Advice for Carrying the View

by His Holiness Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche


The everyday practice is simply to develop a complete acceptance and  
openness to all situations and emotions, and to all people,  
experiencing everything totally without mental reservations and  
blockages, so that one never withdraws or centralizes into oneself.

This produces a tremendous energy that is usually locked up in the  
process of mental evasion and a general running away from life  
experiences.

Clarity of awareness may, in its initial stages, be unpleasant or  
fear inspiring. If so, then one should open oneself completely to the  
pain or the fear and welcome it. In this way the barriers created by  
one’s own habitual emotional reactions and prejudices are broken down.

When performing the meditation practice one should develop the  
feeling of opening oneself completely to the whole universe with  
absolute simplicity and nakedness of mind, ridding oneself of all  
protecting barriers. Don’t mentally split into two when meditating,  
one part of the mind watching the other like a cat watching a mouse.

One should realize that one does not meditate to go deeply into  
oneself and withdraw from the world. In buddhist yoga, even when  
meditating on chakras there is no introspection concentration.  
Complete openness of mind is the essential point.

The ground of samsara and nirvana is the alaya, the beginning and the  
end of confusion and realization, the nature of universal shunyata  
and of all apparent phenomena. It is even more fundamental than the  
trikaya and is free from bias toward enlightenment. It is sometimes  
called the “pure” or “original” mind.

Although prajna (wisdom) sees in it no basis for such concepts as  
different aspects, the fundamental aspects of complete openness,  
natural perfection, and absolute spontaneity are distinguished by  
upaya (skillful means) as useful devices.

All aspects of every phenomenon are completely clear and lucid. The  
whole universe is open and unobstructed, everything mutually  
interpenetrating. Seeing all things nakedly, clear and free from  
obscurations, there is nothing to attain or realize. The nature of  
things naturally appears and is naturally present in time- 
transcending awareness; this is complete openness.

Everything is perfect just as it is, completely pure and undefiled.  
All phenomena naturally appear in their uniquely correct modes and  
situations, forming ever-changing patterns full of meaning and  
significance, like participants in a great dance. Everything is a  
symbol, yet there is no difference between the symbol and the truth  
symbolized. With no effort of practice whatsoever, liberation,  
enlightenment, and buddhahood are already fully developed and  
perfected. This is natural perfection.

The everyday practice is just ordinary life itself. Since the  
underdeveloped state does not exist there is no need to behave in any  
special way or try to attain or practice anything. There should be no  
feeling of striving to reach some exalted goal or higher state; this  
simply produces something conditional or artificial that will act as  
an obstruction to the free flow of the mind. One should never think  
of oneself as “sinful” or worthless, but as naturally pure and  
perfect, lacking nothing.

When performing meditation practice one should think of it as just a  
natural function of everyday living, like eating or breathing, not as  
a special, formal event to be undertaken with great seriousness and  
solemnity. One must realize that to meditate is to pass beyond  
effort, beyond practice, beyond aims and goals, and beyond the  
dualism of bondage and liberation.

Meditation is always perfect, so there is no need to correct  
anything. Since everything that arises is simply the play of the  
mind, there are no “bad” meditation sessions and no need to judge  
thoughts as good or evil. Therefore, one should not sit down to  
meditate with various hopes or fears about the outcome; one just does  
it, with no selfconscious feeling of “I am meditating,” and without  
attempting to control or force the mind, and without trying to become  
peaceful.

If one finds that one is going astray in any of these ways, one  
should stop meditating and simply rest and relax for a while before  
resuming.

If, either during or after meditation, one has experiences that one  
interprets as results, they should not be made into anything special.  
Recognize that they are just phenomena and simply observe them. Above  
all, do not attempt to recreate them as this opposes the natural  
spontaneity of the mind. All phenomena are completely new and fresh  
and absolutely unique, entirely free from all concepts of past,  
present, and future—as if experienced in another dimension of time;  
this is absolute spontaneity.

The continual stream of new discovery and fresh revelation and  
inspiration that arises at every moment is the manifestation of the  
eternal youth of the living dharma and its wonders; splendor and  
spontaneity is the play or dance aspect of the universe as guru.

One should learn to see everyday life as a mandala in which one is at  
the center, and be free of the bias and prejudice of past  
conditioning, present desires, and hopes and expectations about the  
future.

The figures of the mandala are the day-to-day objects of one’s life  
experiences moving in the great dance of the play of the universe,  
the symbolism by which the guru reveals profound and ultimate meaning  
and significance. Therefore, be natural and spontaneous; accept and  
learn from everything.

See the comical, amusing side of initiating situations. In  
meditation, see through the illusion of past, present, and future.  
The past is but a present memory or condition, the future but a  
present projection, and the present itself vanishes before it can be  
grasped.

One should put an end to conceptions about meditation and free  
oneself from memories of the past. Each moment of meditation is  
completely unique and full of potentiality of new discovery, so one  
is incapable of judging meditation by past experience or by theory.

Simply plunge straight into meditation at this very moment with your  
whole mind, and be free from hesitation, boredom, or excitement.

When meditating it is traditional and best, if possible, to sit cross- 
legged with the back erect but not rigid. However, it is most  
important to feel comfortable, so it is better to sit in a chair if  
sitting cross-legged is painful.

One’s mental attitude should be inspired by the three fundamental  
aspects, whether the meditation is with or without form, and it may  
often prove desirable, if not essential, to precede a period of  
formless meditation by a period of meditation with form.

To provide for this eventuality many classes of preliminary  
meditation practices have been developed over centuries of buddhist  
practice, the most important being meditations on breathing, mantra  
recitation, and visualization techniques.

To engage in the second and third of these classes, personal  
instruction from one’s guru is required, but a few words on the first  
would not be out of place here as the method used varies little from  
person to person.

First, let the mind follow the movement of the breath, in and out,  
until it becomes calm and tranquil. Then increasingly rest the mind  
on the breath until one’s whole being seems to be identified with it.

Finally, become aware of the breath leaving the body and going out  
into space, and gradually transfer the attention from the breath to  
the sensation of spaciousness and expansion. By letting this final  
sensation merge into complete openness, one moves into the sphere of  
formless meditation.

In all probability the above description of the three fundamental  
aspects will seem vague and inadequate. This is inevitable since they  
attempt to describe what is not only beyond words but beyond thought  
as well. They invite practice of what is, essentially, a state of being.

The words are simply a form of upaya, skillful means, a hint which,  
if acted upon, will enable one’s innate natural wisdom and naturally  
perfect action to arise spontaneously.

Sometimes in meditation one may experience a gap in one’s normal  
consciousness, a sudden and complete openness. This experience arises  
only when one has ceased to think in terms of meditation and the  
object of meditation. It is a glimpse of reality, a sudden flash that  
occurs infrequently at first, and then, with continued practice, more  
and more frequently. It may not be a particularly shattering or  
explosive experience at all, just a moment of great simplicity.

Do not make the mistake of deliberately trying to force these  
experiences to recur, for to do so is to betray the naturalness and  
spontaneity of reality.


------------------------ Yahoo! Groups Sponsor --------------------~--> 
Join modern day disciples reach the disfigured and poor with hope and healing
http://us.click.yahoo.com/lMct6A/Vp3LAA/i1hLAA/UlWolB/TM
--------------------------------------------------------------------~-> 

To subscribe, send a message to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Or go to: 
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/
and click 'Join This Group!' 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/FairfieldLife/

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 


Reply via email to