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Columbia Teachings Geshe Ngawang Phuntsok's Introductory Teachings in Buddhism Dateline: Columbia
Geshe Nawang Phuntsok
June 26, 2002
Your body is here. I don’t know about your mind. Where is your mind?
We say in logic that your mind is hidden phenomena. The opposite of
hidden phenomena is manifest. Your mind is hidden phenomena for me,
manifest for you.
I know my mind. You know your mind.
The first requirement of your mind is "Please, don’t go outside." This
is your basic house of liberation. We come here voluntarily. If you want
to learn the dharma, you listen. You need mind control, learning time.
There are two geshes. I’m not very good at the English language. This
Friday, our own Geshe-la (Geshe Dakpa Topgyal) will come here and teach
very subtly. I try to teach very subtle dharma, but when I try to teach,
I think I teach rough dharma.
You want a story? Many years ago in India, there were two sadhus, two
Indian devotees. They could look at your hand and tell your future. One
could not speak very politely; he was rough, coarse.
A king’s son came to see the rough-speaking sadhu. The sadhu checked
the hand of the prince and told him, "In the future, you will see the
dead bodies of all your relatives." This was bad news, and the prince
was very angry and sad. He slapped and kicked the rough-spoken sadhu.
The prince came again, and this time he spoke with the well-spoken
sadhu. This one said, "Oh, you are very lucky. You are the one with the
longest life." Then the prince was very happy and gave this sadhu many
gifts. But the only difference in the fortunes was the words, the
sentences. The meaning was the same: If the prince has a long life, he
will see all the dead bodies of his relatives.
I am the first one. Our Geshe-la is the second one.
Now, dharma. First, there are many religions: Hindu, Christian,
Buddhism. We need religions.
If you can train your mind, control your mind, this is religion or
dharma. This trained mind is the protector of yourself. This mind is
your god, very precious dharma.
There are three jewels, the Buddha, the dharma, and the sangha. Then
everybody says, "God is not in heaven; god is in my heart." We don’t say
god is in our mind or "I."
This is how I think; god is in my heart.
We need an explanation of how this trained mind is god, how god is
dharma, god is protector.
It is not easy to train the mind. It is very difficult. That’s because
the mind is crazy. What the mind does has no discipline, no government,
no society. If you say harsh words, the police might come. If you think
harsh words, no police will come.
Dharma is discipline for the mind. We say Buddha is the doctor; dharma
is the medicine; the sangha is the nurse. If you understand dharma, you
see it is the protector to us in this life. If you want more dharma, you
need to believe in the next life. If you want more benefits from dharma,
you need to accept there is a next life.
If you don’t believe in the next life with a blind mind, you need
reason, logic. First, you need a good understanding of cause and effect.
After that, you will know what is the cause of the mind.
So we study pramana, logic and valid perception; prajnaparamita, wisdom
of perfection; madhyamika, the middle way; vinaya, the discipline of the
monastery; and Abhidharmakosh, ethics, metaphysics, and cosmology.
Pramana: "man" means mind in Sanskit. And "tra" means refuge. So mantra
means a "mind refuge."
In pramana, we learn there is no one cause of the mind. The mind is not
caused by materials. The cause of the mind is past mind. So the mind is
beginningless; it has no time.
If mind causes mind, then one question would be, if you have twins, who
have the same mother and father, but grow up with different habits, one
is honest, one rude, what is the difference? Why?
After one year, I will tell you.
Dharma means we can train the mind. The trained mind is our protector,
our god. I say our god is in my heart.
If you want more benefit from dharma, if you have an interest in
dharma, if you want to learn dharma, you need to believe, with reason,
in the next life. If you don’t believe in the next life, okay, but you
need a trained mind.
Vasubandhu said in the Abhidharmakosh that most people argue on
emotions, feelings. He said -- you check – in the Abhidharmakosh that
lay people mostly argue and fight on feelings, but monks argue and fight
on the view. Monks say, "My view is the best."
Logic says if there is no next life, then some element forms the mind,
and it would be difficult to say why differences in minds occur.
Question: If the mind has form, would it start some place because the
form must be created?
Answer: Yes.
In his first teaching, Buddha said, "This is the truth of suffering."
We know the pain of suffering. If we understand the truth of suffering,
it’s a big benefit to practice dharma.
There are three kinds of suffering: 1) the suffering of suffering. 2)
the suffering of change. 3) the suffering of pervasive conditioning.
Within the suffering of suffering, there are eight kinds of suffering:
1) the suffering of birth. When someone is born, first he cries. He
doesn’t laugh. Why? 2) the suffering of aging. 3) the suffering of
sickness. 4) the suffering of death. 5) the suffering of separation from
cherished objects. 6) the suffering of meeting with revolting objects.
7) the suffering of not finding the desired object. 8) In brief, the
five aggregates are a source of suffering. They include 1) the suffering
of uncertainty. 2) the suffering of dissatisfaction and 3, 4 and 5 are
too difficult to explain now.
The suffering of suffering is the suffering of pain. We experience
this; so do animals. The suffering of change is the contamination of
joyous feelings. The suffering of pervasive conditioning is the
contamination of neutral feelings.
There are three kinds of feelings: 1) joyous, happy 2) painful 3)
neutral. And there are two kinds of mind: 1) mental factors and sense
factors.
A contaminated neutral feeling is the suffering of pervasive
conditioning, but within neutral feelings are contaminated and
uncontaminated feelings. We have contaminated neutral feelings in
samsara. Enlightened beings have uncontaminated neutral feelings.
In Buddhahood there are feelings. You praise the god or blind the god,
no difference because the feelings are neutral and uncontaminated.
The suffering of change is the suffering of uncertainty. There are no
guarantees. When we go outside, the weather is hot. Inside, we use the
air conditioner. We come inside, and the feeling is so nice, but there
is no guarantee. After two hours, we need a heater. In wintertime, it is
very cold. When we come inside, we use the heater. After one hour, we
feel so very good; after two or three hours, we want to be cool. There
is no guarantee.
If you want one way to achieve permanent happiness, train your mind.
There are many people here, and each has a different workplace, and
samsara is everywhere. People in the office say, "Oh, my problems." The
taxi driver says, "Oh, my problems." Everybody has a big story of
problems. That shows that where you are is not comfortable for you.
Whatever you do has suffering. There is no comfort in samsara.
In suffering, you don’t get what you want. In suffering, we get what we
don’t want. The truth of suffering is dhuka.
The suffering of suffering is not difficult to understand, but we need
to understand suffering better than animals do. So we try to understand
the suffering of change and the suffering of pervasive conditioning.
Within constant change are the five aggregates: form, feeling, thought,
discrimination and volition or will. I can’t explain this well in
English. It’s not my fault or your fault.
The mind is like a traveler. The body is like a guest house. Our mind
can come here and go. But our body can be a very negative guest house,
so we need life insurance, health insurance, exercise. If you don’t do
that, the five aggregates will give you suffering.
Think of food. If you don’t have food, you don’t have health. Without
health, you can’t learn religion. If you can’t learn religion, you don’t
get the path of dharma. If you don’t get the path of dharma, there’s no
way to get liberation. So we need everything.
But we follow the crazy mind. And the crazy mind follows delusion.
Delusion is our leader so we have suffering.
If you know delusion, you need dharma. If you can contain your mind,
control your mind, this is our religion, this is our protector, this is
our god.
Why do we need to practice dharma? To learn anything, we need to
practice. If we don’t practice, we won’t come to liberation on time.
Maybe we’ll come like the police, long afterward.
Shantideva said if somebody takes a stick and beats you, you’re angry at
that person. But what touched your body? The stick. Why not be angry at
the stick? You say, "No the person took the stick; the stick was not
autonomous." But you don’t need to get angry at that person. Get angry
with anger. Oh yeah, this is logic.
Source: South Carolina Dharma Group
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