The Buddhist Hour Radio Broadcast Archives
The Buddhist
Hour
Radio Broadcast Script 267
Sunday 9 March 2003
This
script is entitled: The Path to Happiness
This week we present a Dhamma Talk by Sogyal Rinpoche,
The Path to Happiness written by Mr Julian Bamford BA
AppRec.
Mr. Julian Bamford is a Director of the Buddhist
Discussion Centre (Upwey) Ltd.; President of the Chan Academy
Australia; Secretary of the World Fellowship of Buddhists Standing
Committee on Publication, Publicity, Education, Culture and Arts;
Assistant Editor of Longhair Australian News and Presenter of the
Buddhist Hour Radio Broadcast.
Mr Julian Bamford attended the
Dhamma Talk by Sogyal Rinpoche, The Path to Happiness
presented by the RIGPA Fellowship (Melbourne) on Thursday 13 February
2003 at the
Dallas Brooks Centre, 300 Albert Street, East
Melbourne 3001.
We thank Julian for recording this great
Teaching in his paper The Path to Happiness: a
Dhamma Talk by Sogyal Rinpoche.
This paper was published
on 3 March 2003 and can be read in the Volume 13 No. 1 of the Buddha
Dhyana Dana Review at www.bddronline.net.au and www.bdcu.org.au
It
is from notes made of Sogyal Rinpoches talk and attempts to relate
the main themes of the talk and where able capture as closely as
possible the Rinpoches words, anecdotes and stories.
The
writer humbly apologises for any error or misinterpretation that he
may have made in his note takings and requests the understanding of
the Rinpoche, the great Teachers and the reader.
May the
blessings of the triple gem bless you.
1. An Introduction
to Sogyal Rinpoche and the Dhamma Talk The Path to
Happiness
A representative from RIGPA Melbourne welcomed
the guests and audience of over 850 persons to the Public Dhamma Talk
by Sogyal Rinpoche at the Dallas Brooks Centre in Melbourne on 13
February 2003.
The Chan Academy Australias Resident
Practitioners and Buddha Dhamma Teachers John and Anita Hughes
attended the talk as special guests of RIGPA Melbourne. Our Chan
Academy Australia President Mr. Julian Bamford was their driver and
attendant for the evening.
John and Anita met with fellow
guests Sandup, and Dr. Ranjith Hettiarachi from the Buddhist
Foundation (Vic) Australia, a Regional Centre of the World Fellowship
of Buddhists. Also in the audience were our Centres Members and
friends Julie ODonnell, Rani Hughes, Jocelyn Hughes and Lainie
Smallwood.
As part of the introduction the Convenor spoke of
Sogyal Rinpoches work and his program of Buddha Dhamma
teachings and meditation retreats at Centres around the world.
In
a hands-up poll of the audience about 35% (approximately 280 persons)
signalled that they had not heard a Dhamma talk before.
Sogyal
Rinpoches Dhamma teaching programs bring him to Australia each
year. His first visit to Australia was in 1985 and our Teacher John
D. Hughes recalls attending the Rinpoches first Melbourne talk
with some of his students.
2.Buddha Dhamma Teacher,
Translator and Aide to Great
Masters
Born in Kham in
eastern Tibet, Sogyal Rinpoche was recognised as the incarnation of
Lerab Lingpa Terton Sogyal, a teacher to the 13th Dalai Lama, by
Jamang Khyentse Chokyi Lodro, one of the most outstanding masters of
the twentieth century,
Jamang Khyentse Chokyi Lodro
supervised Rinpoches training. Rinpoche has studied with many
masters, of all schools, especially Kyabje Dudjom Rinpoche and Kyabje
Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche.
First as a translator and aide to
these masters, and then teaching in his own right. He travelled to
many countries, observing the reality of peoples lives, and
searching for how to translate the teachings of Buddha Dhamma to make
them relevant to modern men and women, by drawing out their universal
message while losing none of their authenticity, purity and
power.
Rinpoche is the Teaching Holder of the Lineage of
Dogzchen.
He has studied in both the University of Delhi
India and the University of Cambridge UK.
His book The Tibetan
book of Living and Dying has been published in 26 languages and sold
over 1.5 million copies in 54 countries around the world.
It
has been adopted by colleges, groups and institutions, both medical
and religious, and is used extensively by nurses, doctors and health
care professionals.
Sogyal Rinpoche teaches world wide,
addressing thousands of people in his teaching programs and is a
frequent speaker at major conferences.
There is an annual
calendar of retreats and teachings at RIGPA Centres in France,
Ireland, Germany, UK and major cities in Australia. Teachings are
also provided through RIGPAs Australian bush telegraph
network of students.
3.The Path to Happiness
and Practice of Dzogchen or Great Perfection
The
practice of Dzogchen, or Great Perfection, is the most
ancient and direct stream of wisdom within the Buddhist tradition of
Tibet. It is considered the very pinnacle of all teachings, and the
most immediate path towards enlightenment.
As a way in which
to realise the innermost nature of mind, Dzogchen is the clearest,
most effective, and most relevant to the modern world. It is the path
at once simple and profound, one that can be integrated with ordinary
life and practise anywhere.
The Rinpoche explained to the
audience in the first minutes of his talk that he was going to give
the complete Buddha Dhamma path.
He began with the words:
Looking at the world today...and being human....the main
purpose of life is to be happy. All people share that same
goal.
Buddhism is all about ultimate happiness or
enlightenment. Following the spiritual path. It is nothing more than
practice to achieve enlightenment, to be completely free from
suffering.
Whatever happiness we have now is only
temporary.
Where do we find ultimate happiness within
ourselves?
It cannot be found in anything external from
ourselves. But unfortunately we spend most of our time looking
outside.
As an old story tells: It is as if you have
left your elephant at home and gone to look for its footprints in the
forest.
While there is a small percentage of happiness
and suffering that comes from outside circumstances, ultimately
happiness and suffering depend upon the mind.
The term Dhamma
is what Buddhism (or Buddha Dhamma) is all about. It is not so much
about religion.
Dhamma can be understood on many levels. At
the highest level Dhamma is ultimate truth. It is the absolute, no
characteristics, and no methodology, described as not even a
hairs breadth of teaching.
At the relative level it is
the path leading to that truth. The realisation of the inherent
nature of things. Dhamma at the relative level is the means to
realisation.
At this point in his talk the Rinpoche asked the
audience are you OK. He then came down from the
stage and stood at the front row of the audience and delivered the
whole Dhamma talk from there.
4. The heart of the practice
of Buddha Dhamma.
The Rinpoche commented that while his talk
may be called a public talk, in reality he was giving a Dhamma talk.
The most essential teaching...the heart of the practice of Buddha
Dhamma.
Ultimate truth is the whole of dhamma.
Dhamma is
the ultimate truth itself.
Relative truth or conventional
truth is the path to realise the inherent nature of things.
The
practise is to realise the inherent nature of everything.
Relative
dhamma is to make it more accessible.
This is called ground
path foundation.
5. What is the Ground path
foundation?
It is this, the original primordial teaching
Buddha nature.
What it speaks of is our potential seed, the
seed for enlightenment in all of us.
One ground is that there
is not the slightest difference between the Buddha and
ourselves.
The second ground is that the Buddha recognised the
adventitious stains, the temporary obscuration.
Ground is
often represented by the primordial Buddha Sammanthabhadra
Buddha.
Always well, always good. Forever unchanging
fundamental nature which is unchanging, beyond words and thought.
As
an example of primordial nature think of the sky.
In the sky
the sun is shining this is like the Buddha.
Even though the
sky and the sun may be obscured by cloud they are still there. The
sky is still there; the sun is still shining.
The Great
Perfection speaks of this very nature. Buddha nature is unstained and
pure. At the highest level sooner or later you will get it. By
hearing this dhamma teaching just once plants the seed.
There
are three qualities: essence, nature and compassion.
Essence
is the clear sky
Nature is the clear sun
Compassion is
the shining of the sun outwardly in all directions this is
what compassion is like.
The whole point or purpose for
following this path is to become like this.
Every being has
the Buddha nature.
But our minds are rooted in ignorance
and the destructiveness of emotions brings negative kamma. Being like
this clouds our original nature, our true nature.
6.
Following a means of realising your true nature.
Buddha
Dhamma is not about dogma it is about following a means of
realising your true nature.
There are three qualities or
grounds. They are true nature, nature of truth, and the nature of
Lord Buddha.
Essence is empty
Nature is
cognisant
Compassion is confidence
Essence is sometimes
described as shunyatta great openness.
In mathematics
if there were no zero there would be nothing. The origin
of zero is a topic that Indias past Prime Minister Nehru talked
about in his book.
Emptiness or shunyata.
As an
example it could be described as teaching or study in a very
scholarly way. It is so rich. When we practise it has to become
essential. Practice is experiential.
Way of teaching: da
(permanence) che (non existence) brahva (real).
Truth is
nature is the whole of nihilism and externalism.
The trouble
is that because something exists we think it is permanent. An example
is this glass of water.
You look at it, you see it here in my
hand, you think it must be permanent. But what if it drops to the
floor and breaks. Then breaks into smaller and smaller bits down to
the size of an atom. And even atoms can be broken down until there is
just light and energy.
It is not permanent even though it
appears so.
Nothing is independently existing. If you and I
would be permanent we wouldnt die.
We are nature and
nature is impermanent. Then we might say its nothing.
But it
is not nothing either.
It appears because of many causes and
conditions that each being creates for himself or herself.
This
is what is called dependant origination.
In the Heart Sutra
and the Prajna Paramita it is noted that form is emptiness
emptiness is form.
7. The practical benefits of
discovering impermanence
What then is the practical benefit of
this?
When you realise impermanence it helps us to let go of
our attachments and grasping.
When a person has ignorance they
believe that things are permanent, so then they grasp at them.
When
they realise that things are impermanent then they will stop their
attachment.
Love is not attachment. When a person grows more
in freedom and letting go, from this action comes real love.
When
you destroy an atom it releases tremendous energy.
When we
destroy attachment it releases compassion.
When we realise
impermanence we can let go and become free.
At the same time
knowing that things are not permanent and not nothing.
Because
of inter-dependence whatever words we say or think the resulting
kamma is our own.
Nagajuna said: We are our own
past.
Buddha said if you want to know your past, then
look at your present.
Whatever we say or do, we have to be
responsible, particularly what we think.
The Buddhas
words in the Dhammapada stated: We are what we think.
8.
Mind is not just mind, it is also heart.
We are what we think
all that we are, misery and happiness, is the outcome of our
own actions in the past.
When we do something noble it is a
good thing, but if our motivation is screwed up the resulting kamma
can be not so good.
Mind is free of permanence and
non-existence.
The Buddha said commit not one single
unwholesome action, avoid negativitys and unwholesome harmful
actions.
About unwholesome actions Shantideva said all the
suffering there is in this world comes from thinking of oneself. All
the happiness in the world comes from thinking of others.
While
the essence of mind is emptiness, its nature is cognisant.
At
a certain level everything breaks down to light and energy
clear light is cognisant nature. Awareness equals knowing of
emptiness.
9. The usefulness of words as indicators of
meaning
The basis or root of the problem is at the moment
that light is misused by the ego.
We need to understand that
words are only indicators of meaning.
To explain this another
way, think of a movie projector.
The projector sends light
onto a screen to light all our senses.
The phenomenon housed
inside the projector is a light bulb that enables images resident on
the film to projected onto a screen. But the bulb is not involved in
the outcome, not at all.
Another example that explains this is
a piece of rope on the ground.
The person fails to see the
rope where it is, or what it is, but instead mistakes it for
something else that is not there a snake.
Ego is the
nature.
Cognisance is cognition.
We use cognisance to
get awareness of cognition.
The manifestation of energy of the
enlightened mind.
There are three equal parts.
Wisdom
that knows
Compassion that loves
Power that is able to
conquer.
When you see the sky, the sun shines bright in
it.
This an analogy for the enlightened mind
The
tremendous light is wisdom
The tremendous warmth is
compassion
Together they give life tremendous power light -
warmth power - luminosity.
10.What is our real
nature?
How can we show people their real nature?
Who
are we?
When we are happy thats who we are
When
we are sad thats who we are
We end up not only
believing but becoming as well.
But this is only
temporary.
Everything around us, everything we associate with
ourselves is impermanent.
If you really look all these talks,
stories come because of causes and conditions, were these to cease
the stories would end.
If you look with your mind, if you
exercise your good thoughts its already past.
Because whatever
arises when you start thinking, it is already gone.
A great
master once said you can never have a thought in the present.
What
is the essence or the nature of our mind? Clarity, cognisance,
fundamental nature of mind is awareness.
With our mind is also
that of our wants, feelings and understanding.
Our purest
mind, purest feeling, purest heart. It is always with us, it always
has been, it always will be with us.
The mind is there at all
times, whether we are happy, high or low, sick or well.
Pure
consciousness will continue until enlightenment.
The Dalai
Lama said this consciousness is mind most conscious.
The
Prajna Paramita and Heart Sutra speak of this.
Nagajuna said
that it is beyond words, beyond thought, beyond description. The
fundamental innate mind of Buddha is the ordinary mind it is
the most natural in the sense that it is nature.
Wisdom is
ordinary whereas delusion is extraordinary.
It is simply your
flawless present awareness, cognisance awakened.
When we come
to discover this fundamental grounded mind then we discover
ourselves.
11. Finding the antidote to suffering
The
greatest source of suffering is not knowing who we really
are.
People are under a great amount of stress, so much
pressure on keeping morality. The new morality is not about good or
bad but it is about whether living is fun or boring.
When you
really practice meditation you can discover this incredible joy,
compassion, love, in fact we discover ourselves.
Everything is
with you, what the masters give is incredible love, wisdom,
they show us but they cannot liberate us.
In order to realise,
how to realise is to go straight there. There are some extraordinary
beings, when they realise; they are liberated there and then.
We
view and we see. With meditation we confirm and maintain the view as
reality. Then we take action.
There is a direct approach.
Meditation on peace.
In order to remove distraction
and mindlessness the antidote is mindfulness being in
the present.
One is lightly mindful focussing on breathing, in
and out, but not 100%. Place 25% on mindfulness of breathing.
Breathe in and breathe, knowing that you are breathing in and
breathing out, no other analysis or commentary.
Pure attention
for 5 to 10 minutes this is anapannasati, meditation on the
breath.
Thinking about this and that.
Another 25% is on
our senses, whenever you feel your mind being distracted you bring
your mind back to the breath.
Meditation is still purist.
Breath is the object. Pure attention, pure attention. Slowly the mind
will settle.
Breathing in breathing out. One pointedness is
the foundation meditation. Shamatha meditation.
Now the
preliminary. Now what is the essence, heart foundation of meditation?
It is the state of non-state, this is the reality the goal.
12.
Arousing bodhicitta for the sake of others
The state of
non-distraction is simply knowing, nothing to meditate on. You are
undistracted, undisturbed. Bodhicitta compassion.
Stay
in that meditation, and wait for a few moments, it has the power to
purify much negative kamma.
You come closer and closer to the
true state.
Bodhicitta - enlightenment
Heart of -
enlightenment
Mind of - enlightenment
What is it?
Arousing
bodhicitta for the sake of others is wanting to attain
enlightenment.
What you really want to do is awaken them from
suffering.
Bodhicitta is love and compassion. It is
wanting to free beings from suffering wanting all beings to be
free suffering and the causes of suffering.
It is wanting all
beings to reach this state of enlightenment. Only this lasting
happiness is the state of enlightenment.
Wisdom - love -
enlightenment. There are two aspects:
Aspiration aspect
and
Action aspect.
Aspiration aspect is the goal. That you
want all beings to be free from suffering.
Action aspiration
is practising. Meditation, dana, patience, wisdom and the six
paramitas.
You dedicate that course of action to all beings
enlightenment.
By this power and the merit of this action may
this become the causes for all beings to become enlightened.
That
is the teaching, that is the practice.
If this practise is
held for a few moments it has the power to purify many eons of
negative kamma.
With the heart and wisdom of bodhicitta
you connect with it forever.
It is incredibly powerful. All
that is needed is to pray very strongly for the peace and sanity of
the world.
You must not sacrifice long term benefits for
short-term gain.
Because in the long term you will suffer more
pain.
13. The practise of calm abiding
Some persons
are not able to remain in a state of undisturbed meditation. For
those persons there is another method.
Use the five sense
doors, because they are the source of negative emotions. For
example:
Eye - beauty desire
Eye ugliness
abhorrence
If we really look deeply at something arising we
see that there are many causes.
Objects of blame or anger are
from many causes. To understand this we can become free of much
suffering.
Even though negative emotions may arise, grasping
has not yet arisen. It is only when you act on the negative emotion
that is does become dangerous.
Many emotions can arise but it
is how we respond to them.
Realise that the essence of mind is
empty from that emotion are empty. For example: as soon as you
awake you are liberated.
It is when you start thinking why? It
is then that problems, stresses begin to arise.
When you
remain undisturbed and negative emotions clear. Our restless thinking
subsides into peace.
This is the practise of calm
abiding.
Our restless thinking mind subsides into a mind of
peace.
Negativity and aggression are disarmed, unkindness
removed, revealing our true happiness from a state of calm abiding.
The confusion evaporates and gives peace from our emotions.
The
more we purify and come in touch with our true nature the more our
compassion can arise.
Knowing the quality of mind. This
goodness is who we really are.
Buddha nature.
Skylight
nature.
Wisdom and loving compassion radiate out.
Ego
has dissolved and we simply rest in this nature of mind, a quiet
state of confidence and peace we can ever imagine.
When we
keep in this state of mind, we become more at peace.
Mind is
peaceful.
By the power and the merit of this dhamma talk may
it become the causes for all beings to become enlightened.
May
you cultivate all the blessings from this talk
May you aide
Buddha Dhamma Teachers, Translators and Great
Masters.
May
you dedicate the blessings of reading this dhamma talk to
finding
ultimate happiness within yourself.
May you practice to
achieve enlightenment, to be completely free from suffering
May
you come to realise your true nature, Buddha nature.
May you
find peace within yourself
May you be well and happy
This
script was written and edited by: Julian Bamford, BA(AppRec) and
Pennie White, BA DipEd.
References:
RIGPA
Melbourne, Centre for the Study and practice of Tibetan Buddhism.
Program 2003 brochure.
Sogyal Rinpoche (2003) 'The Path to
Happiness' Public Talk Australian Tour 2003 brochure, RIGPA Melbourne
Centre.
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Words:
3512
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Paragraphs: 236
Sentences:
267
Averages
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Words per
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Characters per word: 4.7
Readability
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Passive Sentences: 7%
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62.7
Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level score: 7.4
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