czwartek, 31 grudnia 2015

Recognizing Who We Are

When it comes to the true nature of mind, this isn’t something that we get from a spiritual tradition or religion. It’s not something that we need to seek from a guru or that we need to find by going to a sacred place, but it’s a matter of recognizing who we are, whatever that it is. When we see this completely clearly, when who we actually are becomes completely evident and obvious to us, and we recognize it and appreciate it in a completely perfect way, then that I think is what is called recognizing the true nature of mind. Then we fully make this a reality for ourselves.

~ 17th Gyalwang Karmapa Ogyen Trinley Dorje

poniedziałek, 28 grudnia 2015

To see if you’ll attain liberation in the future or not...

To see if you’re aware of impermanence or not, check whether your plans are long or short term. To see if you perceive samsara as flawed or not, check how strong is your attachments. To see if you’ll attain liberation in the future or not, check whether your conduct is good or bad. To see if you’ve given rise to loving kindness and compassion or not, check how you take care of those in need. To see if you’ve tamed the demon of anger or not, check how much hatred you feel towards your enemies. To see if you’ve dispelled the obscuring demon of ignorance or not, check how much you cling in hope and fear. To see if you’ve purified the three poisons or not, check how free from grasping you’ve become. You’ll know your Dharma practice has become the path or not by thoroughly examining your own mind.

~ Chokgyur Lingpa

poniedziałek, 21 grudnia 2015

Without it, all is lost!

When you practise the teachings of the sutras and tantras,
The altruistic bodhicitta of aspiration and application is crucial,
Because it lies at the very root of the Mahayana.
Just to have this is enough, but without it, all is lost.

~ Chatral Rinpoche

sobota, 5 grudnia 2015

The three types of uninterrupted-ness during mantra recitation.

There are three types of uninterrupted-ness when we recite the mantra. There are uninterrupted offerings to the Buddhas; uninterrupted purification of obscurations of sentient beings, and uninterrupted attainment of siddhis or attainments. The siddhi is basically the increase of love and compassion; if love and compassion increase, wisdom increases and one attains enlightenment. Due to compassion, one temporarily experiences the seven qualities of the higher realms, the happiness of the higher realms and many other benefits that come from mantra recitation.

~ Garchen Rinpoche.

niedziela, 29 listopada 2015

Spinning the prayer wheel

Spinning the prayer wheel is a virtuous deed of body, speech and mind, and is therefore extremely beneficial. Whenever you can, if you have time for an hour or even just five minutes, you should pick up the prayer wheel and spin it. It is very helpful to maintain mindfulness, and therefore thoughts may come to an end. Thus, mahamudra can be practiced while spinning the prayer wheel, as it is a practice of maintaining mindfulness. Spinning a prayer wheel involves virtuous actions of body, speech and mind, and if you spin one at all times, you are accumulating merit continuously.

~ Garchen Rinpoche.

sobota, 21 listopada 2015

No limits and no boundary!




Dissolving into the expanse of emptiness
That has no limits and no boundary,
Everything I see, everything I hear,
My own mind, and the sky all merge.
Not once has the notion arisen
Of these being seperate and distinct.

~ Shabkar

środa, 18 listopada 2015

Viewing our experience in this world as a dream


Viewing our experience in this world as a dream, Siddhartha found that our habit of fixating on the mere appearance of our dreamlike relative world, thinking that it is truly existing, throws us into an endless cycle of pain and anxiety.

We are in a deep sleep, hibernating like a silkworm in a cocoon. We have woven a reality based on our projections, imagination, hopes, fears, and delusions.

Our cocoons have become very solid and sophisticated. Our imaginings are so real to us that we are trapped in the cocoon. But we can free ourselves simply by realizing that this is all our imagination.

~ Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche

niedziela, 18 października 2015

Practice for everybody

If you only do one practice wholeheartedly, like OM MANI PADME HUNG, I can guarantee you that you could still reach Buddhahood. 

OM MANI PADME HUNG represents the Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara and it purifies all the karma we have accumulated through countless lifetimes. The Bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara's compassion manifests as OM MANI PADME HUNG to purify all the karma we have accumulated through pride, jealousy, attachment, ignorance, stinginess and anger over countless lifetimes. It purifies all of the causes and conditions for the suffering of samsara and if all our karma and defilements are purified, then we are left with pureness itself, our ultimate essence, the tathagatagarbha – the Buddha-nature.

This means that OM MANI PADME HUNG is the simplest, easiest, most complete and convenient practice for everybody. I sometimes get the feeling that when I tell some of my disciples that they should only practice OM MANI PADME HUNG, this does not make them very happy. Then I realize that they think it is too simple, it is a practice for peasants who do not know how to read or write. This is absolutely wrong. OM MANI PADME HUNG is for everybody. It is also a practice for intellectual, learned people who know how to read and write. 

Nobody can attain Buddhahood without overcoming the five – or as outlined in this practice, the six defilements; nobody can attain Buddhahood without purifying all their karma, it is impossible. Therefore I would say that on top of the practices you have from your guru, in any extra time you get – on the bus, the airplane, the couch or in the restaurant waiting for your food to be served – you quietly say OM MANI PADME HUNG. You have plenty of time in these situations. Don’t come and tell me that you don’t have any time.

~ 12th Kenting Tai Situpa from “Ground, Path & Fruition”

czwartek, 10 września 2015

Padmasambhava

I am present in front of anyone who has faith in me,
Just as the moon casts its reflection, effortlessly,
In any vessel filled with water.
For those with fervent faith and devotion,
My compassion is swifter than that of any other buddha.
Until there is an end to beings in these three realms of samsara,
There will be no end to Padmakara's compassion.
I am never far from those with faith,
Or even those without it,
Though they do not see me.
My children will always,
Always, Be protected by my compassion.

~ Padmasambhava

sobota, 15 sierpnia 2015

The disease of believing in an 'I'

Someone with eye disease might see all kinds of objects apparently floating in the sky -lights, lines, and spots - when in truth there is nothing there. Similarly, because we have the disease of believing in an 'I', we see that 'I' as an inherently existing entity.

~ Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche - "The Heart of Compassion: The Thirty-seven Verses on the Practice of a Bodhisattva"

wtorek, 11 sierpnia 2015

The shortest path of realization

The literal meaning of guru yoga is ‘union with the teacher´s nature’. To blend your mind with the teacher’s mind is the most profound of all practices, and the shortest path of realization. It is the life force of the path and the one practice that includes all others. It was through relying on a spiritual teacher that all the bodhisattvas of the past generated the mind of enlightenment and reached perfection.

 ~ Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche - "The Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones"

poniedziałek, 10 sierpnia 2015

The Nine Benefits of Mantras

1. THE DEITY. Every mantra we recite emanates one deity. These deities then work for the benefit of beings

2. OFFERINGS. When the light rays radiate out from the mantra rosary during creation-stage visualization, each ray of light bears an offering goddess. Each of these hundreds of thousands of offering goddesses further emanates five goddesses who emanate still five more, and so forth, until space is completely filled with goddesses. All of these make offerings to the Buddhas.

3. PURIFICATION OF OBSCURATION. When the light rays radiate out a second time and touch all sentient beings, they purify beings’ obscurations. These obscurations are self-grasping, and the light rays are rays of compassion. The rays of love melt self-grasping like a hot sun melting snow.

4. SIDDHI. When the light rays return and reabsorb to the deity, they bear siddhis in the form of blessings of the Buddhas/ enlightened body, speech and mind.

5. BLESSINGS. Mantra brings about loving kindness and compassion in the practitioner due to the blessings of the deity’s mindstream.

6. MANDALA. When one has fully trained in creation stage, reciting the mantra once will invoke the entire mandala. One no longer needs an entire sadhana text. 

7. ENLIGHTENED ACTIVITY. All of the four activities-peaceful, increasing, powerful and wrathful-are performed and accomplished through mantra.

8. A WISH-FULFILLING JEWEL. Whatever we need to accomplish, mantra will bring about.

9. DHARMATA. When we meditate while reciting the mantra, conceptual thoughts are cut, and free from conceptual thoughts, we see the nature of the mind as emptiness. Since it allows us to see the nature of mind to be dharmata, mantra can be considered to be dharmata. Mantra cuts conceptual thought because it is sound-emptiness. Other sounds produce the graspings of attachment and aversion.

These nine benefits occur whenever you recite mantra. They apply equally to the mantras of all deities. This is the speech of Guru Rinpoche and is also found in the tantras.

~ Garchen Rinpoche

piątek, 7 sierpnia 2015

Bodhicitta, Deity, Mantra

What is the cause of liberation? It is bodhicitta, or the altruistic mind. If you give rise to bodhicitta, you do not think of yourself and thus, self-grasping diminishes. What we need to become free from, what we need to become liberated from is actually the grasping at a self. Self-grasping is the very cause of suffering. The altruistic mind is the cause of happiness.

What is most important is the foundation of faith, bodhicitta-- the altruistic mind. If you have the altruistic mind, the power of your Buddha-nature will naturally unfold; it is like an ice-block melting into water and the water can then be used naturally. If you do not possess the altruistic mind as a foundation, all the other practices, mantra recitation and so forth will not be so powerful. In The Ocean of Samadhi, a text, it is said, “If you do not have bodhicitta, if you lack bodhicitta, you will not attain Enlightenment.” It is just like a body without its life-force; someone without life cannot perform any function. The life-force of all practices is bodhicitta and if you only have bodhicitta, everything based on that will become very, very vast and very beneficial. Any virtuous activity will become very extensive. Therefore bodhicitta, the altruistic mind is the very root or foundation of all practices

It is the mind of a Bodhisattva, only caring about others is bodhichitta. This mind is the essence of all deities. If you practice any deity with this mind, you will be very close to the deity and receive blessings. What we call blessings is actually nothing but love. The mind that is free of selfishness and only cares about others is a bodhisattvas mind, such limitless love is relative bodhichitta. A Buddha has not only perfected relative bodhichitta but also ultimate bodhichitta, i.e. a Buddha mind has fully realized that all duality is delusion and that in fact there are no self and others. There are different levels of bodhisattvas, there are ten stages or bhumis a bodhisattva progresses through on the path. The enlightened mind is beyond all paths, there is no more training, it is complete awakening.

The love of the Buddhas is ever unceasing, always there and pervasive; whether we access it or not depends on the power of our own trust. When we supplicate to and think about the Buddhas and deities, they are actually there, like the Buddha Shakyamuni is actually here when we think about the Buddha. From a conventional perspective, this is due to the great love the Buddhas have for all beings. From the ultimate perspective, they are always there because they are already connected primordially to our own Buddha-nature. They are continuously connected to our own mind-stream.

If you cultivate faith in the Buddha Amitābha single-pointedly, the Buddha will hear us and feel us. It is just as if the Buddhas and deities are the mother and we are their child. When the child is suffering—for example, when the child is sick, the mother experiences an overwhelming, unbearable feeling and will go to help the child very quickly. The mind is just like light or electricity, so when sentient beings give rise to faith, in just an instant, very quickly, the Buddhas will feel this and will come and help beings with love.

We must also understand the mantra to be an offering. When we have faith in the deities that abide in the pure lands and recite the mantra, each of these mantras becomes an offering to the deities there. At the same time, it purifies the obscurations of sentient beings in the impure fields, in particular, the sentient beings living in the three lower realms. The mantra then becomes the protector of sentient beings; it protects those without protection. The mantra is an offering and also purifies obscurations.

The mantra is also a blessing. When we recite the mantra, we purify negative karmas and negative imprints from the mind-stream through the power of the wisdom deity. This is a quality of the wisdom deity. When we talk about the blessings of the wisdom deities, the blessing is nothing other than love and compassion. If we recite the mantra of the wisdom deity, we will destroy the negative imprints and karmas that we have accumulated since beginning-less time and come closer and closer to approaching Enlightenment.

With regard to the benefits of mantra recitation and the mantra itself, the Buddha himself had also said in the Liberation by Seeing mantra for example, that by only seeing a certain mantra, one will purify obscurations accumulated in three-hundred million aeons.

There are three types of uninterrupted-ness when we recite the mantra. There are uninterrupted offerings to the Buddhas; uninterrupted purification of obscurations of sentient beings, and uninterrupted attainment of siddhis or attainments. The siddhi is basically the increase of love and compassion; if love and compassion increase, wisdom increases and one attains Enlightenment. Due to compassion, one temporarily experiences the seven qualities of the higher realms*, the happiness of the higher realms and many other benefits that come from mantra recitation. 

Any virtue you practice, even if it is just a single Mani mantra, you should think that it is for the sake of all mother sentient beings. If you have this intention, the virtue will become very vast and very powerful and it will have two benefits: the temporary benefit of birth in the higher realms and the ultimate benefit of attaining Enlightenment.

Even though you have received many empowerments, if you understand the nature of the deity, you understand that it is sufficient to only practice a single deity. By practicing a single deity genuinely, you are accomplishing the essence of all deities. In fact, it is better to focus on the practice of just one deity, because then it will be easier to habituate to the deity to the point where you will not forget about the deity. To accomplish the deity means to never forget about the deity, it means that the deity always remains in your mind, it never separates from you. As it is always in your mind, you become the deity. If you never separate from the deity, you will also remember the deity in the Bardo after death, upon which you will attain enlightenment into the samboghakaya form of the deity. Sometimes people worry about receiving too many empowerments because they think that they cannot keep all the samayas. Actually if you practice the root samaya of love, compassion and mindfulness, you are keeping all samayas of all deities, even if you only recite the mantra of one deity. In order to understand this you must understand the essence of the deity. If you think that the deities are all separate, there will be a conflict. Actually the power of one wisdom deity is contained within all deities. Various deities appear in order to suit the various thoughts and inclinations of sentient beings, but actually their nature is one and the same. The nature of all deities is bodhichitta. Therefore, if you practice bodhichitta and mindfulness, and only recite the mantra of one deity, you are keeping all your samayas. If you do not practice bodhichitta and mindfulness, no matter how many different mantras you recite, you are not keeping your samayas. That is because bodhichitta is the very life-energy of the deity. Without bodhichitta the deity is like a dead body. However, it is necessary to practice at least one deity on a daily basis. In the various empowerment texts it is mentioned in the section of repeating the samaya that one must recite the mantra of that deity, but this must be mentioned in each sadhana because in old days the masters would only receive this one empowerment and then practice this for the rest of their lives. For this reason it must be mentioned in each empowerment text. But for us, since we receive so many empowerments nowadays, it is crucial to understand the meaning and essence of the empowerment: It is said: "In the expanse of primordial wisdom, all the Buddhas are one."

~ Garchen Rinpoche

wtorek, 4 sierpnia 2015

Compassion, the quickest way to full enlightenment.

The Destroyer Qualified Gone Beyond One (Bhagawan) said, 

“The bodhisattva does not follow many Dharmas. The bodhisattva holds one Dharma well and realizes it well. The whole Buddhadharma will be in the hand of that person.” 

What differentiates Buddhism from other religions is COMPASSION for every single sentient being. What really pleases all the buddhas and bodhisattvas is COMPASSION. COMPASSION is what makes all sentient beings happy. 


STRONG COMPASSION is the foundation that causes you to achieve full enlightenment most quickly. If you want to achieve full enlightenment in order to liberate all sentient beings from suffering and bring them to full enlightenment, the quickest way is to generate strong COMPASSION.

Chandrakirti said,
“At the beginning, COMPASSION is like a seed; in the middle, it is like water; at the end, it is like a ripened fruit. Achieving the result of full enlightenment is all due to COMPASSION.”

Even for non-believers the best thing and only way to create merit (good karma) is COMPASSION, as well as making offerings and prostrations to holy objects and circumambulating them, even by chance. What gives all beings a happy, satisfied, meaningful and successful life is COMPASSION.

From the Sutra Request by Lodro Gyatso:
“The thought of complete enlightenment, preserving Dharma, practicing Dharma and having love and compassion for living beings: these four dharmas have infinite qualities—the limit of their benefits is not seen by the Victorious Ones. It is said that preserving Dharma and protecting the lives of living beings has limitless benefits.”

This shows that if we have COMPASSION for sentient beings, from those we can’t see with the naked eye but only under a microscope up to creatures the size of a mountain, then the Buddha has never explained the limits of the benefits of the compassion we generate for them. It’s the same as saving the lives of human beings, animals and insects; we must understand that it has limitless benefits.

A Kadampa geshe said,
“Holy beings of the land of Dzambu (this world) respond to harm with good actions.” 

When ordinary people are harmed they retaliate with harm. Holy beings repay harm with positive actions. Whoever sees the enemy as the virtuous friend is happy wherever that person is. 

The great Indian scholar bodhisattva Shantideva said in the first chapter of his Bodhicaryavatara:
“I bow down to the body of him in whom the sacred precious mind is born. I seek refuge in that source of joy, who brings to happiness even those who harm him.”

The extensive benefits of bodhicitta, which are like the sky and the depthless ocean, are also the benefits of generating great COMPASSION for all sentient beings. Without great COMPASSION there is no way achieve bodhicitta, which has limitless benefits.

The conclusion is that COMPASSION is the most important practice in life.


~ Lama Zopa Rinpoche - COMPASSION IS OF THE UTMOST NEED

czwartek, 30 lipca 2015

The moment of awakening

The moment of awakening may be marked by an outbursts of laughter, but this is not the laughter of someone who has won the lottery or some kind of victory. It is the laughter of one who, after searching for something for a long time, suddenly finds it in the pocket of his coat.
 ~ Thich Nhat Hanh - "Zen Keys: A Guide to Zen Practice".

niedziela, 26 lipca 2015

Buddha nature cannot be fabricated.

If our nature wasn't already enlightened, we couldn't awaken to it no matter how hard we tried. Buddha nature cannot be fabricated. Our nature is primordially enlightened, but at present our ordinary body, speech and discursive thinking obscures it. The nature of our mind, buddha nature, is like space itself, but it is space obscured by clouds. The whole point of Dharma practice is to remove the clouds and allow the actualization of what already is – the awakened state of mind, the buddha nature. The nature of our mind is primordially pure, primordially enlightened. The way to remove our two obscurations is to train in conditioned virtue and the unconditioned training in original wakefulness – the two accumulations.

~ Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche - "As It Is, Vol. 2"

sobota, 25 lipca 2015

A Discourse Virtuous in the Beginning, Middle, and End


***

NAMO LOKESHVARĀYA

1.
If but a single drop of the nectar of your name were to fall upon my ears,
They would be filled with the sound of Dharma for countless lives.
Wondrous Three Jewels, may the brilliance of your renown
Bring perfect happiness everywhere!

2.
Like some persimmons in the autumn
Which, though inside still unripe, look ripe outside,
I myself am just the semblance of a Dharma practitioner,
And since my mind and the Dharma haven’t mixed, my Dharma teaching won’t be up to much.

3.
But since you, worthy friend, entreat me insistently,
I cannot refuse—I will speak out frankly.
Unusual though it is in this decadent age,
I offer you these words without treachery, so listen well.

4.
The True Ṛiṣhi, the Munīndra, god of gods,
Attained the true level through the true path,
And truly showed this true and excellent path to others.
Isn’t that why he’s known as the True Ṛiṣhi?

5.
Alas! For people in this age of residues!
The mind’s wholesome core of truth has withered, and people live deceitfully,
So their thoughts are warped, their speech is twisted,
They cunningly mislead others—who can trust them?

6.
Alas! How depressing to see the beings of this degenerate age!
Alas! Can anyone trust what anyone says?
It’s like living in a land of vicious man-eating demons—
Think about it, and do yourself a big favor.

7.
Not long ago, your consciousness was wandering alone.
Swept along by karma, it took this present birth.
Soon, like a hair pulled out of butter,
Leaving everything behind, you’ll go on again alone.

8.
Of course what we want is our own good,
So we have to be honest with our own selves:
If we don’t accomplish the essence of the Dharma for our own sake,
Won’t we be ruining our own life?

9.
In this dark age, what people think and do is vile.
None of them will help you, they’ll deceive and trick you;
And for you to be of any help to them will be hard;
Wouldn’t it be best to quit the whole rat race?

10.
Though you serve your superiors, they will never be pleased;
Though you look after your inferiors, they will never be satisfied;
Though you care about others, they won’t care about you.
Think about it, and make a firm decision.

11.
Being learned these days doesn’t help the teachings—it just leads to more debate;
Being realized these days doesn’t help others—it just leads to more criticism;
Being in a responsible position these days doesn’t help govern the country well—it only spreads revolt.
Think about these times with sorrow and disgust.

12.
Though you explain, people miss the point or don’t believe you;
Though your motivation is truly altruistic, people think it’s not.
These days, when the crooked see the straight as crooked,
You can’t help anyone—give up any hope of that.

13.
“All phenomena are like magical illusions,” said the Buddhas;
But these days the illusions are more illusory than ever,
Trickeries conjured up by devious illusionists—
Beware of the illusions of this degenerate age’s ways.

14.
“All talk is like an echo,” said the Buddhas,
But these days it’s more like the re-echo of an echo.
What the echoes say and what they mean are not the same,
So don’t take any notice of these insidious echo-words.

15.
Whoever you see isn’t human, but a fraud;
Whatever people say isn’t right, but just lies.
So since these days there’s no one you can trust,
You’d better live alone and stay free.

16.
If your actions conform with Dharma, you’ll antagonize everyone;
If your words are truthful, most people will get angry;
If your mind is truly good and pure, they will judge it a defect.
Now is the time to keep your own way hidden.

17.
Hide your body by staying alone in a mountain wilderness;
Hide your speech by cutting off contact and saying very little;
Hide your mind by being continuously aware of your own faults alone.
This is what it means to be a hidden yogī.

18.
Disgust, because there’s no one to be trusted,
Sadness, because there’s no meaning in anything,
Determination, because there’ll never be time to get everything you want;
If you always keep these three things in mind, some good will come of it.

19.
There’s no time to be happy; happiness is over just like that;
You don’t want to suffer, so eradicate suffering with Dharma.
Whatever happiness or suffering comes, recognize it as the power of your past actions,
And from now on have no hopes or doubts regarding anyone at all.

20.
Expecting a lot from people, you do a lot of smiling;
Needing many things for yourself, you have many needs to meet;
Making plans to do first this, then that, your mind’s full of hopes and fears—
From now on, come what may, don’t be like that.

21.
Even if you die today, why be sad? It’s the way of saṃsāra.
Even if you live to be a hundred, why be glad? Youth will have long since gone.
Whether you live or die right now, what does this life matter?
Just practice Dharma for the next life—that’s the point.

22.
Ah! Fount of compassion, my root teacher, Lord Chenrezi,
You are my only protector!
The six-syllable mantra, essence of your speech, is the sublime Dharma;
From now on I have no hope but you!

23.
Whatever I know I’ve left it as theory; it’s no use to me now.
Whatever I’ve done I’ve spent on this life; it’s no use to me now.
Whatever I’ve thought was all just delusion; it’s no use to me now.
Now the time has come to do what’s truly useful—recite the six-syllable mantra.

24.
The only never-failing, constant refuge is the Three Jewels;
The Three Jewels’ single essence is Chenrezi.
With total, unshakable trust in his wisdom,
Convinced and decisive, recite the six-syllable mantra.

25.
The basis of the Mahāyāna path is the thought of enlightenment;
This sublime thought is the one path trodden by all the Buddhas.
Never leaving this noble path of the thought of enlightenment,
With compassion for all beings, recite the six-syllable mantra.

26.
Wandering in saṃsāra from beginningless time until now,
Whatever you’ve done was wrong and will lead to further wandering.
From your heart acknowledge all wrongdoing and downfalls, and, confessing them,
With the four powers complete, recite the six-syllable mantra.

27.
The mind, holding on to an “I,” clings to everything—this is the cause of saṃsāra;
So, as offerings to the exalted in nirvāṇa and charity to the lowly in saṃsāra,
Give everything—body, possessions, and virtue—and dedicate the merit to all;
Casting all attachments far away, recite the six-syllable mantra.

28.
The noble teacher has the nature of all Buddhas,
And of all Buddhas, it is he who is the kindest.
Seeing the teacher as inseparable from Chenrezi,
With fervent devotion, recite the six-syllable mantra.

29.
Purifying the obscurations, initiating the practice of the path and actualizing the four kāyas,
The essence of the four empowerments is the teacher Chenrezi;
If you recognize your own mind as the teacher, all four empowerments are complete;
Receiving innate empowerment by yourself, recite the six-syllable mantra.

30.
Saṃsāra is nothing other than how things appear to you;
If you recognize everything as the deity, the good of others is consummated.
Seeing the purity of everything confers the four empowerments on all beings at once;
Dredging the depths of saṃsāra, recite the six-syllable mantra.

31.
The mind cannot cope with all the many visualization practices;
To meditate on one Sugata is to meditate on them all.
Whatever appears, appearances are the form of the Great Compassionate One;
In the realm of the deity’s body, apparent yet void, recite the six-syllable mantra.

32.
Recitations, sādhanas, and powerful spells are just complications;
The all-inclusive six-syllable mantra is the very sound of the Dharma.
All sounds have never been other than the speech of Sublime Chenrezi;
Recognizing them as mantra, resounding yet void, recite the six-syllable mantra.

33.
As thoughts and the two obscurations are pacified, experience and realization increase;
As your perceptions come under control, enemies and obstructing influences are subjugated.
It is Chenrezi who bestows in this very life the supreme and common siddhis;
As the four activities are accomplished by themselves, recite the six-syllable mantra.

34.
Offer the torma of whatever arises to the guests of immediate liberation;
Mold the clay of whatever appears into the tsa-tsa of void appearance;
Offer the prostration of nonduality to the Lord of Mind Nature.
Consummating these Dharma activities, recite the six-syllable mantra.

35.
Overcome your enemy, hatred, with the weapon of love;
Protect your family, the beings of the six realms, with the skillful means of compassion;
Harvest from the field of devotion the crop of experience and realization.
Consummating your life’s work, recite the six-syllable mantra.

36.
Cremate that old corpse of clinging to things as real in the fire of nonattachment;
Conduct the weekly funeral ceremonies of ordinary life by practicing the essence of Dharma;
As the smoke-offering to provide for the departed, dedicate your accumulated merit for all their future lives.
Consummating all positive actions done for the sake of the dead, recite the six-syllable mantra.

37.
Put your child, devotion, at the doorway of your practice;
Give your son, renunciation, mastery over the household of ordinary life;
Wed your daughter, compassion, to the bridegroom of the three worlds.
Consummating your duty to the living, recite the six-syllable mantra.

38.
Whatever appears is delusion and has no true existence;
Saṃsāra and nirvāṇa are just thoughts and nothing more.
If you can liberate thoughts as they arise, that includes all stages of the path;
Applying the essential instruction for liberating thoughts, recite the six-syllable mantra.

39.
Your own mind, aware and void inseparably, is Dharmakāya.
Leave everything as it is in fundamental simplicity, and clarity will arise by itself.
Only by doing nothing will you do all there is to be done;
Leaving everything in naked void-awareness, recite the six-syllable mantra.

40.
Let stillness cut the momentum of moving thoughts;
Within movement see the very nature of stillness.
Where stillness and movement are one, maintain the natural mind;
In the experience of one-pointedness, recite the six-syllable mantra.

41.
By examining relative truth, establish absolute truth;
Within absolute truth, see how relative truth arises.
Where the two truths are inseparable, beyond intellect, is the state of simplicity;
In the view free of all elaboration, recite the six-syllable mantra.

42.
From appearances, cut away the clinging of mind;
From mind, demolish the lair of fictitious appearances;
Where mind and appearances are one is infinite openness;
In the realization of one taste, recite the six-syllable mantra.

43.
In the nature of mind, the simplicity of void awareness, everything is freed;
Thoughts, the spontaneous creativity of awareness, are purified in their own sphere.
Mind and awareness are one in the single essence.
In the nonmeditation of Dharmakāya, recite the six-syllable mantra.

44.
To recognize as the deity whatever forms appear is the crucial point of the development stage;
Clinging to appearance as beautiful or ugly is liberated into its own nature.
Free of clinging, mind as it appears is the body of Supreme Chenrezi.
In the self-liberation of visual experiences, recite the six-syllable mantra.

45.
To recognize sounds as mantra is the crucial point of recitation practice;
Clinging to sound as pleasant or unpleasant is liberated into its own nature.
Free of grasping, the spontaneous sound of saṃsāra and nirvāṇa is the voice of the six syllables.
In the self-liberation of hearing, recite the six-syllable mantra.

46.
To recognize smells as unborn is the crucial point of the completion stage;
Clinging to odor as fragrant or foul is liberated into its own nature.
Free of grasping, all smells are the fragrant discipline of Supreme Chenrezi;
In the self-liberation of smelling, recite the six-syllable mantra.

47.
To recognize flavors as a sacramental feast is the crucial point of offering.
Attachment to taste as delicious or disgusting is liberated into its own nature;
Free of grasping, food and drink are substances to delight Supreme Chenrezi;
In the self-liberation of taste, recite the six-syllable mantra.

48.
To recognize sensations as essential sameness is the crucial point of equal taste;
Feelings of repletion and hunger, hot and cold, are liberated into their own nature.
Free of grasping, all sensations and feelings are the deity’s activity;
In the self-liberation of sensation, recite the six-syllable mantra.

49.
To recognize all phenomena as void is the crucial point of the view;
Belief in true and false is liberated into its own nature.
Free of grasping, everything there is, all of saṃsāra and nirvāṇa, is the continuum of the Dharmakāya;
In the self-liberation of thoughts, recite the six-syllable mantra.

50.
Don’t follow after the object of hatred; look at the angry mind.
Anger, liberated by itself as it arises, is the clear void;
The clear void is none other than mirrorlike wisdom.
In the self-liberation of hatred, recite the six-syllable mantra.

51.
Don’t chase after the object of pride; look at the grasping mind.
Self-importance, liberated by itself as it arises, is primordial voidness;
This primordial voidness is none other than the wisdom of essential sameness.
In the self-liberation of pride, recite the six-syllable mantra.

52.
Don’t hanker after the object of desire; look at the craving mind.
Desire, liberated by itself as it arises, is bliss-void;
This bliss-void is none other than all-discriminating wisdom.
In the self-liberation of desire, recite the six-syllable mantra.

53.
Don’t follow after the object of jealousy; look at the critical mind.
Jealousy, liberated by itself as it arises, is void intellect;
This void intellect is none other than all-accomplishing wisdom.
In the self-liberation of jealousy, recite the six-syllable mantra.

54.
Don’t just take for granted ideas forged by ignorance; look at the nature of ignorance itself.
The hosts of thoughts, liberated by themselves as they arise, are awareness-void;
This awareness-void is none other than the wisdom of the absolute expanse.
In the self-liberation of ignorance, recite the six-syllable mantra.

55.
Form is unborn, primordially void, like the sky;
The quintessence of this awareness-void is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime King of the Sky.
In the view of voidness, recite the six-syllable mantra.

56. Feeling is the lasso that binds mind and object together;
When you know it as nondual sameness, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Bountiful Lasso.
In the realization of same taste, recite the six-syllable mantra.

57.
Appraisal, if you keep taking it as valid, is delusion;
When you turn to all beings with compassion, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime One Who Dredges the Depths of Saṃsāra.
In compassion without bias, recite the six-syllable mantra.

58.
Impulse, as saṃsāric actions, keeps you circling in the six realms;
If you realize saṃsāra and nirvāṇa are the very same, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Greatly Compassionate Transformer of Beings.
Acting for others in one single taste, recite the six-syllable mantra.

59.
Consciousness, the expression of ordinary mind, has eight functions;
If you realize ultimate mind to be Dharmakāya, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Ocean of Conquerors.
Knowing that your own mind is the Buddha, recite the six-syllable mantra.

60.
Believing the body to be solid is what causes servitude;
If you recognize it as the deity, appearing yet void, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Khasarpani.
In the recognition of the deity’s body, appearing yet void, recite the six-syllable mantra.

61. Conceptualizing speech and sound is what causes delusion;
If you recognize it as mantra, resounding yet void, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Lion’s Roar.
In the recognition of sound as mantra, recite the six-syllable mantra.

62.
Clinging to mind’s perceptions as true is the delusion that causes saṃsāra;
If you leave mind in its natural state, free from thoughts, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Unwinding in Ultimate Mind.
In ultimate mind, the Dharmakāya, recite the six-syllable mantra.

63.
Everything that exists is the primordially pure continuum of the Dharmakāya;
If you meet the Dharmakāya face to face, it is Chenrezi—
It is none other than the Sublime Sovereign of the Universe.
In the continuum of all-pervading purity, recite the six-syllable mantra.

64.
One deity, Chenrezi, embodies all Buddhas;
One mantra, the six syllables, embodies all mantras;
One Dharma, bodhichitta, embodies all practices of the development and completion stages.
Knowing the one which liberates all, recite the six-syllable mantra.

65.
What use is all you’ve done? Being so busy just causes saṃsāra—
Look how meaningless all you’ve done has been.
Now you’d better just stop trying to do anything;
Dropping all activities, recite the six-syllable mantra.

66.
What use is all you’ve said? It was all just pointless prattle—
Look how much irrelevant distraction it has brought.
Now you’d better just keep silent;
Ceasing completely to speak, recite the six-syllable mantra.

67.
What use is rushing around? Coming and going just tires you out—
Look how far your wandering has taken you from the Dharma.
Now you’d better just settle down and relax your mind;
Staying put, carefree and at ease, recite the six-syllable mantra.

68.
What use is all you’ve eaten? It all just turned into excrement—
Look how insatiable your appetite has been.
Now you’d better nourish yourself with the food of samādhi;
Quit all that eating and drinking, and recite the six-syllable mantra.

69.
What use are all your thoughts? They’ve just brought more delusion—
Look how few of all your aims you’ve managed to achieve.
Now for this life’s concerns you’d better not think too far ahead;
Dropping all your plans, recite the six-syllable mantra.

70.
What use is all you own? Property is just clinging—
Look how soon you’ll leave whatever you’ve got behind.
Now you’d better put an end to your possessive grasping;
Ceasing to acquire and hoard things, recite the six-syllable mantra.

71.
What use is all the time you’ve slept? It was all just spent in a stupor—
Look how easily your life is running out in indolence.
Now you’d better start to exert yourself wholeheartedly;
Day and night, spurning all distraction, recite the six-syllable mantra.

72.
There’s no time, no time! There’s no time to rest!
When suddenly death is upon you, what will you do?
Now you’d better start practicing the sublime Dharma right away;
Now, quick, hurry—recite the six-syllable mantra.

73.
What can you say about years, months, or days—
Look how things change every moment, right now!
Each moment that passes brings you closer to death;
Now, this very moment, recite the six-syllable mantra.

74.
As your life runs out like the setting sun sinking away,
Death closes in like the lengthening shadows of evening.
Now what’s left of your life will vanish as fast as the last fading shadows;
There’s no time to waste—recite the six-syllable mantra.

75.
The six-syllable mantra, although perfect as Dharma,
Is fruitless recited while chatting and looking around;
And to cling to the number recited is to miss the point outright.
Undistractedly watching the mind, recite the six-syllable mantra.

76.
If you check your mind over and over again,
Whatever you do becomes the perfect path.
Of all the hundreds of vital instructions, this is the very quintessence;
Fuse everything into this one single point, and recite the six-syllable mantra.

77.
The first part, my sorrowful tirade at this decadent age’s ways,
Was a reproof I had intended for myself.
This sad lament has affected me deeply;
Now I offer it to you, thinking you might feel the same.

78.
If that is not the case, and you have total confidence in the loftiness of your view and meditation,
Wise ideas about how to combine the worldly and the spiritual,
And the diplomatic skill to settle problems to the satisfaction of all—
If you have all that, then I offer you my apologies.

79.
The second part, my dissertation establishing view and meditation—
Since of course I have no experience of realization at all—
Just sets out what I’ve understood by the grace of the teachings
From the precious lineage of the all-knowing father and son.

80.
The third part, my exhortation to relinquish everything and practice,
Though you may well miss the point, just slipped out by itself.
Yet, since it in no way contradicts the words of the Buddhas and Bodhisattvas,
It would be truly kind of you to put it into practice.

81.
This discourse, virtuous in the beginning, middle, and end,
Was written in the siddha’s cave of White Rock Victory Peak,
For an old friend whose pleas could no longer be resisted,
By that ragged old fellow Apu Hralpo, ablaze with the five poisons.

82.
I have just been prattling on and on, but so what?
My theme is of great worth and its meaning unerring; so the merit it brings
I offer to you, and to all of us throughout the three worlds—
May all the wishes we make, inspired by the teachings, come true!


~ Patrul Rinpoche - "The Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones"

wtorek, 21 lipca 2015

You are not a Buddhist!

If you cannot accept that all compounded or fabricated things are impermanent, if you believe that there is some essential substance or concept that is permanent, then you are not a Buddhist.
If you cannot accept that all emotions are pain, if you believe that actually some emotions are purely pleasurable, then you are not a Buddhist.
If you cannot accept that all phenomena are illusory and empty, if you believe that certain things do exist inherently, then you are not a Buddhist.
And if you think that enlightenment exists within the spheres of time, space, and power, then you are not a Buddhist.

~ Dzongsar Khyentse Rinpoche - "What Makes You Not a Buddhist"

poniedziałek, 20 lipca 2015

Three kinds of dharma practitioners

There are three kinds of dharma practitioners: firstly, there are those who look like practitioners outwardly, but inwardly they are not real practitioners; secondly, there are those who talk very high, but have no realization at all; thirdly there are those who do not look like practitioners outwardly, but who are in fact genuine practitioners inside.

~ Chatral Rinpoche - “Compassionate Action”

Om Mani Padme Hum

In this decadent age, because of their limited intelligence and lack of determination, people need to practice the Dharma in an essentialized form. The practice of combining devotion to the teacher as inseparable from Chenrezi with the recitation of the six-syllable mantra fulfills this need. This six-syllable mantra, the maṇi, is so easy to recite, yet it concentrates within it the substance of all the Buddhist scriptures. It is the essence of Chenrezi’s heart, and the blessings it brings are infinite. If you make it your main practice, humans, celestial beings, and even harmful spirits will be well disposed to you, and you will have a long life free from illness and obstacles. In your next life you will be born in the Blissful Buddha-field of the Potala Mountain, or at the very least in a place where the Dharma prevails. This is because Chenrezi’s mantra contains the infinite blessing and compassion of the Buddhas. 

~ Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche - "The Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones"