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(Bowl rings)
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(John): So In this presentation we are
going discuss the Path of Sutra.
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We will look at how Sutra enforms monastic
life and the advantages of monastic life.
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We are going to look at the refuge vows
may be taken by lay practitioners.
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And we'll also look at the types of
meditations
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that are done in Sutric tradition,
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which are different from
the ones in Tantra and in Dzogchen.
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So Geshe la, perhaps we could start out
with talking about just the view and
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conduct of Sutra. How would you describe
the view and the conduct of Sutra?
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In Sutra there are 5 poisons, and
the 5 poisons have the 5 antidotes.
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The antidotes can
destroy the 5 poisons.
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(John): Can you tell us what the
5 poisons are?
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Yes. Attachment, anger, ignorance,
pride, and jealousy are the 5 poisons.
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In Sutra they say that these are the
5 poisons, and you don't touch them,
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we need an antidote for them. Destroy from
the root and throw out.
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If there is a poisoned tree, with this
poison the tree will grow up.
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You need to take it out from the root and
throw out, otherwise it will destroy us.
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Same as in the West. There are medicines,
and description: away from the child.
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If the child touches and eats it,
it is a posion for the child.
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(John): Right, So you want to keep it
away from the children.
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Yes, keep it away from the children.
Sutra looks like that.
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(John): So we try to avoid negative
actions, negative thoughts,
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negative speech, and we also try to
cultivate the virtuous activities.
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Yes, cultivate virtous things.
Also they say, if there is a posion
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and the poison is destroyed, good things
would come out. In Sutra they think that.
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So I guess in one way you could say that
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Sutra is the basis of moral behavior
in the Bön tradition.
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Yes. In Sutra they talk more about
disciplines.
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In the monks' life there are a lot of
disciplines.
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It all comes from the Sutra.
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Looking the outside the Sutra is good.
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Inner you practice Dzogchen and Tantric,
outer you practice Sutra.
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(John) : Good. I was going to ask you
about this, because many people in the
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West first encounter Dzogchen practice,
before they really studied Sutra.
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And of course Dzogchen tells us that
everything is perfect as it is. Right?
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Single taste, right?
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And so it also gives you a lot of freedom
in your conduct.
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And yet we see that great Dzogchen
practitioners such as Yongdzin Rinpoche or
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His Holiness and of course yourself
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you are still continuing to practice
the life of the monk. Right?
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So why do people continue to practice
and observe all of these moral conducts,
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and also practice Dzogchen?
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There are two ways to practice Dzogchen.
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In Dzogchen there are Tantric
practitioners.
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This Dzogchen is common for everyone who
practices.
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Before Nyame Sherab Gyaltsen there
was only Tantric practitioner,
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Dzogchen practitioner or a Sutric
practitioner.
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There were only single lineages
of Sutra,Tantra and Dzogchen.
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Before that they did not combine
Sutric and Tantric, or Dzogchen.
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Then Nyame Sherab Gyaltsen, second Buddha
of the Bön, he combined them.
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Outer monk, inner Dzogchen and Tantric.
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Also Dzogchen can be practiced by
lay people too.
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(John): Of course.
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Sutric [vows of monks and nuns] cannot be
practiced by lay practitioners.
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There are different types of
Sutric practices,
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Lay level Sutra practices and Sutric
practices for monks are different.
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Monks need to take a lot of vows. Lay
people do not need that kind of vows.
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(John): You know I heard Yongdzin Rinpoche
saying one time that he preferred to
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continue practicing in the moral way of
the Sutra, because it does not confuse
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people too and give people the wrong
idea about behaviour.
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Yes.
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(John): So you are trying to set
a good example for other people.
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Yes, if you show the good example,
then people will follow that.
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If you show the bad example,
the student will follow that.
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The teacher need a better discipline than
the student. It's more important.
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(John): Why do monk and nuns take
many vows as part of their path?
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What is the advantage of taking
all these vows?
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Because there are 250 vows for monks
is that right?
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Yes. 250 vows.
Monks take 2 types of vows.
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One is when they take 25 vows, and
after that we take 250 vows.
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(John): So the first 25 vows are for the
novious monks,
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and then the 250 are for the full
ordination of a monk?
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If you take the 25 vows then
you become a monk.
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Before that you are not a monk.
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They are more disciplined, more than
lay people. Lay people do not have
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[the same level of] discipline.
They can put in discipline [when needed].
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If you go to an office, they have a
discipline.
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If you go the school they have
a rule for that.
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And the monks in the monastery
also need disciplines.
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They say that monks are better than
lay people. Why are they better?
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Because they have vows and they are
more disciplined.
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So it is about disciplining your behaviour
and disciplining your mind.
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Yes, yes.
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Which makes your practice stronger.
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Yes. Yes.
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Discipline in the daily practice and
discipline for when you go out,
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the way you talk, the way you do [things
or the way you act]
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everything that needs to be
under discipline.
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And of course all these vows that the
monks and nuns take
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also help tame the ego. Like for
instance the monks are always
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wearing the robes, and nothing else.
And you always cut the hair.
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So in these ways we avoid becoming
proud of our appearance.
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I guess that's one of the reasons.
Or are there other reasons?
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Yes. This colour we call the spiritual
colour.
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Red, yellow, blue we call them spiritual
colours.
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Now also black and white,
we call normal colour.
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We wear the spiritual colour.
We do not wear the fancy things.
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If you look in your house and you have a
lot of different shirts, T-shirts,
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different jackets. This jacket for the
party, cocktail party.
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This jacket for something else,
wedding party, this one is for the office.
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Lot of different shoes, pants, different
jackets and shirts that we do not have.
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We have 2 or 3 clothes. For party we wear
this one, for monastery we wear that one.
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Whenever we go out we wear that one.
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We are satisfied. Satisfaction.
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You [lay people] are not satisfied.
Especially girls, they go the mall,
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and they are buying every time,
keep wanting more and more.
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(John): Attachment?
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Attachment, desire. Every year there
is a new fashion, they want it.
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The things from last year are no
more of use.
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Not only the girls do this,
many man do it too, you know.
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Oh yes. I think that girls do it
more than men.
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(John): Possible.
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Shopping, shopping. Girls have a lot to shop.
Their shopping chakra is open. (laughing)
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We call it the shopping chakra.
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That way if you go to mall there is a lot
of girls' cloth, more than men.
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I think it's showing that the girls
are doing more shopping.
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(John): One of the vows that monks
and nuns take is of course not to have
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relationship, no family basically. What
is the advantage of not having a family?
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Because many people think that family is
wonderful. It's very warm, very loving.
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So why do monks and nuns choose not to
have a family, not to have children?
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These days it's easy to give an example,
in the past time it was
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a different answer. These times we would
say population control (laughs).
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Easy to say that it's population control.
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Look at the Tibetan people.
The population is not big.
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We don't need to say population control.
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We are already control
because of the nuns and the monks.
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In the texts they say we make
relationships because of the attachment.
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(John): We have very strong attachments.
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Strong attachment. So because of this we
do not have attachments.
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Also that's why we don't have family.
If you have a family, you need to spend
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a lot of time for that. That time takes
us away from our mediation.
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Doing the virtuous thing, or you
need to spend time in the family.
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We monks have a lot of time to do the
practice, because we don't have family.
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(John): That's right.
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Saving time.
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Well, and also if you have a family, you
have to generate a lot of money somehow,
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to support this family. Again, this takes
us away from the spiritual practice.
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Also you need to take care of wife, child
and also money, time, and everything.
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That way it's reducing the practice time.
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So you just making your life simpler and
simpler and more focused on the practice,
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more focused on the teachings.
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Yes. More focused on the
teachings and meditation.
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And you live in the community of the
monastery,
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so you are supported by all the
other monks and nuns.
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We think that all the monks are Dharma
brothers, and the nuns are Dharma sisters.
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We don't have a family life, we have
Dharma brothers and sisters, as we call.
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This seems like a very wonderful way
of living.
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Yes. Then you [lay people] are saving
money. Also you have health insurance.
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As monks, we don't have it. We don't save
money, we don't have insurance.
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We don't think about that.
We just got food today, and it's fine.
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We are not thinking about putting things
away for tomorrow.
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Mainly we focus - the dialectic school -
just focuses on the philosophy.
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Then also in meditation there are 2 groups
in the monastery.
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One is the meditation group and the other
one is the dialectic, philoshopic group.
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And we just focus on that.
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If you go to a monk's room,
there is nothing. It's very simple.
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(John): Simple life. Simple is good.
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Yes. (laughing)
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(John): So lay practitioners do have the
possibility of taking refuge vows.
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Yes, sure.
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(John): So it's possible for lay people
to take some of these simple vows,
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and simplify their lives, and also guide
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their moral discipline
as a lay practitioner.
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Yes. Moral discipline is very important,
and lay practitioners also take the vows.
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There are 4 lay vows. First is
killing life. Don't kill anyone.
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(John): No harm.
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No harm.
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If someone harms you, how much suffer does
this harm cause for you?
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This is the same for others.
Don't harm anyone.
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(Tibetan words)
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Second is don't steal.
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(John): Yeah. Don't steal.
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(John): Actually is it going a little
bit further than that? Not to take what
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You should not take what was not
given to you.
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Yes. Anything not given to you,
you do not take it.
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(John): That's right. So if you see
a 100 dollar bill laying on floor,
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you don't take it.
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You don't take it. If you take it, then
you can put a note somewhere with
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your contact that you found it.
You can give information.
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And then the next vow is to refrain from
false and idle speech.
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(John): So in other words we always tell
the truth.
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Yes.
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(John): And we also don't gossip.
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Yes, don't gossip.
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(John): Or say negative words about
people.
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And also avoid sexual misconduct, as the
forth vow.
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Sexual misconduct is harming a lot
others too.
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If you don't marry a woman, if you have
a girlfriend who is already married
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or a boyfriend who already married, than
don't do the sexual misconduct.
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If you had a sexual contact with somebody
else's wife and the husband notices it,
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it destroys the husband's heart.
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(John): Sure, yes.
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Also some girls have a contact with
somebody else's husband.
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If the wife notices, there would
be a lot of fight at home.
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(John): It comes back to the very first
vow, when we don't harm anyone.
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Yes, don't harm anyone.
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(John): So harming is not only on the
physical level, but also on the
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emotional level. Or the mental level.
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So any sort of sexual behaviour that
we would do and cause someone some pain,
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some harm, that should be avoided.
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Yes.
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That's one of the lay people's vow.
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(John): Now there is also the
possibility to take some vows for
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we don't use any intoxication, such as
alcohol, or something like that.
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Is that correct?
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Yes. Alcohol (Tibetan words)
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If you take 5 vows then it includes
not taking alcohol.
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If lay people take 4 vows, than
it's not included.
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(John): So you have the possibility of
taking a different set of refuge vows.
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Yes.
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(John): But you have to take the basic
four
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if you're going to take the refuge vows.
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But you can take the five. Because there
is also a possibility, I think, of taking
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some dietary restricitions. Either about
no meat or no onions, or garlic.
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Yes. There are not root ones.
There are vows that are root vows.
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And there are vows that are branch vows.
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If you cut the branch, the tree will not
die.
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If you cut the root of the tree,
the tree will die.
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If you break one of the root vows, then
monks are not monks anymore
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and lay people also take we call the
"genyen" (Tibetan word), so if they break
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then there is no more "genyen" too.
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(John): These first 4 are considered to
be the root vows:
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so it's not harming other living
creatures,
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refraining from taking that,
which is not given,
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we refrain from sexual misconduct and
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we refrain from false and idle speech.
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Yes, these 4 are for the lay people.
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And the alcohol. If you drink alcohol
limitless, you drink it with no limit,
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and you get drunk, you'll be doing
something wrong.
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(John): Sure.
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That way it's very strict for monks.
They are not allowed to drink alcohol.
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(John): Of course.
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(John): Because we loose control.
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Or loose our good judgement. Or we loose
our moral discipline.
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Yes.
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(John): Of course it's not just alcohol,
but any sort of drugs or anything else
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we become inebriated. Same principle.
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Same principle, yes.
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(John): It's not restricted to just
alcohol.
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So, some lamas give the refuge vows
very frequently, but I've heard that
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Tenzin Rinpoche said that he prefers
not to give these very often because
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it's better not to take the vow than
take it and then break it.
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Yes.
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(John): So one should be very careful,
if one is really serious if they're going
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to take the vows or not.
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When you take a refuge vow from the lama
you need to consider
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that lama is your is your teacher.
You have to think about that.
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Some day if the lama is doing something
little bit wrong, you may say:
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oh I don't want to contact any more
this lama.
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Then the refuge vow is broken.
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(John): So when you take that refuge vow
from a teacher you have the
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spiritual connection.
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Yes, you have the spiritual connection.
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You always need to think of him
as your spiritual teacher.
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(John): So it seems that these
refuge vows though are a wonderful way
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to simplify are own lives as lay
practitioners because, of course if
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if we tell the truth, if we don't harm
other people and so on,
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it leads to a much happier life.
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Yes.
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If you take the refuge vows,
this life is more useful.
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Refuge vows are not these
four [previous vows].
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Anyone can take refuge vows.
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Taking refuge in the lama
Taking refuge in the Buddha
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Taking refuge in Buddha's speech
Taking refuge in Boddhisattva.
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That's the refuge.
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(John): So you are taking refuge in
the sources of enlightenment.
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Yes, that's the refuge.
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And it's an other thing if you take
the 4 vows or 5 vows,
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that we call the "genyen" (Tibetan).
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(John): So it's two different sets of
refuge.
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Yes, first the refuge vow, and then comes
the "genyen".
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Then monks have 2 types of vows :
"tsantsug" and "gelong" (Tibetan)
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(John): Do the monks and the nuns take
the same vows?
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Almost the same.
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(John): In the Sutric system not only
do we avoid these negative behaviours,
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for instance we do not lie, but we also
try to cultivate the positive,
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the virtuous conduct within ourselves.
Which are referred to as the paramitas,
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or the perfections. Right?
So let's talk about that a little bit.
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I have list here with the 10 paramitas,
maybe you could explain us a little bit,
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what's the importance of
each one of these.
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So the first one is, how would you say
Tibetan? "sByin-pa" ?
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"sByin-pa", yes. Generosity.
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(John): So we try to cultivate
generosity.
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What is the advantage of
cultivating generosity?
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There are 2 types of generosity. One is
when physically you can give something to
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somebody who doesn't have it.
We can be generous and give food for
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somebody who doesn't have enough
to eat. Those people are hungry,
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those people are thirsty. If you give
food to them, if you give drink to them
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that's a generosity too.
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What is generosity according to the
teaching?
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According to the teaching generosity
means very big things.
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There is a lot of suffering in
this Samsara.
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Giving teaching to change the mind,
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that kind of teaching, if you give it.
This is a generosity.
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(John): So when we share the Dharma
with others it a great generosity.
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If senior students help junior students
in the Dharma things,
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Some have a lot of suffering
they can not control
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they don't know how to control,
and then senior student teaches to
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do meditation. Then you can guide the
meditation.
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You can teach the Dharma prayer.
This is all generosity.
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(John): So our Dharma brothers and
sisters in our sangha
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are great support for us.
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Here at Ligmincha in summer and autumn
hundreds of people come to
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Rinpoche's teaching. They all come at the
same time and share things.
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Some are new students,
some are old, or senior students.
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Senior students share their experience
and everything. That's generosity.
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(John): Hopefully without pride.
(laughing).
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Yes, pride like
"I'm the teacher, l have more knowledge
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than the other one". Sometimes there is
a lot of pride, when people are thinking
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"I have knowledge". I have a lot of
experience. Don't think like that.
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Rather think that "I've learned many
years, I have a knowledge. They are new
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and I'm generously helping the new
student". That is the best, it's generous.
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(John): That's wonderful.
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(John): So the second paramita we've
already talked a little bit about,
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because it's the ethical discipline.
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Discipline, yes.
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(John): We keep our ethics pure and clear.
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Discipline. There are a lot of
discipline. Monks have disciplines.
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Lay people have disciplines.
-
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During the teaching time you have
discipline. You put timetables:
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Monday at 9 the teaching is starting
and at 10.30 there is a break.
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Following all the disciplines,
is a discipline.
-
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Monks have discipline, all
the community has discipline.
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If you follow all the disciplines,
everybody is happy for that.
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No one is angry. Discipline
helps develop patience.
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(John): Yes, I mean that's the beauty
of moral conduct and ethical conduct,
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is that it leads to happiness within
ourselves and happiness in others.
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Yes, it gives happiness for both sides.
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(John): So the third paramita is patience.
Now we could all use more of this.
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Yes. (Laughing)
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Patience is the most important one.
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Especially patience in the case of
husband and wife.
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(John): Or anyone in the family.
(laughing)
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Or anyone in the family.
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Mostly husband and wife, if they
spent long time, more than 10 years,
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together after that they
can loose patience often.
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At the start when they were girlfriends
and boyfriends,
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they had a lot of patience.
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After marriage they loose the patience.
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To have the patience, if someone is angry,
don't respond immediately.
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They say, just listen, listen.
If you put wood on the fire,
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fire becomes bigger and bigger.
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If you put gas on the fire,
it gets very big.
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If you respond immediately, than
the anger, the fire will come out.
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(John): So just be patient and just wait.
-
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Just be patient, and wait, and just
listen. Don't respond immediately.
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If somebody is angry, the other side needs
more space.
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More space. Space helps.
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(John): Space helps in many things.
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Yes, in many things.
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Looking in the space you can see lot
of things.
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Space holds everything. Good and bad,
everything. Space doesn't bother.
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(John): So the next of the paramitas is
virtuous effort, being diligent.
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Or I guess the Tibetan term is
"brTson-'grus".
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"brTson-'grus", yes.
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If you do virtuous things, if you
do practice, you need that.
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Immediately you can not run [away from]
that one you have continually spend time
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and do it continually, more and more
you need to practice.
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(John): So you should do things well.
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Yes.
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(John): So we shouldn't do things
half way. If we do it, we should do it
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very fully and completely.
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Also we give example: (Tibetan words)
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If the fire is on the hair, then you need
to do everything that is possible to
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put out the fire.
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Also grass burns slowly,
and then burns everything
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Let me give you another example.
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Every books they have it.
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Also in the West you have the story of
the rabbit and the tortoise.
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(John): Oh the rabbit and the tortoise.
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(John): Oh yes. Where the rabbit goes very
quickly, but it goes down to sleep,
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and eventually the tortoise wins because
it slow and steady, but diligent.
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Yes, it looks like that.
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(John): So have your diligents to complete
your task.
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Like a turtle.
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(John): So it's the same story in
Tibetan. That's interesting.
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(John): So well the next one is pretty
obvious: meditation.
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(John): So we should have our meditation
practice, and
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be regular in our meditation practice.
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Meditation. When you meditate you
become happy.
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If you suffer, if you have a problem
you can meditate.
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There is so many different ways to
meditate.
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You can meditate on emptiness, you can
meditate on impermanence,
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if you are on a higher level, you can
practice Dzogchen,
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Natural state of the mind, you can do that
kind of meditation.
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If you meditate, meditations feels good,
right?
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(John): Meditation brings us joy, brings
us equanimity,
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it said that it brings us the four
inmeasurables: love, joy, compassion and
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equanimity. It leads to a wonderful
positive life.
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Yes it's possible that meditation would
bring that.
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Meditation is medicine for the mind.
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(John): Yes, it is.
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(John): So the 6th paramita is confidence,
or (Tibetan word)
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Confidence.
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(John): So self confidence? Is this what
we are talking about?
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Yes, self confidence is very good,
self confidence if you practice.
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Also too much confidence in not so good.
It becomes pride.
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Self confidence is for example when
I know that I have the capabilty of
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teaching other people. Teaching is to help
the others.
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That kind of confidence is good.
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Too much confidence is not so good.
Then comes pride.
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Pride is one of the poisons too.
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(John): So it always that balance of
confidence and pride
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we have to make sure. Too much confidence
might lead to pride.
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"I'm the teacher. I have the knowledge."
That's pride.
-
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Confidence is a little bit different from
that.
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I have the capability to teach.
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I know these things, I have the capability
to teach.
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I will not hold it to myself, I will teach
other people.
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This teaching will help the others.
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That kind of "nuba" (Tibetan word)
can help.
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(John): Of course it also an be that
confidence it's more basic than
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being a teacher, just being confident that
I'm a good person.
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I think this is something many people
in the West have challenge with, because
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maybe they had some experience when
they were a child and someone told them
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that they were bad. And then they don't
have this positive image of themselves.
-
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So it's very good to have this confidence
in yourself,
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that you are essentially a Buddha, within.
-
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Yes. I can see this confidence in children sometimes.
-
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When here in the West children are
taught in the school
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how to talk with in front of
other people.
-
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From the child level they are teaching.
-
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Whenever they got a chance they talk,
they are not shaking, they have a lot
-
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of confidence to talk with the people.
-
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If you look at the children from India or
from Nepal coming to the USA,
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they are a little bit shy. They don't have
a confidence for that.
-
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In the West children, sometime I feel,
have so much confidence.
-
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So " Ok, I will do it" They never say:
I don't know.
-
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They say: " I know that".
-
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Someone tells them "don't do that", they
say: "yeah, I know that".
-
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That is too much confidence. (laughing)
-
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(John): Yeah. Again it's the balance of
confidence versus pride.
-
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Yes, confidence and pride need to
be balanced.
-
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(John): So the 7th paramita is
compassion.
-
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Of course this is a very important part
of the teachings.
-
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Yes. Compassion "snying rje" (Tibetan )
-
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"“nyen gye manu pala tsa" (Tibetan)
-
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If someone does not have
enough food to eat
-
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we have compassion for that.
-
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After the compassion we can be
generous.
-
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(John): Yes, you can show your generosity.
-
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Yes, you can show generosity.
-
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If an animal is injured, you feel
compassion for that.
-
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After you have compassion, you take
action.
-
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You need to take it to the hospital.
-
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Take care for that.
That is compassion.
-
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(John): Of course we should show
compassion for eveyone that we know,
-
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everyone that we meet,
everyone in our family.
-
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Because everyone is experiencing
suffering.
-
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Yes, everyone.
-
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Whoever has suffering you can have
compassion for that.
-
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(John): So everyone is experiencing it,
so we should have compassion for everyone.
-
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(John): So the 8th paramita is the
aspirational prayer or monlam.
-
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Maybe you could give us an example.
What would be an aspirational prayer?
-
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Aspirational prayer we are doing it every
year.
-
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" I wish you a very happy...". This is an
aspiration.
-
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(John): "May you have a happy year"
-
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I wish you a very happy year.
-
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I wish you a better life or something
like that.
-
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That is a monlam (Tibetan word).
An aspiration.
-
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(John): May your life be filled with
happiness.
-
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Yes. Every year is like today. Every year
be healthy, have good health.
-
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This is all monlam, (Tibetan word).
An aspiration.
-
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(John): We are wishing that someone have
a better life, a good life.
-
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Wishing anything, wishing is a monlam,
(Tibetan word), aspiration.
-
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(John): So this is connected with the
generosity and the compassion too,
-
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because we are hoping that others
enjoy a beautiful life.
-
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So the 9th is skillful means, which is in
the dedication. Or "top" (Tibetan word)?
-
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"Top" is the method. "Top" means idea.
-
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(John): Careful thinking maybe.
-
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Careful thinking, yes.
-
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(John): Careful planning, careful
execution.
-
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Yes, careful thinking. Helping through
different ideas is a "top" (Tibetan word)
-
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(John): Yes. Many times we have the
motivation to help someone
-
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or improve something, but we are not
careful about it and maybe we are
-
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rushing too quickly. So this is a careful,
skillful way of helping others.
-
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Yes, skillfully helping others.
That is "top".
-
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(John): The final one is
"Sherab" (Tibetan) or wisdom.
-
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Wisdom, yes.
-
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(John): We all could use more of this.
-
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What do we mean by wisdom
exactly here?
-
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There are many different ways that
wisdom might be interpreted.
-
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Wisdom is something like intelligence.
-
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If you learn something, you need
more wisdom.
-
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Someone learns really quickly.
They have a lot of wisdom.
-
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For someone it takes time to learn.
There's less wisdom there.
-
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Someone has a lot of experience,
lot of knowledge,
-
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that we call a lot of wisdom.
-
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There is a lot of wisdom to carry
all the things.
-
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(John): There is this one aspect of
wisdom having intellectual knowledge,
-
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or sharpness of the mind.
-
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Yes, sharpness of the mind also.
-
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(John): But there is also isn't there a
wisdom that just arises from the heart?
-
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Like the wisdom of emptiness,
or the mirrorlike wisdom.
-
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Speaking of the five of these wisdoms.
-
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It's more about the mediative experience.
-
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Yes. When you do the meditation,
first level it will be difficult to
-
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do the meditation. When you do it again
and again, more wisdom comes,
-
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more knowledge comes out.
Better knowledge.
-
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(John): More wisdom.
We just say it, more wisdom.
-
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More and more wisdom comes out,
more good things come out.
-
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More experience comes out.
-
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(John): The wisdom and experiences
arise directly from the meditation.
-
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Not necessarily just throught thought.
-
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Yeah. If you look at the Tantric
masters, earlier masters,
-
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when they meditate, more experience comes
-
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and they thought to write it down.
-
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Through the thinking, there is all
we call "gurma" (Tibetan)
-
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Experience telling to people
-
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(John): That arises directly from their
meditative experience
-
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the text that they are writing,
flows naturally.
-
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Flows naturally yes.
Flows out.
-
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If you look at one text
again and again and again,
-
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more and more knowledge comes out
from that text.
-
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After that you don't need to look
in a book.
-
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When you start immediately everything
comes out.
-
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There is more knowledge.
-
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(John): It seems like that the Sutric
method is avoiding all these negativities
-
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like lying, sexual misconduct, and
stealing and so forth,
-
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in combination with the
cultivation of these paramitas.
-
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leads to very happy life.
-
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Yes, it leads to a happy life.
-
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(John): And it serves as a very clear
guide for our behaviour.
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Yes.
-
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If you do all these things,
it leads to a very good life.
-
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(John): It does lead to a good life.
-
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Now the meditational methods in Sutra
are many times are analytical meditations,
-
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like the meditation of impermanence
for instance, where we are using the mind
-
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to reflect on the truth, the inner most
truth of something like
-
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what can we find that's truly permanent.
-
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And we think, we are using the mind to
think about these things.
-
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So this is quite different from
Dzogchen meditation.
-
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Also meditation on impermanence helps
the practice too.
-
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(John): Of course
-
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When you are young, you are not thinking
of the impermanence.
-
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You are energetic, you have power,
you think that this life is forever,
-
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and you don't want to meditate.
-
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Also Sutra is saying that our life is
impermanent.
-
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(John): No one is lives forever.
-
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Yes. Children, boys and girls will become
teenagers, then they will be men and women
-
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and after that wifes and husbands.
Then their child call them parents,
-
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and one day they will be called
grandpa and grandma,
-
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then it's time to go.
Life will be finished.
-
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That way it's all changing.
-
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It's impermanent. We should think
"now I need to do the virtuous things."
-
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(John): It changes our mind when we
understand impermanence.
-
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This helps us to do the practice.
-
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(John): Give us motivation.
-
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Motivation, yes.
-
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(John): Because we realize that nothing is
permanent in this life.
-
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Also is Sutra there is the practice of
emptiness.
-
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If search for the table, you find out
that there is not a solid table there.
-
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If you take it piece by piece,
then there is no table.
-
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We are just giving name.
-
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(John): Yes, that's one of the classic
analytical meditations. You meditate
-
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upon a table, - because people might not
be familiar with this meditation, -
-
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and you try to find a table. You look at
every element of the table:
-
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Is it the leg? Is it the top?
Is it the side? Where is the table?
-
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And you find that there is no table.
It's only our mind.
-
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But this analytical process leads to
inside, it leads to a new wisdom.
-
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Sutric teachings says that we are giving
name for things,
-
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that are not not solid from the outside.
-
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We give names to all the things.
-
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Or when the boy is called by his mother
and father my son.
-
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Wife says: my husband. Child says:
my father.
-
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Everybody is giving names.
-
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(John): That's right.
-
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They are not solid from
outside.
-
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(John): It's always changing. From every
different perspective.
-
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(John): I remember that one of the
teachings I received on this was
-
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when a monk was visiting me as a house
guest, and he start giving this teaching
-
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on emptiness and we were eating pizza.
He held up the pizza and said:
-
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show me the pizza! Is it the mushroom?
Is it the olive? Is it the tomato?
-
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No, we could find no pizza, while we were
eating the pizza.
-
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Because this pizza was in our mind,
a name. Just a name we create.
-
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Then you ask: where is the tomato?
Is the tomato the colour?
-
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Is the tomato the shape?
-
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There is no tomato. (laughing)
Nothing is there.
-
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(John): Nothing is there. Empty.
-
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Empty. This Sutric practice leads
to the realization of emptiness.
-
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(John): So in the Sutric analytical
process we are using the mind to think.
-
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We are using thoughts.
-
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While in the Dzogchen practice we are
trying to liberate the thought.
-
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Yes, to liberate the thought.
-
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(John): So it's a very different way to of
working with the thoughts.
-
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Yes. Dzogchen says if thought comes
don't chase after thought.
-
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Just leave it there.
-
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If you leave them there, thoughts
will dissolve themselves.
-
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So ok, we need an antidote for that.
You need to take it out from the root.
-
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(John): With the Sutric analytic approach
we use the thought,
-
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we don't try just liberate the thought.
-
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Yes we don't liberate it.
-
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(John): Because throught the thinking,
and through the sharp, clear mind,
-
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which is really emphasized in the
debate especially in the monastery,
-
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you can reach this insight.
-
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Yes.
-
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(John): So this meditation over
impermanence we were discussing,
-
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is found in the Ngöndro, which is one of
the foundation mediation practice.
-
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So it's considered to be very-very
fundamental.
-
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Yes, it is fundamental. The practice of
impermanence is a fundamental
-
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practice for everyone.
-
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It's a foundation.
-
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(John): It really changes your life
whenever
-
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you have this understanding
of impermanence.
-
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And the same is true for the
meditation on emptiness.
-
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These two are considered to be a very
fundamental meditation.
-
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Looking at these practices,
sometimes we are powerful,
-
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sometimes we are down.
We are poor, then some years later
-
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we become rich.
This is all impermanence.
-
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(John): That's wonderful.
-
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Well, thank you very much Geshe la
for this explanation of these
-
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Sutric meditations.
-
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So the next part of the this course
people going to get to enjoy
-
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a teaching by Tenzin Wangyal Rinpoche
on impermanence.
-
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And then a meditation guided by Rinpoche
on impermanence.
-
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Yes. This will be very helpful, he will
explain everything in detail.
-
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His English is a wonderful
English. Not like my English. (laughing)
-
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(John): I think your English is very
good.
-
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(John): But this should have given you
a very good taste of how we work
-
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with these analytical meditations in the
Sutric way.
-
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(John): Hope you have enjoyed.
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Thank you.