A Brief Overview of the Lam Dre 
                  By His Holiness Sakya Trizin 
                    
                  Virupa 
                  Virupa was born in a royal family and from a very young age had  very special qualities. Seeing that all samsara was suffering, he  renounced his station, became a monk and entered the great monastery of  Nalanda. He began by studying the Sutrayana teachings and also received  and practiced Mantrayana teachings. He became so renowned for his  learning that after the passing away of his teacher, he succeeded him  as the abbot of Nalanda monastery. During the day he gave Mahayana  teachings to the monks, taught debate, and composed texts. In secret,  however, he undertook Mantrayana practices for a very long period of  time. Yet, after practicing in this way for a very long period of time,  he experienced no significant signs of progress or accomplishment.  Virupa thought that perhaps he did not have the karmic connection with  the tantric practice, and so decided to devote his efforts full-time to  giving Mahayana teachings. 
                  After making this decision, on that very night, he experienced  a vision of Vajra Nairatmya. Vajra Nairatmya said to him: "What you  have decided is wrong. I am your karmic link deity and you must  continue your vajrayana practices." So because of this vision, he  continued his secret practices. Shortly afterward in his pure vision,  he saw the full mandala of Vajrayogini and received the empowerment of  the deity Hevajra. Every night for six nights, one after another, he  attained great realizations. On the first night he attained the great  realization of the first bhumi, realizing the ultimate truth. On the  second night and on each night after it, he obtained one bhumi or one  stage of the bodhisattva path, up to the sixth bhumi. He then became a  great mahasiddha, left the monastery, performed many great miracles,  and subdued those on the wrong path. Many benefitted just by hearing  his name, and he did great service to the Buddhadharma. 
                  Virupa had many general followers as well as Mahayana  followers, but Krishnapa and Dombipa were the two main followers of his  esoteric, pith instruction. For the benefit of Krishnapa, he gave the  teaching known as "Vajra Words." This very short teaching contains the  essence of all the Tripitaka and Vajrayana. In the same way that butter  is refined from milk, the Vajra Words are the most important essence of  the Buddha's sutric and tantric teachings in the form of pith  instruction. This teaching then passed to his close disciple Krishnapa,  who gave it to his disciples. In this way it was passed on to five  great Indian gurus. The fifth of these gurus was the Gayadhara who came  to Tibet several times and gave this teaching to the great translator  Drogmi Lotsawa. Drogmi Lotsawa was the first Tibetan to receive the Lam  Dre teaching. He was a great master who had many male and female  disciples who had very great realizations. Drogmi Lotsawa transmitted  the general tantra explanations and the pith instructions to his  disciples separately. He would not give the general tantric  explanations to the disciples who were listening for the pith  instructions, and he would not give pith instructions to those who were  listening for the general teachings. Among his disciples who received  the most important teachings was Seton Kunrik. Seton Kunrik received  the Lam Dre teachings, attained high realizations, and gave the  teachings to Zhangton Chobar. Zhangton Chobar was a kind of hidden  yogi: to the general public he was an ordinary person working in other  people's fields. He promised to work in many fields, and emanated his  body to many places. Zhangton Chobar gave the teaching to the great  lama Sakyapa, who was born of the Khon race. 
                  The Lam Dre Lineage 
                  The Khon lineage is believed to be directly descended from  celestial beings dwelling in the rupadhatu. When the time was ripe,  they felt it was necessary to descend into the human realms. Three  brothers descended from the heavenly realms to the high mountains of  Tibet. One of them settled in Tibet. The first name of this lineage is  known as the Clear Light race. Later they mixed with the rakshas, which  were the local spirits. When this mixture took place, there was some  disagreement between the perfect wisdom and ignorance. At that time the  name "Khon" was given, and both the name and lineage have continued to  the present day. Members of the Khon lineage were formerly Bon  practitioners. Later on, Khon Nagarakshita was a direct disciple of  Padmasmbhava. Guru Padmasmbhava gave him many teachings - and in fact,  he was one of the first Tibetans to receive full Buddhist bhiksu  ordination. He was one of seven Tibetans ordained as a trial to see if  the Tibetans could keep the Buddhist monastic ordination. So, Khon  Nagarakshita's monastic ordination was the beginning of a very  auspicious Buddhist monastic tradition. In any case, he was a very  great disciple of Guru Padmasambhava, and for many generations, the  descendants were great Nyingmapa practitioners. During Khon Konchog  Gyalpo's time, they felt it was necessary to start a separate school,  so they concealed all the ancient teachings and started the Sakya  order. The first monastery was built in 1073 by Khon Konchog Gyalpo who  was the father of the great Lama Sakyapa, Kunga Nyingpo. 
                  Khon Konchog Gyalpo was a disciple of Drogmi Lotsawa and  received the tantric teachings from him. However, Lama Sakyapa Kunga  Nyingpo received the Hevajra tantra teachings directly from his father;  but received the pith instruction from Zhangton Chobar. At first there  was some hesitation on the part of Zhangton Chobar, but later when he  found out that Kunga Nyingpo was the son of his dharma brother, Khon  Gyalpo, he was more eager to give the Lam Dre pith instructions. When  he gave them to Lama Sakyapa Kunga Nyingpo, he did so with the  admonition that he should not disclose even the name of the teaching to  anybody for eighteen years. The condition was that after eighteen  years, Lama Sakyapa would be free to write the teachings down or give  them to his disciples, because by then, he would be the 'owner' of this  great teaching. So for eighteen years Sachen Kunga Nyingpo didn't  mention the name of 'Lam Dre' to anybody and kept it completely secret.  During this time he studied and mastered the t eachings. Lama Sakyapa  was an emanation of both Manjushri and Avalokitesvara, a manifestation  of all the Buddha's wisdom and compassion combined. In reality he was  already a fully enlightened being, but from our ordinary perception, he  appeared in human form and followed the path. 
                  At one point during these eighteen years he became ill and  actually forgot many of the teachings, because at that time there was  yet no written text. Because it was a strictly oral teaching he was  very worried because his guru had already passed away. At that time,  tantra was practiced secretly in the high mountains or in the great  forests; it was not commonly given. He thought that even if he went to  India it would be very difficult to find such a teaching. So he prayed,  and in a dream, the guru Zhangton Chobar, came to him and gave  teachings. In this way Kunga Nyingpo remembered a lot of what he had  forgotten. A second time after praying in his meditation cell the Guru  Zhangton Chobar came and gave teachings, and he was able to remember  the greatest part of the teachings. A third time after praying, the  great mahasiddha, the guru Virupa, founder of Lam Dre teaching who  received the teaching directly from the deity, appeared in the Sakya  mountains. 
                  In the vision, the huge mountain behind Virupa was covered  with his body: he said 'this earth belongs to me' and then gave the  full Lam Dre teaching and many other pith instructions to Kunga  Nyingpo. And so, in this way, the great Lama Sakyapa Kunga Nyingpo  became the owner of all the Buddha's teachings. Kunga Nyingpo gave  these teaching to his sons and many of his disciples, and it has  continued up to the present day. This is a very brief history of how  the Lam Dre teaching was started. 
                  The famous five Sakya teachers, the Jetsuns, are members of  the Khon lineage. Sonam Tsemo was Sachen Kunga Nyingpo's son, and Sakya  Pandita was Sonam Tsemo's nephew, and Chogyal Phagpa was the son of  Sakya Pandita's brother. 
                  Overview of the Lam Dre Structure 
                  The Lam Dre teaching is very profound and very vast. Though it  is one teaching, it can be practised in many different ways. Those  destined to follow the gradual path will start first with the Hinayana  path and then continue with the Mahayana and Vajrayana. Others may be  able to follow the direct path due to circumstances related to their  state of mind and their karmic connections. So for this reason there  are many different ways to present the Lam Dre teaching to disciples.  The common way is to combine the whole of the Lam Dre teachings into  two parts: the preliminary part and the main part. 
                  The preliminary part is included in the preliminary teaching  known as the Triple Vision. The Triple Vision consists of the base, the  path, and the result. The base refers to sentient beings. Due to karma  and defilements, sentient beings have the impure vision, which is the  ordinary vision that we have right now. Yogis and practitioners who  have enrolled in the path and practice meditation have the vision of  experience. After working on the path very hard, one achieves the  result, which is Buddhahood. The Buddhas have great inner qualities and  pure vision. So, the triple vision refers to the impure vision, the  vision of experience, and the pure vision. This is how the preliminary  part is divided. 
                  Preliminaries 
                  In the Lam Dre, as in all Buddhist traditions, the very first  point- the preliminary practice of all the paths, the root of all  dharma and the foundation of all vows is to take refuge in the Buddha,  Dharma and Sangha. The practice of Refuge differentiates Buddhist  practitioners from practitioners of other religions. The first  meditations of the preliminary part divide taking refuge into three  sections: 
                   1. Taking refuge and creating the enlightenment thought 
                    2. Practicing the main part of the meditation 
                    3. Dedicating the merit 
                  To more fully understand Refuge, five additional points are used to clarify the principles: 
                   1. the cause  
                    2. the object 
                    3. the way 
                    4. the benefit 
                    5. the rules of refuge 
                  1-3. Regarding the cause of taking refuge: we take refuge in the  Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha out of fear, faith and compassion. The  object is the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. In the Mahayana, the word  'Buddha' is used to refer to one who possesses three kayas [or  aspects]: the dharmakaya, the nirmanakaya, and the samboghakaya. The  Dharma or the teaching points us to the realization. The Sangha refers  to the great boddhisattva who has already reached the irreversible  state. We take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha with the Buddha  as our guide, the Dharma as our path; and the Sangha as our spiritual  companions. 
                  4. As it is said in the scriptures, the benefit of taking  refuge is immense. If the merit we earn in taking refuge had physical  form, the whole universe would be too small to accommodate it. 
                  5. Regarding the rules of taking refuge: there are general  rules and individual rules. These will be explained in detail at  another time. 
                  The Impure Vision   
                  There are three preliminary meditations: 
                   1. Suffering 
                    2. Impermanence and the rarity of human rebirth 
                    3. The law of cause and effect 
                  The explanation on the impure vision is given first in order to  develop renunciation. This is connected to the first turning of the  wheel of dharma by Buddha Shakyamuni, in which he taught the four noble  truths. 
                  The first noble truth is the truth of suffering, the second  truth is the cause of suffering, the third is the truth of cessation,  and the fourth is the truth of the path. In order to be free from  suffering, we must first understand the nature of suffering. For  example, when we are sick, we must first know the disease before we are  able to get the proper treatment. It is for this reason that the first  noble truth- the truth of suffering, must be understood. We begin by  understanding the nature of suffering in samsara. 
                  1. Suffering 
                   There are three types of suffering: 
                   1. the suffering of suffering 
                    2. the suffering of change 
                    3. the suffering of the conditional nature of all things. 
                  The suffering of suffering means the visible suffering we have  all experienced, such as physical pain and mental anxiety. Beings  reborn in the lower realms- the hell realm, the hungry ghost realm, the  animal realm- have an intense experience of the first suffering. In the  higher realms it appears that there is a mixture of suffering and  happiness, but in reality, there is no such mixture. The experience of  suffering in the higher realms is merely different than it is in the  lower realms. First of all, we all experience the sufferings of  physical pain and mental anxiety. Also we experience the suffering of  change, in that anything that is created with cause and conditions is  impermanent, and anything that is impermanent is conditioned by  suffering. In this sense, just as the outside world changes, as in the  changing of the seasons, change is also occurring in our own lives.  Young ones grow older, large families become smaller - everything is  changing. The third suffering is the suffering of the conditional  nature of all things. Feelings which we normally categorize as "happy"  or "indifferent," exist only in relation to other feelings. In reality,  there is no happiness in these relative feelings. In samsara as a  whole, from top to bottom, there is no essential happiness. So although  in certain ways we have less suffering and in certain ways experience  more suffering, in reality, there is not a single aspect of our  experience that is worthy of attachment. For example, when a poison is  mixed with food, whether it is good food or bad food, the poison still  is harmful. Therefore, in order to arouse renunciation the first part  of the Lam Dre teaching emphasizes the meditation on suffering. 
                  In order to fully arouse renunciation, the teachings explain  the details of sufferings; especially the hell realm and the hungry  ghost realm. According to the teachings, the whole universe is divided  into six realms: three lower realms which include the hell realm, the  hungry ghost realm, and animal realm; and three higher realms: the  human realm, the demi-god realm and the god's realm. But taken  together, in samsaric existence there is not a single space that is  worthy of attachment. 
                  In order to arouse the inner urge to free ourselves from  suffering, we have to concentrate on the first step: the different  conditions, and the different levels of suffering. 
                  2. Impermanence and the rarity of human rebirth 
                  The second preliminary practice is to meditate on the  difficulties of obtaining the precious human birth. As ordinary  sentient beings we are only able to perceive the impure vision, due to  our karma and defilements. We conclude that this impure vision came  from our own actions; therefore, the only way to be free from this  realm of existence is to practice the holy Dharma. In order to practice  the holy Dharma, we need to first obtain a precious human birth. 
                  To obtain a precious human birth is very rare. In order to be  born as a human being, generally one must have created the proper  causes in advance - such as having practiced virtuous deeds, especially  pure moral conduct, supported by other good deeds such as generosity  combined with sincere prayers. It is very rare for all of these  qualities to combine together. Consider the world today, and of the  many people who practice the spiritual path. Even of those who appear  to practice dharma, many of them only practice externally and on a  superficial level. Since the cause is rare, the result is very rare. So  from the causal point of view, all of these qualities are very rare.  From the sheer numerical point of view, outwardly it seems that there  are so many people; however, if you think about it carefully, it is  very easy to count how many people live in one house; and yet it is  impossible to count how many different beings, including insects, are  in the same house. So from point of view of how many sentient beings  exist already, human life can be understood as very rare. From the  point of view of nature, generally human life is rare, particularly  those who have been freed from all the unfavorable states of mind, or  the human life that has all the right conditions. The additional  conditions for an optimal human rebirth are to be born at the time that  a Buddha has come to this universe, or in a time when a Buddha has  given the teaching and the teaching is still a living tradition, or  being born with functioning sensory organs, and with an eagerness to  receive the teachings. Just from these factors we see that it is very,  very difficult to find the Dharma. Therefore, we must think that human  life is very precious, more precious than the wish-fulfilling jewel.  The wish-fulfilling jewel is the most precious thing of all material  things because if one has it, it can bestow all our material  requirements such as food, medicine and clothing. However, the  wish-fulfilling jewel cannot bestow his/her rebirth, self-liberation,  or enlightenment. But with the precious human body and hard work, it is  possible to achieve not only higher rebirth and personal liberation,  but even ultimate enlightenment. One must not only intellectually  understand the value of the precious body, but also feel that it is  very precious and very rare because it is more valuable than the  wish-fulfilling jewel. When one possesses such a precious thing, one  then understands that there is no greater loss than losing this very  rare opportunity. If one cannot make use of this precious time, one  will never know whether there will be such an opportunity in the  future. Therefore, it is very important for us to work when we have all  the right conditions, and are free from all the unfavorable states. 
                  In other teachings, the meaning of the precious human birth  and impermanence are taught separately, but in the Lam Dre they are  taught together. The precious human birth that we have now is  impermanent. Since everything is impermanent we must understand that  our precious human birth is impermanent also. In the Sutras, it is said  that the best offering that one can offer to the Buddha is to think  about impermanence, because just by thinking about impermanence will  turn us away from attachments. By thinking about impermanence we will  be motivated to practice and make efforts on the spiritual path.  Thinking about impermanence is a great antidote to suffering, and will  eventually help us to realize the ultimate truth. 
                  In this way, we must be mindful that this human existence that  we enjoy now has no definite life span. We all know people can die  before birth, or soon after birth, or when they are babies or grownups,  and so forth. Moreover, even if one has a certain amount of time, there  is no actual reason that one will live up to that time because anything  can happen. It is the same as a butter lamp with oil that can be blown  out at any moment due to a sudden wind. In the same way, the precious  life that we have right now, even if one is young and healthy, can be  affected by outer or inner obstacles. Anything can happen, and at any  moment one can die. Therefore, not only is it important to practice  dharma, but it is very important to practice it quickly without wasting  any time. 
                  3. The law of cause and effect 
                  The third preliminary is the law of karma: cause and effect. It  is one of the unique teachings that the Buddha gave in order to show  what one must do and what practices one must follow. Everything we see  and experience, including our current quality of life has been created  by our own actions. The teaching on cause and effect has two parts: the  illusory vision and the karmic vision. 
                  The Illusory Vision. 
                  The illusory vision is sometimes referred to as the "jeweled  vision." Just as in a dream, when we are dreaming the experience is as  real as in our waking life, but when we awake, nothing remains of the  things that we saw and experienced. In this great illusory vision,  subject and the object appear separately. All sentient beings  experience this illusory vision, and it characterizes the world we live  in now. 
                  The Karmic Vision. 
                  The karmic vision consists of the different perspective each  sentient being has, based on their karma. For example, some beings have  less suffering, some have more suffering, and so on. In any case, the  law of karma requires that whatever action we take, the result will  follow; just as surely as our shadow follows us wherever we go.  Similarly virtuous and non-virtuous actions are like seeds which we  plant. In due course, the seed will ripen and produces the result. 
                  There are non-virtuous, virtuous, and neutral deeds.  Non-virtuous deeds are actions created out of ignorance, desire, and  hatred. If the root of a tree is poisonous, the flowers and leaves that  grow from it are also poisonous. In the same way, whatever actions that  are generated by desire, hatred and ignorance are called non-virtuous  deeds which create suffering in this life as well as in future lives. 
                  There are three kinds of action: physical, verbal, and mental;  and there are ten non-virtuous deeds. Virtuous actions are deeds done  without hatred, desire, or ignorance. Actions which are motivated by  loving kindness and compassion are called virtuous deeds. If the root  of a tree is medicinal, then whatever grows from the tree is also  medicinal. Similarly, any action that is created without the  defilements is called a virtuous deed. Virtuous deeds create happiness  in this life as well as in future lives. 
                  Finally, there are actions that are neither virtuous or  non-virtuous deeds, such as walking and sitting. Since these actions do  not produce any negative results, they are greater than the  non-virtuous deeds; yet since they do not produce any positive results,  they are inferior to virtuous deeds. It is important to turn these  neutral deeds into positive deeds. 
                  If one wishes to be free from suffering, one must abstain from  negative deeds. We begin by abstaining from the cause: if we indulge in  a negative cause, then we can't expect to have happiness as the result.  Therefore, we must abstain from even the tiniest negative deeds, and we  must try our best to practice even very small virtuous deeds. In the  same way that an accumulation of drops of water forms the great oceans,  even tiny virtuous deeds will gradually accumulate and produce a  beneficial result. Regarding indifferent actions that are neither  virtuous nor non-virtuous, one should change one's motivations using  the skillful means of the bodhisattva's way of life. One should try to  convert negative deeds through diligent practice. This is a very brief  explanation of the first part of the Lam Dre, the Impure Vision. 
                  Some questions and answers follow, which relate in particular to the topic of the Impure Vision 
                  Q: Are there factors that determine at what time during this or  future lifetimes that the fruit of a person's virtuous actions will  manifest? What are the factors? 
                  Sakya Trizin: It depends on the action itself. There are  certain actions that will ripen in this life. When the object is  strong, the action is strong, and the intention is strong, then the  result ripens in this very lifetime. There are certain actions that  ripen in this life after this lifetime, or even in several lifetimes  later. The law of cause and effect is such a subtle thing that no  ordinary person can fully explain it. 
                  Q: Sakya Pandita was very critical on the use of the term  "mahamudra" for anything less than the highest completion practice.  Would you comment on this in connection to the other schools of Tibetan  Buddhism?  
                  Sakya Trizin: Actually, Sakya Pandita did not say that we  couldn't use the term "mahamudra". With any practice, not necessarily  mahamudra, if we do not do it correctly, we can not achieve the result.  If we do it correctly, with the right teacher, the right path, and the  right method, we can achieve the result. What he said was that in order  to attain enlightenment, we must follow the right practices that  balance method and wisdom. Mahamudra is primordial wisdom that we  experience through meditation. 
                  Q: Please explain the concept of karma and its relationship to cause and effect and merit. 
                  Sakya Trizin: Actually the word karma means action or activities  - the work that we undertake. The life we go through now, and all of  its experiences, is the product of our own actions that we have taken  in the past. Nobody can make us suffer. Nobody can make us happy. Only  through the main cause that comes from our own actions will we be happy  or suffer. The main cause is our own action. The actions that we've  taken create the effect and the result. 
                  The Vision of Experience 
                  The second part of the Lam Dre is the vision of experience,  which consists of two parts. The first part is the common vision of  experience and the second part is the uncommon vision of experience. 
                  The Common Vision of Experience 
                  The common vision of experience refers to the experience of the  common Mahayana practitioner. These practioners apply themselves to  meditation on loving kindness, compassion, and the enlightenment  thought. By practicing these, one will experience the vision of  experience. First, in order to arouse this vision, one must practice  loving kindness. To practice loving kindness one must see that samsara  is full of suffering. Next, one sees that since everyone wishes to be  free from suffering, one must work to be free from suffering. One then  aspires to attain personal freedom or nirvana for oneself. We must view  the impermanence of our present aggregates, understanding our situation  is like a fire without fuel which will eventually go out. Similarly,  when one attains nirvana, the aggregates, which are the base of  suffering, disappear. However, this goal is only an intermediate goal:  if we carefully consider the situation we will see that this is not the  ultimate goal. Working for oneself alone is not the highest aspiration.  For example, it would not be appropriate to remain in a safe place if  the other members of our family were in great trouble. If one is a good  and kind-hearted person, one would not be happy in such a situation,  but would rather go, and suffer together with the other members of  one's family. 
                  We believe that a continuum exists in our present awareness.  Since our present body came from our parents, our consciousness must  have come from the same kind of mind we experience now. From birth and  continuing until old age, although our consciousness changes, the mind  continuum remains the same. In this sense, there is no gap in the  continuum - the same mind is simply taking different forms. This same  example is used to prove that the mind has to exist before the  formation of our physical body. Likewise, when we die, the mind cannot  be burned or buried, but continues on in another form.  
                  In this sense, there is no time that is considered the  beginning of the individual mind. From beginningless time until now we  have continued in this realm of existence: we have taken birth, we have  died, and we have taken on another form. It is for this reason we  believe that at one time or another, every sentient being has been our  dear mother, or father, or relative, or friend. Abandoning other  sentient beings in order to achieve our own salvation is not the proper  goal of spiritual practice. We must continually think of other sentient  beings in our practice. 
                  When we begin to consider developing loving kindness, we  should remember that every sentient being, even the most fearful animal  has a kind of instinctive capacity for loving kindness. Even fearful  lions love their cubs. We all have a certain level of loving kindness,  but not a full capacity for it. So, we must first cultivate kindness  toward persons for whom this is easier - such as our own mother, or  relatives or friends. We begin by cultivating the loving kindness we  already have, and then work on increasing it. Next, we should try to  develop loving kindness to more difficult objects, like one's enemies.  We should attempt to transcend the superficial distinction between  people we see as friends, as enemies, or those we treat with  indifference. In reality, we should see ourselves as having been  related to all three kinds of persons at one time or another. By  understanding our relatedness to others, and seeing that they have  given us much love and kindness as our relatives and friends, we can  finally develop loving kindness for all sentient beings  indiscriminately. It is possible for us to wish all sentient beings to  be happy and to experience the cause of happiness. In this way we must  cultivate and build up loving kindness toward all. 
                  After we develop loving kindness we must next develop  compassion. We generate compassion by focussing on a particular  sentient being that is suffering, and wishing that they be free from  the suffering and its causes. As in the meditation on loving kindness,  we start first with easier objects, and then gradually build up to more  difficult objects, and finally apply the meditation to all sentient  beings. 
                  On the basis of loving kindness and compassion, we then  develop the ultimate enlightenment thought. In order to completely free  oneself from samsara, one must cut the root of samsara, which is  self-clinging. Although in ultimate reality, the "self" does not exist,  due to the illusions of the "jewelled vision," we perform actions.  Through these actions we get caught up in this realm of existence. We  therefore must create bodhicitta to crush self-clinging, which is the  source of all suffering and the cause of the illusory vision. In order  to crush self-clinging thoughts one must practice the two bodhicittas -  which are known as relative and absolute bodhicitta. Relative  bodhicitta suppresses self-clinging by making it inactive. Absolute  bodhicitta completely eradicates self-clinging. 
                  Relative bodhicitta has two parts - wishing bodhicitta and  entering bodhicitta. Wishing bodhicitta means to have a sincere wish to  attain perfect enlightenment for the sake of all sentient beings.  Entering bodhicitta means not only to have the wish, but to actually  undertake some kind of practice to achieve enlightenment. This implies  enrolling on the path and proceeding with practice. Efforts which are  made after generating the wish to attain enlightenment such as  studying, contemplation and meditation, are considered entering  bodhicitta. From the very beginning of this practice one must see  oneself on an equal level with others. This is an important practice  because we are in the habit of believing that there is an enormous  difference between ourselves and others. No matter how much we care for  others, self-clinging is a propensity we have experienced from  beginningless time. Even when we consider another person "beloved,"  typically one still cares more about oneself, and self-clinging pe  rsists. To change this we must cultivate the practice of loving other  beings as much as ourselves. Then gradually, as we habituate this  attitude, we are able to begin to give up our happiness, benefits, and  other good things, for the sake of other beings. Then, we begin to take  the sufferings and the cause of sufferings of others onto ourselves. If  we had done this in the past, we would already be enlightened. But from  beginningless time until now, we have only cared for ourselves. We care  for ourselves to the point that every effort we make is only for our  own sake, although all this achieves for us is more suffering. It is  for this reason we begin to do the exchange meditations, first for  ordinary persons, and later on with more difficult objects, like one's  enemies, and finally for all sentient beings. In this way we accumulate  merit and eradicate selfish thoughts as well as the attitude of  self-clinging. 
                  The next topic is the general bodhisattva activities. The  relative bodhicitta thought only suppresses self-clinging, so that the  defilements become inactive. In this sense, the defilements are not  eradicated, but appear again in the future when the conditions are  right again. Therefore, in order to completely eradicate the attitude  of self-clinging, one needs to practice absolute bodhicitta. 
                  Absolute bodhicitta refers to the absolute reality, the true  nature of all phenomena. This is not the sort of thing ordinary people  attempt to understand. More intelligent beings try to examine and draw  conclusions from questions such as: What is our true nature? Why are we  here? Why do we have to experience this kind of life, and why do we  have to have this sort of vision? . This is the reason there are so  many different philosophical schools like Sarvastivada, Vijnanavada,  and Madhyamika. And within these schools there are also internal  divisions. 
                  Sometimes, students find it difficult to understand the  concept of generating loving kindness toward our mothers, families and  friends, because of the difficulties they have experienced with  dysfunctional, addicted, and unloving families and relationships. When  we give teachings, the teachings are given to help people eliminate  suffering and lead them to enlightenment. So the presentation is given  in the best possible way. It is true that it is difficult to practice  loving kindness and compassion, especially in this degenerate age. When  we teach through the pith instructions, teachings that have been passed  down from one guru to the next, they have a very special effectiveness.  So by presenting these, even if one cannot practice all of it, part of  it might actually be very helpful. The Buddha's teaching is like an  ocean, very deep and wide. Whatever amount one can take, even as little  as a spoonful will be of great benefit. Moreover it is basic human  nature that we all need love and kindness. We must try to cultivate  these virtues through various methods, through the teachings, and  through actual experience. We must make every effort through the  various methods. 
                  The Pure Vision 
                  Many of the higher tantric teachings call this ultimate reality,  "the simultaneously born primordial wisdom." "Simultaneous" means that  the result and the cause arise simultaneously - the result is not  elsewhere. In this sense, the result is not something we seek outside  ourselves, but which is actually within ourselves. Because the cause  and the result are simultaneously born, Buddha Nature is within every  human being. 
                  If we make efforts, we can all attain full enlightenment. In  the relative sense, we go through different phases along the path to  enlightenment; however, we must understand that there is a continuity  between the ordinary cause mind and the ultimate enlightenment mind. We  might consider the example of a copper container which is used to hold  dirty things. When such a container is used for dirty things, we  consider the container itself dirty. But if the same copper were melted  down and made into ornaments which people wore proudly and others  admired, then we would consider the copper radically transformed. If  again, the ornaments were melted down and made into the image of a  deity, then the copper becomes even more precious, as people worship  and pay respect to the image. The point is, of course, that the actual  nature or real quality of the copper never changes. The same copper has  been used as a dirty container, as ornaments, and as the image of a  deity. The face or the appearance of the co pper may change, but the  actual quality of the copper does not change. Similarly, the natural  cause, the true state of our mind, is the Buddha nature. The true state  of all phenomena is the same everywhere. 
                  Through our practice, the application of method and wisdom eliminates obscuration and finally enables us to achieve results. 
                  After the vision of experience, when obscurations have been  gradually eliminated, and inner wisdom improves, the pure vision is  attained. The Buddhas or Tathagatas abandon every possible fault or  obscuration and then, through their great realizations, achieve the  pure vision. Just as a man who has awakened from sleep cannot  experience his dreams, similarly, beings who are completely awakened  from illusion cannot see the impure vision. They see the same vision  that we have now, in complete pure vision, everything in form and  primordial wisdom and everything in pure vision.  |