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Bodhicitta: the Perfection of Dharma
by Lama
Thubten Yeshe
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- Lama Thubten
Yeshe gave this teaching during a five-day meditation course he
conducted at Dromana, near Melbourne, Australia, in March, 1975.
Edited by Nicholas Ribush. This teaching appears in the
November/December 1997 issue of Mandala Magazine.
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I think it
is absolutely essential for us to have loving kindness towards
others. There is no doubt about this. Loving kindness is the essence
of bodhicitta, the attitude of the bodhisattva. It is the most
comfortable path, the most comfortable meditation. There can be no
philosophical, scientific or psychological disagreement with this.
With bodhicitta, there's no East-West conflict. This path is the
most comfortable, most perfect, one hundred percent uncomplicated
one, free of any danger of leading people to extremes. Without
bodhicitta, nothing works. And most of all, your meditation doesn't
work, and realizations don't come.
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Why is
bodhicitta necessary for success in meditation? Because of selfish
grasping. If you have a good meditation but don't have bodhicitta,
you will grasp at any little experience of bliss: 'Me, me; I want
more, I want more.' Then the good experience disappears completely.
Grasping is the greatest distraction to experiencing single-pointed
intensive awareness in meditation. And with it, we are always
dedicated to our own happiness: 'Me, me I'm miserable, I want to be
happy. Therefore I'll meditate.' It doesn't work that way. For some
reason good meditation and its results – peacefulness, satisfaction
and bliss – just don't come.
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Also,
without bodhicitta it is very difficult to collect merits. You
create them and immediately destroy them; by afternoon, the
morning's merits have gone. It's like cleaning a room and an hour
later making it dirty again. You make your mind clean, then right
away you mess it up - not a very profitable business. If you want to
succeed in the business of collecting merits, you must have
bodhicitta. With bodhicitta you become so precious – like gold, like
diamonds; you become the most perfect object in the world, beyond
compare with any material things.
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From the
Western, materialistic point of view, we'd think it was great if a
rich person said,'I want to make charity. I'm going to offer $100 to
everybody in the entire world.' Even if that person gave with great
sincerity, his or her merit would be nothing compared with just the
thought,'I wish to actualize bodhicitta for the sake of sentient
beings, and I'll practice the six paramitas as much as I can. That's
why I always say, actualization of bodhicitta is the most perfect
path you can take.
- "The best Dharma practice,
the most perfect, most substantial,
is without doubt
the practice of bodhicitta."
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Remember
the story of the Kadampa geshe who saw a man circumambulating a
stupa? He said, 'What are you doing?' and the man answered,
'Circumambulating.' So the geshe said, 'Wouldn't it be better if you
practiced dharma?' Next time the geshe saw the man he was
prostrating, and when he again asked what he was doing, the man
replied, 'One hundred thousand prostrations.' 'Wouldn't it be better
if you practiced dharma?' asked the geshe. Anyway, the story goes
on, but the point is that just doing religious-looking actions like
circumambulation and prostration isn't necessarily practicing
dharma. What we have to do is transform our attachment and
self-cherishing, and if we haven't changed our mind in this way,
none of the other practices work; doing them is just a joke. Even if
you try to practice tantric meditations, unless you've changed
within, you won't succeed. dharma means a complete change of
attitude - that's what really brings you inner happiness, that is
the true Dharma, not the words you say. Bodhicitta is not the
culture of ego, not the culture of attachment, not the culture of
samsara. It is an unbelievable transformation, the most comfortable
path, the most substantial path – definite, not wishy-washy.
Sometimes your meditation is not solid; you just space out.
Bodhicitta meditation means you really want to change your mind and
actions and transform your whole life.
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We are all
involved in human relationships with each other. Why do we sometimes
say,'I love you,' and sometimes, 'I hate you?' Where does this
up-and-down mind come from? From the self-cherishing thought – a
complete lack of bodhicitta. What we are saying is, 'I hate you
because I'm not getting any satisfaction from you. You hurt me; you
don't give me pleasure. That's the whole thing: I – my ego, my
attachment – am not getting satisfaction from you, therefore I hate
you. What a joke! All the difficulties in inter-personal
relationships come from not having bodhicitta, from not having
changed our minds.
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So, you
see, just meditating is not enough. If that Kadampa geshe saw you
sitting in meditation he'd say, 'What are you doing? Wouldn't it be
better if you practiced dharma?' Circumambulating isn't dharma,
prostrating isn't dharma, meditating isn't dharma. My goodness, what
is dharma, then? This is what happened to the man in the story. He
couldn't think of anything else to do. Well, the best dharma
practice, the most perfect, most substantial, is without doubt the
practice of bodhicitta.
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You can
prove scientifically that bodhicitta is the best practice to do. Our
self-cherishing thought is the root of all human problems. It makes
our lives difficult and miserable. The solution to self-cherishing,
its antidote, is the mind that is its complete opposite –
bodhicitta. The self-cherishing mind is worried about only me, me –
the self-existent I. Bodhicitta substitutes others for self.
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It creates
space in your mind. Then even if your dearest friend forgets to give
you a Christmas present, you don't mind. "Ah, well. This year she
didn't give me my chocolate. It doesn't matter." Anyway, your human
relationships are not for chocolate, not for sensory pleasures.
Something much deeper can come from our being together, working
together.
- "With bodhicitta you become so precious –
like gold, like diamonds.
You become the most perfect object
in the world, beyond compare
with any material things."
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If you want
to be really, really happy, it isn't enough just to space out in
meditation. Many people who have spent years alone in meditation
have finished up the worse for it. Coming back into society, they
have freaked out. They haven't been able to take contact with other
people again, because the peaceful environment they created was an
artificial condition, still a relative phenomenon without solidity.
With bodhicitta, no matter where you go, you will never freak out.
The more you are involved with people the more pleasure you get.
People become the resource of your pleasure. You are living for
people. Even though some still try to take advantage of you, you
understand: 'Well, in the past I took advantage of them many times
too.' So it doesn't bother you. Thus bodhicitta is the most perfect
way to practice dharma, especially in our twentieth-century Western
society. It is very, very worthwhile. With the foundation of
bodhicitta you will definitely grow.
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If you take
a proper look deep into your heart you will see that one of the main
causes of your dissatisfaction is the fact that you are not helping
others as best you can. When you realize this you'll be able to say
to yourself, 'I must develop myself so that I can help others
satisfactorily. By improving myself I can definitely help.' Thus you
have more strength and energy to meditate, to keep pure morality and
do other good things. You have energy, 'Because I want to help
others.' That is why
Lama
Tsong
Khapa
said that bodhicitta is the foundation of all enlightened
realizations.
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Also,
bodhicitta energy is alchemical. It transforms all your ordinary
actions of body, speech and mind – your entire life into positivity
and benefit for others, like iron transmuted into gold. I think this
is definitely true. You can see, it's not difficult. For example
look at other people's faces. Some people, no matter what problems
and suffering they are enduring, when they go out they always try to
appear happy and show a positive aspect to others. Have you noticed
this or not? But other people always go about miserable, and angry.
What do you think about that? I honestly think that it indicates a
fundamental difference in the way these two kinds of people think.
Human beings are actually very simple. Some are a disaster within
and it shows on their faces and makes those whom they meet feel
sick. Others, even though they are suffering intensely, always put
on a brave face because they are considerate of the way others feel.
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I believe
this is very important. What's the use of putting out a miserable
vibration? Just because you feel miserable, why make others unhappy
too? It doesn't help. You should try to control your emotions, speak
evenly and so forth. Sometimes when people are suffering they close
off from others, but you can still feel their miserable vibration.
This doesn't help – others with even momentary happiness forget
about leading them to enlightenment. To help the people around you,
you have to maintain a happy, peaceful vibration. This is very
practical, very worthwhile. Sometimes we talk too much about
enlightenment and things like that. We have a long way to go to such
realizations. Forget about enlightenment, I don't care about
buddhahood – just be practical. If you can't help others, at least
don't give them any harm, stay neutral.
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Anyway,
what I'm supposed to be telling you here is that bodhicitta is like
atomic energy to transform your mind. This is absolutely,
scientifically true, and not something that you have to believe with
blind religious faith. Everybody nowadays is afraid of nuclear war,
but if we all had bodhicitta, wouldn't we all be completely secure?
Of course we would. With bodhicitta you control all desire to defeat
or kill others. And, as
Lama
Je
Tzong
Khapa
said, when you have bodhicitta all the good things in life are
magnetically attracted to you and pour down upon you like rain. At
present all we attract is misfortune because all we have is the
self-cherishing thought. But with bodhicitta we'll attract good
friends, good food, good everything.
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As His
Holiness the Dalai Lama said recently, if you're going to be
selfish, do it on a grand scale; wide selfishness is better than
narrow! What did His Holiness mean'! He was saying that, in a way,
bodhicitta is like a huge selfish attitude because when you dedicate
yourself to others with loving kindness you get a lot more pleasure
than you would otherwise. With our present, usual selfish attitude
we experience very little pleasure, and what we have is easily lost.
With 'great selfishness' you help others and you help yourself; with
small it's always 'me, me, me and it is easy to lose everything.
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Remember,
Atisha had over 150 teachers? He respected them all, but when he
heard the name of one – Lama Dharmarakshita – he would come out in
goose-bumps. He explained this by saying, 'I received many teachings
from many, many great gurus, but for me, Lama Dharmarakshita, who
gave me the bodhicitta ordination and teachings on the method and
wisdom of bodhicitta and the six paramitas, was the most helpful for
my life'. This is very true. Sometimes techniques of deity
meditation are extremely difficult, but bodhicitta meditation is so
simple, so incredibly profound and real. That's why Atisha would
shake when he heard the name of his main teacher of bodhicitta.
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The main
point, then, is that when you contact Buddhadharma you should
conquer the mad elephant of your self-cherishing mind. If the dharma
you hear helps you diminish your self-cherishing even a little, it
has been worthwhile. But if the teachings you have taken have had no
effect on your selfishness, then from the Mahayana point of view,
even if you can talk intellectually on the entire lam-rim, they have
not been must use at all.
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Do you
recall the story of Shantideva and how people used to put him down?
They used to call him Du-she-sum-pa, which means one who knows how
to do only three things: eating, sleeping and excreting. This was a
very bad thing to call someone, especially a monk. But that's all
that people could see him doing. However, he had bodhicitta, so
whatever he did, even ordinary things, was of greatest benefit to
others. Lying down, peacefully, he would meditate with great concern
for the welfare of all living beings, and many times, out of
compassion, he would cry for them. Westerners need that kind of
practice. Fundamentally we are lazy. Well, maybe not lazy, but when
we finish work we are tired and don't have much energy left. So,
when you come home from work, lie down comfortably and meditate on
bodhicitta. This is most worthwhile. Much better than rushing in
speedily, throwing down a coffee and dropping onto your meditation
cushion to try to meditate. It doesn't work that way; your nervous
system needs time and space. You can't be rushing through traffic
one minute and sitting quietly meditating the next. Everything takes
time and space. It is much better to r have a quiet, blissful cup of
coffee, And don't pressure yourself either; that too is very bad.
Don't punish yourself when you are too tired to meditate: 'I should
be meditating; I am very bad.' You destroy yourself like this. Be
wise. Treat yourself, your mind, sympathetically, with loving
kindness. If you are gentle with yourself you will become gentle
with others so don't push. Pushing doesn't work for me, that's why I
tell others not to force themselves. We are dealing with the mind,
not rocks and concrete; it is something organic.
- "In a way, bodhicitta is like a huge selfish attitude
because when you dedicate yourself to others
with loving kindness you get a lot more pleasure
than you would otherwise."
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The Western
environment offers lots of suffering conditions that act as causes
for our actualizing bodhicitta, so life there can be very
worthwhile. For example, it is much better to subdue an adversary
with bodhicitta than with a knife or gun. When attacked, you can
practice loving kindness. We could also do this in the monasteries
of
Tibet,
where there were often horrible monks. Don't think that Tibet was
full of only holy people – we had unbelievably wild monks there that
nobody in authority could subdue! If you would try to control them
wrathfully they would get only more aggressive. But arya bodhisattva
monks, people who had completely given themselves up for others,
would treat them with loving kindness, and the wild monks would calm
down completely. They would feel, 'This man loves me; he has great
compassion. He has given up everything for others and has nothing to
lose.' In that way aggressive people would be subdued, without
authority but with bodhicitta. There are many stories about this
kind of thing, but I'm not going to tell them now. Perhaps you think
they're funny, but it's true – you can conquer your enemies, both
internal and external, with loving kindness and bodhicitta. It is
most worthwhile and there's no contradiction bodhicitta is the
totally comfortable path to liberation and enlightenment.
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In his text
Lama Choepa, the Panchen Lama says, 'Self-cherishing is the cause of
all misery and dissatisfaction, and holding all mother sentient
beings dearer than oneself is the foundation of all realizations and
knowledge. Therefore bless me to change self-cherishing into concern
for all others.' This is not some deep philosophical theory but a
very simple statement. You know from your own life's experiences
without needing a Tibetan text's explanations that your
self-cherishing thought is the cause of all your confusion and
frustration. This evolution of suffering is found not only in
Tibetan culture but in yours as well.
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And the
Panchen Lama goes on to say that we should look at what the
Buddha
did. He gave up his self-attachment and attained all the sublime
realizations. But look at us we are obsessed with 'me, me, me' and
have realized nothing but unending misery. This is very clear isn't
it? Therefore you should know clean clear how this works. Get rid of
the false concept of self-cherishing and you'll be free of all
misery and dissatisfaction. Concern yourself for the welfare of all
others and wish for them to attain the highest realizations such as
bodhicitta and you'll find all happiness and satisfaction.
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"Bodhicitta
is the most perfect way to practise dharma,
especially in our twentieth century Western society.
It is very, very worthwhile.
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With the
foundation of bodhicitta
you will definitely grow."
- You people are young, intelligent and not satisfied with what
you have in your own countries. That's why you are seeking further
afield. And now you have found that most worthwhile of all things,
bodhicitta.
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But it is
not an easy thing. Easy things bore you quickly. It is quite
difficult, but there's no way you'll get bored practicing it. People
need to be most intelligent to actualize bodhicitta, some, though,
have no room for it. 'Forget about yourself and have a little
concern for others?' they'll ask. 'That's not my culture.' It is
very difficult to change holding yourself dear into holding others
dear instead – the most difficult task you can undertake. But it is
the most worthwhile and brings the greatest satisfaction.
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After
practicing some meditations, such as impermanence and death, for a
month you'll say, 'I'm tired of that meditation.' But you'll never
get tired of meditating on bodhicitta. It is so deep; a universal
meditation. You'll never get tired of bodhicitta.
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You have
heard of many deities that you can meditate on, many deities to be
initiated into - Chenrezig and the rest. What are they all for? I'll
tell you – for gaining bodhicitta. As a matter of fact, all tantric
meditations are for the development of strong bodhicitta. That is
the purpose of your consciousness manifesting as a being with 1000
arms so that vou can lend a hand to a thousand suffering beings. If
you don't like to manifest yourself this way you can relate the
meditation to your own culture and see yourself as Jesus.
Avalokiteshvara and Jesus are the same: completely selfless and
completely devoted to serving others.
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Remember
what happened the first time that Avalokiteshvara took the
bodhisattva ordination? He vowed to guide all universal living
beings to enlightenment from behind, like a shepherd.'I do not want
to realize enlightenment until first I have led all mother sentient
beings there first. That will be my satisfaction.' He worked for
years and years, leading thousands of beings to enlightenment, but
when he checked to see what was happening he found there were still
countless more. So again he worked for years and years and again
when he checked there were still so many left, and this cycle was
repeated until finally he was fed up and thought to himself, 'For
aeons and aeons I have struggled to lead all sentient beings to
enlightenment but there are still so many left. I think it is
impossible to fulfil my vow.' And because of the intensity of his
emotion his head split into eleven pieces. Then Amitabha Buddha came
and offered to help.
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Venerable Lama Thubten Yeshe
1935-1984
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"Most of
the time our grasping at and craving for worldly pleasure does not
give us satisfaction. It leads to more dissatisfaction and to
psychologically crazier reactions."
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Lama
Thubten Yeshe was born in Tibet in 1935. At the age of six, he
entered
Sera
Monastic
University
in Tibet where he studied until 1959, when as
Lama
Yeshe
himself has said, "In that year the Chinese kindly told us that it
was time to leave
Tibet and
meet the outside world."
Lama
Thubten
Yeshe
and
Lama
Thubten Zopa Rinpoche, together as teacher and disciple since their
exile in India, met their first Western students in 1965. By 1971
they settled at Kopan, a small hamlet near Kathmandu in Nepal. In
1974, the Lamas began touring and teaching in the West, which would
eventually result in The Foundation for the Preservation of the
Mahayana Tradition. Lama Yeshe died in 1984, his reincarnation
Lama
Tenzin
Ösel
Rinpoche
was born to Spanish parents in 1985.
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