Kyabje Ling Rinpoche, the senior tutor of His
Holiness the Dalai Lama, was the 97th holder of the Ganden throne and
thus head
of the Gelug tradition of Tibetan Buddhism. He was ordained by the
Thirteenth
Dalai Lama, to whom his predecessor had also been tutor. This teaching
was
given at Tushita Mahayana Meditation Centre on November 14, 1979. Edited
by
Nicholas Ribush from an oral translation by Lama Gelek Rinpoche. From
Teachings
at Tushita, edited by Nicholas Ribush with Glenn H. Mullin, Mahayana
Publications,
New Delhi,
1981. A new edition of this book is in preparation. Tushita Mahayana
Meditation
Centre is the FPMT centre in New Delhi,
India.
The enlightened attitude, the bodhimind that has love and compassion as its
basis, is the essential seed producing the attainment of buddhahood. Therefore
it is a subject that should be approached with the pure thought, "May I
thus gain enlightenment in order to be of greatest benefit to the world."
However, there are but very small spiritual effects in hearing teachings on the
bodhimind if we lack a certain spiritual foundation. Consequently, most
teachers insist that disciples cultivate various preliminary practices within
themselves before approaching this higher precept. If we wish to go to
university, we must first learn to read and write. While merely hearing about
meditation on love, compassion and the bodhimind does leave a favorable imprint
on our stream of consciousness, for the teaching to produce a definite inner
transformation we trainees should first meditate extensively on the
preliminaries (such as the preciousness of the human opportunity, death and its
significance, the nature of karma and samsara, refuge, and the higher trainings
in ethics, meditation and wisdom).
If we wish to attain the state of the full enlightenment of buddhahood as
opposed to the lesser enlightenment of arhatship, our innermost practice must
be cultivation of the bodhimind. Were we instead to make meditation on
emptiness our innermost practice, there would be the possibility of falling
into the arhat's nirvana instead of gaining buddhahood. This teaching is given
in the saying, "When the father is the bodhimind and the mother is wisdom,
the child joins the caste of buddhas." In intercaste marriages in ancient India, children
would adopt the caste of the father, regardless of whether the mother was of
higher or lower caste. Therefore the bodhimind is like the father: if one
cultivates the bodhimind, one enters the caste of buddhas.
Although the bodhimind is the primary force producing buddhahood, bodhimind as
the father must unite with wisdom, or meditation on emptiness, as the mother,
in order to produce a child able to accomplish buddhahood. One without the
other will not bring full enlightenment. The bodhimind is the essential energy
that produces buddhahood, yet throughout its stages of development it should be
applied to meditation on emptiness. In the Perfection of Wisdom Sutras, where
Buddha spoke most extensively on emptiness, we are constantly reminded to place
our meditations on emptiness within the context of the bodhimind.
What precisely is the bodhimind? It is the mind strongly characterized by the
aspiration, "For the sake of all sentient beings I must attain the state
of full enlightenment." It is easy to repeat the words of this aspiration
to ourselves but the bodhimind is something much deeper than this. It is a
quality within the mind systematically cultivated by one of a number of methods,
such as those called "Six Causes and One Effect," or "Exchanging
Self (Awareness) for (Awareness of) Others."
Merely holding in mind the thought, "I must attain enlightenment for the
sake of benefiting others" without first cultivating the prerequisite
causes, stages and basic foundations of this thought will not give birth to the
bodhimind. For this reason the venerable Atisha (11th century) once asked,
"Do you know anyone with bodhimind not born from meditation on love and
compassion?" What benefits arise through having generated the bodhimind?
If we know what qualities good food has we will attempt to obtain, prepare and
eat it. Similarly, when we hear of the efficacy of the bodhimind we shall seek
to learn the methods and practices by which it is generated.
The immediate benefit of having given birth to the bodhimind within our
mindstream is that we enter the great vehicle leading to buddhahood and gain
the title of bodhisattva, a son of the buddhas. It does not matter what we look
like, how we dress, how wealthy or powerful we are, whether or not we have
clairvoyance or miraculous powers, or how learned we are: if we have generated
the bodhimind we are bodhisattvas, and regardless of our other qualities, if we
do not have the bodhimind we are not bodhisattvas. A being with the bodhimind
who incarnates as an animal is respected by all the buddhas as being a
bodhisattva.
The great sages of the lesser vehicle possess innumerably wondrous qualities,
yet someone who has developed merely the initial stages of the bodhimind
surpasses them in terms of his nature. This is likened to the baby son of a
universal monarch who, although only an infant possessing no qualities of
knowledge or power, is granted a higher status than any scholar or minister in
the empire.
In terms of conventional benefits, all the happiness and goodness that exists
is a product of bodhimind. The buddhas are born from bodhisattvas, but the
bodhisattvas are born from the bodhimind. As a result of the birth of the
buddhas and bodhisattvas, great waves of enlightened energy spread throughout
the universe, influencing sentient beings to create positive karma. This
positive karma in turn brings them much benefit and happiness. On the one hand,
the mighty stream of enlightened and enlightening energy issues from the wisdom
body of the buddhas, but as the buddhas are born from bodhisattvas and
bodhisattvas from the bodhimind, the ultimate source of the universal reservoir
of goodness and happiness is the bodhimind itself.
How can we develop the bodhimind? There are two major methods, as mentioned
above. The first of these, the "Six Causes and One Effect," applies
six causal meditations-recognizing that all sentient beings were once one's own
mother; the kindness of a mother; the wish to repay such kindness; love;
compassion; and the extraordinary thought of universal responsibility-to
produce one result: the bodhimind. The second technique is a meditation whereby
one directly changes self-cherishing into the cherishing of others.
In order to practice either of these methods of developing the bodhimind we
must first develop a sense of equanimity toward all living beings. We must
transcend seeing some beings as close, some as alien and some as merely unknown
strangers. Until we have this equanimity toward all beings, meditation to
develop bodhimind will not be effective. For example, if we wish to paint
frescoes on a wall we must first remove any cracks or lumps from its surface.
Similarly, we cannot draw the image of the bodhimind within ourselves until the
mind's view has been made clean from the distortions of seeing others in terms
of friend, enemy and stranger.
The way we impute this discrimination upon others is quite automatic, and as a
result of it, when we see someone we have labeled as 'friend,' attachment
arises within us and we respond with warmth. Why have we labeled him as
'friend'? Only because on some level or other he has benefited or supported us.
Alternatively, whenever we encounter someone whom we have labeled as 'enemy,
aversion arises within us and we respond with coldness. The reason will be
because he has once harmed or threatened us in some way. Again, when
encountering a stranger we simply have no feelings toward him.
Yet if we examine this method of discrimination we quickly see that it is an
unstable process. Even in this life, people once regarded as friends become
enemies and enemies often become friends. And in the countless lives we have
taken since beginningless time while spinning on the wheel of life there is not
one sentient being who has consistently been either our friend or enemy. Our
best friend of this life could easily have been our worst enemy in a previous
incarnation, and vice versa. A friend who mistreats us quickly becomes an
enemy, and an enemy who helps us soon becomes a new-found friend. Someone who
last year was regarded as a friend because he had been kind to us, this year
harms us and is seen as an enemy; last year's enemy this year helps us and
becomes a friend. So which one is really the friend and which one the enemy?
Instead of responding to them on the basis of the ephemeral benefit or harm
they have brought us, we should meditate that all have alternately benefited
and harmed us in the stream of past lives, and thus abandon superficial discriminations.
A root cause of this discriminating mind is the self-cherishing attitude, the
thought that considers oneself to be more important than others. As a result of
self-cherishing we develop attachment to those who help us and aversion to
those who give us problems. This in turn causes us to create countless negative
karmas in trying to overcome the 'harmers' and support the 'helpers.' Such
actions bring great suffering upon ourselves and others, both immediately and
in future lives, as these karmic seeds ripen into suffering experiences.
There is a teaching that says, "All happiness in this world arises from
cherishing others; every suffering arises from self-cherishing." Why is
this so? From self-cherishing comes the wish to further oneself even at others'
expense. This causes all the killing, stealing, intolerance and so forth that
we see around us. As well as destroying happiness in this life, these negative
activities plant karmic seeds for a future rebirth in the miserable realms of
existence-the hell, hungry ghost and animal realms. Self-cherishing is
responsible for every conflict from a family problem to an international war,
and for all the negative karma thus created.
What are the results of cherishing others? If we cherish others we shall not
harm or kill them. This is conducive to our own long life. When we cherish
others we are open and empathetic with them, and live in generosity. This is a
karmic cause of our own future prosperity. If we cherish others, even when
someone harms or makes problems for us we are able to abide in love and
patience, a karmic cause of having a beautiful form in future lives. In short,
every auspicious condition arises from the positive karmas generated by
cherishing others. These conditions themselves bring joy and happiness, and in
addition they act as the causes of and circumstances leading to nirvana and
buddhahood.
How? To gain nirvana one must master the three higher trainings: moral
discipline, meditation and wisdom. Of these the first is the most important
because it is the basis for the development of the other two. The essence of
moral discipline is abandoning any action that brings harm to others. Anyone
who cherishes others more than he cherishes himself will not find this
discipline difficult. His mind will be calm and peaceful, which is conducive to
both meditation and wisdom.
Looking at it another way, cherishing others is the proper and noble approach
to take. In this life everything that comes to us is directly or indirectly due
to the kindness of others. We buy food from others in the market; the clothing
we wear and the houses in which we dwell depend upon the assisting
participation of others. And for attaining the ultimate goals-nirvana and
buddhahood-we are completely dependent upon others: without them we would not
be able to meditate upon love, compassion, trust and so forth, and thus would
be unable to generate spiritual experience. Also, any meditation teaching we
receive has come from the Buddha through the kindness of sentient beings. The
Buddha taught only to benefit sentient beings; if there were no sentient beings
he would not have taught. Therefore, in his Bodhisattvacaryavatara, Shantideva
comments that in terms of kindness, the sentient beings are equal to the
buddhas. Sometimes, mistakenly, people have respect and devotion for the
buddhas but dislike sentient beings. We should appreciate sentient beings as
deeply as we do the buddhas themselves.
If we look at happiness and harmony we will find its cause to be universal
caring. The cause of unhappiness and disharmony is the self-cherishing
attitude.
At one time the Buddha was an ordinary person like ourselves. Then he gave up
self-cherishing for universal caring and entered the path to buddhahood.
Because we still hold the self-cherishing mind we are left behind in samsara,
having benefited neither ourselves nor others.
The Jataka Tales (Previous Lives of Buddha) relate that in one earlier
incarnation, the Buddha had been a huge turtle who took pity on several
shipwreck victims and carried them to shore on his back. Once ashore the
exhausted turtle fell into a faint but as he slept he was attacked by thousands
of ants. Soon the biting of the ants woke the turtle up, but when he saw that
if he moved he would kill innumerable creatures, he remained still and offered
his body to the insects as food. This is the depth to which the Buddha
cherished living beings. Many of Ashvagosha's Jataka Tales are dedicated to
relating similar accounts of the Buddha's previous lives, in which the importance
of cherishing others is exemplified. The Wish-Fulfilling Tree has 108 such
stories.
Essentially, self-cherishing is the cause of every undesirable experience, and
universal caring is the cause of every happiness. The experiences of the lower
realms of existence, all the suffering of mankind and every interference to
spiritual practice are caused by self-cherishing, and every happiness of this
and future lives comes from universal caring. The subtle limitations of lesser
enlightenment are also caused by self-cherishing.
We should contemplate the benefits of cherishing others and try to develop an
open, loving attitude toward all living beings. This should not be an inert
emotion but should be characterized by great compassion-the wish to separate
others from their suffering. When we meet with a being in sorrow our reaction
should be like that of a mother witnessing her only child caught in a fire or
fallen into a terrible river: our main thought should be to help others. Toward
those in states of suffering we should think, "May I help separate them
from their suffering," and for those in states of happiness we should
think, "May I help maintain their happiness." This attitude should be
directed equally toward all beings. Some people feel great compassion for
friends or relatives in trouble but none for unpleasant people or enemies. This
is not spiritual compassion, it is merely a form of attachment. True compassion
does not discriminate between beings; it regards all with an equal emotion.
Similarly, love is the desire to maintain the happiness of all beings
impartially, regardless of whether we like them or not. Spiritual love is of
two main types: that merely possessing equanimity and that possessing the
active wish to maintain others' happiness. When we meditate repeatedly on how
all beings have in previous lives been mother, father and friend to us, we soon
come to have equanimity toward them all. Eventually this develops into an
overwhelming wish to see all beings possess happiness and the causes of
happiness. This is great, undiscriminating love.
By meditating properly on love and compassion we produce what are called the
eight great benefits. These condense into two: producing happiness in this and
future lives for both ourselves and others, and developing along the path to
full and perfect buddhahood. It produces rebirth as a man or god, and
fertilizes the seeds of enlightenment.
In brief, we should have the wish to help others maintain their happiness and
separate from suffering regardless of whether they have acted as friend or
enemy to us. Moreover, we should develop a personal sense of responsibility for
their happiness. This is called "the special thought" or "the
higher thought" and is marked by a strong sense of responsibility for the welfare
of others. It is like taking the responsibility of going to the market to get
someone exactly what he needs, instead of just sitting reflecting on how nice
it would be if he had what he wanted. We take upon ourselves the responsibility
of actually fulfilling others' requirements.
Then we should ask ourselves, "Do I have the ability to benefit all
others?" Obviously we do not. Who has such ability? Only an enlightened
being, a buddha. Why? Because only those who have attained buddhahood are fully
developed and fully separated from limitations: those still in samsara cannot
place others in nirvana. Even sravaka arhats or tenth level bodhisattvas are
unable to benefit others fully, for they themselves still have limitations, but
a buddha spontaneously and automatically benefits all beings with every breath
he takes. His state is metaphorically likened to the drum of Brahma, which
automatically resounds teachings to the world. Or it is like a cloud, that
spontaneously takes cooling shade and life-giving water wherever it goes. To
fulfil others' needs we should seek to place them in the total peace and
maturity of buddhahood, and to be able to do this we ourselves must first gain
buddhahood. The state of buddhahood is an evolutionary product of the bodhimind.
The bodhimind is born from the special thought of universal responsibility-the
thought to benefit others by oneself. To drink water we must have both the
desire to drink and a container for the water. The wish to benefit others by
placing them in buddhahood is like the desire to drink, and the wish to attain
enlightenment oneself in order to benefit them in this way is like the
container. When both are present, we benefit ourselves and others.
If we hear of the meditations that generate the bodhimind and attempt to
practice them without first refining our minds with the preliminary
meditations, it is very unlikely that we shall make much inner progress. For
example, meditating on compassion without first gaining some experience of the
meditations on the four noble truths, or at least on the truth of suffering,
would lead to a merely superficial understanding. How can we experience mature
compassion, the aspiration to free all beings from suffering, when we do not
know the deeper meanings and levels of suffering that permeate the human
psyche? How can we relate to others' suffering when we do not even know the
subtle levels of frustration and tension pervading our own being? The nature of
suffering must be known in order to know the workings of our own mind; only
then shall we be in a position to empathize with the hearts and minds of
others. We must have compassion for ourselves before we can have it for others.
Through meditation on suffering a certain amount of renunciation or spiritual
stability will be generated. This stability should be guarded and cultivated by
the various methods taught on the initial and intermediate stages of training,
which are the two main steps in approaching the meditations on the bodhimind.
As we progress in our meditations on the suffering nature of being and on the
causes of this suffering, we begin to search for the path leading to
transcendence of imperfection. We meditate upon the precious nature and unique
opportunities of human existence, which makes us appreciate our situation. Then
we meditate upon impermanence and death, which helps us transcend grasping at
petty aspects of life and directs our minds to search for spiritual knowledge.
Because spiritual knowledge is not gained from books or without a cause, its cause
must be cultivated, which means training properly under a fully qualified
spiritual master and generating the practices as instructed.
Merely hearing about the bodhimind is very beneficial because it provides a
seed for the development of the enlightened spirit. However, to cultivate this
seed to fruition requires careful practice. We must progress through the actual
inner experiences of the above-mentioned meditations, and for this we require
close contact with a meditation teacher able to supervise and guide our
evolution. In order for his presence to be of maximum benefit we should learn
the correct attitudes and actions for cultivating an effective guru-disciple
relationship. Then step-by-step the seeds of the bodhimind he plants within us
can grow to full maturity and unfold the lotus of enlightenment within us.
This is but a brief description of the bodhisattva spirit and the methods of
developing it. If it inspires some interest within anyone I shall be most
happy. The basis of the bodhimind-love and compassion-is a force that brings
every benefit to both yourself and others, and if this can be transformed into
the bodhimind itself, your every action will become a cause of omniscient
buddhahood. Even if you could practice to the point of even slightly weakening
the self-cherishing attitude I would be very grateful. Without first generating
the bodhimind, buddhahood is completely out of the question. Once the growth of
the bodhimind has started, perfect enlightenment is only a matter of time. We
should try to meditate regularly on death and impermanence and thus become a
spiritual practitioner of initial scope. Then we should develop the meditations
on the unsatisfactory nature of samsara and the three higher trainings, which
make us practitioners of medium scope. Finally, we should give birth to love,
compassion, universal responsibility and the bodhimind, thus entering the path
of the practitioner of great scope, the Mahayana, which has full buddhahood as
its goal. Relying on the guidance of a master, we should cultivate the seeds of
the bodhimind in connection with the wisdom of emptiness and for the sake of
all that lives quickly actualize buddhahood. This may not be an easy task, but
it has ultimate perfection as its fruit.
The most important step in spiritual growth is the first: we must begin by
making a decision to avoid evil and cultivate goodness within our stream of
being. On the basis of this fundamental discipline every spiritual quality
becomes possible, even the eventual perfection of buddhahood. Each of us has
the potential to do this, each of us can become a perfect being. All we have to
do is direct our energies at learning and then enthusiastically practicing the
teachings. As the bodhimind is the very essence of all the Buddha's teachings
we should make every effort to realize it