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Question: How
does one live in the world and do spiritual practice skillfully
when one has no spiritual teacher, and how does one who already
has a path live and work in a world where others don't share it?
Answer:
Those who have no spiritual guide and are motivated by a strong
aspiration can practice on their own until a good spiritual guide
is found. Those who have the intention to do good things will, sooner
or later, meet a qualified teacher.
With
the motivation to do beneficial things and to follow the spiritual
path, body, speech, and mind can be used to generate right attitude
and right actions through kindness and compassion. One should also
be motivated to develop the constant wish that all beings experience
happiness and freedom from suffering. As a result, ones body,
speech and mind will become engaged in expressing compassion. This
is a basic preliminary spiritual practice that can be learned on
one's own without the help of a spiritual guide.
As
Buddhists, we believe that we shouldn't do anything to others that
would hurt them. So you should always make an example of yourself.
If someone speaks to you in a positive way, you experience well-being;
therefore, you should speak to others in the same manner so they
may also have that experience. When you meet someone who communicates,
without words, purely motivated loving and compassionate mind-energy,
you feel clear, more peaceful. In turn, you should cultivate that
same kindness and compassion as much as possible, and then bring
that attitude of speech, mind and body to all that you meet.
So
this is my advice to someone who does not have a spiritual guide:
It is not necessary for you to sit down and do formal meditation
and visualization practice. Expressing loving-kindness and compassion
can be done anywhere. There is always an opportunity for applying
kindness and compassion to others and for using your body, speech
and mind in right action. This attitude is very powerful and is
the perfect preliminary spiritual practice. Sooner or later, through
the power of your positive motivation, you will meet the right spiritual
guide, and the door will open to the spiritual path.
In
the second case, you are already in spiritual practice, and you
are distracted by worldly concerns. It is important that you follow
the spiritual friend, the teacher and not go from place to place.
Stay with one spiritual guide, someone you really feel is true,
and try not to change teachers until you get the true understanding
within.
The
Boddhisattva attitude is very important; without it, you cannot
practice Vajrayana and Mahayana Buddhism. When your mind is motivated
one hundred percent by this pure attitude, then your body, speech
and mind naturally turn toward the positive. From the Mahayana and
Vajrayana perpsective, even if you are not able to sit on your cushion
in front of your altar because of children, because of a job, because
you have all kinds of distractions in the world, you can still practice.
You must get the true advice from your teacher and have confidence
in him or her and also in the teachings. Then your activity in the
world will offer the same opportunity for enlightenment as that
gained on your cushion.
Question:
Would you please explain how this is done?
Answer:
For guidance in such situations, we can turn to one of the great
Tibetan masters, Machig Labdron, the founder of the Chod practice.
She was an extremely accomplished yogi and teacher. Although most
Buddhist teachings travelled only from India to Tibet, hers was
transmitted from Tibet back to India. She has a few great words
of advice on this subject that for me seem full, rich and simple.
She reminds us that we human beings alternate between happiness
and suffering. One moment we are very happy, but the happiness does
not last long; we grasp at that happiness and suddenly it becomes
suffering which is hard to get rid of. Occasionally there is brief
happiness again, but this causes more attachment and clinging, and
thus more suffering. This is the experience of all sentient beings,
but it is more acultely felt by humans.
So,
Machig Labdron taught: Do not worry. If you are suffering, you have
an excellent opportunity there to practice. Remember, "If I
am happy, this happiness which I experience so pleasantly, I wish
for all living beings without exception. May everyone experience
this happiness just as I have." In this way happiness becomes
purification, true practice, and accumulated merit. Secondly, "If
I suffer physical or mental pain, may I take on with my suffering
the suffering of all sentient beings, without exception." So
our suffering also becomes useful as purification and gives us a
deeper sense of the bodhisattva conduct. This approach is highly
useful for those who have no time to formally practice in a world
full of responsibilities and distractions.
One
person may practice for years sitting and counting mantras, and
another person may practice living in the world with the technique
I have just mentioned. The second person may reach enlightenment
sooner because he or she has dealt with daily life as a spiritual
practice, transforming all worldly circumstances into spiritual
phenomena. The person staying at home sitting all day may not be
practicing correctly; they may be daydreaming, distracted and unable
to accomplish realization.
We
always have opportunities to be mindful. As we fulfill our responsibilities
to our families, our love for them remains strong in spite of problems.
If we think of all sentient beings as being equal to family, some
day we will be able to serve all in the same way. For instance,
at your place of work, because of karma, a person has a dispute
with you. By accepting responsibility for the dispute, you take
this suffering on yourself, you purify it, and the cause of the
suffering is removed. If, instead, you more forcefully continue
with the argument, you will create more suffering and pain. Therefore
it is very important to take on the suffering of other sentient
beings. As you do this, your selfishness will be weakened and you
will become more selfless.
So
those who have no time to practice should keep in mind Machig Labdrons
words and try to think of their full and rich meaning as you go
through daily life. You definitely have to be mindful, you must
remind yourself morning and evening of these insights, and you have
to apply their meaning daily. Also remember that being busy is not
an excuse. This is especially true in the Mahayana tradition. Even
in the Vajrayana, you think of yourself as the deity of the initiation,
whatever sound you hear is the sound of the mantra, and all beings
are the entourage of the deities. And yet all that is seen and all
that is heard has no inherent existence.v This is, rather, the manifestation
of the Dharmakaya, the manifestation of profound emptiness. If you
are able to apply your mind in this way daily, then your work, your
taking care of your family -- all these things become your practice,
and you are progressing every moment. But sometimes our problems
come from laziness, lack of confidence and trust, insufficient faith,
and procrastination. We think daily practice is a good thing to
do, but not today. Suddenly, something important comes up and we
are willing to engage in practice seriously; only then we take a
spiritual point of view. Instead, one should always dedicate all
happiness to others and use every personal suffering to take on
the suffering of all sentient beings.
Remember
when taking the Vajrayana point of view: every form is inseparable
from the form of the deities, every sound is inseparable from mantra;
but every form and every sound is inherently non-existent, an expression
of emptiness. That's the way Vajrayana is practiced.
Lama
Lodu Rinpoche resides at Kagyu Droden Kunchab, a Dharma center for
the practice of Mahayana and Vajrayana Buddhism, located at 1892
Fell Street (near Clayton) San Francisco, CA 94117. Lama has supervised
the translation of numerous practice texts (sadhanas) and has written
several books: Bardo Teachings (available through Snow Lion Publications),
The Quintessence of the Animate and Inanimate, Attaining Enlightenment,
Maintaining the Bodhisattva Vow, and Homage to Kalu Rinpoche (available
from KDK Publications).
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