|
|
|
Excerpt from The Words of My Perfect Teacher From Chapter 1: The difficulty of finding the freedoms and advantages The main subject of the chapter, the teaching on how difficult it is to find the freedoms and advantages, is preceded by an explanation of the proper way to listen to any spiritual instruction. I. THE PROPER WAY TO LISTEN TO SPIRITUAL TEACHING 1. Attitude 1.1 THE VAST ATTITUDE OF THE BODHICITTA All of these beings, who have been so kind to us, want to be happy, and yet they have no idea how to put into practice what brings about happiness, the ten positive actions. None of them want to suffer, but they do not know how to give up the ten negative actions at the root of all suffering. Their deepest wishes and what they actually do thus contradict each other. Poor beings, lost and confused, like a blind man abandoned in the middle of an empty plain! Tell yourself: "It is for their well-being that I am going to listen to the profound Dharma and put it into practice. I will lead all these beings, my parents, tormented by the miseries of the six realms of existence, to the state of omniscient Buddhahood, freeing them from all the karmic phenomena, habitual patterns and sufferings of every one of the six realms." It is important to have this attitude each time you listen to teachings or practise them. Whenever you do something positive, whether of major or minor importance, it is indispensable to enhance it with the three supreme methods. Before beginning, arouse the bodhicitta as a skilful means to make sure that the action becomes a source of good for the future. While carrying out the action, avoid getting involved in any conceptualization, so that the merit cannot be destroyed by circumstances. At the end, seal the action properly by dedicating the merit, which will ensure that it continually grows ever greater. The way you listen to the Dharma is very important. But even more important is the motivation with which you listen to it. What makes an action good or bad? No matter how many teachings you have heard, to be motivated by ordinary concerns—such as a desire for greatness, fame or whatever—is not the way of the true Dharma. So, first of all, it is most important to turn inwards and change your motivation. If you can correct your attitude, skilful means will permeate your positive actions, and you will have set out on the path of great beings. If you cannot, you might think that you are studying and practising the Dharma but it will be no more than a semblance of the real thing. Therefore, whenever you listen to the teachings and whenever you practise, be it meditating on a deity, doing prostrations and circumambulations, or reciting a mantra—even a single mani—it is always essential to give rise to bodhicitta. 1.2 VAST SKILL IN MEANS: THE ATTITUDE OF THE SECRET MANTRAYANA It has the same goal but is free from all confusion, The Mantrayana can be entered by many routes. It contains many methods for accumulating merit and wisdom, and profound skilful means to make the potential within us manifest without our having to undergo great hardships. The basis for these methods is the way we direct our aspirations: Everything is circumstantial Do not consider the place where the Dharma is being taught, the teacher, the teachings and so on as ordinary and impure. As you listen, keep the five perfections clearly in mind: The perfect place is the citadel of the absolute expanse, called Akanistha, "the Unexcelled." The perfect teacher is Samantabhadra, the dharmakaya. The perfect assembly consists of the male and female Bodhisattvas and deities of the mind lineage of the Conquerors and of the symbol lineage of the Vidyadharas. Or you can think that the place where the Dharma is being taught is the Lotus-Light Palace of the Glorious Copper-coloured Mountain, the teacher who teaches is Padmasambhava of Oddiyana, and we, the audience, are the Eight Vidyadharas, the Twenty-five Disciples, and the dakas and dakinis. Or consider that this perfect place is the Eastern Buddhafield, Manifest Joy, where the perfect teacher Vajrasattva, the perfect sambhogakaya, is teaching the assembly of the divinities of the Vajra Family and male and female Bodhisattvas. Equally well, the perfect place where the Dharma is being taught can be the Western Buddhafield, the Blissful, the perfect teacher the Buddha Amitabha, and the assembly the male and female Bodhisattvas and deities of the Lotus family. Whatever the case, the teaching is that of the Great Vehicle and the time is the ever-revolving wheel of eternity. These visualizations are to help us understand how things are in reality. It is not that we are temporarily creating something that does not really exist. The teacher embodies the essence of all Buddhas throughout the three times. He is the union of the Three Jewels: his body is the Sangha, his speech the Dharma, his mind the Buddha. He is the union of the Three Roots: his body is the teacher, his speech the yidam, his mind the dakini. He is the union of the three kayas: his body is the nirmanakaya, his speech the sambhogakaya, his mind the dharmakaya. He is the embodiment of all the Buddhas of the past, source of all the Buddhas of the future and the representative of all the Buddhas of the present. Since he takes as his disciples degenerate beings like us, whom none of the thousand Buddhas of the Good Kalpa could help, his compassion and bounty exceed that of all Buddhas. The teacher is the Buddha, the teacher is the Dharma, We, as the assembly gathered to listen to the teachings, use the basis of our own Buddha-nature, the support of our precious human life, the circumstance of having a spiritual friend and the method of following his advice, to become the Buddhas of the future. As the Hevajra Tantra says: All beings are Buddhas, |





