LYWA Monthly e-letter Archive
No. 16: July 2004
|
|
Dear Friends,
Thank you for being on our e-letter list. Please feel free
to forward these letters to your friends and ask them to
sign up for them. We’d welcome more readers. This month’s
teaching follows.
And thank you, too, to all of you who joined us in reciting
the Sanghata Sutra as requested by our
precious spiritual director, Lama Zopa Rinpoche.
More than 200 LYWA supporters participated in this Dharma
adventure and we way surpassed our goal of 150 recitations:
about 430! Thank you so much.
Here (lightly edited) are some excerpts of what some of
you said about the experience:
“This is to let you know I have chanted one complete Arya
Sanghata Sutra. I found it touching and interesting
that my three cats sat around me until I was finished chanting
it (it’s long!).”
“While I was sitting on the ground waiting for my
bus, I was visited twice by a little yellow spider, a green
leafhopper, and one of the tiniest bugs of a yellowish green
I had ever seen. I thought that Dharma readings can reach
even the tiniest form of life! That made my heart very warm
and full. Also, I was so energized throughout the first weekend
of this month. I was full, if I can put it into words. It
is a wonderful sutra and I will definitely read it as many
times as I can.”
“I’ve just had the extraordinary experience
of reciting the Sanghata Sutra, dedicated with much gratitude
to the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive and its work.”
“Thank you so much for giving me this opportunity
to recite the Sutra. I had a very touching and spiritual
experience when I was reciting it. With much gratitude and
thankfulness….”
“I have completed, with joy, 2 recitations of this
extraordinary sutra….”
“I have completed one full recitation of the Arya
Sanghata Sutra. I am blessed to have had this opportunity.”
“I did have a good experience, though tiring at times.
It is like filling up gaps that should have been filled up
earlier on. It is interesting to imagine others than yourself
listening to it during the recitation. Without your request,
I probably wouldn’t have come across the Sanghata
Sutra,
much less read or recited it. I have never recited a sutra
in full before or in that many repetitions. I have underestimated
the recitation of sutra. Recitation definitely leaves a deeper
imprint of the contents on the mind than reading it silently.”
“My horizons have been broadened by reading this sutra.”
“It was quite wonderful, with a lovely sense of light
and blessings surrounding me. I recited it outside so as
to benefit more beings.”
“After I did the Sutra this morning, I left for a
job interview. I have been applying for jobs for a couple
of months now, sending about ten posted applications, various
email applications and cold calling dropping off my résumé.
Well, I got the job that I was being interviewed for. When
I left the interview, I turned on my mobile phone and there
was a message for another interview. I went to that interview
and it sounded very positive, they will let me know. When
I walked out of that one, a message for another interview!!
Is this a result from the practice?”
“This is to let you know that I finished the recitation
of the Sanghata Sutra this evening. Believe me, the pleasure
was all mine (though I dedicate it to others)! I often found
myself crying during the reading…I really don’t
know why…and I must admit there is much wording in
these pages I don’t understand. But it was wonderful
all the same.”
“I felt that by reciting it I started to understand
reality more than ever. I enjoy it very much. It makes my
life easier.”
“Thank you for this wonderful opportunity. I have
read sutras, but never recited them in this way before. It
is a powerful experience!”
“I am very happy to report that I was gratefully able
to complete one recitation aloud of the Sanghata Sutra
Dharma-Paryaya this morning and dedicated the merit as you advised in the
newsletter. Thank you for this opportunity to be introduced
to and to recite this deeply wondrous sutra on behalf of
the Archive.”
“I have just finished my five Sanghata Sutras! What
a joy it was to do. I hope all is well with you, Lama, and
the
FPMT. I might keep doing them, unless there is something
else our Lama would prefer.”
“So far I have done one and a half recitations of
the Sanghata Sutra and have found it quite amazing.”
“Please thank Rinpoche for his great kindness in requesting
the recitations.”
“It is my honor to be associated with such a project.”
“I wanted to thank you for making the Sanghata
Sutra available to me. I also wanted to thank you
for the opportunity to help out with the Archive.”
“This was a very positive experience. It reminded
me of the time, long ago, when I read the Buddha’s
words; it created a feeling of familiarity and joy.”
“What an amazingly quick two weeks that was!! With
hopes all flourishes endlessly...I think I will just continue
on reciting and reciting!”
“It was very beneficial
and I ask you send thanks to Lama Zopa for the inspiration
of asking us to recite the Sutra. Otherwise I would
never have found or read this myself. Nor would my dog, cat,
and son, numberless beings in and
around my home, or the fishes in the lake, the geese, ducks,
turtles or the other beings without number in Montana have
heard this sutra.”
“I have just done one recitation this morning, and
dedicated as you suggested. It seems to be of profound benefit.”
“Thank for this precious opportunity to know this
sutra.”
“My dogs listened attentively all the way to the end,
from start to finish, in one sitting! They rarely stay in
one place for that length of time.”
“What an incredible teaching!”
“The recitation provided me with calm peaceful sleep
and inner peace upon waking the following morning—many
blessings to you, your staff, Lama Zopa Rinpoche, and all
others who had a part in bringing this precious text to sentient
beings.”
“I feel the Buddha power when reciting the Sutra,
it is very intense. I finished reciting it once and plan
to do more.”
“I was thrilled to participate, thank you.”
“I have done one recitation of the Sanghata Sutra.
Wow, it was great! I hope to do more.”
“How wonderful of our precious teacher Lama Zopa Rinpoche
to let us meet and recite the Sutra.”
“I can’t thank you enough for sharing this teaching
with all of us, not to mention the other wonderful teachings
that have been shared.”
So, dear LYWA supporters, it is we who have to thank you
for so kindly accepting our request to do these recitations.
I am happy that it was a positive experience for you and
suggest that you keep on reciting it whenever you like.
Oh, and for those who asked, a yojana (Tib: pak-tse) is
an ancient Indian unit of length, 4,000 arm spans, or about
8,000 yards, and a koti is ten million!
Much love,
Nick Ribush
Director
Walking and Chewing Gum: Doing Two Things at Once
Lama Yeshe
In Lord Buddha’s Mahayana tradition, we always emphasize
the great importance of uniting method and wisdom in order
to attain the highest realization of enlightenment. If you
have only wisdom but not method, it’s impossible to
realize totality. Even in our daily lives we need both method
and wisdom to keep our lives together. Without method, our
daily lives reflect mental disorder. Intelligence alone is
not enough.
It’s important to be realistic and keep your lifestyle
together. With intelligence, you can see what has to be done,
but laziness and inaction prevent you from doing it. This
is an example of a lack of method. Your wisdom can see what
to do but you can’t put it into action. This brings
problems into your life. Instead of being orderly, harmonious
and integrated, your life is disorderly, disjointed and fragmented.
Keeping your lifestyle together does not mean being rich,
having a car and being materially well off in general. That’s
not what it signifies. It means that even if you have very
few possessions, your room is tidy and comfortable—if
you have just a few things and they are all over the place,
the disorder reflects in your mind. Therefore, it’s
important to keep things together. This is just a simple
example but it’s applicable to your Dharma practice.
For inner development, to find liberation, you have to practice
method and wisdom together.
Many times I hear Dharma practitioners blame their problems
on their Dharma practice and complain that their Dharma practice
does not help them. It’s almost as if they’re
criticizing Dharma. When they get depressed, they question
and criticize Dharma and have doubts about continuing their
practice. The problem is not Dharma; the problem is that
these people are confused. They don’t know what Dharma
is. That’s why it doesn’t help.
When we explain Dharma, we don’t say that it’s
a material object. We don’t say the dorje and bell
are Dharma. If we did, then perhaps you could have doubts
about how helpful it is for you. Thinking of Dharma in material
terms is a misconception, but unfortunately it’s fairly
common.
Other people feel that their meditation doesn’t help
them. If that’s how you feel, check how you’re
meditating. The thing is, no matter what you do, your experience
is personal and unique. Don’t put meditation up there
while you’re down here and then complain that it doesn’t
help like it used to. It doesn’t help because you’ve
created a gap between yourself and your meditation. The point
I’m trying to make is that you must practice method
and wisdom together.
You must also understand that the way method and wisdom
are practiced in Paramitayana is very different from the
way they’re practiced in Tantrayana. If it were the
same for both vehicles, tantra would be no faster or more
powerful than sutra. Tantrayana and Paramitayana would then
be the same.
In Paramitayana practice, the way method and wisdom are
practiced together is alternately. Sometimes your consciousness
is wisdom; at other times it’s method. They are two
different things. In tantric yoga, method and wisdom occur
together in the same consciousness. This is difficult to
explain and takes time to understand, but gradually you’ll
manage.
It’s more difficult to put two things into the one
space at the same time than to put them in two different
spaces, so putting method and wisdom simultaneously into
the one consciousness is also difficult. It’s hard
for the unintelligent mind to comprehend two things at once.
The simple mind can comprehend two things one at a time but
not both together. As we often say, “Tell me one thing
at a time,” or “I can’t do two things at
once.” Therefore, if you want to practice tantric yoga,
it means you’re saying, “I’m intelligent
enough to do two things at once.”
Lama Yeshe gave this teaching at Manjushri Institute, England,
in July 1977. Edited from the Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive by
Nicholas Ribush.
===================================
If you know of others who might like to receive this monthly
LYWA e-letter, please ask them to contact info@LamaYeshe.com or
subscribe by visiting www.lamayeshe.com.
See past issues here.
The Lama Yeshe Wisdom Archive
PO Box 356
Weston, MA 02493 · USA
Telephone: (781) 259-4466
Email: info@lamayeshe.com
Website: www.lamayeshe.com
To subscribe or unsubscribe please visit www.lamayeshe.com
|