Happiness,
Karma and Mind any billions of years elapsed between
the origin of this world and the first appearance of living beings upon
its surface. Thereafter it took an immense time for living creatures to
become mature in thought—in the development and perfection of their
intellectual faculties; and even from the time men attained maturity up to
the present many thousands of years have passed. Through all these vast
periods of time the world has undergone constant changes, for it is in a
continual state of flux. Even now, many comparatively recent occurrences
which appeared for a little while to remain static are seen to have been
undergoing changes from moment to moment. One may wonder what it is that
remains immutable when every sort of material and mental phenomenon seems
to be invariably subject to the process of change, of mutability. All of
them are forever arising, developing and passing away. In the vortex of
all these changes it is Truth alone which remains constant and
unalterable—in other words, the truth of righteousness (Dharma) and its
accompanying beneficial results, and the truth of evil action and its
accompanying harmful results. A good cause produces a good result, a bad
cause a bad result. Good or bad, beneficial or harmful, every result
necessarily has a cause. This principle alone is abiding, immutable and
constant. It was so before man entered the world, in the early period of
his existence, in the present age, and it will be so in all ages to
come.
All of us desire happiness and the avoidance of suffering
and of everything else that is unpleasant. Pleasure and pain arise from a
cause, as we all know. Whether certain consequences are due to a single
cause or to a group of causes is determined by the nature of those
consequences. In some cases, even if the cause factors are neither
powerful nor numerous, it is still possible for the effect factors to
occur. Whatever the quality of the result factors, whether they are good
or bad, their magnitude and intensity directly correspond to the quantity
and strength of the cause factors. Therefore, for success in avoiding
unwished- for pains and in acquiring desired pleasures, which is in itself
no small matter, the relinquishment of a great number of collective cause
factors is required.
In analyzing the nature and state of happiness, it will he
apparent that it has two aspects. One is immediate joy (temporary); the
other is future joy (ultimate). Temporary pleasures comprise the comforts
and enjoyments which people crave, such as good dwellings, lovely
furniture, delicious food, good company, pleasant conversation and so on.
In other words, temporary pleasures are what man enjoys in this life. The
question as to whether the enjoyment of these pleasures and satisfactions
derives purely from external factors needs to be examined in the light of
clear logic. If external factors were alone responsible for giving rise to
such pleasures a person would be happy when these were present and,
conversely, unhappy in their absence. However, this is not so. For, even
in the absence of external conditions leading to pleasure, a man can still
be happy and at peace. This demonstrates that external factors are not
alone responsible for stimulating man's happiness. Were it true that
external factors were solely responsible for, or that they wholly
conditioned the arising of, pleasure and happiness, a person possessing an
abundance of these factors would have illimitable joy, which is by no
means always so. It is true that these external factors do make partial
contribution to the creation of pleasure in a man's lifetime. However, to
state that the external factors are all that is needed and therefore the
exclusive cause of happiness in a man's span of life is an obtuse and
illogical proposition. It is by no means sure that the presence of such
external factors will beget joy. On the contrary, factual happenings such
as the experiencing of inner beatitude and happiness despite the total
absence of such pleasure-causing external factors, and the frequent
absence of joy despite their presence, clearly show the cause of happiness
to depend upon a different set of conditioning factors.
If one were to be misled by the argument
that the above-mentioned conditioning factors constitute the sole cause of
happiness to the preclusion of any other conditioning causes, that would
imply that (resulting) happiness is inseparably bound to external causal
factors, its presence or absence being exclusively determined by them. The
fact that this is obviously not so is a sufficient proof that external
causal factors are not necessarily or wholly responsible for the effect
phenomena of happiness.
Now what is that other internal set of causes? How are
they to be explained? As Buddhists, we all believe in the Law of Karma—the
natural law of cause and effect. Whatever external causal conditions
someone comes across in subsequent lives result from the accumulation of
that individual's actions in previous lives. When the karmic force of past
deeds reaches maturity a person experiences pleasurable and unpleasurable
mental states. They are but a natural sequence of his own previous
actions. The most important thing to understand is that, when suitable
(karmic) conditions resulting from the totality of past actions are there,
one's external factors are bound to be favourable. The coming into contact
of conditions due to (karmic) action and external causal factors will
produce a pleasurable mental state. If the requisite causal conditions for
experiencing interior joy are lacking there will be no opportunity for the
occurrence of suitable external conditioning factors or, even if these
external conditioning factors are present, it will not be possible for the
person to experience the joy that would otherwise be his. This shows that
inner causal conditions are essential in that these are what principally
determine the realization of happiness (and its opposite). Therefore, in
order to achieve the desired results it is imperative for us to accumulate
both the cause-creating external factors and the cause-creating internal
(karmic) conditioning factors at the same time.
To state the matter in simple terms, for the accrual of
good inner (karmic) conditioning factors, what are principally needed are
such qualities as having few wants, contentment, humility, simplicity and
other noble qualities. Practice of these inner causal conditions will even
facilitate changes in the aforementioned external conditioning factors
that will convert them into characteristics conducive to the arising of
happiness. The absence of suitable inner causal conditions, such as having
few wants contentment, patience, forgiveness and so on, will prevent one
from enjoying pleasure even if all the right external conditioning factors
are present. Besides this, one must have to one's credit the force of
merits and virtues accumulated in past lives. Otherwise, the seeds of
happiness will not bear fruit.
The matter can be put in another way. The pleasures and
frustrations, the happiness and suffering experienced by each individual
are the inevitable fruits of beneficial and evil actions he has
perpetrated, thus adding to his store. If at a particular moment in this
present life the fruits of a person's good actions ripen he will
recognize, if he is a wise man, that they are the fruits of (past)
meritorious deeds. This will gratify him and encourage him to achieve more
merits. Similarly, when a person happens to experience pain and
dissatisfaction, he will be able to bear them calmly if he maintains an
unshakable conviction that, whether he wishes it or not, he must suffer
and bear the consequences of his own (past) deeds, notwithstanding the
fact that normally he will often find the intensity and extent of his
frustration hard to bear. Besides, the realization that they are nothing
but the fruits of unskilled action in the past will make him wise enough
to desist from unskilled deeds henceforth. Likewise, the satisfying
thought that, with the ripening of past (evil) karma, a certain part of
the evil fruit accrued by former unskilled action has been worked off will
be a source of immense relief to him.
A proper appreciation of this wisdom will contribute to
grasping the essentials for achieving peace of mind and body. For
instance, suppose a person is suddenly afflicted with critical physical
suffering due to certain external factors. If, by the force of sheer will
power (based on the conviction that he is himself responsible for his
present misery and sufferings), he can neutralize the extent of his
suffering then his mind will be much comforted and at peace.
Now let me explain this at a rather higher level. This
concerns the strivings and efforts that can be made for the systematic
destruction of dissatisfaction and its causes.
As stated before, pleasure and pain, happiness and
dissatisfaction are the effects of one's own good and bad, skilled and
unskilled actions. Skillful and unskillful (karmic) actions are not
external phenomena. They belong essentially to the realm of mind. Making
strenuous efforts to build up every possible kind of skillful karma and to
put every vestige of unskillful karma away from us is the path to creating
happiness and avoiding the creation of pain and suffering. For it is
inevitable that a happy result follows a skillful cause and that the
consequence of building up unskillful causes is suffering.
Therefore, it is of the utmost importance that we strive
by every possible means to increase the quality and quantity of skillful
actions and to make a corresponding paring down of our unskillful
actions.
ow is this to be accomplished? Meritorious and
unmeritorious causes which result in pleasure and pain do not resemble
external objects. For instance, in the human bodily system different parts
such as lungs, heart and other organs can be replaced with new ones. But
this is not so in the case of karmic actions, which are purely of the
mind. The earning of fresh merits and the eradicating of bad causes are
purely mental processes. They cannot be achieved with outside help of any
kind. The only way to accomplish them is by controlling and disciplining
the hitherto untamed mind. For this, we require a fuller comprehension of
the element called mind.
Through the gates of the five sense organs a being sees,
hears, smells, tastes and comes into contact with a host of external
forms, objects and impressions. Let the form, sound, smell, taste, touch
and mental events which are the relations of the six senses be shut off.
When this is done the recollection of past events on which the mind tends
to dwell will be completely discontinued and the flow of memory cut off.
Similarly, plans for the future and contemplation of future action must
not be allowed to arise. It is necessary to create a space in place of all
such processes of thought if one is to empty the mind of all such
processes of thought. Freed from all these processes there will remain a
pure, clean, distinct and quiescent mind. Now let us examine what sort of
characteristics constitute the mind when it has attained this stage. We
surely do possess some thing called mind, but how are we to recognize its
existence? The real and essential mind is what is to be found when the
entire load of gross obstructions and aberrations (i.e. sense impressions,
memories, etc.) has been cleared away. Discerning this aspect of real
mind, we shall discover that, unlike external objects, its true nature is
devoid of form or color; nor can we find my basis of truth for such false
and deceptive notions as that mind originated from this or that, or that
it will move from here to there, or that it is located in such-and-such a
place. When it comes into contact with no object mind is like a vast,
boundless void, or like a serene, illimitable ocean. When it encounters an
object it at once has cognizance of it, like a mirror instantly reflecting
a person who stands in front of it. The true nature of mind consists not
only in taking clear cognizance of the object but also in communicating a
concrete experience of that object to the one experiencing it.*
Normally, our forms of sense cognition, such as eye-consciousness,
ear-consciousness, etc., perform their functions on external phenomena in
a manner involving gross distortion. Knowledge resulting from sense
cognition, being based on gross external phenomena, is also of a gross
nature. When this type of gross stimulation is shut out, and when concrete
experiences and clear cognizance arise from within, mind assumes the
characteristics of infinite void similar to the infinitude of space. But
this void is not to be taken as the true nature of mind. We have become so
habituated to consciousness of the form and color of gross objects that,
when we make concentrated introspection into the nature of mind, it is, as
I have said, found to be a vast, limitless void free from any gross
obscurity or other hindrances. Nevertheless, this does not mean that we
have discerned the subtle, true nature of the mind. What has been
explained above concerns the state of mind in relation to the concrete
experience and clear cognizance by the mind which are its function, but it
describes only the relative nature of mind.
There are in addition several other aspects and states of
mind. In other words, taking mind as the supreme basis, there are many
attributes related to it. Just as an onion consists of layer upon layer
that can be peeled away, so does every sort of object have a number of
layers; and this is no less true of the nature of mind as explained here;
it, too, has layer within layer, slate within state.
All compounded things are subject to disintegration. Since
experience and knowledge are impermanent and subject to disintegration,
the mind, of which they are functions (nature), is not something that
remains constant and eternal. From moment to moment it undergoes change
and disintegration. This transience of mind is one aspect of its nature.
However, as we have observed, its true nature has many aspects, including
consciousness of concrete experience and cognizance of objects. Now let us
make a further examination in order to grasp the meaning of the subtle
essence of such a mind. Mind came into existence because of its own cause.
To deny that the origination of mind is dependent on a cause, or to say
that it is a designation given as a means of recognizing the nature of
mind aggregates, is not correct. With our superficial observance, mind,
which has concrete experience and clear cognizance as its nature, appears
to be a powerful, independent, subjective, completely ruling entity.
However, deeper analysis will reveal that this mind, possessing as it does
the function of experience and cognizance, is not a self-created entity
but Is dependent on other factors for its existence. Hence it depends on
something other than itself. This non-independent quality of the mind
substance is its true nature which in turn is the ultimate reality of the
self.
Of these two aspects, viz. the ultimate true nature of
mind and a knowledge of that ultimate true nature, the former is the base,
the latter an attribute. Mind (self) is the basis and all its different
states are attributes. However, the basis and its attributes have from the
first pertained to the same single essence. The non-self-created
(depending on a cause other than itself) mind entity (basis) and its
essence, sunyata, have unceasingly existed as the one, same,
inseparable essence from beginningless beginning. The nature of
sunyata pervades all elements. As we are now and since we cannot
grasp or comprehend the indestructible, natural, ultimate reality
(sunyata) of our own minds, we continue to commit errors and our
defects persist.
Taking mind as the subject and mind's ultimate reality as
its object, one will arrive at a proper comprehension of the true essence
of mind, i.e. its ultimate reality. And when, after prolonged patient
meditation, one comes to perceive and grasp at the knowledge of mind's
ultimate reality which is devoid of dual characteristics, one will
gradually be able to exhaust the delusions and defects of the central and
secondary minds such as wrath, love of ostentation, jealousy, envy and so
on.
Failure to identify the true nature of mind will be
overcome through acquisition of the power to comprehend its ultimate
reality. This will in turn eradicate lust and hatred and all other
secondary delusions emanating from the basic ones. Consequently, there
will be no occasion for accumulating demeritorious karma. By this means
the creation of (evil) karma affecting future lives will be eliminated;
one will be able to increase the quality and quantity of meritorious
causal conditioning and to eradicate the creation of harmful causal
conditioning affecting future lives—apart from the bad karma accumulated
earlier.
In the practice of gaining a perfect knowledge of the true
nature of mind, strenuous and concentrated mental efforts are required for
comprehending the object. In our normal condition as it is at present,
when our mind comes into contact with something it is immediately drawn to
it. This makes comprehension impossible. Therefore. in order to acquire
great dynamic mental power, the very maximum exertion is the first
imperative. For example, a big river flowing over a wide expanse of
shallows will have very little force, but when it passes through a steep
gorge all the water is concentrated in a narrow space and therefore flows
with great force. For a similar reason all the mental distractions which
draw the mind away from the object of contemplation are to be avoided and
the mind kept steadily fixed upon it. Unless this is done, the practice
for gaining a proper understanding of the true nature of mind will be a
total failure.
To make the mind docile, it is essential
for us to discipline and control it well. Speech and bodily activities
which accompany mental processes, must not be allowed to run on in an
indiscreet, unbridled, random way. Just as a trainer disciplines and calms
a wild and willful steed by subjecting it to skillful and prolonged
training, so must the wild, wandering, random activities of body and
speech be tamed to make them docile, righteous and skillful. Therefore the
Teachings of the Lord Buddha comprise three graded categories, that is
sila (training in higher conduct), samadhi (training in
higher meditation) and prajna (training in higher wisdom), all of
them for disciplining the mind.
By studying, meditating and practising the three grades of
trisiksa in this way, one accomplishes progressive realization. A
person so trained will be endowed with the wonderful quality of being able
to bear patiently the miseries and suffering which are the fruit of his
past karma. He will regard his misfortunes as blessings in disguise, for
they will enlighten him as to the meaning of nemesis (karma) and convince
him of the need to concentrate on performing only meritorious deeds. If
his past (evil) karma has not as yet borne fruit, it will still be
possible for him to obliterate this unripe karma by utilizing the strength
of the four powers, namely: determination to attain the status of
Buddhahood; determination to eschew demeritorious deeds, even at the cost
of one's life; the performance of meritorious deeds; repentance.
Such is the way to attain immediate happiness, to pave the
way for attaining liberation in future and to help avoid the accumulation
of further demerits.
|
With kind permission of His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Dharamsala. From Second Dharma Celebration, November 5th-8th 1982, New Delhi, India. Translated by Alex Berzin, clarified by Lama Zopa Rinpoche, edited by Nicholas Ribush. First published by Tushita Mahayana Meditation Centre, New Delhi, 1982 |
Back to top • Contact us • Teachings
by Lama Yeshe •
Teachings
by Lama Zopa Rinpoche • Back to
Teachers