Bodhisattva Commitment
By Mingyur Dorje Rinpoche
This afternoon we are going
to have instructions on taking the Bodhisattva Vow and the benefits of
taking it. Generally speaking, having desire, anger, pride and many
conflicting emotions in our mind is the cause of all the suffering that
we experience. Suffering is caused by conflicting emotions and also we
have a mind which has great grasping.
If
we have great grasping and a mind which is under the power of
conflicting emotions, then our mind becomes smaller and smaller.
Normally what is the thought that occupies our mind? It is the thought
that I am the most important, I should succeed, I should have victory
and the other person should fail. If we have a mind state where we
think only about ourselves, and try to put ourselves at the top or be
the best, then generally speaking, whatever we try to accomplish, we
will fail. So then we lose both the benefit which we could have
obtained for ourselves, and also benefit for anyone else. It is like
what was taught yesterday: if you wear a pair of glasses with blue
tinted lenses then everything will be perceived as blue. Or if one wore
yellow tinted lenses everything would be perceived as yellow.
We
are going to use an example of somebody who habitually steals. Wherever
he goes, as he passes by people's homes he looks in wondering how he
could break in and steal their belongings. If he is in town he looks at
the shop doorways and windows thinking how he could get inside and
steal things. Imagine that thief is in his own house with his own
belongings, there is jewellery and other precious things that he owns.
Somebody comes to his house and happens to look at some of the things
on the table. The thief automatically thinks, "This person comes to my
house and after one second he is looking to see how to steal my stuff!"
If you went into a house where you have never been before, it's quite
natural that you might look around at the windows, doors and the
contents of the house. Someone does this and the thief is thinking,
"Oh, he really is thinking of stealing my stuff and not only that, he
is working out how to escape!" So if one is a confirmed habitual thief,
you will perceive other people as having that kind of mind state and
intention. And if you are a person who has a lot of anger, then you
will perceive other people to have anger and ill intent towards you.
What
beneficial method could be used at this point? At this point we need
wisdom. We need to think, "What appears to me to be somebody else's
anger or whatever emotion is arising, is an appearance, just an
illusion. It's not real. One needs to understand the illusory nature of
appearances. So it's like before in the thief's house - the man comes
in and just generally looks around. He is not thinking of stealing
things but your perception is such that you think he intends to steal
your belongings. The person who has an habitual tendency to steal, to
be a thief, will perceive other people to have that intention towards
him, and without reason he will shout at this person, abuse them and
accuse them of trying to steal his things.
But if the thief
realizes that "Oh, the person just entered my house, and it's just my
own illusion that I think he is a thief - if he understands that, if he
has that wisdom, he won't have any problem. The first stage of wisdom
is to recognize that you have, for example, anger in your mind. One
needs to recognize, "I have anger in my mind and this is how it
manifests, this is how it makes me think and react." It is the same for
jealousy.
With anger, a person always has an object for their
anger. Having that object gives rise to anger in his mind: seeing the
object makes him unhappy. Then jealousy comes, thinking that he and
other beings are exactly the same. But it seems that other people like
others better than him. "That's not very good. We are equal, same type
of person and we have the same amount of belongings. In the future this
person may get more wealth than me and that's not going to be good at
all." With that fault in his mind, he starts to think badly about that
person, he has thoughts of harming him. Then come harmful thoughts and
harmful actions. Meaning and benefit are lost. Both people end up
accomplishing nothing.
Now if we look at pride, this is based on
wanting someone to be inferior to you. "This person has no good
qualities at all, he is nothing. I'm the best, I've got so many
possessions and so much wealth. I'm really famous. He has got nothing.
I can meditate really well. He doesn't understand anything. The sort of
realization and experience that I've got - nobody has that." That's
what we call pride. If we have pride in our mind we rule out the
possibility of having much opportunity to obtain any more qualities.
The fault we have is thinking that nobody else has any qualities at all.
Desire
comes from an object which causes desire to arise in the mind. We are
completely out of control, our mind thinks solely about obtaining this
object. Any other thoughts are totally obstructed. One has only one
idea, to obtain this object.
Ignorance is really not knowing
what is good and what is bad. One's mind becomes smaller and smaller
and one can only think about small things.
That's what we call
the classification of the five emotions, the mind poisons. But all of
these various emotions really are, if you bring them down to one point,
thinking that one is superior, and one needs certain things, and that
others are worse than you. So, if a person has these five emotions in
his mind and also the attitude of selfishness and thinking solely about
themselves and maybe putting other people down, then this will result
in not being able to obtain a mind which has any happiness or peace in
it. We will have an example.
If a person has a very strong grasp
of the idea that they are the most important, what kind of emotions
would come up in the mind of that person? The sort of thing that would
come up is "that person is intending to harm me. So then anger will
arise and he thinks: "That person wants to get higher than me, wants to
be better than me." Then jealousy will arise. Thinking that that person
has nothing, no qualities whatsoever, and "I've got everything, I'm
very clever" or "I'm very famous", this is giving rise to pride.
Thinking that "I need to get this object and I don't want anybody else
to get it, I'm the only one who can have it", that's giving rise to
desire. So ignorance is that one's mind becomes very small and one
doesn't have a light body or a vast open mind and one has thoughts only
about very small topics.
The arising of these five mind poisons
depend really, if you look at it, on the feeling that I myself, I am
the most important, and having a very great grasping at that idea. The
main point is that one thinks only about oneself. "That person doesn't
want to do anything nice to me, he wants to hurt me." Me, me, me. "That
person wants to go higher than me, again me, that person and me, we are
not equal. That thing I need to obtain." If we have this kind of mind
state, which is pervaded by the five emotions, and grasping at the
thought that we are the most important, then one will never be able to
say: that's enough now, I'm satisfied. You would never to be able to
say that, because you would never feel it. So you will have a very
small and very touchy mind. You think, "He is not good, that person is
not nice…" For example, if you look at somebody who is not doing
anything, just neutrally sitting there. You are looking at this person
and he just sits. "Hmm, I don't think he likes me." You look at him out
of the corner of your eye. The man, who is just sitting there, minding
his own business, thinks, "That's a bit strange, that guy is giving me
a really strange look. I haven't done anything to him, what's wrong?
Maybe he is a bit crazy; he might be thinking of harming me." Then he
looks back at you and thinks, "Maybe you are not very nice." So then
you think: "He did look at me very strangely. Now he is looking me
strangely again! That's twice now." Then the two of you end up arguing
and it will grow and grow. That's what we call misunderstanding. The
reason for the misunderstanding, arguing and fighting, is that one's
mind has become very small, very sensitive.
We'll have another
example. If we have an argument, it's normally based on something very
small. For example one person puts his watch down. The other person
says, "Don't put it there, put it here." The first one disagrees. They
change it backwards and forwards, "I'm right, you are wrong." There is
no point to it. Starting with a very small idea, we make it bigger.
That's a sign of having a very sensitive mind. It's also a sign that
one has a very strong sense of feeling that one is important and just
thinking about oneself. If we have this very strong grasping, that we
are the most important, we will never be able to accomplish our wishes.
If we have love for another person they will generate love for us,
return love. So, if we give love to another person, that love is the
best. Then we can give rise to the best type of love.
Generally
speaking, all our problems and suffering start with a very small
beginning. In the beginning, at the point when anger arises, we need to
recognise it. Then think, "Oh, I'm beginning to become angry." That's
called wisdom or mindfulness. If one doesn't have any other method, if
one just has that method, that's wisdom. So, one will be able to
control one's mind. Normally one will be able to have this awareness
arising, mindfulness.
I'm going to give you a story. This story
is related to love and compassion. This story happened in China. There
was a husband and wife. Traditionally the wife and her mother-in-law
don't get along very well, they are constantly arguing. One day it
happened that they had quite an argument in someone's home. The wife
was thinking that her mother-in-law is very cruel and often says very
bad things. She felt very angry towards her. Later she was even
angrier. She thought, "I'm going to kill my mother-in-law. How am I
going to do it?" She went to a doctor and asked for poison. "I need the
poison, because my mother-in-law is always nagging me and shouting and
putting me down. So I shall give her poison and then she will die. I'll
be happy." The doctor agreed and gave her some medicine. He gave advice
with it, "Now you give this medicine to your mother-in-law, but she
won't die immediately, she will die very slowly. So you need to give
this medicine a little bit every day with the food. If she dies
immediately, then everybody will know that you gave her the poison.
They will know that I gave the poison to you, and they will take me to
jail. So it's better she doesn't die straight away. "Give the medicine
a little bit every day and after you have given it, you have to be
really nice to her, say nice things to your mother-in-law." She
thought, "This is great." Every day she put little bit of poison in the
food and gave it to her, saying nice things. In her mind she thought -
she is going to die soon. A few days later she looked at her
mother-in-law and thought, "She doesn't seem so bad after all." After a
month she thought, "She actually is a decent person, a very good
person. Oh dear, I have been giving her poison for a month!" What to
do? Although she had given poison to her mother-in-law, now she liked
her. Also the mother-in-law's attitude had changed and she liked her
daughter in law more than her own son.
So the daughter-in-law
ran off to the doctor again, worrying. She said, "Look I came to you a
month ago and asked for poison to kill my old mother-in-law, but
actually I really like her now, she is very good. When I thought she
was bad before I was mistaken. If you have any antidote for this
poison, please give it to me." The doctor said, "Is it really true? Do
you really believe that?" She said, "Yes, I really believe this." The
doctor said, "Sorry, there is no antidote." She was very sad. The
doctor said, "If you don't give poison to somebody, there is no need of
an antidote. If you do give poison to somebody, then you need an
antidote. In this case you didn't give her poison and I haven't got any
antidote to a poison which hasn't been given." Both the doctor and the
daughter-in-law were happy. Then the doctor gave her a technique. What
the doctor told to the daughter-in-law I'm going to tell you. I'm going
to give you this method.
In the first instance the mother-in-law
and the daughter-in-law had a misunderstanding, and they both saw each
other in a very negative way, so they had many arguments. At the time
the daughter-in-law was speaking nicely to the mother-in-law, they both
changed somewhat, and they both saw each other in a different light. If
we have very small and shrivelled up minds, we will cause problems for
ourselves and others. But if we have a light, open mind we are going to
give happiness and peace to others and we will also experience
happiness and peace in our own mind. That's the end of the story.
So,
if we don't have a mind which is intent on benefiting others, we will
see other people as enemies and cause harm to them, and we will never
obtain peace and happiness. As many enemies as we try to subdue, we
will never be able to do it, there will always be another one. If we
really want to defeat an enemy, the best way is to kill them. If you
kill an enemy, behind him are two further enemies. Kill two - four
come. If you kill four, eight come. In the end the whole world becomes
transformed into enemies. Then you will not be able to subdue the
enemies. They increase. If you look at it, the real enemy is anger etc.
If we have peace in our mind, a peaceful mind, everybody will perceive
us as a friend and we will have no enemies at all. Whatever we say,
people will listen. Our friends will become more and more. They will
become stronger friends. As an example, if the leaders of Britain
(whoever they are) look after the people in a good way, the people will
vote for them, support them and their power will grow. If they don't
look after the people, we won't vote for them and they will become less
powerful. This is the nature of things, interdependence.
If you
take as an example Hitler in Germany, he subdued and killed lots of his
enemies. But even at the time he was killing his enemies he didn't have
any peace in his mind and in the final instant he committed suicide. He
didn't achieve his purpose at all.
If we really do have this
desire in our minds to be of benefit to other beings, then our mind
becomes open and vast, we have courage and self-confidence and our view
will be spacious. We will see other sentient beings as our friends. All
beings will naturally give rise to a feeling of love in us. Then we
will see everybody as good. If we wear a pair of glasses with lenses
extremely clear and clean, we'll see everything as being clear and
clean. We'll have no enemies. You will have self-confidence, peace and
happiness.
Here is another example. At the end of this example
there will be a question. The question is not difficult. It's about a
man in a forest. The man in the forest walks around, up and down the
hills. Long time ago people were like that. While walking, the man was
getting stones and thorns in his feet. He thought, "How can I stop my
feet being hurt by the gravel and thorns? I know what to do, I'll cover
all the roads with leather." So he covered the roads, but he only
managed to cover about three miles before the leather run out. After
those three miles he had to walk on gravel and thorns again. At that
point, what method could he use?
Answers: Use shoes. Walk on his hands. Jump from a tree to another. Learn to levitate.
Rinpoche:
If it is possible to do all these it's very good. Now I'm going to tell
you. The best method would be to have a small piece of leather, just
the size of his feet. That will be enough. Long time ago people did not
have shoes. And they weren't able to meditate very well. If one had
just enough leather to cover the shape of one's feet, then one could go
all over the world and it would be the same as covering the whole world
with leather. Likewise with us, if we have peace in our mind, if we
pacify the conflicting emotions, then it is the same as conquering all
the enemies in the world.
Having the motivation to benefit
others is a benefit for us in the present life. It's said that if one
has even a small particle of compassion, at that moment it purifies
countless aeons of negative karma. If we have a mind which benefits
others, then demons and ghosts and so on cannot harm us. Also the black
magicians cannot harm us, if we have the wish to bring benefit. If we
have a mind which causes harm to other people by generating anger, we
are also harmed. But if we have a mind which wishes to benefit others
and our actions are motivated by that, we will receive the best of
benefits and others are benefited too. So, naturally, benefit arises
both for us and others.
Following this bodhisattva path to the
level of complete enlightenment, buddhahood, this is the way the
previous Buddhas and Bodhisattvas followed, and when you reach complete
enlightenment, then you will have total omniscience and you will have
complete and vast love. One has complete power.
What's the
reason for these three qualities arising? The cause is having generated
the bodhicitta mind previously and the wish to benefit others. The
cause for us to be travelling around in samsara lifetime after lifetime
is the selfish idea that we are the best and we should be victorious
and others are inferior and they should lose.
There are three
types of mind which wish to benefit others: there is loving-kindness
and compassion, there is limitless loving-kindness and limitless
compassion, and there is the bodhicitta mind. With these three, one's
mind will become vaster and greater, open. What is the most vast, open
and strong of minds? The most vast of minds would be to think that
based on the realisation of my natural mind state, my bodhicitta mind,
I have the desire to bring all sentient beings, totally freed from
suffering, to the level of complete and perfect enlightenment. For that
reason I am going to practise and I will bring all beings out of
suffering to the level of perfect enlightenment. Then one's mind
becomes very vast. There is no other way to get a mind so vast, that's
the only way. The bigger one's mind, the bigger the benefit will be.
For
example, if you plant the seed of a medicinal plant, the root of that
plant will be medicinal and beneficial. If you plant a poisonous plant,
then the result will be poisonous. That's the completion of the
explanation of the benefits of the bodhicitta mind.
If you take
the commitments of the bodhisattva vow, what are the commitments we
have to stick to, what do we have to think about? There are several
kinds, but if you want to put them into one there is one main point of
teaching which contains all types of commitments.
One has the
intention to bring all sentient beings out of suffering to the level of
complete enlightenment. To have that in mind is the basis of one's
commitment. So even if there is one sentient being with whom from time
to time you have arguments, and who maybe causes harm to you, you don't
abandon them, you don't leave them out. You think, "At the moment you
are causing harm to me, but in the end, even you I'm going to take to
enlightenment." But at certain times you might have arguments and
unpleasantness between you. If you haven't completely purified your
mind stream of the five mental poisons, then of course it is easy to
have arguments with people and unpleasantness from time to time without
you being in control of that.
You can't think: ""I'm going to
take all sentient beings except that one, to the level of
enlightenment, that's not correct. But it does happen from time to time
that we might give rise to some small doubts and think that we are not
able to bring all beings to enlightenment. That's okay, it is possible
something like that may arise, but in your deep mind you still hold
onto the idea that to bring all sentient beings out of suffering to
complete enlightenment would be a very good thing. It is very good to
have that.
It is said that even if you broke your bodhisattva
vow, there is great benefit in taking it in the first place. There are
two situations: one is when you have not taken the bodhisattva vow and
you are not generating either too much good or negative karma and the
second situation is when you take the bodhisattva vow and you keep it a
certain period of time, and you again don't generate too much negative
or positive karma, and you actually come to a point that you break your
vow. Out of these two situations, having taken the vow up to the point
of breaking it is more beneficial, it is said. But if you can take the
bodhisattva vow and not break it, then it is said you swiftly reach the
level of enlightenment. That is the completion of the advice about the
bodhisattva vow.