LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 22: January 2005
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Dear Friends,
Welcome to our first e-letter of 2005. Happy New Year!
First, I’d like to thank all of you who responded
so positively to the advocacy of vegetarianism in our previous
e-letter. Here are some related links that have come to light
as a result:
Lama
Zopa Rinpoche’s
Animal
Liberation Sanctuary,
Veggie
Dharma and Tibetans
for vegetarianism.
Last June we asked
you to recite the Sanghata Sutra and
the response was wonderful. Many of you expressed how happy
and blessed you felt when doing this. Now there’s
no specific request, but if you’d like another wonderful
sutra to recite, try the Sutra of Golden Light. Lama Zopa
Rinpoche briefly explains
the benefits here.
It’s available
on-line in several languages but
not in English. If you would like to recite it in English,
please email me.
Also, if you are interested in Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s
recent tsunami advice, please
go here. In fact, if you go to Lama
Zopa Rinpoche's page on the FPMT site, you’ll find
all kinds of teachings and advice, including a radio address
Rinpoche gave last
year in Mongolia, “What is Buddhism?”
Finally, a little appeal: For the past year we have been
editing for publication Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s Vajrayogini
generation stage teachings--several long commentaries and
a few more short ones--given over the past 25 years or so.
It has been a lot of work but the end is in sight. Please
go here if you would like to contribute to or learn more about this
project.
Thank you so much for your interest in and support of the
Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive.
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
Guru Devotion
Since Rinpoche was unable to attend the 37th
Kopan Course (Winter 2004), he gave this teaching for the
participants
to a small group of students at his Aptos House, California,
December 20, 2004. It was later shared with the Kopan course
participants.
Guru devotion is the quickest way to collect the most extensive
merit, the means to achieve enlightenment. Of course, the
main thing is having the right motivation, bodhicitta, but
having a pure mind of guru devotion, no negative mind arising
toward the guru—which is very heavy negative karma—is
also very important.
A negative attitude such as a thought of giving up respect,
even just thinking, “What is the use of this teaching?” I
think creates negative karma; one breaks the samaya vows.
A kind of pollution comes and whatever you offer becomes
negative and can invite sickness or obstacles. So, I think,
most important is keeping samaya, not doing any wrong thing,
not letting heresy arise, having negative thoughts or losing
faith. Also, maybe, not having broken the root pratimoksha
vows. Especially, lost faith is very heavy.
So much emphasis is placed on guru devotion because, with
very strong guru devotion, there is no hardship in following
advice; it becomes so easy to follow any advice.
If one sees Buddha, one feels incredible happiness, joy,
pleasure in this life. We were trying the other day to find
an example of happiness. I said “going to the beach” or
something like that, “drinking nectar”; you said “having
sex,” remember? We were looking for an analogy of something
that is most exciting and happy for ordinary beings.
Here, Dharma practice offers the most exciting, highest
happiness there is: following the advice, finding no hardship
at all in whatever advice the guru gives, even things that
generally seem hard in the view of other people, even impossible.
That itself is guru devotion. Then, seeing your guru as Buddha,
without any question, is incredible, the peak, the highest
enjoyment. Nothing is difficult to accept. But if the devotion
is not strong, if the devotion is, what’s the word,
yacki yoki—what is that expression, yacki yoki? There’s
one expression, it means a little bit there but not stable…wishy-washy!
Wishy-washy, meaning not strong. If there’s no real
devotion, if there’s only a little and it’s wishy-washy,
then it is artificial, from the lips, no real devotion in
the heart; or there’s something but it’s very
tiny, not very strong.
When a fire has been burning a long time and there are only
one or two fire sparks left, it can disappear very easily.
That is what happens to devotion—one or two sparks
left, all the fire gone. Then it’s very difficult even
if the advice is very simple, nothing hard, not a great sacrifice.
Even very small things, like something to bring or take away,
some very, very small thing becomes hard. The mind doesn’t
want to do it.
With that attitude one cannot obtain the advice, there’s
no thought that it is precious, so precious, and there is
no thought that “this is a task for me,” that
this is a dependent arising, that this advice is purification
of negative karma accumulated from beginningless rebirth
up to now and is collecting the most extensive merit. Seeing
it as a path to achieve enlightenment, that this advice brings
you to enlightenment. Then one doesn’t see that every
single advice that is given, whatever service one does, every
single task is the most powerful one, the best method to
fulfill all your wishes, the best cause for your highest
wish to be fulfilled.
Here, from among all your wishes, the highest, most important
wish is to achieve enlightenment for sentient beings and
this is the best, most powerful cause to be able to enlighten
numberless sentient beings, to do perfect work for sentient
beings.
The proof [of the power] of guru devotion is found in many
stories. Such-and-such a lama, such-and-such a yogi served,
obtained advice, spread Lama Tsong Khapa’s teachings,
was able to offer skies of benefit for sentient beings and
teachings of Buddha, and gave explanations—all those
stories. Incredible, that root of guru devotion, seeing the
guru as buddha, grew into stable realization, through advice
obtained from correctly devoting to the virtuous friend in
thought and action.
Many people can understand, have admired the life story,
or have heard how Milarepa achieved enlightenment in one
brief lifetime in this degenerated time. That’s because
he was given advice by Marpa, before receiving teachings
or initiations, not only to build a tower alone, without
any help, but then to tear it down and put the stones back
from where he brought them. Again rebuild, again put back.
That is unbelievable, it’s almost impossible, what
Milarepa did without losing faith or devotion. Not only that,
sometimes Milarepa came with other students to receive teachings—I
guess he maybe sort of sneaked in—but the minute Marpa
saw Milarepa among the people, he scolded him and asked him
to leave. Yet there never arose one single heresy from Milarepa’s
side. His devotion was always very firm, he never lost any
faith. Because of that, correctly devoting with thought,
then with actions, following every single word that Marpa
said, he achieved enlightenment in that very lifetime.
It’s the same with Gyälwa Ensapa, Chökyi
Dorje and numberless beings such as Naropa and Lama Tsong
Khapa. It is said that Lama Tsong Khapa could have achieved
enlightenment in one brief life in this degenerated time
with the wisdom mother practice, with a consort, but out
of concern for the Vinaya teachings, in order to preserve
them and be an example to others, he achieved enlightenment
in the intermediate state.
There are many inspiring stories, such as the story of the
bodhisattva Sadaprarudita, “Always Crying One.” I
think Sadaprarudita must have reached the great path, the
third level, of the bodhisattva’s path of merit because
when you achieve that level, wherever you are, it just happens
that you see numberless buddhas in nirmanakaya aspect. Sadaprarudita
was able to see and could have received teachings from many
other buddhas but he was not satisfied, he wanted to see
the buddha, the guru with whom he had a karmic connection.
He went to see the bodhisattva Dharmodgata, the one he had
past karmic connection with, but bodhisattva Dharmodgata
was in retreat. Always Crying One stayed seven years in that
temple, cleaning outside the temple. The day bodhisattva
Dharmodgata was coming out to give teachings, he set up the
throne and cleaned the place. When he was cleaning, he wanted
to prevent dust from rising but as maras had created obstacles
and the place did not have water, he took blood from his
body and sprinkled it on the ground. That is just a very
rough outline of the story.
Generally, without practicing tantra, only following sutra,
the Paramitayana, one has to collect merit for three countless
great eons, but Always Crying One finished collecting the
merits of one countless great eon within those seven years.
Why so fast? Because he had incredible strong devotion to
his guru, cherishing bodhisattva Dharmodgata more than his
own life. That means achieving enlightenment more quickly.
Another one is the Kadampa Geshe Chayulwa. Normally the
teachings mention him as an incomparable example, one that
we should pray to be like. Bodhisattva Shönu Norsang
is one and Chayulwa is another—incomparable, like an
Olympic champion, a world champion, like Tiger Woods. Those
world champions—bodhisattva Shönu Norsang, Always
Crying One, Kadampa Chayulwa and Milarepa—are very
common examples, incomparable in giving their life to their
gurus, cherishing the guru more than their own life.
With that kind of strong guru devotion, cherishing the guru
more than his life, every day Kadampa Chayulwa offered service
to his guru, Chengawa, cleaning Chengawa’s house and
many other services. It is said that even while he was offering
a mandala, when Kadampa Geshe Chayulwa heard his guru calling,
he would stop in the middle of the mandala and run to offer
service, even in the middle of writing the (Tibetan) letter
nga. This is expressing how the mind had such strong devotion,
cherishing the guru and actualizing the guru’s advice,
that kind of thing.
One day, after cleaning and dusting Chengawa’s room,
while going down the stairs, as he reached the third step,
because of all this incredible purification—sweeping
having become unbelievable purification of the impure mind,
defilements and negative karma, each sweeping collecting
the most extensive merit—the karma that blocked seeing
buddha was purified and he saw numberless buddhas in nirmanakaya
aspect, just there, while going down to throw the garbage.
Of course, it can be another thing, whatever service you
are doing, like cooking or serving, especially following
whatever advice is given, every second one moves closer to
liberation, becomes more distant from samsara, closer to
enlightenment, each time coming closer to realizations of
the path to liberation and enlightenment.
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Another example is Sakya Pandita.
When Sakya Pandita’s
guru, Dragpa Gyaltsen, took the aspect of having a very heavy
sickness, Sakya Pandita offered service so selflessly that
he had no time himself to eat food or sleep. He offered one-pointed
service day and night, bearing hardships in order to offer
service to his guru. His guru, Dragpa Gyaltsen, was extremely
pleased and said he would give him Manjushri guru yoga practice.
After he received the guru yoga practice, Sakya Pandita actually
realized and was able to see that his guru was Manjushri.
That was the same, you see, all the negative karmas and
the impure mind that had blocked him from seeing Manjushri
before were purified by doing service, day and night, without
even sleeping. Then Sakya Pandita became extremely learned.
His name became world-famous as the most expert logician,
expert in the five sciences: crafts, logic, grammar, medicine
and philosophy, or inner knowledge. Buddhism falls into inner
knowledge. He was far-famed in Tibet, China and all those
countries. He was able to offer the most extensive, incredible
benefit, like lotus blossoms, by seeing Manjushri. This came
by serving the guru. The knowledge blossomed by having purified
the defilements, the blockages, through service.
Then there was Dromtönpa. One time Lama Atisha took
the aspect of being sick with uncontrollable diarrhea. When
he lost kaka in the bed and was making pipi, Dromtönpa,
without any thought of it as dirty, cleaned and took care
of Lama Atisha with his own hands, like a mother, cherishing
him more than his own life. As he was doing service like
this, one day he was able to read the minds of insects, ants
and worms, even from the distance it takes an eagle eighteen
days to fly. After taking care of Atisha like that, he actualized
one of the six types of clairvoyance, the ability to read
anyone’s mind, very clearly. The potential is there
in everyone to attain those qualities but is blocked by karma
and defilements. Dromtönpa, by having one-pointed guru
devotion to Lama Atisha and doing service, purified and those
qualities arose within him by the blessing of the lama, having
received lama’s blessing through devotion and service.
One story is how Lama Atisha, with his clairvoyance, one
day saw that Kadampa Geshe Gönbawa was thinking, “I
must have greater realizations than the translator Dromtönpa.
Why? Because he doesn’t have time to meditate, he’s
always so busy translating. I have so much time to meditate
so maybe I have greater realizations than him and the cook,
Amé Jangchub, who is always busy cooking.”
So Lama Atisha invited all three of them to line up in front
of him and checked who had higher realizations. Dromtönpa’s
realization was much higher than Gönbawa’s—no
comparison, much higher. No way to compare. Even Amé Jangchub’s
realization was higher than Gönbawa’s, even though
he didn’t have time to meditate like Gönbawa.
This story clarifies one point. Generally people have the
idea that retreat and meditation are good and doing service
is not really the best practice to develop the mind. What
really develops the mind, what can give realizations from
path to path is meditation, only meditation. But in reality
it is not necessarily like that. One has to analyze which
of these collects most merit, which becomes the most purification,
which is more powerful. Amé Jangchub, the cook, and
the translator were so busy offering service, I think that
is why their realization was higher.
I don’t know the explanations, but my guess is that
it might be along these lines: that what matters is whatever
is most pleasing. I think that’s the main point—whatever
is most pleasing. One should realize that is the quickest
path to enlightenment, I would say. That is, of course, based
on the mind keeping devotion one-pointedly, not arising negative
thoughts and not breaking samaya with the guru; based on
correct devotion to the virtuous friend, as is mentioned
in the eight disadvantages of making mistakes and eight advantages
of correctly devoting to the virtuous friend, in the guru
devotion section of the lam-rim.
Doing something one would like but which is not following
what the guru said—breaking the advice, or giving rise
to negative thoughts of anger or heresy—can make you
lose any qualities you may have, such as some experience
of compassion or renunciation, even the actual realization
of bodhicitta, maybe even an experience or realization of
emptiness.
It is explained that even if one has achieved actual realization
of bodhicitta, there is the possibility to lose it, so it
may be similar with realization of emptiness. Whatever experience
one has one loses and no new experience can happen. It’s
very difficult, the mind gets stuck, thick-skulled and like
a stone that has been in the ocean many tens of thousands,
thousand years. No water goes into it, it is so hard. Or
like the hot desert, which doesn’t get one drop of
liquid, wetness. The mind becomes like that. Nothing grows.
Whatever thoughts arise are negative, it is so easy for negative
thoughts to arise, the mind becomes kind of covered by them,
like being covered by mud or kaka, filthy dirty. It becomes
very difficult for positive thoughts to arise, such as thinking
of the qualities of the guru. Even if the guru is an enlightened
being, one cannot see even as a bodhisattva, only seeing
as very selfish or seeing mistakes, mistaken actions or suffering
body and mind, like that.
Not only the realizations but even the Dharma understanding
one had before becomes meaningless, degenerates, one can’t
remember. It becomes difficult to learn new things even when
one listens to teachings. Before, one could concentrate and
it was easy to understand, now it is difficult, one can’t
keep up or follow. That is the result of actualizing mistakes
in guru devotion; a negative thought arising and then giving
up on the object of respect.
Now the opposite: by correctly devoting to the virtuous
friend in thought and actions, even if one doesn’t
have intellectual knowledge, understanding and realizations
come, even if one didn’t study.
There was an attendant of Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo, author
of Liberation in the Palm of the Hand, whose name was Jamyang.
He had never studied the Tibetan alphabet, couldn’t
read Tibetan. Before Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo passed away,
he told this attendant that eventually he would be able to
read the entire Guru Puja by himself, without being taught.
And that’s exactly what happened. After going into
exile from Tibet, Jamyang finished up at the refugee camp
at Buxa, where I lived for eight years and received philosophical
teachings from my three gurus, Geshe Rabten Rinpoche, Lama
Yeshe and another lama, also called Gen Yeshe.
Buxa had previously been a concentration camp when India
was under British rule. This was the place where Mahatma
Gandhi-ji and Prime Minister Nehru were imprisoned. Nehru-ji’s
place of imprisonment became the Sera Monastery prayer hall.
It was a very long house and the monks also slept there on
beds made from bamboo, cut from the forest. Between the roof
and the wall was a space and sometimes snakes fell down on
the beds. Where Gandhi-ji was imprisoned became a nunnery
for some Kagyu nuns.
At Buxa, the incarnate lamas lived on a mountain high above
the rest of the camp. The abbot and main teacher at Kopan
Monastery, Lama Lhundrub, who supervises the education and
discipline of the three hundred Kopan monks, used to live
up there in the same building as Pabongka Dechen Nyingpo’s
incarnation, where the attendant Jamyang also lived. When
Jamyang first arrived at Buxa, he couldn’t read a thing,
but suddenly one day he was able to read the entire Guru
Puja. He himself told Lama Lhundrub that Pabongka Dechen
Nyingpo had predicted that this would happen.
(Rinpoche said this teaching is still to be finished.)
Transcribed by Vens. Gyaelten Yarphel and Thubten Labdron
and lightly edited by the latter.
For more teachings on the topic of guru devotion see Geshe
Ngawang Dhargyey’s long
commentary and short
commentary on Ashvagosha’s classic text, the Fifty
Verses of Guru Devotion.)
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