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On Marriage & Related Topics
Lama Thubten Yeshe gave this teaching in Brisbane,
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Australia, in April, 1975. Edited by Nicholas Ribush.
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These days,
one of the main reasons that a man and a woman become friends is
sexual. They get together for sexual pleasure. In earlier times,
marriage had a divine quality—a couple came together out of respect,
with the aim of creating a kind of totality. That gave meaning to
getting married, and marriages made with such purpose became good
ones.
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Many of
today’s marriages become disastrous because they lack purpose; there’s
no worthwhile goal for coming together. A couple should not come
together out of grasping at each other; there should be more meaning
to it than that. But our craving desire and lack of wisdom work
together to create an extreme situation that finishes up causing
conflict: the woman agitates her man; the man agitates his woman—in
either case, it ends in “goodbye.”
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These days, I
travel the entire world and many young people come to see me to
discuss their relationship problems, but they all boil down to
people’s coming together out of the wrong motivation. Whether you’re a
man or a woman, it’s important that there’s not too much grasping in
your relationship, that you don’t agitate your partner. Extreme
grasping at sexual pleasure is a problem; sexual pleasure is an
irritant. You can see.
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However, many
couples aren’t together for the sex. Their relationship is deeper than
that, so their attitude is different. They are very comfortable, free,
somehow, with no tremendous expectations of each other. Therefore,
they have a good relationship. I’m sure you’ve seen examples of such
couples, where there’s not much grasping.
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In my limited
experience of the Western world, many Christians, who believe in God,
have very respectful marriages. They believe in something deeper than
themselves and are not living for sense pleasure alone. I would say
that such couples have been blessed by God or
Jesus.
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Of course,
many people these days believe that Coca-Cola is better than God.
“What’s the point of religion?” they ask; “Coca-Cola is more
refreshing than God or the Bible.” This is their problem. What to do?
I’m joking!
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The next day:
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Thousands of
people the world over get married every day out of craving for sexual
pleasure. Others get married principally for reputation: “He’s world
famous; he’s great.” Still others marry for wealth or power. Those are
all wrong motivations for marriage. The purpose of marriage should be
to avoid extremes and gain balance in your life. However, it often
turns out the complete opposite.
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These days,
perhaps as many people get divorced as get married. Don’t think
divorce is easy. Psychologically, divorce can be hell. It’s not a
simple as “OK, bye-bye,” and it’s over. It’s not like that. First
there’s a huge build-up of psychological pressure and when it releases
it’s like falling into hell. So, sentient beings are suffering like
this.
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We criticize
modern society for such ills, but it’s not society’s fault. There’s
nothing wrong with society—it’s our mental attitude that’s mistaken.
We create all kinds of fantasies, grasp at sense pleasure and
everything finishes in disaster.
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Buddhism
explains that we circle from one life to another because of craving
desire and that we can put an end to cyclic existence, to rebirth in
samsara, by abandoning desire. Craving is what makes the wheel of life
go round and it’s our own clinging that binds us to it; nobody else
makes us cycle from one suffering life to another.
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The twentieth
century example of this is those ladies and gentlemen who get married,
experience problems, grasp at another person, then at another, and
another…maybe they cycle through four or five marriages in a single
lifetime. Some people have hundreds of lovers in their life. Why can’t
they stop? Why do they keep on grasping? There’s nobody driving them
to do this; they drive themselves. They hang on continuously;
non-stop. Desire is fickle in nature. Freud tried to explain sex as
the basis of most human problems. Buddhism disagrees. The main human
problem lies much deeper than that.
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At a course
on mind and mental factors,
Istituto Lama
Tzong
Khapa, Italy, 1978
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Question:
Lama, is it possible to teach married people on the spiritual path
some form of modified tantric practice to help deepen their spiritual
and sexual relationship?
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Lama: Yes,
it’s possible. But as the texts explain, you have to approach these
things gradually. Still, if married people study properly, they can
learn the great significance of tantric practice, have a good
relationship and, in a simple way, experience some kind of unity.
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However, I
can’t be specific about this because it depends greatly on the level
of development of the individuals involved. It’s similar with people
who want to be celibate: just because you’re intellectually ready for
a certain type of practice, the scientific reality—what Buddhists call
the interdependent origination of it—may be against it; the physical
nervous system, which comes from the mind, may not be ready. In such
cases, the nervous system can crack under the strain.
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Therefore,
whatever practice you’re trying to achieve, you need to go slowly,
slowly and develop yourself organically. It’s not something that
depends only on ideas. If you take it gradually, any practice can
become easy. You should not push or squeeze yourself. If you pump
yourself too hard, you run out of space, freak out and go crazy.
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Question:
Some people take teachings and then decide to live on the world and
practice Dharma without becoming a monk or nun. Is it easy to
integrate worldly responsibilities with spiritual practice?
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Lama: That,
too, depends on the individual. For some people it’s beautiful
experience. They get married, the marriage is good, they try to help
and share with each other. I think that’s beautiful; such couples are
also a good example to others.
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Many of my
married students were experiencing unbelievable suffering and conflict
when I met them. All I could do was to try to help them be happy and
have as good a relationship as possible. But, sometimes the
circumstances are against it. Basically, both people are unhappy; they
have much conflict and many problems within their marriage. I think
this is common. It’s not just confined to my students. Many Western
people experience this. I think the grasping, sexual relationship is
one of the greatest problems Western people face, whether they are
religious practitioners or not.
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However, some
people understand each other and try to live with loving kindness, but
that’s really up to the individual. Some people can lead a beautiful
married life; others can’t. It really depends on the individual’s
needs at the time.
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From an
interview with a Catholic theologian,
Kopan
Monastery,
Nepal,
1977
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Question:
Lama, many people have problems with their marriage. Do you have
anything to say about this?
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Lama: Do I
have anything to say? Yes! They don’t understand each other. They lack
good communication. That creates many problems. Many people,
especially young ones, marry for very superficial reasons: “I like
him; let’s get married; I like her, let’s get married.” There’s not
much thought given to how they’re going to spend their life together
or much analysis of each other’s personality. People are too
influenced by external appearance; true beauty lies within. People’s
faces and behavior are constantly changing; you can’t rely on them.
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Because we
lack the knowledge wisdom to understand each other’s inner, human
qualities, we easily disrespect our partner. When things don’t work
out as planned, when our partner no longer appears attractive, our
marriage fails. That’s because it was built one hundred percent on
ego; it was totally an ego-based relationship. No wonder it didn’t
work.
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A marriage
built on mutual understanding, good communication and sincere efforts
to help each other has a much better chance of lasting. Mental
communication is much better than physical. That is very important.
Superficial relationships, those based on mainly external factors,
never last.
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Let’s say a
couple buys a new piece of furniture. The husband says, “Put it here,”
the wife says, “No, put it there,” and a huge fight ensues. Here,
there, what difference does it make? It’s foolish and narrow-minded,
but that’s how things go.
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At a public
talk in
Los Angeles,
1975
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Question:
Lama, what do you think about marriage?
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Lama:
Marriage is good; because of marriage, you and I exist on Earth.
Without marriage most of us wouldn’t exist. I have some Christian
friends I like and respect very much. Many Christian couples have a
good relationship because they keep love of God in their heart. I’ve
also heard they have the attitude that sex is for reproduction, not
for pleasure. I think that’s a very good idea.
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Question:
What about contraception?
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Lama: I’m not
going to talk about the Buddhist point of view; I’m going to talk
about this monk’s point of view. I have to be careful. However, my
observation of the Western world is that contraception is a very good
thing because many young people are not ready to have children and
when they do, instead of growing, they go crazy. I have students like
this. They are young, super-intelligent and well educated, but as soon
as they have babies they become unbelievably miserable. I’ve seen
intelligent, worldly-wise girls suddenly become terrible, with no
capability, no happiness, and no love for their man; they hate
everything. It’s incredible. If those girls hadn’t had babies, over
time, they could have become incredibly spiritually developed.
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Parenthood
brings with it many societal obligations; having a baby is a big
responsibility. So, for those who cannot control their desire for
sexual pleasure, contraception is essential. Also, if you can prevent
an unwanted pregnancy from occurring, you eliminate the possibility of
having to consider killing the fetus by abortion. Buddhism explains
that for a sentient being to come from the intermediate state into a
human rebirth the mother’s womb should be healthy and unobstructed. In
other words, the conditions should be perfect. If you interrupt the
conditions through contraception, it’s OK. It’s certainly better than
madness. This is my own observation; I hope it doesn’t upset anybody.
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Question:
Well, Lama, what about abortion?
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Lama: For
Buddhists, abortion is difficult. It’s a question of morality, or
ethics. But still, it’s a relative question. Let’s say that you don’t
have an abortion and that the next twenty years of your life are
miserable. And even more misery comes from that. Yet you think nothing
of killing fish and small animals. Relatively, which is worse? Good
and bad are relative; good karma and bad karma are relative. I’m not
making any statement here; it’s just something for you to think about.
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At a course
on death and rebirth,
London,
1981
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