The purpose of meditation is to gain realizations leading to the
cessation
of delusion and superstition. This cessation depends, first of all, on
recognizing the character or function of the deluded mind. In addition,
it is
necessary to understand the various factors causing such a deluded mind
to
arise. Regarding this, Je Tsongkhapa has explained six factors leading
to the
growth of delusion: (1) karmic imprints, (2) the object, (3) the
influence of misleading
companions, (4) following false teachings, (5) habit and (6) mistaken
conceptualizations.
The fundamental cause of the deluded mind is the karmic imprint left on your
consciousness by previous non-virtuous actions. Because of past actions done in
ignorance and motivated by desire, hatred or any of the other delusions,
various imprints-or seeds of karmic instinct-have been planted on your mind.
When the conditions are right, these seeds ripen and the deluded mind rises
again.
The object itself is the second factor encouraging this ripening. Most of the
time when the object is there near you and the karmic imprint is there in your
mind, bang!-delusion arises. A good example is when you go shopping. The object
is there on the shelf. Through the sense perception of your eye you come into
contact with it and before you are aware of what is happening, your mind sinks
with attachment into the object. It can happen in a very sneaky way and be
extremely difficult to separate your mind from this desired object. Your hand
automatically moves to your pocket, finds some money and you buy even before
you know what you are doing. It is so simple, isn't it! Thus when the deluded
subject (mind) comes into relationship with the appropriate object,
superstition explodes like an atomic bomb.
In the West it is incredible how everything is exaggerated so that the deluded
mind is certain to pay attention to it. "Look at this; how fantastic it
is!" This technique is used so extensively that even when we give a
meditation course we have to advertise, "Come to our fantastic meditation
course and learn all about your amazing mind!" Western culture seems a
little too much for me.
Buddha gave a very simple name to all of this. He called the realm that we are
living in the desire world. It is now easy to see clearly why he gave it this
name. The desire world. Desire is here! The deluded mind coming into contact
with desirable objects leads to superstition producing more and more delusion.
It is for this reason that Milarepa stayed in a cave. He knew that once the
deluded mind comes into contact with the object of desire, delusions arise
uncontrollably. That is why he thought it better to avoid such contact until
his mind was tamed.
The object causing the deluded mind to arise must have some relationship to the
karmic imprint. That is why technically it is called a "related
object." For example, you may have a particular imprint of attachment on
your mind. This will be activated by an object having desirable qualities, but
not by one having repulsive, hateful qualities. Thus there has to be the proper
combination of both the imprint on the mind of the subject and the object's
characteristic qualities. If there is no contact with an appropriate object, it
is impossible for the subjective delusion to function.
The third factor mentioned by Lama Tsongkhapa is influences from the outside.
Negative, misleading friends giving you deluded information are included here.
These are the people you know who make you confused. Therefore whom you have
for friends, whom you stay in close contact with, is very important. All around
you people are drinking, for instance. If you have some kind of control, you
may be able to remain uninfluenced by them for a week or so. But after a while
you can no longer control yourself because the situation is too overpowering.
It is very difficult to maintain control in opposition to such influence. If
you check up in your own life, I am sure that you will find many examples of
this. Such influence is not limited to bad friends or good friends. In your
life you have so many "teachers," people who feed you information
that only adds to your delusions. Therefore it is very important to stay around
those people who give you the right vibration, the wisdom vibration. This is
much better than exposing yourself all the time to polluted, confused
vibrations. But this does not mean that you give up completely on all
misleading friends, hating them and having bad thoughts about them. No, this
should not be your reaction. It is essential always to remain compassionate.
Also remember that we are polluted already; our friends are not to blame for
our delusions. Their influence just makes this pollution thicker and thicker.
The Western mind is very interesting. In some respects it is very skeptical,
doubting everything. This can be a very good attitude, especially when
surrounded by untruth. Yet in some respects the Western mind is totally the
opposite of skeptical. If it sees something that has one good aspect, that has
one interesting side to it, without hesitation it accepts the whole thing as
good. This overly emotional attitude is very dangerous. Every philosophy,
doctrine, and religion has at least one point which is good. Even the most evil
person in the world-whoever that may be according to your interpretation-has
something good about him or her. Therefore, the mind that runs uncontrollably
to things that it finds interesting can easily grasp onto what is really not
very good at all.
I do not know why, but it seems that the Western mind likes mixtures. Something
that has many different flavors mixed together in it is seen as very
interesting. Please check up and see if this observation is correct. In any
event, such an attitude can cause problems in certain situations. For instance,
you might be listening to someone expressing an idea which, in fact, is a total
misconception. You think, "It does not matter if what he says is true or
not, it is interesting. Let him tell me more." I think the Western mind is
like that, having incredible curiosity and ready to listen to anything. But
actually, each misconception, each piece of wrong information that you grasp at
in this way thickens your deluded mind. That is why I said that this uncritical
attitude can be dangerous.
All this relates to the fourth factor causing delusions to arise: following
false teachings. This factor differs from the previous one, which concerns
going together with those who are bad influences. The third factor relates in
general to your life style, to your surroundings. This fourth factor, however,
means believing that someone is a special teacher and therefore listening to
and following all the wrong conceptions he or she teaches.
For example, at the time of Shakyamuni Buddha there lived a man who wanted
liberation very badly, and so he went to see a certain guru. The guru told him
to kill a thousand people and make a rosary out of their thumbs. "When you
are finished, and have gained realizations, come back to me for more teachings."
This man, known as Angulimala, actually believed this so-called guru, and
collected 999 thumbs before he finally met Buddha and was persuaded to practice
real Dharma. His devotion had been blind, and led to nothing but suffering.
Teachings, of whatever quality, can be very interesting. But when people find
things interesting it often just means that they crave information. The same
thing can be seen in children. Before Western children go to sleep they like
their mother or father to read them a story. That's true, isn't it? The stories
are very interesting, but most of them are garbage. Children are very sensitive
and have fantastic imaginations. They also believe in things very strongly, so
that what they hear makes a deep imprint on their minds. Most parents are not
fully aware of this and think, "It doesn't matter. As long as the kid
likes this story and falls asleep, that's okay." There is no idea of what
kind of effect it is having on the child's mind, what result it is producing.
The important thing is that he falls asleep quickly so that you can be free,
free to go to sleep yourself or whatever. Just as long he doesn't make any
noise. But this is not right. It is not being kind to your children to give
them such garbage information. It only makes their delusions and superstitions
thicker and thicker.
Of course, if you have wisdom you can read any type of garbage information at
all without being affected by it. You can be checking up on it without taking
it all in greedily. That's okay. But when you are too interested, too
attracted-"Yes, yes, tell me more!"-it leaves a very strong
impression on your mind. There is a total lack of discriminating
wisdom-knowledge, no clear idea of what is right and wrong. You take everything
in with no judgment whatsoever.
The same is true about all types of information. So much comes in but generally
there is no integration and no differentiation between what is useful and what
is harmful. In fact, nearly every aspect of popular Western culture-books,
magazines, movies, television and the like-is totally dedicated to producing
more and more desire and superstition. There are exceptions to this, of course.
Some movies, for instance, are different. But most of them show you what you
like, what the superstitious mind wants to see.
Anything to arouse your interest. The people who create these films, books and
so forth have a practical understanding of psychology. They know exactly what
arouses people's desires and superstitions and what will make them more
confused than they already are.
In short, misconceptions and misinformation cause more delusion if the mind
lacks discriminating wisdom-knowledge. You receive so much information from the
television, for example, that you actually become excited. Sometimes you cannot
take it any longer and have to leave the room! So whatever information there is
that makes you become more confused should be avoided as much as possible.
The fifth factor increasing the strength of the delusions is habit. It can work
this way: at one time you had a certain experience with an object. When you
meet a similar object you remember the first experience, and each time you
repeat the action the strength of that memory increases, becoming more powerful
and distorted in your imagination. Habit builds up certain associations so
strongly that whenever a similar situation arises, your mind automatically runs
towards delusion. Some people become so obsessed in this way with a deluded
object that they cannot forget it. Why does this happen! Because the experience
has been repeated over and over and over again, making the imprint of it
thicker and thicker. The mind dwells in the recollection of this experience,
adding to the delusion. A person cannot even sleep without a vision of that
object appearing in his or her dreams. I am sure that everyone has had
experience with this phenomenon. If a habit is repeated often enough and its
imprint becomes strong enough, you can actually go mad.
Sometimes the object of delusion forcefully impresses itself on your
imagination. For example, in the West when you are about to part from a
girlfriend or boyfriend, you both plead, "Please don't forget me! Keep me
in your memory. If you forget me, it means you don't love me anymore."
That's why you are not free. You can see that you are not free because you have
become obsessed in this way with one object.
The sixth factor also concerns things that appear interesting. When the memory
of something comes, you make a certain type of judgment about it: "This
thing is so good. It is fantastic. It has this quality, and that quality, and
this and that..." You exaggerate tremendously the worth of something until
it does not resemble the original at all. It has become merely the product of
your mistaken conceptualizations.
You have a boyfriend, for example, with whom you are obsessed. You find his
every movement and gesture interesting. The way he walks, what he says, what he
does-it all seems good to you. Even when he does something incredibly bad, for
you it becomes a source of pleasure. You are concentrating so much on his
attractive qualities that his negative aspects are totally obscured.
The mind works in such a way, however, that if one day he says something
particularly unpleasant to you, your attitude begins to change. You think,
"He's not nice at all." Your mind concentrates on this thought.
"Not nice, not nice, not nice..." Soon everything about him appears
repulsive; there is nothing about him anymore that is pleasing to you. You can
see this happen, can't you! It is incredible how the deluded mind works. First
something appears completely positive and then it changes to its opposite. But
I say that it is totally impossible for any object, any sentient being to be
completely positive or completely negative. Everything has both positive and
negative energy. It is only the obsessed mind that sees things in terms of
black and white. There is a certain saying I heard in the West: "You hear
what you want to hear." This is a very accurate psychological statement, a
very good Dharma point. It emphasizes the truth of what we have been
discussing.
Seeing some kind of desirable object, then, always involves an overestimation.
Its good aspects are emphasized so much that you lose all judgment about it.
Simultaneously, you view that object as if it were somehow self-existent. You
conceive of it as something permanent, existing self-sufficiently the way it
appears to you. You fail to see that the way it appears is actually a function
of your own projections. Instead, you think that these exaggerated qualities
come from the object itself rather than being what you have put onto the object
from your own side. You do not see what has happened. This deluded projection
covering the object is much thicker than make-up. Impermanent things are viewed
as permanent. Objects being in the nature of suffering are thought of as the
causes of happiness. And although all things lack true, independent
self-existence, they are conceived of as having such self-existence.
Je Tsongkhapa defined this process as holding onto something that has nothing
to do with reality. It is completely unrelated to the way things actually
exist. You grasp onto something, perceiving and believing it to exist in a
certain way, and as a result your delusions grow. The deluded mind becomes more
powerful. This brings us back to an earlier point: whatever exists-good news,
bad news, heaven and hell, samsara or nirvana-is a manifestation of the mind.
When the mind is covered with superstitions it creates suffering. Therefore, in
order to gain release from this suffering it is important to understand both
the characteristic nature of the deluded mind and the factors causing these
superstitions to arise and increase. So check up and meditate on these six
factors. It is so worthwhile. Your understanding can become so powerful that it
makes your mind really straight. Otherwise there is no way to begin to rid
yourself of delusions.