engaged in a long solitary retreat and put much effort to find this Guru. After the first 3 years of retreat, he hadn’t met his Guru but he did see a rock with a deep groove made by the feather of a bird. Due to the frequency of the bird flying past that rock, the wings made a deep cut into the rock. This Asanga understood to mean that he should persevere in his search, since through consistent effort, even a soft feather could cut rock. After the next 3 years, he still didn’t see his guru. He went out of his cave and observed that some dripping water falling onto a rock had over time, made a deep hole in the rock. This Asanga took as a lesson that perseverance enabled even drops of water to bore a hole into rock. With this, he returned to the cave. In the final round of 3 years, he went out again hoping to see his guru and this time, he saw an old, wounded dog outside his cave, which had many sores filled with maggots. When he saw this dog, he generated deep compassion in his heart. Seeking to help the dog and yet not wanting to harm the maggots while removing them from the dog’s sores, he used his tongue to lift the maggots out of the dog’s wounds. As he bent down to do that, the dog disappeared and before him was his Guru, Maitreya. Asanga was so happy but asked Maitreya why he didn’t come sooner. Maitreya explained to him that he was with Asanga all those years but because of Asanga’s karma, he was not able to see him; however because Asanga generated such strong compassion that day, it purified so much obstacles that he was now able to see Maitreya. Asanga didn’t quite believe that Maitreya was with him all those years. To convince him, Maitreya said “Look at my robes and these spit marks on them. During your retreat, you would spit and your spit would stain my robes and here you can see it”. Asanga was so happy to see Maitreya that he wanted to carry him on his shoulders through the nearby village to let the villagers meet Maitreya. Maitreya told Asanga that it was pointless because most people there had’t the karma to see him directly. Asanga didn’t quite believe this could be so and thus carried Maitreya as he had asked. True enough, many of the villagers either couldn’t see anything on Asanga’s shoulders, some saw an old dog being carried and only an old woman of some virtue was able to see Maitreya’s golden foot.

Therefore, encountering the Guru is not easy. But if the perfect disciple can meet the perfect Guru, enlightenment can happen right there. Maitreya brought Asanga to the Pureland for one morning which was equivalent of 5 human lives, and there Asanga received all the teachings the 5 Treatise. So we need to put a lot of effort and purification of karma to meet the right teacher, whose teachings will be the cause of liberation and enlightenment.

“Correct devotion to him” – after finding a proper Teacher, the student needs to correctly devote to the Guru. By doing so, whatever practice one does becomes the root of enlightenment. How to devote correctly? There are 2 ways – through physical action and mentally, through one’s thoughts. Devoting through action refers to various ways of showing respect. Imagine if you met Amitabha Buddha in person, how would you behave? Would you march up to him to shake hands? You’d probably put your palms together and call his name respectfully. That’s how one should behave with the Guru. Verbally, use honorific terms for the master. Mentally, must see the Guru as embodiment of all the Buddhas. Once, one of the Pandits (Atisha) was meditating on Green Tara. At that time he also had a vision of Chenresig (Kuan Yin) and also of Tara. He said whilst Tara appeared green and Chenersig appeared white, to him they were inseparable from his master. This is to denote that whilst Buddhas may have different manifestations, they are of one essence and of the same essence as that of one’s Guru.

In short, Guru devotion practice is seeing the Guru as being in oneness with the Buddha, as the embodiment of the Buddha. This is the realisation to be cultivated and attained. When one sees Guru, one sees all aspects of the Buddha in him. It is not an easy practice.

If both Guru and disciple do not abide by the guru devotion practices, the practice will degenerate e.g. if you met your Guru on the street and you fear that if you started to bow down to him, people will laugh at you, so you don’t offer your respects to him or if one’s master in not wanting you to face being ridiculed by others, stops you from paying respects, then there is the danger of degeneration of the practice.

Devote oneself to a qualified master – one who knows the entire path and upholds vows and lives ethically. If one devotes correctly and devotes well, it will bring success to one’s cultivation.

Having understood the importance of correct devotion to the Guru, one should put effort to sustain this guru devotion practice and pray for blessings from the Buddha to practice well. When you see Buddha directly, you purify so much negative karma and this can happen when one truly from one’s heart, sees the guru as inseparable from the Buddha.

During the Buddha’s time, there was once where there were 3 kids playing in the sand, as the Buddha was passing by. One of them was inspired to make offering to the Buddha – he had nothing and thus, picked up some sand and put it into the Buddha’s begging bowl as an offering. Through this single act, the boy became a Wheel Turning Dharma King. So whether one gains benefit from devotion depends on the mind of the disciple – if one regards one’s Guru as merely an ordinary teacher, then one will get ordinary benefit from that relationship; but if one seems one’s Guru as the Buddha with all the virtuous qualities, one then gains the maximum benefit. Conversely, if the Buddha appears before you and you only see the Buddha as ordinary, then the merit will be ordinary.

In the famous ancient Buddhist Monastic University called Nalanda, all the scholars practiced seeing the Guru as the Buddha and hence they obtained the benefit of high realisations and some attained enlightenment.

Can one have one or more teachers? It is up to the individual. In the early times in Buddhist India, there were many realised beings who by devoting to one Guru, were able to obtain great realisations but here, we rely on many Gurus but cannot get any realisations! Lama Atisha (7th century) explained that the practitioners in India, by seeing the Buddha in Guru, they were able to actualise the entire knowledge of the Dharma; whereas in Tibet (during Lama Atisha’s time there) they didn’t have such a view, hence, they gained no benefit. Similarly, by correctly devoting to one Buddha-deity, one is able to attain enlightenment and be of one taste with all the Buddhas. Hence one needs devotion and devote correctly. The fundamental point is to be able to see the Buddha’s qualities in one’s Guru.

Thus if your level of devotion can handle multiple gurus, go ahead; but if not, then having one Guru is safer. If having established a guru-disciple relationship, you don’t devote correctly, it becomes obstacle to your cultivation.

What are the ways to establish a guru-disciple relationship? There are several ways: It could be through the process I earlier set out i.e. finding a Guru through analysis and finally requesting the Guru to be one’s Guru or having developed faith in a master as Guru, listening to that master’s teachings; or it could also arise as a result of a master giving you a vow (e.g. Refuge Vow, Bodhisattva vow, vows from initiations). Once that happens, one needs to devote correctly to that Guru.

In my case, I have none of the qualities of a qualified Guru, yet I give Refuge vows, so upon taking those vows, the teachings on Guru Devotion apply. Correct guru devotion brings vast merit; whereas a breach of guru devotion brings heavy negative karma. Therefore, one needs to understand the significance of taking vows, taking transmissions and initiations and creating a Guru-Disciple relationship.

The reason for exercising caution in establishing a Guru-Disciple relationship is because our minds are fragile, hence our devotion is fragile and karmic consequences will follow.

HH Dalai Lama says it is easier to devote to master sitting on high throne and whom one rarely meets. But it is much more challenging to sustain guru devotion towards a guru who lives with you or is in regular contact because it is easy for one to project our own faults onto the guru.

In conclusion, mentally, one should always be one with the guru but physically, best to remain as far as possible.

Let’s say you do find your Guru but subsequently, you see or hear something seriously negative about your guru, what do you do? As a disciple, think that the Guru is manifesting a negative display in order to teach us not to be that way. For example, when the Guru scolds you, see it as a teaching; see it as a mind-training exercise for you. Having established the Guru-Disciple relationship, one needs to abandon one’s sceptical mind in relation to that guru. No more checking about whether Guru is pure. One should focus on the qualities, not the faults.

If Guru gives you a very heavy task and you cannot do it, what should one do? The teachings say that one can respectfully and without any loss of faith in Guru, explain that whilst one will do that task one day but right now, one is not ready to do so and therefore respectfully request the guru to postpone the task till later. But note that although one may postponed a task many times, there will come a time when you have to do it!

Questions & Answers

Question:

As ordinary people, it will be difficult to practice the 3 principal aspects of the path in our daily lives. How can we do it?

Ans: In order to be able to practice renunciation, one needs to engage in being more detached towards common distractions such as avoiding intoxication, negative friends who indulge in unethical activities, learn to be contented with one’s gains e.g. we need to work hard to earn money but one shouldn’t be overly attached to money. Earn money with the mind of right purpose e.g. helping others. If one earns money just to be rich and enjoy life for one’s own benefit alone, that kind of self centredness will deny us satisfaction, plus bring a lot of suffering to oneself. Satisfaction comes when engaging in activities that help others (within your means), preserving virtue, Dharma teachings. All these help in the practice of renunciation.

To integrate bodhicitta into one’s daily life – begin by at least expressing unconditional, un-biased love towards all beings and not just express care for the person/object of your desire; cultivate the heart that wishes all other beings to be happy. Learn about karma, life and rebirth and try to see the interdependence between all sentient beings. Remind oneself that one has the ability and responsibility to ease the suffering of all sentient beings and do your best to serve others. Cultivate compassion and as minimum, wish all beings to be free from suffering. Before going to sleep, generate this thought too. Think, “When I go to college, it is for the ultimate purpose of helping sentient beings I go to work to free sentient beings; I eat to free sentient beings “. Repeatedly think this way until it becomes second nature to oneself to have this kind of thinking. When you are well trained in this way, bodhicitta will naturally arise. The highest level of compassion is called bodhicitta.

To integrate emptiness or right view into daily life: Learn to view how everything is like an illusion; everything is a creation which comes about from various factors. Analyse it - when you try to grasp at a person/object and try to pin-point something that is the essence of that person/object, you will discover that there is no solidly, independently-existing object for one to grasp at. There is no fixed permanent object to hold onto for us to be angry at. Of course, at first, to meditate this way takes time and one’s affliction like anger might have already arisen. So one begins by training in emptiess by holding the thought that there is no “object of anger”” or “object of desire” that is independent of one’s mental projection. Start by training in having such a thought. Then progress to exploring this concept further and you will find that there is not a single atom of an object of anger or an object of attachment. Let’s say you like this cup and someone breaks it; you get upset. If we train in thinking that this cup (and its attractiveness which gave rise to our being liking it) does not exist on its own but came about due to many factors, our grasping towards the cup will loosen. Our misconception makes us believe that things exist on their own out there. Instead, think that all things are empty of inherent existence. Or you could also think this way – think that all things are a dependent arising – e.g. why do people hurt me? Because I’ve hurt people before. For me to stop experiencing hurt, I must now not retaliate and cause harm in return. By realising inter-dependence and cause & effect, we come to understand the emptiness of self and phenomena a bit more.

Q: We are supposed to generate more compassion but how do we generate great compassion and bodhicitta without attachment?

Ans: The practice of bodhicitta and emptiness must be done on the basis of renunciation. This way, the complication of attachment and afflictions will not arise. If by generating compassion towards someone gives rise to attachment, our compassion is not pure nor stable. Hence we first need to cultivate renunciation towards samsara and the causes of samsara which include objects of desire, anger and indifference. Further, compassion must be unconditional without any expectation of return or result. Compassion towards family and friends is mixed with attachment and hence not really pure. Whenever you feel hurt, it shows there is some underlying attachment there. In all situations, one should first check one’s motivation to see whether it is pure or not.

Q: Can I have a Guru from any Buddhist tradition?

Ans: Yes, why not?

Q; Is it possible not to follow any particular Buddhist tradition but seek direct teachings from Kuan Yin?

Ans: Yes, why not. There are some situation of special connections with Buddha-deities, so why not?

Q: Why do Buddhas have to continue their work in the form of Teachers?

Ans: Because we do not have the merit to meet the Buddha directly and hear the words directly from the Buddha. Thus, the teachings have to be transmitted from person to person, as an oral tradition. For this, the Buddha has to manifest himself as a human being so that we can interact with him. The Buddha taught that during degenerate times, he will appear in the form of Teachers who manifest birth, aging, sickness, death. Buddha is indestructible yet we may see that one’s Guru manifests sickness, aging and death. Why? Because these are teachings on the contaminated nature of aggregates; of samsara; teachings of impermanence. But does it mean that Guru is samsaaric being? No. Guru is only manifesting a body that is subject to decay. Buddha has to manifest different bodies to teach and reach different sentient beings.

Q: How are we to differentiate between guru devotion and guru attachment?

Ans: If you feel jealous when someone gets closer to the Guru, then you are most likely affected by Guru attachment. But if you are more happy that others are getting closer to the Guru and learning more Dharma, then it’s more like devotion.

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