Teachings from the Vajrasattva Retreat
Lama Zopa Rinpoche
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Chapter Index
48, Tuesday, April 27
EVENING: FINAL VAJRASATTVA SESSION
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
Good evening. Is there one question?
Ven. Marcel: Rinpoche, if sentient beings are infinite, if infinite buddhas
minds can see all sentient beings, if buddha cannot see the beginning of sentient
beings lives, I wonder how buddha can see infinite sentient beings if their
numbers are limitless?
Rinpoche: Buddha doesnt have any defilements. There are no defilements to
block a buddhas seeing infinite sentient beings.
Ven. Marcel: So infinite means not just a great number? Im just
wondering exactly what the definition of infinite is. Does it mean there are always
more or is it actually such a large number that it cant be counted?
I think sometimes people use the word infinite because the number is
too big to count.
Rinpoche: I would say that yes, there are infinite sentient beings. It is not just
a word; in reality, there are numberless sentient beings. But that doesnt mean
that their lives have to have a beginning.
Ven. Marcel: Rinpoche, we also had some discussion about the expandability of karma.
This example in the scriptures that if you kill an insect and its not confessed,
then after fifteen days it becomes the same weight as having killed a human being...
Rinpoche: ...you get the same heavy karma as if you had killed a human being. Even
though you havent killed a human being, the negative karma from having killed
that tiny insect increases until after fifteen days it has become the same as if you
had killed a human being.
Ven. Marcel: If somebody kills an insect in the very beginning of his life when
hes very young, and he kills a human being when hes very old, then the
karma of having killed the insect will be stronger at that time?
Rinpoche: Yes, I would think so. According to what Pabongka Rinpoche says, it has
to be like that. The negative karma of killing an insect as a child and not purifying
it could end up being much heavier than killing a human being when you were eighty
years old. But it also depends on what kind of human being you killed. If it was a
holy being that you killed, for example, the karma would be heavier. However, I think
the karma of having killed one insect as a child and not purified it would be much
heavier than that of killing an ordinary human being later, as an adult.
Ven. Neil: The question was also, Rinpoche, if for example, one kills another human
being, the karma is to be reborn in hell. It seems that one has created the karma
to take one rebirth in hell, which will last for millions or billions of years, and
then on top of that, as the days, years, lifetimes go by and this karma is not purified,
the karmic result is expanding more and more. Then, for example, if this karma ripens
after three billion years, one will have to experience an inconceivable number of
rebirths in hell, each of which will last millions or billions of years. All from
killing one insect. Or does the expandable result mean that one ends up getting just
one hell rebirth from that single, unpurified action?
Rinpoche: The expandability of karma means that you do experience the result of
a particular karma many times, but this doesnt include then creating the result
similar to the cause, one of the four suffering results of a complete karmathen
creating the same negative karma again. The expandability of karma refers just to
the direct results of one negative karma. In dependence upon how heavy the karma is,
you then experience the suffering that results from that negative karma many times
in one life or in many lifetimes. In his Letter to a King, Nagarjuna says, If
you cheat one sentient being, as a result you will be cheated in one thousand lifetimes.
This is because karma is expandable.
Similarly, as you may remember from Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand or other
lam-rim texts, if somebody criticizes a monk by saying to him disrespectfully, Youre
jumping around like a monkey, it creates the cause to be born as a monkey for
five hundred lifetimes.
Thus, karma is expandable, but this doesnt include consideration ofcreating
the result similar to the cause, which means that each complete negative karma again
produces four suffering results, one of which is creating the result similar to the
cause, so that the process is endless. Unless you purify the negative karma, you experience
the karmic results endlessly.
TAKING MEDICINE FOR INTESTINAL INFECTION
Ven. Marcel:Rinpoche,
theres a question
about whether viruses and bacteria are considered sentient
beings? And can we then
take antibiotics?
Rinpoche: This question has been asked many times! I cannot say with certainty that
they are sentient beings. However, we can discuss the question in relation not only
to bacteria but to bigger sentient beings, worms.
Many of the young Kopan monks get intestinal worms, and Lama Yeshe used to get everybody
to take worm medicine.
Later, during a question and answer session in one of the early courses at Manjushri
InstituteI think it might have been a course led by Venerable Marcelsomeone
asked whether it was permissible to take worm medicine. At that time Geshe Jampa Tegchog
was teaching the philosophical part of the course and Geshe Kelsang was teaching lamrim.
Geshe Jampa Tegchog, who was the abbot of Nalanda Monastery for many years, is now
the abbot of Sera Je Monastery, which has more than two thousand five hundred monks.
In response to this question, Geshe Jampa Tegchog said, You are not permitted
to kill worms. Buddhism has never permitted killing. Some people then got upset
with Geshe-las answer and brought up the fact that Lama Yeshe had permitted
the taking of worm medicine. Some confusion arose during this question and answer
session.
The lamas used to eat together, and at lunchtime Geshe-la brought up what had happened
during the discussion. I dont think Lama Yeshe was there at that time. Geshe-la
said that he was going to have to talk differently the next time he did a question
and answer session. He was going to make an adjustment. Geshe-la said he was going
to tell the people that according to Buddhism you cant take worm medicine, but
that according to the general world situation you can take medicine for worms. He
was planning to say this in the question and answer session.
So far, I myself havent ever taken any medicine for worms. It seems to me
that the worms disappear after some time even without taking medicine. I think they
die. I think that perhaps you have the karma to have worms for a short time but not
the karma to have them all the time.
When that karma has finished, I think that the worms just leave the body. Maybe
they just say goodbye! I remember taking worm medicine when I was in Buxa, because
a doctor checked and gave it to me, but I dont remember taking any since I first
returned to Nepal from India.
My personal experience is that even though there are worms, they disappear after
a while, even without worm medicine. I am just telling you of my own experience.
Basically, I think it depends on the capacity of each individual. You have to see
that your life will definitely be more beneficial for other sentient beings if you
kill the worms. The bottom line is that you have to try as much possible to make even
that action of killing become virtue.
Even if you have to take the medicine and end their lives, at the very least you
have to make your action become virtue. And as much as possible, you have to make
your action beneficial for the sentient beings that are going to be killed.
I cannot make a generalization that it is okay to kill. I cannot say that. However,
I would like to say that if it has to be done, at the very least you must attempt
to ensure that your action becomes virtue, Dharma, and that it is as beneficial as
possible for the sentient beings you are killing. If you have to do it, do it in this
way. You have to do something for those beings, for their happiness, for their good
rebirth or whatever.
Perhaps each time you take worm medicine you should make food or money offerings
to the monasteries where there are thousands of monks.
Perhaps you should build a stupa, a very large oneone stupa for each worm!
Perhaps you should sponsor as many stupas as the number of worms that you kill! I
am joking a little here, but you need to do something.
I mean, killing is involved and you need to ensure that your mind is not completely
selfish when you do it. Those worms are also sentient beings. I am not sure about
bacteria, but worms are sentient beings.
Therefore, they all want happiness.
I think I mentioned earlier in the retreat [Chapter 34, Tuesday, March 2] that one
of the texts mentions that attachment to sex causes you to be reborn an intestinal
worm. I dont remember which text it was (I should have written down its name),
but it is an authentic source.
Perhaps it is one of the thought transformation teachings of the Kadampa geshes.
Anyway, it is not the kind of text written by an ordinary person that we come across
nowadays.
These worms are just like you in having no freedom to choose their rebirth. Without
choice, they are born there in the kaka in the gut. They do not plan to be born there.
They are also like you in wanting happiness and not wanting to suffer. Therefore,
if you make the decision to take worm medicine, you have got to do something for them.
You should at least do some strong practice to purify their negative karma and to
pray for them to have a good rebirth as a human being, to meet the Dharma and so forth,
as Nagarjuna says in the food offering practice.
The sutra way of offering food involves motivating to take the food not to become
fat, not out of arrogance, not to look beautiful, but just to sustain the body to
practice Dharma. The tantra way of offering food involves reciting quite a number
of mantras and making offerings to the gurus and to the deities, but we have yet to
translate that part. Many monks practice the tantric food offering, then do Nagarjunas
prayer to also offer the food in the sutra way.
At the very end, after offering in both ways, many practitioners do another prayer
that says, At the moment I satisfy the worms by giving them food. Due to this,
in future lives may I draw them to me as disciples and reveal Dharma to them.
This means that in future lives, when the worms have become human beings, they will
become your disciples and by revealing Dharma to them, you will lead them to enlightenment.
I would suggest that you do some practice like this. Since killing is involved,
you have to make your life really beneficial for other sentient beings. Because those
sentient beings have to die for you, you have to make your life worthwhile. You have
to have a compassionate attitude.
You cant simply ignore them or think, Oh, theyre causing disease,
and kill them out of anger. You cannot omit the practice of compassion. I cant
make a generalization about what should be done, but I would say that if you do become
involved in killing the worms, there should be compassion in your motivation, which
means that killing them will enable you to make your life more beneficial, more worthwhile.
There is then some purpose in their dying, especially if you use their death to develop
your good heart, your bodhicitta. If you have to engage in killing the worms, this
is the best way to do it.
BENEFITING INSECTS KILLED BY YOUR CAR
When Roger bought the red van, which now has all the ten direction buddhas around
it, he was very excited. I think he thought he had accomplished something really great.
He bought it one evening and came to tell me right away. He was very happy about it
and curious as to what I would say. I didnt go out to see the car immediately,
but not because Roger was so excited about it. I saw it late the next morning. For
one or two days I tried to think, This car belongs to sentient beings,
but that didnt last long.
We then drove all the way from John and Elaine Jacksons house in California
to Geshe Sopas place in Wisconsin. On the way there were some sections with
no insects, but in other parts, especially where there were cows and fields, a lot
of insects died on the car. So many insects died when they flew in front of the car.
I dont know whether the number of insects also had something to do with the
time of year it was.
Many insects were dying and we didnt seem to have much choice about killing
them. I was telling the others in the car, We are creating many, many causes
to be born in the Gathering and Crushing Hell. The Gathering and Crushing Hell
is the third of the hot hells, where you are crushed between huge mountains shaped
like the heads of the animals or human beings you have killed. You are crushed between
the mountains, your blood gushes out like a waterfall, then you revive and are crushed
all over again. This goes on and on for an inconceivable length of time, until the
karma is exhausted. I said, I think we are creating many causes to be in that
hell realm.
We stopped somewhere and did many light offerings and prayers dedicated to all the
insects that had died on the road. Later on, when I asked if there was anything we
could do to stop killing the insects, someone mentioned putting a special plastic
screen on the front of the van. It is supposed to give some protection to the insects
but I dont think it helps that much.
Anyway, now the van is covered with mantras. A shop that makes decals used a computer
to make all the mantras and the pictures of the Thirty-five Buddhas, Lama Tsong Khapa,
Maitreya Buddha, White Tara and so forth. The person who made them put a lot of time
and effort into it, especially into the Tibetan writing because he was not familiar
with it. You start off with a black sheet, then like carving a rock, you have to cut
away the excess until just the shapes of the letters are left. It is unbelievably
time consuming.
The person who did the work became very, very interested in the project.
Even though they are not Buddhists, both he and his wife said that this time their
work had been very meaningful. I dont think they have read anything on Buddhism.
Once they might have attended a talk given by His Holiness the Dalai Lama, which could
have been the start of their interest in Buddhism. I visited their shop once or twice
and they told me this on one of my visits. I was very happy to hear how they felt.
You have to have some merit even to appreciate that the work is worthwhile; if you
dont have merit, you wont recognize its worth. Anyway, I was happy to
hear that they realized that this time, the work they were doing was meaningful.
They wanted to make a very large decal of White Tara to keep in the office where
they worked. It would make their shop very meaningful, because everybody who came
there would see this picture of buddha and thus plant seeds of liberation and enlightenment.
This picture of buddha would purify the defilements of anyone who saw it there, including
the people who worked in that office every day. Seeing a picture of buddha would make
coming into the shop very worthwhile for other sentient beings.
THE FIVE POWERFUL MANTRAS
The idea was to have the five powerful mantras used in the practice of jang-wa on
the van. [See Appendix 5.] The tantric practice of jang-wa is used when somebody has
died, and even if the person is in the intermediate state on the way to the lower
realms, you can still do jang-wa and change the direction of the persons reincarnation.
You can cause the person to reincarnate in a pure land or in a deva or human realm.
Jang-wa is a skillful tantric practice of purification, due to the power of mantra,
the power of concentration and the power of Buddhas words of the truth.
These five mantras have unbelievable power. If you recite these mantras, blow on
sand and then sprinkle the sand on someones grave or cremation site, you can
affect that persons consciousness, no matter where they have been reborn. You
do not even have to touch the dead body. Simply sprinkling the blessed sand on the
grave or cremation site can purify that persons negative karma and bring them
a good rebirth.
These mantras have unbelievable power to purify negative karma.
Within the practice of jang-wa there are different means of purification, but recitation
of these mantras is one of the main ones. You use the mantras to bless mustard seeds.
Through meditation you hook the people who have died and then you throw the blessed
mustard seeds over them to purify them. Finally, you do po-wa to transfer their consciousness
to a pure land. After that, if you dont have ashes or parts of the body, you
burn the photograph of the dead person or the pieces of paper with the dead persons
name written on it while meditating on emptiness.
You recite the Heart Sutrafrom where it says either ...no form, no feeling...
or Form is emptiness, emptiness is form....
I think I have already mentioned these mantras at various times in the pastfor
example, the mantra of Mitukpa, the Immovable Buddha, which you often see on tsa-tsas.
If a dying person sees the Mitukpa mantra, they wont be reborn in the lower
realms because seeing this mantra purifies their mind, their negative karma.
All of these mantras have incredible power. Simply touching these mantras to the
body of a dying or dead person purifies their negative karma, and they are not reborn
in the lower realms. Kirti Tsenshab Rinpoche explained that the people in Amdo have
these mantras written or printed on paper and they rub the paper on the body of anyone
who is dying or has died to purify that persons negative karma.
The Namgyalma mantra, another of these powerful mantras, has unbelievable benefits.
I mentioned them already when I was talking about the mantra on the bell at the Kshitigarbha
statue, so I am not going to repeat them again. Remember, I mentioned that if the
Namgyalma mantra is on a mountain, the negative karmas of all the insects or people
who walk on that mountain are purified. If the mantra is on a banner, the negative
karmas of the insects or people who are touched by the shadow of the banner are purified,
and they are liberated from the lower realms. It is also mentioned that if you have
the Namgyalma mantra in your house, the house becomes purified and blessed, and the
same applies to your car. It is very good to have the Namgyalma mantra in your car,
because any insects or people who touch the car will be purified. The mantras of Namgyalma
and Stainless Pinnacle are extremely powerful ones for purification.
If you recite the mantra of the deity Stainless Beam seventy-three times after somebody
has died, that person will definitely be liberated from the lower realms and be able
to reincarnate in the higher realms, the realms of the happy migratory beings. If
you recite the heart mantra, which is half the length of the root mantra, eighteen
thousand times, and then build a stupa, all your wishes will be fulfilled. I thought
to put this information in Mandala magazine, because stupas are now being built in
many places. If the people building the stupa recite this mantra eighteen thousand
times before they build the stupa, it is very powerful; all their wishes will be fulfilled.
Buddha himself explained this in the Kangyur, the many hundreds of volumes of sutra
teachings, although I dont remember in which volume. There is a section that
talks about the infinite benefits of making a stupa. Buddha also explains the benefits
of all the mantras that I have just mentioned, as well as those of the other mantras
that go into a stupa. Putting the mantras into a stupa makes the stupa unbelievably
powerful in benefiting sentient beings. It is just amazing! It doesnt apply
just to big stupas; you can use them even in small ones.
If a group of people is building a stupa, everybody in the group should recite this
mantra before they start building. This would be extremely powerful and so good. I
started to recite them one day but my laziness didnt allow me to do more than
a few hundred.
Another of the mantras is the Wish-granting Wheel mantra. I have read of the unbelievable
benefits of reciting the mantra, but I have yet to see a picture of this deity. The
mantra is very short: OM PEMO USHNISHA VIMALE HUM PHET. If you recite this mantra
seven times every day, you will be born in a pure land when you die. And if you recite
it and bless incense, whether stick or powder, by blowing on it, people are healed
by smelling the burning incense. Here the healing comes through purifying the other
sentient beings negative karma, through purifying their mind, which is the most
important healing. Purifying the mind then helps to heal any sickness. If you recite
this mantra and then blow on your clothes, wearing the clothes brings healing; wearing
the clothes brings purification. And if the cloth is made of silk, wool, or the skin
of an animal, reciting this mantra also helps that animal, no matter where it has
been reborn, by purifying that animals negative karma.
The other deity is Kunrig, which is white in color with three faces.
Kunrig is not a Highest Yoga Tantra deity; I think it belongs to either Yoga Tantra
or Charya Tantra class. Kunrig is known as the King of the Deities for purifying
the lower realms. Even if someone has already been born in the lower realms,
if you do Kunrig practice or puja, they will be liberated from the lower realms. There
is a story that when a deva died and was reborn in one of the hell realms, King Indra
didnt know what to do, so he asked Buddha for help. Buddha then manifested as
this deity Kunrig and granted the practice of the Kunrig jang-wa. The deva was then
liberated from the lower realms. The practice of jang-wa was originally done with
Kunrig, then later the pandits, those great holy beings, used various deities to do
jang-wa. Both Kunrig and Mitukpa are used in jang-wa practice.
I think I have now mentioned the five powerful deities, although the five might
have become six!
On the van we have the mantra of Stainless Beam, but the mantra of Stainless Pinnacle
might not be there. Im not sure. There is also the Medicine Buddha mantra, which
has incredible benefit, as well as OM MANI PADME HUNG. There is also a very short
mantra which when seen purifies 100,000 eons of negative karma.
A quotation from either a sutra or tantraIm not sure whichmentions
that one of the benefits of the Wish-granting Wheel mantra is that by walking underneath
it, you purify one thousand eons of negative karma. Thats why this mantra is
normally put above doorways. Quite a number of years ago in Malaysia I wrote out this
mantra and asked somebody to make many copies of it. Then later, in Taiwan, many,
many small red cards were printed with a copy of the Wish-granting Wheel mantra and
a picture of Lama Atishas stupa. Many were given out to people so that they
could put one above the doorway to each room. In this way anybody who passed through
the doorway would be purified. It is said that Lama Atishas stupa protects from
pollutionnot so much external pollution as mental pollution. It stops pollution
from negative karma and degenerated samaya vows from affecting the minds of those
living in the house.
Anyway, my idea in putting all those mantras on the van is to purify all the insects
that come on the van. Also, any water or dust that comes off the van will have touched
the mantras and will then go down on the ground to touch insects and worms, which
will be purified and liberated.
After touching the mantras, it becomes holy water or holy dust. Even human beings
who see the mantras get purified. The point of the mantras is to benefit other sentient
beings as much as possible.
BLESSING THE FEET
Anyway, I thought to take this opportunity to mention the blessing of the feet.
I think that the Nalanda prayer book contains the various mantras for blessing the
speech, blessing the mala and blessing the feet, blessing the toes. I think that some
people do this practice every day. It is very good to bless your feet, especially
if you are walking in the bush or trekking or doing work that requires you to walk
over the ground. Recite the mantra OM TRE TSARA GHANA HUNG HRIH SOHA seven times,
then blow or spit on the soles of your shoes. It says to blow on your feet, but I
would say that it is better to blow on the soles of your shoes because it is your
shoes that directly touch the insects. It might help to blow on your feet, but I think
it is better to blow on the soles of your shoes. It is especially good to do this
if you have to walk through fields of grass, where there are so many insects. It is
unbearable to walk through grass fields because you step on so many insects; as you
walk you can see so many insects jumping around to try to escape. This is why it is
very good to recite this mantra. When I remember, I do this practice when from time
to time I have to walk across fields with many insects. It might look a little funny
to other people, but we should try to take the opportunity to recite the mantra and
then spit on the soles of our shoes. Cover the whole sole with spit. This is in case
you step on any insects, because it means that you can benefit them by causing them
to be born in the higher realms.
I think this practice comes from the tantric root text Jam-pal tsa-gyü, but
Im not absolutely sure.
You can do the same practice with the tires of your car. Recite the mantra then
spit on the tire surface that will touch the ground. You can spit all the way around
on the surface that will touch any insects and worms. By doing this, even if you unknowingly
kill insects, you will still benefit them by purifying them and helping them to have
a good rebirth. Such mantras have infinite benefits. Perhaps the benefits can be explained
or translated at some later date.
I havent really checked the benefits of the mantras for blessing the speech
in the source texts. Understanding the benefits would give more faith in the practice
and inspire us to use the mantras. Knowing which sutra or tantra text is the source
of the practice would also give us more faith. The sources are mentioned in the Tibetan
prayer, and it would be good if that information was added to the translation.
SUFFERINGS OF THE PRETAS
Before talking about the water practice in relation to pretas and to Dzambhala,
before you learn how to become a billionaire, I thought to mention a little about
the sufferings of the pretas. Before learning how to become a billionaire, you first
have to have the suffering of the pretas!
I will read what Pabongka Rinpoche has explained in Liberation in the Palm of Your
Hand [p. 380], where he gives some details about the great suffering of the pretas.
The general sufferings of preta beings are listed as six: extreme heat, extreme
cold, hunger and thirst (their heaviest sufferings), exhaustion and fear (which is
fear of being stopped from getting food and water by karmic guardians).
Also, even if a preta sees some food, it is difficult for them to get it because
they have to compete for it with many hundreds or thousands of other pretas. When,
after many hundreds or thousands of years, a preta finally sees a tiny bit of food
or a drop of water, they have to fight a crowd of hundreds or thousands of other pretas
for it. You will have an idea of what it is like if you have ever given food or money
to the beggars in Bodhgaya in India. Like the beggars in Bodhgaya, thousands of pretas
crowd around so that any food is difficult to get. This also causes fear.
The place where the pretas, the hungry ghosts, live is simply unimaginable.
There are no grass, trees or waternothing! There are absolutely none of these
things. It is said in the lam-rim that the whole ground is like a red-hot copper pot,
because it has been burnt by the sun. It is extremely hot. Without considering any
of the other sufferings, just think of this one suffering. The ground in the preta
realm is nothing like that around here, where we live, where everything is green and
there are grass and many trees. The ground there is scorched by the sun and extremely
hot to the touch, and the pretas have to live their whole life in such a place. The
thought of even this one suffering is unbearable. When we feel hot we can use fans
or air conditioners or drink iced water. We can always have ice in everything: ice
in our tea, ice in our coffee, icecream.
We can have ice in every drink. To think of living in the place where the pretas
live is unimaginable. Just thinking of it is so terrifying that you have to purify
the negative karma to be born in the preta realm that you have created during beginningless
past lives. It is so terrifying to have any karma to be born in the preta realm that
you have to purify it immediately.
The bodies of pretas are unbalanced, because their limbs are not of the same size.
Their heads are big, with hair that sticks out in all directions, like tufts of grass.
Their faces are covered with wrinkles. Just thinking of their wrinkles should make
us feel the need to purify. Since we dont want to have a single wrinkle on our
face, we need to purify any karma we have to be born as a preta. Because we dont
want even a tiny wrinkle on our face, especially on our nose, we need to purify immediately
all such karma we have created not only since our birth in this life but during beginningless
rebirths.
Pretas also have very tiny necks. I think it is explained in Lam-rim chen-mo that
a pretas neck is as thin as a hair from a horses tail. Anyway, it is extremely
thin and cannot support the large head. The stomach is as huge as a mountain and the
limbs are like bamboo stalks. The Tibetan term jang-ma refers to the fine slivers
of bamboo that are bound together to make brooms. The limbs are so thin that they
can barely support the body. Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo says that pretas have a hundred
times more difficulty standing up and walking than very old people in the human world.
Pretas also have an uneven number of limbs.
Because pretas are unable to find a drink for many years, their bodies have no moisture,
not even any blood or lymph. They are like a dry log wrapped tightly with very dry
red leather. Their muscles and veins are all dry, so theyre wrapped in very
dry skin. When they move about and their limbs touch each other, there is a sound
like two dry sticks or two rocks hitting each other. Sparks also fly out.
Pretas receive no food or drink for hundreds or thousands of years, therefore, they
suffer extreme hunger and thirst. Because they still live in the hope of finding food
and drink, they have no choice but to go to look for it. But their bodies are so weak
and pitiful that when they do go to look for food, they are easily exhausted.
While looking for food, whenever they see the yamas they get so frightened that
they feel as if their whole body will disintegrate. They feel incredible fear. In
the heat of summer, even the moon feels hot to the pretas; due to their karma even
moonlight burns them. And in the cold of winter even sunlight makes the pretas feel
cold. Usually the sun warms and the moon cools, but for pretas, due to their karma,
it is the opposite.
In this way, they suffer incredibly from heat and cold.
These are the six general sufferings of pretas. We will now consider the particular
sufferings of individual types of preta beings.
PRETAS WITH OUTER OBSCURATIONS
Pretas with external obscurations see water, trees laden with fruit and so forth
in the distance, but when, after battling exhaustion and other great hardships, they
finally reach that place, the water or food has disappeared.
There is nothing there. After overcoming all their exhaustion, their fear of meeting
yamas on the way and other incredible hardships, they reach their destination only
to find that the food they saw has become non-existent.
Pabongka Rinpoche also says that when some pretas reach the food, they find armed
guards protecting it, not allowing them to get any. I guess the guards are like those
police who carry all kinds of weapons when controlling crowds. On top of all their
already unbelievable suffering of hunger and thirst, at that time the pretas experience
inconceivable suffering from despair and physical exhaustion.
PRETAS WITH INNER OBSCURATIONS
Pretas with inner obscurations are sometimes able to find food, but even when, after
undergoing many hardships, they do find some, they cannot eat it because their mouths
are as tiny as the eye of a needle. Even if a little food does go into their mouths,
they cannot swallow it because they have knots in their necks. It is extremely difficult
for any food to reach the stomach. Some pretas have a goiter in their necks and have
to drink the pus that oozes from it.
PRETAS WITH FOOD AND DRINK OBSCURATIONS
When some pretas with food obscurations eat food, it transforms into a flaming iron
ball that is one with fire. For some, the food transforms into the husks of grain,
pus or their own flesh. Even when they manage to find some food, when they actually
start to eat it, the food turns into these things. I guess the karma suddenly changes.
Many years ago, I visited a home in Spain for the severely disabled. I was with
Piero, an old student from Italy, who was a monk at that time and traveling with me
as my secretary, and Merry Colony, who was a nun. I think I probably said that I wanted
to see the home. In the past, I sometimes used to go to see old peoples homes
or homes for the disabled. It is very helpful for the mind. It inspires you to practice
Dharmafor a short time, anyway! Seeing how some human beings suffer, how they
dont have even a human body with complete senses and organs let alone a perfect
human body with which to practice Dharma (let alone mentioning Mahayana tantra), can
inspire you to practice Dharma.
I think the home was in Barcelona, and was run by Catholic nuns. At that time, Carmen
and her husband Alberto were the directors of Nagarjuna Center in Barcelona, and Carmen
had previously worked as a nurse in that home. It is only through such a connection
that you are allowed to visit the home. Carmen made the appointment for our visit.
In one room, there were teenage girls tied into frames with four wheels, because
they couldnt walk, and their arms were covered with leather so that they wouldnt
bite their own flesh. There were a few of them just moving back and forth on these
wheels. I just remembered this when I mentioned the pretas that eat their own body.
You might not believe such pretas exist, but since there are even human beings who
do this, why should there be any doubt about pretas?
Anyway, since I brought up this story, Ill mention a little more.
Right at the beginning, before we visited the children, the head nun warned me that
some of the children might try to scratch my skin because it is not white. Since the
children have no idea about people who are not white, they might scratch black skin
to see if the black color comes off. In one section of that home, one child actually
did that to me.
The whole place is really amazing because most of the adults and children there
have no hope of getting better. They will simply spend their whole life living in
that home with other people taking care of them. I think they might have cleaned the
home before we arrived; it was very clean. We saw one little girl who was horribly
disfigured. I dont remember the details clearly, but I think that her eyes were
tiny and it seemed as if her nose and mouth were missing. One of the nurses lifted
her up and kissed her and generally showed her affection. I mean, this little girl
was the opposite of beautiful. I think the staff try to show the children that they
are not frightened of their disfigurements, that they dont regard them as ugly
or dirty or bad. This little girl said goodbye to us. Piero was totally freaked out
when he saw this little girls face.
When we came down to see the head nun after our visit, she told us that they never
ask anybody for help; they ask only God. She said that God gave them all the help
they needed. She said that even when people come with money they dont accept
it. This is what she said, but I am not sure about that. I told her, What you
are doing and what Buddha says we should do, to cherish and to serve others, are the
same. Here you are putting it into practice. I then gave a donation of ten dollars
or a hundred dollars. It might have been ten dollars, I think, as it couldnt
have been a hundred dollars. I made a prayer, and I told her that the money was to
help the home to benefit the children. Anyway, that piece of news is now finished.
It is really great that the nuns are able to take care of those children for whom
there is no hope at all. No matter how many years they live, the nuns just take care
of them every day.
When some pretas eat and drink, even if the food somehow passes through their neck,
when it reaches their stomach it turns into molten iron. The Tibetan term tog refers
to a type of hard metal, but I dont know the exact translation. I think the
huge cauldrons in which soup was cooked for thousands of monks in Tibet were made
out of tog.
When many thousands of monks from Sera, Ganden, Drepung and other monasteries would
gather for Mön-lam, huge containers made of tog, perhaps a kind of iron, would
be used for the soup. Instead of quenching the pretas thirst and stopping their
hunger, anything eaten turns into hot liquid iron when it reaches their stomach. Instead
of benefiting them, the food gives them immense additional suffering. And even if
the food reaches the stomach and doesnt turn into molten iron, it can never
satisfy the preta because their stomach is so big; the food can never fill their stomach.
Another type of preta has flames of hunger coming from its mouth.
The Tibetan term for this preta is de-me.De is hungry ghost and meis fire, so it
could be translated as flame ghost. In Buxa and certain other parts of
India, you often see these pretas at nighttime in the forest. We saw many flames in
the forest from the place where we used to debate. I think these pretas might also
be in remote deserts, where it is very hot, the ground is copper-colored and nothing
grows. This is my guess, anyway.
The preta with the worst suffering of all is the drul-geg. Pabongka Rinpoche tells
the story of Ananda, Guru Shakyamuni Buddhas attendant, seeing such a preta
when he was outside engaged in his daily activities.
He met a female preta with three knots in her neck, and she had five terrifying
sounds coming from her mouth. It says here that the three knots cause these pretas
unbelievable suffering, that there is no limit to their suffering.
Next comes a quotation about the sufferings of preta beings from Nagarjunas
Letter, followed by one from Chandragomins Letter to a Disciple and another
from the Seventh Dalai Lama, Kelsang Gyatso.
Pabongka then says that we cant be sure that by this time next year we wont
be born as one of those preta beings. The causes for rebirth as a preta are miserliness
with your possessions, great covetousness and having such strong attachment to your
own possessions that you have to keep checking them again and again. I can see that
I myself have created some causes to be born as a preta through being heavily attached
to things and looking at them again and again.
Another cause of rebirth as a hungry ghost is interfering in other peoples
attempts to make charity. Perhaps someone is practicing generosity and you interfere,
saying such things as, Oh! You are giving too much or They dont
need it. Other causes are stealing others wealth and taking away things
that belong to the sangha. Pabongka gives an example of this second one at the beginning
of his explanation of refuge. If someone wants to offer even a slice of butter to
the sanghabutter is a common offering because it is used to make Tibetan teaand
has already dedicated it to the sangha and you say, Oh, that is too much. The
sangha dont need it, you are taking away things that belong to the sangha,
because the person has already dedicated it. Also, when money offerings are given
to the sangha by a benefactor, if you take extra for yourself, you are taking what
has not been given.
You have to understand that the disciples to whom Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo gave the
teachings contained in Liberation in the Palm of Your Hand were mainly monks. Of course,
there might also have been many lay people listening, but you have to understand that
the presentation was given in terms of monks living in monasteries. Even though the
examples often refer to sangha, you can still relate them to similar situations outside
of a monastery. It can easily happen that when someone has already given something
to someone else, you tell them that the other person doesnt need it. Such instances
dont occur only in monasteries.
If Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo had been teaching in the West, his presentation would
also have been related to Western people and the Western lifestyle. Since he taught
mainly monks who lived in monasteries, his presentation was mainly related to their
life. Once you understand that the basic points on karma are similar, you can also
relate them to the lay life. There are many similar situations in lay life.
Another cause of rebirth as a preta is to call someone a preta. In the West you
would not do this, but you might call them a ghost. In Tibetan, insulting someone
by calling them a preta easily happens.
Insulting a member of the sangha by calling them a preta causes rebirth as a preta
for five hundred lifetimes.
Pabongka Rinpoche then says that when pretas with three knots are able to receive
a drop of water, it is because in the past those pretas were not miserly in giving
water to other sentient beings. You dedicate the drop of water with the powerful mantra
given by Buddha, OM JVALA MIDAM SARVA PRETA BHYAH SOHA. Because of the power of the
mantra and because of their past karma of being generous with water, those pretas,
who have the heaviest of preta sufferings, are able to receive one drop of water.
They have the karma to get just one drop of water but are unable to enjoy more than
this.
Next comes the story of Lobpön Sangye Yeshe, a yogi who used his psychic powers
to go to the preta realm. There he met an extremely pitiful female preta with five
hundred children. She gave Sangye Yeshe a message for her husband, who had gone looking
for food in the human world. She said, Twelve years have passed since my husband
went to look for food, and during this time I have had five hundred children. I am
experiencing incredible hardship and suffering, as I have not had even one drop of
water during this whole time. O master, please tell my husband to return quickly with
whatever food he has found in the human world.
The yogi then said, There are so many pretas there, so how will I know which
one is your husband? She replied, Oh, he has particular characteristic.
He is blind in one eye and has only one arm and one leg.
And even the arm and leg he has are not healthy.
When the yogi went to the human world to check among the pretas, he saw one that
exactly fitted her description, so he passed her message to him. The husband said,
What she says is true. In other words, he really wished that he could
have returned as quickly as possible; he could not bear the fact that his search had
taken so long. He continued, I have looked for food for twelve years and I have
found only this. In his hand he was holding a very small piece of dried phlegm.
I havent found any other food other than this, so I regard this as extremely
precious.
The preta was able to find this small piece of phlegm because one bhikshu,one fully
ordained monk, who was living in his vowed morality had spat the phlegm on the ground
and recited a mantra to dedicate it to the pretas. A crowd of pretas then fought for
the phlegm and the husband won. He told the yogi this story. The phlegm had dried
out completely, and the preta kept it as his prized possession.
Pabongka says that if we are not careful with our lives, we cannot be sure that
a time wont come when we have to lunch on dried phlegm.
Another story concerns Uttara, a novice monk. Twenty-five years after his mother
had died, Uttara met a terrifying preta. He was so frightened that he started to run
away. The preta then said, Dont run away!
Uttara asked, Who are you? The preta replied, My only son, I am
your loving mother. I have been born here among the pretas, who have no food or drink.
Since my death twenty-five years ago, I have never seen any water. Forget about seeing
foodI havent even seen a damp mark on the ground.
When I read about the sufferings of the pretas, I feel happy that I have been trying
to do a little water charity to the pretas. I can rejoice by thinking, Oh, this
little bit of water charity that I have been doing must be really good for the pretas
since they are suffering unbelievably. It must be very beneficial for them because
it is fulfilling their immediate needs.
However, making water charity to the pretas and reciting these mantras are done
not just to enable them to find water and to alleviate their hunger and thirst. The
very important benefit that this water charity has is that not only does it stop their
hunger and thirst, but it also liberates them from their all their preta sufferingsome
of the mantras and visualizations have the power to purify their negative karma and
thus liberate them from the suffering of the preta realm and cause them to achieve
a higher rebirth. That is the real benefit; that is what they really need.
Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo says that in terms of merit gained, you collect greater
merit from making charity to one preta than from making charity to three galaxies
of sentient beings. (There are different ways of counting this, but I dont remember
at the moment. I have heard the explanation quite a few times, but I still dont
remember it!) And making charity to one preta with flames coming from the mouth collects
far greater merit than making charity to all the other general pretas. This is because
this particular type of preta has much more suffering than the general pretas. Then,
giving just one drop of water to a preta with three knots collects far greater merit
than making charity to the pretas with flames coming from the mouth. In terms of material
charity to sentient beings, giving one drop of water to this type of preta collects
unbelievable meritthe most merit of all.
Of course, the main point is not how much merit you collect. The main reason for
doing this practice is because the pretas need it. Since numberless pretas are experiencing
unbelievable suffering, they need this charity of food and drink.
WATER CHARITY TO THE PRETAS
First I will explain how to make water charity to the pretas, which is part of the
practice of the one hundred torma offerings. After that, I will talk about offering
water to Dzambhala [see Appendix 4].
First, of course, you have to generate a motivation of bodhicitta.
Think, Every single hell being is the source of all my past, present and future
happiness, including enlightenment. Every single preta being is the source of all
my past, present and future happiness, including enlightenment. Every single animal
is the source of all my past, present and future happiness, including enlightenment.
Every single human being is the source of all my past, present and future happiness,
including enlightenment. And it is the same with every single asura, sura and intermediate
state being. Every single one of them is the source of all my past, present and future
happiness, including enlightenment.
Bring every single one of them into your heart by thinking of their kindness and
of how precious they are.
After that, think, I must take the total responsibility for all of them upon
myself. I must free all the hell beings from the three types of suffering;
I must free all the hungry ghosts from the three types of suffering. I must free
all the animals from the three types of suffering. I must also free all the human
beings, asuras, suras and intermediate state beings from the three types of suffering.
I must free all sentient beings from the three types of suffering of samsara, as well
as their causes, and bring them to enlightenment. Therefore, I myself must achieve
enlightenment. For this reason, I am going to make water charity to the pretas.
(Or if you are doing Dzambhala practice, say, For this reason, I am going to
do the water offering to Dzambhala.) It isnt that you have to make the
offering to Dzambhala before you can make water charity to the pretas, but the water
carries more blessings if you first offer it to Dzambhala and then give that same
water to the pretas. The practice then becomes more powerful and effective for the
pretas. This is what Ribur Rinpoche said. Previously I didnt do Dzambhala practice;
I just made water charity to the pretas. Somehow I happened to talk with Ribur Rinpoche
about the water charity to the pretas, and Rinpoche then advised me that it would
be better to do the Dzambhala practice first. That is how I started the Dzambhala
practice.
Before that I didnt do the Dzambhala practice. I did the water charity to
the pretas because I read about some of its unbelievable benefits and because they
really need it. The practice is not just about our collecting merit; the pretas actually
need our help. I mean, when you think of their suffering, there is no choice; you
have to do the practice.
If you wish, you can generate the motivation, do the Dzambhala practice first, and
then make charity to the pretas with that water.
Actually, all these practices have already been translated into Chinese by the Chinese
translator from Shanghai, who is translating Geshe Sopas lam-rim commentary
into Chinese. It will also be published in English, and will be the largest lam-rim
commentary in English in the world. The root text, Lama Tsong Khapas Lam-rim
chen-mo is also being translated into Chinese in a style that will be easy for the
general public to understand.
There is an existing translation, but it is written in classical Chinese, which
is very difficult for ordinary people to understand. We are sponsoring this project.
Geshe Sopas commentary represents more than twenty years of teaching. I think
that Geshe-la started this commentary the very first time that we visited the United
States, in the mid- 1970s. I think it was around that time that Geshe-la founded Deer
Park Center in Madison, Wisconsin. Before that, he was just teaching at the university.
There was no actual center and very few disciples. People would be introduced to Buddhism
at Kopan then go to America to learn from Geshe Sopa, so the center was formed.
You already have an English translation of the Dzambhala practice [see Appendix
4], so I will read the oral transmission of it in Tibetan. I received the oral transmission
of the Dzambhala practice and of the practice of making water charity to the pretas,
which is just a small part of the practice of the one hundred torma offerings, from
His Holiness Ling Rinpoche. There is a complete text of this in Dharamsala. I will
give the oral transmission of this practice, along with the Dzambhala.
So think, No matter what, I must achieve enlightenment in order to enlighten
all sentient beings. Therefore, I am going to take the oral transmissions of the Dzambhala
practice and the practice of making water charity to the pretas. [Rinpoche gives
the oral transmissions in Tibetan.]
It would take a lot of time to translate all the prayers, and in any case they have
already been translated, so Im not going to do it again. I will just explain
the meditations.
When I do the practice, I usually visualize myself as the Thousandarmed Buddha of
Compassion with nectar flowing from the hand. But I guess that you can also think
that you are the Buddha of Compassion with one face and two arms and seated in the
vajra posture as visualized in the very beginning of the nyung-nä practice, when
you have to generate yourself as the Buddha of Compassion before you bless the action
vase and the offerings. This aspect of the Buddha of Compassion is similar to that
of White Tara; the only difference is that there are no eyes in the hands or the feet.
Otherwise, I think the position is the same.
Alternatively, you can visualize the Buddha of Compassion in the resting posture,
the posture of royal ease. This aspect also has one face and two arms and is seated
on a moon disc. The right hand rests on the right knee in the mudra of granting sublime
realizations and the left is stretched out behind on the moon disc. You can visualize
whichever aspect you like.
You visualize that nectar comes from the palm of the hand, but physically, you pour
water from a jug, kettle or watering can. A watering can with a long spout is very
good for Dzambhala practice and for making water charity to the pretas since it allows
you to pour the water in a very fine stream, which is the preferred way of offering
it. If you dont have time, you can offer the water more quickly in a thicker
stream.
For the water charity to the pretas, the container from which you pour should have
a lid. You cannot use just any container that is around.
It should be covered because pretas get very anxious when they see an empty container
or a container that is only partly filled. Therefore, any container you use should
be covered unless it is full and there should not be empty containers around when
you do the practice. It is also good to do the practice in a clean place. This is
advised for the one hundred torma offerings. Some pretas cannot come to dirty places.
Also, there shouldnt be any sparkling lights where you are doing the practice
as these lights will make the pretas run away.
The torma charity or the water charity can generally be done at any time of the
day, though some specify that it should be done in the morning when the sun rises
and others that it should be done at night.
Different lamas give different advice. According to Lama Atisha, since pretas always
need food and drink, the practice can be done at any time.
However, the torma charity to the pretas should be done before eating a meal, and
this advice might also apply to the water charity. After you have eaten a meal, the
pretas become scared because your body then becomes powerful and radiant. Another
thing is that you should not smell of onion, garlic or other black foods. If the pretas
smell these foods on your breath, hands or body, some of them will run away and wont
get the torma or water that you are trying to give them. Therefore, it is good to
do the practice in the morning before having a meal. If you have eaten, wash your
hands before doing the practice.
Pretas are also so pitiful that they become frightened if they see the eyes of humans.
For them, a human faces is like the face of a lion, something very haughty and intimidating.
When my alphabet teachers did this practice every morning, they would wear a piece
of animal skin with a fringe that covered their eyes. Ribur Rinpoche explained that
when Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo did this practice he would wear very long black threads
that completely covered his face. You can make something with black threads that at
least cover your eyes.
When I stopped at Bangkok Airport on one of my recent trips from India or Nepal,
I found some yellow hats and bought a small one for Brian and one big one. I wrote
various mantras on the hat, including OM MANI PADMEHUM, the Wish-granting Wheel mantra,
which purifies one thousand eons of negative karma each time you go underneath it,
and another mantra which when seen purifies 100,000 eons of negative karma. The hat
was covered with mantras. I then had somebody sew black thread around the brim of
the hat. The last time that I went to see Ribur Rinpoche in Washington, I thought
I left the hat there. I didnt have one to use so I started to use the small
one that I gave Brian, which also has mantras all over it. At that time the hat that
I bought for Brian became useful. The big hat was later found in one of the suitcases.
When you pour the water, hold your left hand against your breast in the mudra of
granting refuge and snap your fingers as you recite OM AH HRIH HUM,the mantra for
the general pretas, over and over again. Think that you are the Buddha of Compassion
and that your body is the size of a mountain. Pour the water from the container into
the receptacle from the Dzambhala practice. Think that nectar flows from your hand
and relieves the suffering of the numberless pretas. The nectar instantly cools their
suffering of heat and they feel incredible peace and pleasure. Not only that, but
it also goes into their mouth, purifies their negative karma and defilements, and
brings them satisfaction. The nectar not quenches their thirst but also purifies their
minds.
Then recite OM MANI PADME HUM as you make charity to the pretas with flames coming
from the mouth. Again, do three things simultaneously:
recite the mantra, snap your fingers and allow the water to drip from the container
into the receptacle.
To make charity to the pretas with three knots, recite OM JVALA MIDAM SARVA PRETA
BHYAH SOHA. Jvala actually means flame, but in the text it says that this mantra is
for the pretas with three knots. As you recite the mantra, snap your fingers and at
the same time give one drop of waterdo these three things together. In the previous
two offerings [to the pretas in general and to those with flames coming from the mouth]
you poured the water into the receptacle from the Dzambhala practice; here you allow
the water to drip outside the receptacle into the body of water or onto plants or
the ground. Recite the mantra, snap your fingers and drip the water many times to
make water charity to the pretas with three knots.
Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo says here that if you recite this very blessed mantra OM
JVALA MIDAM SARVA PRETA BHYAH SOHA, snap your fingers and offer one drop of water
outside of the receptacle, the knots in the pretas throat are instantly released
and the drop of water goes into their stomach giving them great pleasure and satisfaction.
It has this great benefit.
As I have already said, I am not going to translate the prayers because I have already
translated them.
WATER CHARITY TO THE INTERMEDIATE STATE BEINGS
The next practice is called Yeshe Karda. Yeshe means transcendental wisdom;
karmeans star and da can mean either shooting or arrow. You visualize yourself as
Chenrezig and visualize the deity Yeshe Karda on your right hand. Yeshe Karda has
a green-blue holy body; her right hand is in the mudra of granting sublime realizations
and her left is in the mudra of concentration.
Nectar flows down from the palm of Yeshe Kardas hand as well as from the rest
of her body. The nectar flows over all the sentient beings, but in particular over
the pitiful intermediate state beings; they are all fully satisfied by the nectar.
Hold the water in a container in your right hand and, snapping the fingers of your
left hand, recite the mantra OM JNANA AVALOKITE SAMANTA PARANARAMI BAWA SAMAYAMAHA
MANIDURU DURU HRIH DAYA JALANI SOHA seven times and pour the water. Then recite the
dedication, By making this water charity to all the samsaric intermediate state
transmigratory beings, may they be liberated from all fear and suffering and go to
a pure land.
It is extremely good to do this practice when you are at the beach or near a river,
lake or even a swimming pool.
The other mantras I recite are not mentioned in the practice; I have added them
to make the practice more powerful. The first time, along with the OM JNANA AVALOKITE...
mantra, you can recite OM MANI PADME HUM as many times as possible times, blow on
the water, then pour it back into the ocean, river or other body of water. The text
doesnt say to blow on the water, but I think it would be better if you did.
Meditate that all the water appears as uncontaminated nectar to all the pretas that
are seen by buddhas omniscient mind. Think that all the pretas drink the nectar
and are fully satisfied by it. Also, they are completely liberated from all their
suffering, negative karma and defilements and all become enlightened in the aspect
of the Buddha of Compassion. Visualize all of them as the Thousand-armed Buddha of
Compassion.
Reciting this mantra (OM JNANA AVALOKITE...) and pouring the blessed water back
into the ocean has the power to enable all the pretas to actually see the water and
drink it. The special benefit here is that not only are they relieved of all their
preta sufferings, but also that their mind is purified and they achieve a higher rebirth.
This is a very important benefit that the pretas receive when this practice is done.
This is a practice for all pretas. When you go to the beach, you must take the opportunity
of doing this practice, because the ocean is the largest body of water.
Due to the power of the mantra given by Buddha, the preta beings are able to see
the whole ocean as nectar and to drink it; they are then able to be liberated.
Then take another container of water and again recite the mantra OM JNANA AVALOKITE...
seven times. You can support the container with your left hand and hold the handle
with your right. Then recite the Medicine Buddha mantra a few times and blow on the
water. Do the same meditation and pour the water back.
Take another container of water, recite the mantra OM JNANA AVALOKITE...
seven times, then recite the Namgyalma mantra a few times, blow on the water, then
pour the water back.
For the fourth round, repeat the same process but recite the Mitukpa mantra. For
the fifth round, recite the Kunrig mantraKunrig is the king of the deities for
purifying the lower realms. For the sixth round, recite the Wish-granting Wheel mantra,
OM PEMO USHNISHA VIMALE HUM PHAT. For the seventh, recite the Stainless Pinnacle mantra.
You can also recite the Stainless Beam mantra.
Each time you take some water, recite the mantra OM JNANA AVALOKITE... seven times,
recite in turn a few of each of the other seven or eight extra mantras, blow on the
water to bless it, pour the water back and meditate that the whole ocean appears as
nectar to all the pretas.
I have added these extra mantras because if you bless the water with these powerful
mantras and pour it back into the ocean, the whole ocean is then blessed and all the
billions and billions of sentient beings that live in the ocean are purified. The
water purifies all their negative karma, and even that of the people who play in the
water. If we recite these mantras and throw the water back into the ocean, the negative
karma of any sentient being touched by that water will be purified. Reciting those
extra mantras has this unbelievable benefit; it has the power to bless the water and
to purify all those sentient beings. And incidentally, you purify your own negative
karma. If you see some water when you are traveling, if you have time to stop and
do this practice, it is extremely good. And if you have a swimming pool, you can do
this practice in your pool.
WATER CHARITY TO THE NAGAS
After the Yeshe Karda practice, the text next mentions visualizing Mitukpa to purify
the nagas. Visualize that nectar flows down from Mitukpas right hand to all
the sentient beings of the six realms, especially the nagas. Again, while reciting
the Mitukpa mantra seven times, pour the water and snap your fingers. All the sentient
beings of the six realms, including yourselfand especially the nagas, who are
suffering so muchare purified. As I mentioned before, the main cause of rebirth
in the animal realm as a naga is taking vows and then degenerating them.
The particular function of Mitukpa is to purify the negative karma of broken vowspratimoksha
as well as all others. Mitukpa practice is very powerful for that. Therefore, because
rebirth as a naga is the result of having broken vows, Mitukpa practice is especially
beneficial for nagas.
Finally, dedicate the merit as already translated there in the practice.
When you finish the water offering to the pretas, think that all the pretas have
been totally purified of all their defilements and become the Buddha of Compassion.
Here, you can think that all the nagas and the rest of the sentient beings of the
six realms are purified of all their defilements and become Mitukpa. My feeling is
that reciting the Mitukpa mantra at the beach has particularly great benefit because
of all the nagas there.
Making water charity to the pretas is actually a cause of wealth. As mentioned in
the Madhyamika, From morality one receives a good rebirth and from charity one
receives wealth. Making charity to other sentient beings is a cause of wealth.
Because of the nature of the karma, making charity becomes the cause of your success
in this life and in all the coming future lives. You are able to fulfill your wishes
and receive whatever you need for both your Dharma practice and to benefit others.
WATER OFFERING TO DZAMBHALA
Did I mention before how Chenrezig, the Buddha of Compassion, came to manifest as
Dzambhala? No? What happened was that one day, when Lama Atisha was traveling in IndiaIm
not sure where, perhaps where Buddha cut his hair or around Bodhgaya; anyway, some
place associated with Guru Shakyamuni Buddhahe saw a man dying of starvation
on a sandy river bed. Lama Atisha felt such unbearable compassion for the man that
he wanted to cut some flesh from his own body to help the man to survive. The man,
refusing his offer, said, I dont want to eat the flesh of a monk.
Lama Atisha replied, I understand. In particular, you should not eat the flesh
of an arya being. Lama Atisha was an arya being, one who has realization of
true path, of the path of seeing and the path of meditation.
Lama Atisha was disappointed that the man wouldnt accept his offer.
He lay down on the sand and suddenly a very bright light appeared.
When Lama Atisha looked up, he saw the Thousand-armed Buddha of Compassion, who
said, Dont worry. I have a method to relieve the poverty of sentient beings.
The Buddha of Compassion then manifested as Dzambhala and taught various practice
for alleviating the poverty of sentient beings.
Thus, Dzambhala is the Buddha of Compassion, not some ordinary, worldly, wealth-granting
god. The Buddha of Compassion manifested as Dzambhala to grant wealth, to relieve
the poverty of sentient beings. The practices of the Dzambhala wealth vase, torma
offering to Dzambhala, water offering to Dzambhala and recitation of the Dzambhala
mantra came from Chenrezig as methods to relieve poverty.
There is a white Dzambhala, a yellow Dzambhala, a black Dzambhala and a red Dzambhala.
Also an Australian Dzambhala, an American Dzambhala, an LMB Dzambhala, a Californian
Dzambhala!
White Dzambhala rides a dragon and has four dakinis around him.
Recite the prayer, then pour water on the head of Dzambhala while snapping your
fingers and reciting the mantra OM PADMA KRODHA ARYA DZAMBHALA HRIH DAYA HUM PHAT.Ribur
Rinpoche explained the reason for pouring the water on Dzambhalas headthere
might be more details in the text, but all I remember is that at the time Devadatta
threw rocks at the Buddha, the Buddha was surrounded by Dzambhalas. The rocks hit
the white and yellow Dzambhalas on the head and the black Dzambhala on the stomach,
wounding them there. Therefore, we offer water on Dzambhalas head, and in return,
Dzambhala gives prosperity, wealth. In the text, the poetic term nyäl-droi
gyun-pois used for water.
However, Dzambhala is the Buddha of Compassion and this is the story. I think that
Buddha probably manifested in this way to help sentient beings by giving them this
method to practice water offering to Dzambhala. It is not possible for the Buddha
of Compassion, an enlightened being, to experience suffering. Anyway, this is why
you offer the water on Dzambhalas head or stomach.
As in the general practice of offering, if you visualize Dzambhala as inseparable
from the guru, you accumulate more merit when making the offering. You can also think
that your offering fills Dzambhalas holy mind with bliss as extensive as the
sky and inspires him to immediately help to fulfill all your needs.
Ribur Rinpoche gave me one very nice small statue of Black Dzambhala, which came
from Tibet. When Rinpoche gave it to me, he said to the statue, Now you go to
him, now you go to him.... I also have one small Yellow Dzambhala statue that
was maybe bought in Dharamsala. It was given to some Tibetans in Dharamsala to be
painted gold, but now even the eyes are covered with gold. You cant see the
eyes clearly because of the gold. Just recently, a White Dzambhala on a dragon came
from Nepal. I ordered it from Rajesh, who is the best painter of gold and who has
now started to make statues. He made the statue very nicely, except that he made Dzambhalas
face wrathful, like Palden Lhamos or Mahakalas. Dzambhalas face
should be fat with round eyes like Namtöse [Vaishravana], the protector of morality.
Think that Dzambhala is totally inspired to bring immediate success to whatever
projects you have, as well as to relieve all other sentient beings from poverty immediately
by giving them everything they need.
I usually try to think that Dzambhala is totally inspired to immediately bring about
the success of the Maitreya Project, the building of the 500-foot statue of Maitreya
Buddha, by giving everything that is needed to actualize the statue. I also think
that Dzambhala is inspired to immediately give everything that is needed to bring
extensive benefit to the teachings and to sentient beings. However, you can think
like this in relation to whatever projects you have in mind. First think of your main
project, then after that think that Dzambhala is inspired to immediately bring extensive
benefit to the teachings of the Buddha and to sentient beings, which covers everything,
through giving everything that is needed.
I have been telling people that these two small statues of Dzambhala have the responsibility
of building the 500-foot Maitreya Buddha statue.
They are very small but their job is huge.
Next comes water offering to Yellow Dzambhala. There is a prayer to recite that
requests the granting of realizations; this has already been translated, so you can
read it in the text. You then recite the mantra, OM DZAMBHALA JALANDRAYESOHA.
At the end you recite a verse of prostration and request. It says, Sentient
beings are tormented by the fire of the actions of miserliness, so together with all
other sentient beings, I go for refuge to you from life to life. With the flowing
nectar rain of jewel treasure, please pacify the suffering of poverty of sentient
beings.
After you have finished the practice, you sprinkle the water in each of the four
directions and in the center [Rinpoche uses ring finger as in sprinkling the inner
offering]. Think that the poverty in the minds of all sentient beings has been pacified.
Then take a little bit of water at the end as a blessing. Then say, DZAMBHALA SIDDHIPALAHO.
Make charity to the pretas with the rest of the water. Ribur Rinpoche said that
to do this is very powerful and has more blessings.
DEDICATION
At the end, dedicate first of all for bodhicitta, as usual. Then dedicate specifically
for the long lives of the virtuous friends and for the immediate accomplishment of
all their holy wishes. Due to all the merits of the three times collected by
me, buddhas, bodhisattvas and all other sentient beings, may I be able to obtain immediately
everything needed to fulfill the holy wishes of all my virtuous friends.
Due to this merit, may I be able to actualize immediately everything that
is needed by the sangha to complete their Dharma practice, both realizations and scriptural
understanding, and to preserve and spread the Dharma.
May I also be able to actualize immediately everything that is needed by those
sentient beings who are experiencing material poverty, as well as everything that
is needed by those who are experiencing poverty of Dharma. (You should do this
specific dedication, because your purpose in doing the Dzambhala practice is to help
others and to serve the teachings of Buddha.) After that, do any of the dedications
in A Daily Meditation Practice, but the main ones I would choose are: Due to
all the merits of the three times, may anyone who sees me, touches me, remembers me...
and From now on, may whatever kind of life I experience, even rebirth in the
lower realms, be most beneficial for all sentient beings, causing them all to achieve
enlightenment as quickly as possible. You dont have to do all the dedications
in the booklet; choose any one of them you like.
Or you can do the dedication that I often use, in which you request for this and
that to happen just through your being in this universe, world, country, area or place.
Dedicate for everyone to have perfect happiness;
to find solutions to all their problems, including the various sicknesses;
to never ever be reborn in the lower realms; and to achieve all the realizations
of the path, especially bodhicitta.
Another very important dedication is, Due to all the merits of the three times
collected by me, buddhas, bodhisattvas and all other sentient beings, from now on
in all my future lifetimes, may I be able to offer benefit as extensive as the sky
to all sentient beings as the Buddha of Compassion does by having the same qualities
within me as the Buddha of Compassion has.
After that, recite ge-wa di...and seal the dedication with emptiness.
At the very end, it is extremely important to dedicate for the flourishing of Lama
Tsong Khapas teachings. Always do this dedication at the end of every practice
session. Dedicate to actualize the complete teachings of Lama Tsong Khapa, the unification
of sutra and tantra, within your own mind in this very life; in the minds of all the
students and benefactors of this organization, especially those who sacrifice their
lives offering service to others and the teachings through this organization; and
in the minds of all other sentient beings. You can do this dedication for the spreading
and flourishing of Lama Tsong Khapas teachings in the minds of all sentient
beings elaborately or briefly. You should do this dedication for the flourishing of
Lama Tsong Khapas teachings at the end of any practice because if the teachings
exist for a long time, sentient beings will have the opportunity of achieving happiness.
Without the teachings of buddha, sentient beings have no chance of achieving happiness.
Ven. Chantal: Rinpoche, I have a question. Rinpoche said that Yeshe Karda is blue-green,
but the translation says that Yeshe Karda is extremely red in color, so
it is very confusing.
Rinpoche: Oh, I see. Yes, there is greatconfusion! Unbelievable confusion!
The confusion is so big that it doesnt fit in ParisIm joking.
Pabongkas commentary says that Yeshe Karda is blue-green, but the prayer says
that Yeshe Karda is extremely red. Maybe the deity has different colors. I think you
can visualize whichever color you like, whichever color suits you more.
The water charity to the pretas and the Dzambhala water offering are now finished.
Tomorrow, if there is time, we might go through the nine attitudes from the guru devotion
section of Lama Tsong Khapas Lamrim chen-mo. The prayer that I translated is
not from there, but from a text by Shabkar Tsogdrug Rangdrol, whose main guru was
the abbot of Reting. I dont remember this abbots name, but he composed
many texts, including a commentary to Wheel of Sharp Weapons. However, the nine attitudes
are also explained in Lama Tsong Khapas lam-rim.
Due to all the merits of the three times collected by me, buddhas, bodhisattvas
and all other sentient beings, may all the father and mother sentient beings have
happiness; may the three lower realms be empty forever;
may all the bodhisattvas prayers be accomplished immediately; and may I be
able to cause all this by myself alone.
Due to all the merits of the three times collected by me, buddhas, bodhisattvas
and all other sentient beings, which are totally empty from their own side, may the
I, who is also totally empty from its own side, achieve Vajrasattvas enlightenment,
which is also totally empty from its own side, and lead all sentient beings, who are
also totally empty from their own side, to that enlightenment, which is also totally
empty from its own side, by myself alone, who is also totally empty from its own side.
[Multiplying mantras etc.]
Then dedicate for the flourishing of Lama Tsong Khapas teachings.
Good night.
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