Remembering Death
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche
|
|
|
This
teaching appears in the March-April, 1997 issue of Mandala,
the newsmagazine of the FPMT.
|
Reflecting
on impermanence and death in itself is not really a big deal,
but thinking about it because of what follows after the death
is important. If there is negative karma, then there are the
lower realms of unimaginable sufferings, and this is something
that can be stopped immediately.
We cannot be liberated
from samsara within this hour, today, this week or even this
year, but we can purify negative karma now, this hour
today,
and therefore stop being reborn in the lower realms if we
die now, this hour, today. This is possible.
By
remembering impermanence and death, karma and the lower realms
of suffering, the mind is persuaded to use the solution of
Dharma practice. Immediately the mind prepares for death.
Immediately it purifies the heavy negative karmas that cause
one to remain in the lower realms, where there are unimaginable
sufferings and no possibility to practice Dharma.
Whenever
there are problems in our lives it is always good to remember
the lower realms of suffering. We can't stand the problems
we have now, but the lower realms of suffering are a zillion,
zillion, zillion times greater, like the sky. If we put together
all the energy of fire, no matter how hot, it is cool compared
to one tiny fire spark of hell. All the energy of this human
world's fire put together is cool compared to one tiny fire
spark of the hell realm. Like this, it's always good to make
a comparison.
Beings
possessing a human body who haven't met Dharma, no matter
how much wealth they have, no matter how may friends they
have, no matter how much they appear to be enjoying their
lives, in reality are only living with hallucination; they
are living with wrong concepts, so many piles of wrong concepts.
They are not aware of what is happening to them, they are
not aware of their own life. They are not aware of the powers
of their hallucination, the piles of wrong concepts that compel
them to create the causess of samsara and the causes of the
lower realms. They don't have the opportunity to plant the
seed to be free from samsara, to cut the root of samsaric
ignorance, because there is no understanding of emptiness,
no opportunity to meditate on emptiness.
If
a person has a good heart, a sincere mind, and gives some
help to others without expecting any results, then maybe they
create some pure Dharma—but that's very rare; otherwise not.
Usually people live the life only with a worldly mind, particularly
attachment, clinging to this life. They use the whole human
life, the precious human body and all their education just
to create additional causes to go to the lower realms.
This is what is happening
in every day life. For the entire life people act like a
moth
attracted to the flame, completely hallucinated, completely
deceived, not knowing the flame will burn, that it is
completely
other than what it appears. Even though they get burned,
while
they still have the power to fly they will continue to go
towards the flame.
It
is exactly the same with a fish and a baited hook. The fish
does not know that there is a hook that cheats, leading to
death and unbelievable suffering. Having no idea of the danger,
it is constantly being drawn with strong desire toward the
hook baited with a piece of meat. The result that the fish
experiences is completely other than what it expected. Once
caught, there is no way to get away alive.
Following
the dissatisfied mind, desire, the worldly mind, brings exactly
the same result. Once sunk in the quagmire of the activities
of this life, it is difficult to escape the hundreds of different
problems, emotional pains of the mind and of the body that
come from this one root, the dissatisfied mind, desire, attachment,
clinging to this life. All we are doing is making samsara
longer by creating karma; we are making a donation, a contribution
to samsaric suffering, making it longer and longer. And then,
of course, there are the sufferings of the lower realms, which
are difficult to get out of.
It's
the same with the way in which an elephant can be caught.
A female elephant is used as a lure, the male elephant becomes
crazy with desire and as a result, becomes trapped inside
a cage. What was expected in the beginning was happiness,
but what was received in the end was something else, something
completely frightening.
All
these examples show us the way in which samsara and the samsaric
perfections cheat us, that they are not to be trusted. Therefore
always remembering impermanence and death becomes so essential.
Reflecting on impermanence and death makes life highly meaningful,
and so quickly and so powerfully destroys the delusions and
seed imprint. It is very easy to meditate on and one can cease
the delusions. It leads one to begin to practice Dharma, and
to continue and complete the practice.
|