LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 47: March 2007 |
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Dear LYWA Friends,
Thank you for subscribing to our monthly e-letter.
Reminder and Update
As
most of you know, a couple of weeks ago we sent out a Special
Announcement to let you know that we have created some
beautiful portraits of Lama Yeshe suitable for altars, framing
and so forth. These professionally restored photos are printed
on museum-quality paper, and the result is truly outstanding.
For more information, see our portrait
information page.
Also, in our January e-letter we asked for your help to create
the merit to help a friend sell her property, many of the
proceeds of which would go to support Dharma projects, including
the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. Many of you agreed to follow
Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s advice and recite the Akashagarbha
mantra and/or write out the Sanghata Sutra to this
end. Well, it seems to have worked! A buyer has been found
and a contract negotiated. Our friend and all of us here thank
you for your faith in Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s observations
and dedication to helping the Dharma. Thank you so much. You
can stop reciting the mantra (unless you want to keep doing
it anyway!), but if you have started copying out the Sutra,
please continue till it’s done.
Books and DVDs
Once more, our ever-popular Becoming
Your Own Therapist / Make Your Mind an Ocean combined
edition is running low and we’re going to reprint another
20,000 copies. People love that book! We’re seeking
$15,000 to accomplish this project, so if you’d like
to help, please let us know.
Our
new Lama Yeshe DVD project, Anxiety
in the Nuclear Age, is in production. We expect to
have copies available in a couple of weeks. It contains two
talks Lama gave in California in 1983…with nuclear tensions
again running high, these teachings are as relevant today
as when they were given. This subtitled DVD costs only $15
and a mere $7 for LYWA members. Although the DVD won't be
ready to ship until April 13th, you
can place your order now.
And work is already well advanced on our next DVD projects.
One is a couple of 1982 interviews with Lama Yeshe, a bit
of which we published in our August
2006 e-letter. In these interviews Lama talks about how
he and Lama Zopa Rinpoche began teaching Westerners, the approach
to teaching Dharma to Westerners, what is the essence of Buddhism,
how to bring Dharma to the West, how the
FPMT got going, how a center should develop and many other
interesting topics along these lines.
The other DVD project is really exciting in that it was recorded
in 1975 and you’ve never seen the Lamas look like this!
Those of us who met the Lamas in the ’70s will be gripped
with nostalgia; those who did not will have their minds blown!
More on this later, but we do have a problem. There are gaps
where the videotapes are changed and although we have complete
transcripts, for some reason we do not have audio of Lama
Zopa Rinpoche’s part of these teachings in the Archive.
They were given at Royal Holloway College, near London, in
September 1975. If by
any chance anybody has audiotapes of these teachings, please
let us know. Thank you so much.
New Lama Zopa Rinpoche Material
We
have added to our
Members' Area the transcripts of lectures given by Lama
Zopa Rinpoche at the 17th Kopan Meditation Course in 1984.
These lectures include extensive teachings on the Heart
Sutra, selflessness, and dependent origination.
Also, we have now made available for public access Rinpoche's
lectures from the 28th Kopan Meditation Course in 1995; you
can access this through Rinpoche's
Teachings page. The audio from these teachings
are being posted to our Online
Recordings page... see more information about this below.
This month's updates to Rinpoche's Online
Advice Book include new advices in the Dharma
Work section of the book. There's new advice
for Center Directors, recommendations for how to handle
conflicts
among fellow students, and advice related to teaching
Dharma.
We have made a number of updates to our Photo
Gallery and added new sections with photos of Rinpoche,
some of which were from the Lake Arrowhead course in 1975.
In addition we've posted the group photo from this course,
which is remarkably clear—if you attended this course,
you are sure to be able to find youself in this photo!
If you'd like to see more photos of Lama Zopa Rinpoche, be
sure to visit the FPMT's
Photo Gallery as well.
Additions to Our Online Recordings Page
We've posted the
audio of another of Lama Zopa Rinpoche's lectures from
the 28th Kopan Meditation Course in 1995. This one includes
the oral transmission of Kyabje Pabongka Rinpoche's Heart-Spoon
prayer. The transcripts to these teachings have just been
posted to Lama Zopa Rinpoches teachings page, too, so you
can read along as you listen.
This month's podcast is the 2nd chapter from our newest book
of Lama Yeshe's teachings, Ego,
Attachment and Liberation. You can read along with
the unedited transcript of this teaching, too. Listen to this
recording—and all of the recordings we've released as
podcasts—on our Online
Recordings page.
Final Notes
Our friends at Langri Tangpa Centre have put up a great page
of Lama
Zopa Rinpoche stories. Check them out!
Thank you again for your kind interest in and support of
the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive. As ever, we’re happy
to leave you with a teaching you would not have seen before.
This one is from the 1975 London course that we are bringing
out on DVD, as mentioned above.
Much love
Nick Ribush
Director
The
Causes of Happiness and Suffering Lie Within
All human beings and even the tiniest of creatures desire
happiness and freedom from suffering. But our biggest problem
is that although we desire happiness and don’t want
any suffering whatsoever, we don’t know what their actual
cause is. That’s our biggest problem.
Most living beings, no matter how much they wish for happiness,
spend most of their time destroying its cause, and no matter
how much they do not want suffering, they rush to do what
it takes to bring it about. All this happens because sentient
beings lack method and wisdom.
Earth’s original human inhabitants did not have minds
as negative and cruel as those of today. As a result, their
actions of speech and body were not as violent and harmful
as those of the people we see around us now, and life was
much more peaceful in those far gone days. But gradually,
as their delusions of anger, attachment, pride and jealousy
arose more frequently and strongly, the actions of the early
humans’ speech and body became more violent and harmful.
And now, irrespective of how much material progress the world
has made, life has become busier and more dangerous.
The main cause of the problems we experience does not lie
in the external environment, however; the main cause of suffering
is the unhealthy, dissatisfied mind. That’s why external
development has not brought real, true peace. On the contrary,
it seems that the more things have developed externally, the
more danger has been brought to our lives, our people and
our countries. All this arises mainly as a result of internal
factors: the dissatisfied mind, attachment and hatred.
So, even though external development proceeds apace in the
hope of happiness, it’s all based on the wrong conception
that happiness comes from external things. It does not; happiness
arises only from inner factors, the mind.
Look at people who have every material thing their heart
desires—food, clothing, fancy apartment, everything:
they’re still not happy; they still get depressed; they’re
still not satisfied. And because they don’t understand
the meaning of the human life and think that there’s
nothing left to enjoy, they kill themselves. Such life problems
arise from the mind, the inner factor of attachment. Instead
of bringing satisfaction and happiness, all their desirable
material possessions simply lead to more dissatisfaction.
Sometimes it seems that our personal, everyday sufferings
seem to be caused by other people—our family members,
enemies, other people in the country and so forth—but
even if we killed every other living being on earth and were
here alone, we’d still have neither peace nor happiness.
The cessation of suffering and the experience of happiness
do not depend on making all other beings on earth non-existent,
and the fact that doing so would not bring peace or happiness
to the last person left proves that this would be an extremely
mistaken way of seeking happiness. That person would feel
very lonely and unhappy. Problems arise from within, from
inner, mental factors such as attachment.
Also, we all know that when we acquire an object or a friend
that we desire, we eventually lose interest and look for something
new. This sort of problem also arises from within, from the
dissatisfied mind and attachment.
And even after a person’s physical body has become
non-existent and disappeared, still that person’s suffering
has not ended; his or her mind still exists—just because
the body finishes doesn’t mean the mind does. And as
long as that mind is under the control of the three poisonous
delusions of ignorance, attachment and aversion, it’s
not free of suffering. In fact, those delusions are the worst
of all suffering, the root of every problem experienced by
all beings everywhere. Just as a tree without a root can have
no branches, leaves or fruit, similarly, a sentient being
free of root delusions can experience none of the sufferings
of sickness, aging, death and so forth.
This is the beginning of the first teaching Lama Zopa
Rinpoche ever gave in Europe. Edited from the Lama Yeshe Wisdom
Archive by Nicholas Ribush.
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PO Box 356
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Telephone: (781) 259-4466
info@lamayeshe.com · www.lamayeshe.com
Affiliated with the FPMT |
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