This too can be explained
through three principal aspects. The first is to refrain from hurting
those who have hurt us. The second is to cope with whatever suffering
we have to endure, without fighting it uselessly or developing strong
feelings of resentment. The third is to have confidence in the ultimate
truth.
Non-retaliation
means that when someone hits us, abuses us, does anything to injure us,
our possessions or those dear to us, or anything which might increase
our anger, we do not react negatively. Very simply, it means that when
we are struck, if we hit that person in return then they have really
struck us; if we do not retaliate, they have not really struck us.
Furthermore, it is not that their blow came from nowhere. It arose from
causes and conditions created in the past; it is the result of some
cause that we ourselves have generated. By just accepting that blow,
the cause of that particular suffering is removed, and at the same time
the blow itself can become the object of diligent practice. Thus the
striking becomes beneficial rather than harmful.
This is a very
easy thing to say but very hard to practice. This was especially true
in Tibet where, through the cultural conditioning which totally ignored
the proper way of dealing with the situation, anyone who did not
retaliate when struck was looked down upon; they felt ashamed. I saw,
though, something which really amazed me when I was in Sikkim. There
was a monk there who was a very nice and very funny man. One day he
made a frivolous comment to another monk who was short-tempered. This
other monk was angered by his remarks and first kicked him and then
struck him on the head with a piece of wood. The monk who had been
struck remained as soft as cotton, without getting uptight or angry and
said, "Thank you, thank you very much. If there was no one with anger,
I would never be able to develop my forbearance. Thank you." He really
meant what he was saying. When such a situation arises we have to be
ready to cope with it in that way. We have to begin with the most
simple things: first, when someone says something annoying but not very
important then we just say, "Yes, yes - it's very true." We do not
really mean that but it saves argument and we must avoid being led into
argument. What they say is just words. By developing forbearance on the
less relevant things, we will eventually be able to deal with the
difficult ones.
The second aspect of forbearance concerns not
avoiding suffering. It does not mean that we should look for suffering
or be happy to suffer, even if it does sound like that. From
beginningless time until the present, each individual being has been
suffering in the six realms of existence. During that enormous span of
time it is certain that we have suffered billions of centuries in the
hell realms, billions of centuries in the animal realm and so forth. In
one way, it could be said that all that suffering was beneficial
because we are here at present and have little suffering. In another
way, it has not really done much good. Now as we sit down to a session
of meditation, we have very little forbearance or patience, and it is a
great effort to sit in the right posture, form the right attitude of
mind and recite the necessary things. If we do have the forbearance, it
will be highly beneficial for both ourselves and others. Buddha
practiced intensively for six years on the banks of the river Neranjara
before achieving his enlightenment at Bodh Gaya. The result of his
endeavour has endured until the present day and will continue until the
end of everything. That benefit was not only for this planet but for
all beings in all states. Thus, we should not regard as difficulties
all our petty troubles encountered in meditation and Dharma practice.
Sometimes
we do suffer intensely, when we are sick and so on. When we are sick we
should resort to medicines and when we get into trouble with people we
should try to get out of that trouble. Definitely. However, our
attitude to the suffering and the trouble should not be one that
defines them as solely negative. Suffering is like a broom that sweeps
away the causes of suffering and when we understand this then the
suffering is reduced to its true stature. Without the understanding it
tends to become amplified to twice, ten or a hundred times its true
size. The way we develop our understanding is to think, "The suffering
that I am now experiencing is the result of previous karmic causes.
Just as I do not want to suffer, neither does any being. Thus may this
present suffering be of true benefit in removing the sufferings of all
beings." In such a way we mentally take the sufferings of all beings to
ourselves and remove them by our own suffering.
If we do not do
this with the fullest confidence and if there is no karmic connection
between ourselves and those suffering whereby their suffering can be
removed by us, then this practice can only benefit our Mind Training
and cannot actually help them. If we really mean what we think then it
can accomplish much more than just the taking of their suffering to
ourselves. Practice involving such thinking is called tonglen in
Tibetan: taking (len) the sufferings of others and giving (tong) them
our happiness.
The third sort of forbearance is to have
confidence in the excellent qualities of the Three Jewels. It comes
about through taking refuge in the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha and
through practicing Dharma. We should constantly remember to seek our
inspiration in the Three Jewels and to apply ourselves to comprehending
the absolute and relative aspects of truth. In the relative world,
karma, cause and effect, exist and we should do good and avoid bad
action. In the absolute truth there is neither good nor bad and all is
seen as illusion. To strive hard to understand these two simultaneous
levels of truth, hard for most people to grasp, especially to
understand the absolute, is to forbear the ultimate truth.
We
start the practice of this third aspect from a very basic position,
such as the understanding of the precious human existence, how good our
life is and how we can do whatever we wish with it. We have exactly
what is right for us to be good - all the required qualities are
present in this precious human body. Since we have these qualities it
would be a waste not to use them. If a poor family has a hundred kilos
of gold buried beneath the floor of their house and yet do not dig it
up to use it to buy food and so forth, then they are wasting the gold's
value, it serves for nothing. In exactly the same way is our human life
of great value ; it is extremely precious but if we do not use it, it
is just wasted. It will not last very long. By developing such
understanding to the point where we use our lives to the full, and then
deepening the understanding step by step, we cultivate this third
aspect of forbearance.