Advice
His Holiness Kyabje Ling Rinpoche
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Given at the conclusion of the Yamantaka initiation,
Enlightened Experience Celebration, Dharamsala, 24 April
1982. Translated and clarified by Lama Thubten Zopa
Rinpoche, Dharamsala, June 1982. From the Report on
the first Enlightened Experience Celebration in Bodh
Gaya and Dharamsala, India. January-June 1982.
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If, after receiving an initiation, you practice well, you
can become like Vajradhara. This means you should keep perfectly
the root and branch tantric vows and all aspects of the samayas
(commitments). You should understand the samayas of eating,
drinking, protection, sleeping and so forth, and study well
the details of the three levels of ordination. There are teachers
at your Dharma centers and you can learn all this from them.
The purpose of taking an initiation is not to send yourself
to the lower realms but to lead yourself to the state of Vajradhara.
This is what you should do with the initiations you receive;
they are to be practiced, not merely collected. For example,
you have just received a Vajrabhairava initiation. This itself
is what you have to practice; there is no Vajrabhairava practice
other than what is contained in the initiation. The vows and
samayas, the stages of generation and completion are all there.
And unless you are illiterate you should recite the sadhana
every day. If you cannot do the long one you should at least
do the short one written by Lama Dorje Chang (Kyabje Pabongka
Rinpoche); there are only a few pages in it.
Each day you should do the self-generation, and the six-session
guru yoga, because it contains all the daily practices you
have promised to do during the initiation.
All of you here are highly fortunate. You who have come from
the West to this Dharma Celebration have received the highest,
most profound teachings from most precious lamas, in particular,
His Holiness the Dalai Lama. As far as fortune is concerned
there is none greater than this.
However, each individual must practice well. There is no benefit
in simply thinking, "Now I have received these teachings,"
and leaving it at that. If you have received some material
like money, perhaps it is enough just to record it as a credit
in an account book, but where initiations are involved, merely
counting the number you have received is useless; you have
to practice.
It used to be impossible to hear Buddhadharma and meet gurus
in the West. From the Dharma point of view these were barbaric
lands, outlying countries to which the teachings of the Buddha
had not spread. But now there are many different Dharma centers
in the West, and especially through the incomparable activities
of Lama Thubten Yeshe and Lama Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, many
devoted to preserving and disseminating the teachings of Lama
Tsong Khapa. So it is very good that you have taken the great
responsibility of serving the teachings in this way, engaging
in both Dharma and administrative activities to establish
these centers all over the world. And although you have done
very well so far and are making progress year by year, still
you must continue making the efforts necessary for further
progress. As the teaching spreads in this way, more and more
people in the West can hear the Buddhadharma and are to that
extent highly fortunate.
To ensure progress in the many centers you have established
there are two aspects of activity that have to be developed
together: the Dharma aspect and the administrative aspect.
To develop the conditions necessary for study and practice
in a center, those who do the administrative work should take
proper responsibility and be in good harmony with everybody
at the center. On the basis of this, all the students there
should make great efforts to develop the center in whatever
way possible. It's like when you have some very delicious
food, you take big bites and chew it with all your teeth,
taking full advantage of itthis is a Tibetan saying;
I hope you understand its meaning. If you were at a place
where there were gold coins for the taking you would stuff
them everywhere, into every pocket and orifice! Take every
opportunity to develop your Dharma center.
With respect to developing the Dharma side, it seems that
most of your centers have already received resident teachers.
Thus it is extremely important that you expend energy in studying
well. But don't leave whatever you learn as mere intellectual
knowledge; you should use it to subdue your minds and eradicate
delusions. Your understanding should become one with your
mind. As it is said in the lam-rim teachings:
The purpose of understanding what one has heard is to enable
one to practice according to his capacity.
After you have heard and understood some teaching-for example,
the perfect human rebirth, renunciation, bodhicittayou
must practice it; that is the purpose of the teaching. Each
one of us should practice in accordance with our individual
level of mind, or ability.
We study, study, study, but if we do not mix whatever we have
understood thoroughly with our minds there will be a Dharma
famine in our minds; we shall suffer from poverty of Dharma.
This is what happens: you live in the middle of a Dharma center,
you study Dharma, but you are a Dharma pauper. So don't be
like that. Use the Dharma that you have studied to change
your mind, to be different from before. That is the purpose
of Dharma, and if you can use it to change your mind in this
way you won't be poor in Dharma. As Tewugen Rinpoche said:
Those who know the secret of turning iron into gold through
alchemy never experience material poverty.
How can you become poor if you can transform any old piece
of iron into gold? Similarly, if you know how to change your
mind with Dharma you'll never suffer from Dharma starvation.
This is the most important thing to worry about.
Because we have not yet changed our minds, we create negative
actions and accumulate many non-virtuous impressions that
cause us to wander in samsara. How can we know if our mind
is unchanged, unsubdued? If we are constantly concerned about
the comfort of this lifefood, clothing and reputationwe
have unsubdued minds. How should we change such minds? By
reflecting on topics such as the eight freedoms and ten richnesses,
the great usefulness of, and the great difficulty of, receiving
the perfect human rebirth and impermanence and death. Through
this we should be able to change our minds. Also, if we are
seeking samsaric enjoyments such as the pleasures of the devas,
our minds are unsubdued. As a remedy we should contemplate
the suffering nature of the whole of samsara and generate
strong aversion to it. Furthermore, the thought, "How
good it would be if I had to remain in samsara no longer,"
the concern for oneself alone that abandons the welfare of
other sentient beings, while generally not considered an unsubdued
mind, is an unsubdued mind from the Mahayana point of view.
The antidote to this is training in the loving compassionate
bodhicitta and equanimity.
We should accustom ourselves to the fact that all sentient
beingsfriends, enemies and neutralsare exactly
equal: all desire happiness and none desire the slightest
suffering, even in their dreams. Since we ourselves and all
others are like that, exactly equal, we should work for the
benefit of all sentient beings. All the good things we possess
have come from other sentient beings: our perfect human body,
with its eight freedoms and ten richnesses, our meeting with
the holy Dharma and the ability to practice it, our food,
drink and clothingeverything. Thus of course we should
work for their benefit.
To be able to work for sentient beings we must train our
minds in bodhicitta and thought transformation. This starts
with subduing the mind through study and reflection on the
lam-rim teachings. This is the most important thing and is
the basis for the practice of the entire path to enlightenment.
Even though the practice of tantra is so important and is
the incomparable method for attaining the unified state of
Vajradhara, it depends completely on the lam-rim. Just as
the Tibetan delicacy made of powdered cheese and butter is
said to depend on the kindness of the butter, without which
it would be just a pile of dry cheese, so too does the profound
tantra depend on the kindness of the sutra and lam-rim teachings,
the graduated paths of those of the three levels of capability.
Whoever tries to practice the generation and completion stages
of tantra without having gone through these is like a small
child gazing around a temple: nothing happens.
You should all study the lam-rim thoroughly, and on the basis
of that try to change your minds. That is the essential point.
If you then practice the Guhyasamaja, Chakrasamvara or Vajrabhairava
tantras your efforts will be incomparable and you will be
able to achieve the unified state of Vajradhara. Please take
this advice to heart.
And each of you should take the responsibility of spreading
Dharma so that, like the rising sun, it illuminates the darkness
of the world. You have been doing so; please do still more.
We should all pray for success in this.
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