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Difference between revisions of "The Tibetan Seven-Point Mind-Training"

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Superficially, the [[arhat]] who is free from [[mental suffering]] can seem to us who lack this [[realization]] as numb and de-tached, in a [[state]] of [[existential]] {{Wiki|anesthesia}}. A [[buddha]], one who is [[fully awakened]], presents the [[paradox]] of being free from [[suffering]] and also non-dually {{Wiki|present}} with other people's joys and sorrows, [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] and {{Wiki|fears}}. A [[buddha]] taps into [[immutable bliss]], the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] ground [[state]] of aware-ness beyond the {{Wiki|dichotomy}} of stimulus-driven [[pain]] and [[pleasure]]. The [[mind of a buddha]] has been [[purified]] of all {{Wiki|obscuration}} and from its [[own]] [[nature]] there naturally arises [[immutable bliss]], like a spring welling up from the [[earth]]. With the unveiling of the [[buddha-nature]] of [[unconditioned]] [[bliss]], there is also a complete erosion of an [[absolute]] demar-cation between [[self]] and other. The barrier is gone. This is why [[buddhas]] are vividly and non-dually {{Wiki|aware}} of the suf-fering of others, their [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]] and {{Wiki|fears}}, the whole situation, and at the same time are not disengaged from the [[purity]] and [[bliss]] of their [[own]] [[awareness]]. The [[mind of a buddha]] doesn't block out anything and nothing is inhibited, and this is why the [[awareness]] of an [[awakened]] being is frequently described as "unimaginable."
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Meanwhile, back in [[samsara]], we are identifying—"This is my [[body]]. These are my problems. Your problems are not my problems." Our ground-state is the [[suffering]] of
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vulnerability, a very big problem. Many [[people]] assume that after [[death]], the [[suffering]] of [[life]] is [[extinguished]]. [[Buddhists]] say that is wishful [[thinking]]. The [[Buddhist]] position is that whether you like it or not and regardless of your [[belief]] system, [[the nature of reality]] is such that there is an un-broken [[stream of consciousness]] not contingent on this [[body]]. Your [[body]] will eventually turn into fertilizer but your [[consciousness]] carries on.
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There are both {{Wiki|theoretical}} and [[empirical]] grounds for the [[continuity of consciousness]]. There is currently no consensus in {{Wiki|psychology}}, {{Wiki|neuroscience}}, [[Wikipedia:cognition|cognitive]] [[science]], or philoso-phy of the [[mind]], regarding an [[empirically]] based {{Wiki|theory}} of [[consciousness]]. This is a major [[void]] in the edifice of {{Wiki|modern science}}. Since object-oriented [[scientific]] [[methods]] themselves {{Wiki|present}} [[obstacles]] to the effective study of [[consciousness]], [[scientists]] are at odds even about the [[Wikipedia:scientific method|methodology]] of studying [[consciousness]].
  
[[Buddhism]] with an [[Attitude]]
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There are alternatives to the [[Western]] [[methods]] for the study of [[consciousness]]. The [[philosopher]] of [[science]] Tho-mas [[Kuhn]] observed that in order for a [[paradigm]] shift to occur, it is not enough to see that one's {{Wiki|present}} [[paradigm]] is flawed. It is important to {{Wiki|present}} a coherent alternative that accounts for what you know and makes intelligible what was previously unaccounted for. If you are in a boat that needs periodic bailing, you won't improve matters by be-ing rescued by a sinking ship—and you don't want just to swim for it either. What you want is another boat, preferably one without any leaks, otherwise your best bet is staying where you are.
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The [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is that, like the [[scientific]] {{Wiki|theory}} of the conservation of mass/energy, there is conservation of [[consciousness]]. [[Consciousness]] doesn't arise from {{Wiki|mass}}/ [[energy]], but [[consciousness]] is [[conditioned]] by mass/energy. The {{Wiki|brain}}, [[sense faculties]], {{Wiki|nervous system}}, and {{Wiki|environment}}
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all [[condition]] [[consciousness]]. Just as {{Wiki|mass}} and [[energy]] take different forms—gas, fluid, or solid—the [[Buddhist]] teach-ing is that under different [[conditions]], [[consciousness]] mani-fests in different ways. Additionally, [[consciousness]] is not a by-product of {{Wiki|matter}}, nor does it arise ex nihilo, out of noth-ing.7
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The [[Buddhist view]] is that the {{Wiki|brain}} does not produce [[consciousness]], but it does [[condition]] [[consciousness]]. The [[stream of consciousness]] is a continuity that stores imprints, [[memories]], and {{Wiki|tendencies}} throughout a [[lifetime]]. Just as mass/energy changes [[form]] rather than disappearing alto-gether, [[consciousness]] changes as it disengages from the [[physical body]].
  
The [[Tibetan]] [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]]
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The [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|theory}} of the origin of [[consciousness]] is that [[consciousness]] arises from [[consciousness]]. The [[Buddhist]] hy-pothesis is that an individual's [[consciousness]] does not arise from the [[consciousnesses]] of his or her [[parents]]. [[Parents]] have their [[own]] continua of [[consciousness]]. {{Wiki|Individual}} conscious-ness [[exists]] prior to {{Wiki|conception}}, [[arising]] from a preceding, unique {{Wiki|continuum}} and will carry on after this [[life]].
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When [[individual consciousness]] disengages from the [[body]], the number of types of embodiments it can enter into is vast. There are states of re-embodiment that are condi-tioned by intense [[suffering]]; another [[state]] [[conditioned]] by unfulfilled [[desire]]; another [[conditioned]] by [[mental dullness]]; and another by great [[joy]]. If in this [[life]] as a [[human]], we do not profoundly {{Wiki|purify}} our [[minds]] and gain deep realiza-tion, we are vulnerable to [[rebirth]] in other less favorable [[realms of existence]]. The {{Wiki|continuum}} of [[consciousness]] is tre-mendously malleable and can take on a wide variety of [[forms]], some {{Wiki|subtle}} and [[blissful]], some very dense and mis-erable. There is nothing in this vast spectrum of modes of [[rebirth]] that we are automatically exempt from. Since we are no longer incorporated in a [[human body]] after [[death]],
  
by [[B. Alan Wallace]]
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there is nothing [[human]] about us at all. According to Bud-dhist {{Wiki|theory}}, re-embodiment is propelled by our habitual [[grasping]].
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The sobering notion here is that not only is our [[mind]] basically in an afflicted [[state]] making us vulnerable to suf-fering, it doesn't get better by itself. If we continue in [[habitual patterns]], there is no way out. When [[Buddhists]] say no way out, they mean it. [[Samsara]] never runs down. The [[cycle of existence]] from [[rebirth]] to [[rebirth]] is like being a ball in a per-petual {{Wiki|motion}} pinball machine. Merely wishing, "I have been in [[samsara]] for countless [[eons]] and have had enough," won't get you out. [[Samsara]] runs of its [[own]] momentum as long as it is fueled by the same [[habitual patterns]]. The Bud-dhist {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is that [[samsara]] stops only when we take radical measures and break through the [[habitual patterns]] of [[delusion]].
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[[Buddhist psychology]] states that [[mental suffering]] is pro-duced by one of three primary [[mental afflictions]]. The first primary [[mental affliction]] is [[delusion]]. The [[Buddhist]] term "[[delusion]]" includes the [[philosophical]] term "[[reification]]" and means mistaking what has no [[inherent existence]] as being concretely real. [[Delusion]] results in grasping—"I am," "I am autonomous," "I am separate," "I am [[permanent]]." The primary [[delusion]] of our [[self]] as an [[inherently existent]], autonomous [[entity]] is the source of all [[mental afflictions]].
  
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Out of [[delusion]], the primary [[affliction]], grows the sec-ond fundamental [[affliction]], [[attachment]]. [[Attachment]] is not simply [[desire]] but entails superimposing desirable qualities upon [[objects]] and screening out undesirable qualities. The result is [[craving]]. [[Attachment]] is distorted [[awareness]] in which we idealize an object—"If only I could go there, have that job, that spouse, that car, then I would be [[happy]]." Ide-alization creates a {{Wiki|fiction}} that we [[cling]] to. When we conflate a [[person]] with a {{Wiki|superimposed}} {{Wiki|fiction}}, we might fall in [[love]] with the wonderful {{Wiki|fiction}} and later be disappointed that the [[person]] "changed."
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[[Anger]], also referred to as [[aversion]] or [[hatred]], is the third of the three primary [[afflictions]]. [[Anger]] is the natural complement of [[attachment]]. [[Anger]] regards its [[object]] with {{Wiki|superimposed}} [[disagreeable]] qualities, and filters out desir-able or [[neutral]] qualities. The frequent result of [[anger]] is [[aggression]].
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The [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is that from day to day, from [[moment]] to [[moment]], whenever we [[experience]] [[mental]] suf-fering, its source is the arousal of one or more of the [[mental afflictions]].
  
Preface
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When we [[experience]] [[suffering]], we habitually identify the source of [[suffering]] as "out there"—other [[people]], situations, traffic, the government. In [[Buddhism]], this is an incorrect analysis, a [[wrong view]]. The radical [[Buddhist]] diagnosis of our [[condition]] is that the source of [[suffering]] is [[mental]] afflic-tions. When [[mental afflictions]] are catalyzed in any of many ways, we [[suffer]]. The actual source of [[suffering]] is not "out there." External circumstances and other [[people]] merely serve as catalysts to trigger something already within us. The source of [[suffering]] is not our job, spouse, children or other variations on the theme "I am [[suffering]] because of them or it." The source of [[suffering]] is rooted in [[mental afflictions]].
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What about [[happiness]]? Once again, [[Buddhism]] presents an [[extraordinary]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}}. The [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is that [[happiness]] is your birthright; all you need to do is dis-cover it. When we stop the {{Wiki|behavior}} that impedes natural, inborn [[happiness]], when we stop throwing dirt in the wound, just stop, [[happiness]] starts to well up naturally. From a [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, what we need to do is stop making the great efforts smothering the natural [[happiness]] that is within us. A good [[definition]] of [[Dharma]] is: that which enables us to unveil the natural, genuine [[happiness]] within.
  
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The {{Wiki|purpose}} of discursive [[meditation]] on [[suffering]], the third of the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]], is to become disillusioned with all the [[mundane]] pursuits we value.
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[[Pleasure]], reputation, {{Wiki|comfort}} are all {{Wiki|stimuli}} that result in rela-tive well-being but do not deal with the fundamental problem, our profound vulnerability to [[suffering]], a problem that continues until we do something about it.
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[[Karma]]
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The last of the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]] is [[karma]]. "[[Karma]]" is the [[Sanskrit]] [[word]] for "[[action]]." In anthropo-logical {{Wiki|terminology}}, "[[karma]]" is a thick, theory-laden term. [[Karma]] refers to the [[nature]] of [[actions]] and how their long-term {{Wiki|consequences}} play out over time. According to [[Buddhism]], the [[universe]] is not a mechanistic, sterile machine as some [[philosophies]] argue. Instead, [[reality]] has a [[moral]] [[dimension]]. Some {{Wiki|modern}} [[Western Buddhists]] have shrugged off the significance of [[karma]] and the [[continuity of consciousness]] after [[death]], claiming that the [[Buddha]] simply borrowed these [[ideas]] from the [[Indian]] {{Wiki|culture}} of his time. Study of the prevalent [[views]] concerning the [[afterlife]] that were proposed in [[India]] during the [[Buddha's]] [[lifetime]], however, shows that his assertions were profoundly unlike those of any of his contemporaries. Moreover, he claimed that he had directly observed the [[truth]] of his claims in this regard on the night of his [[enlightenment]], and he showed others how they might verify these theories for themselves.8 Certainly we must consider that the [[Buddha's]] assertions in this regard may be wrong. But to claim that he adopted these from others as congenial [[metaphysical]] [[beliefs]] is simply a sign of [[ignorance]]. The repercussions of [[karma]] are deep because they affect not only this [[lifetime]], but the entire continuity of conscious-ness extending over many lifetimes. The [[Buddhist]] [[belief]] in the [[continuity of consciousness]] from one [[life]] to another is backed with [[logical]] {{Wiki|reasoning}}. {{Wiki|Reasoning}} alone isn't utterly compelling, but [[Buddhism]] does {{Wiki|present}} the [[continuity of consciousness]] as a coherent and [[rational]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}}, and centuries of [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[experience]] have
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produced experiential {{Wiki|evidence}} to support this {{Wiki|hypothesis}}. There are many cases of remembered [[past lives]], foretold {{Wiki|future}} [[lives]] and, further, the [[subjective]] details of the tran-sitional, or [[intermediate]], [[state]] between embodiments, called the [[bar do]]. Preparation for dying and taking [[rebirth]] is a very significant part of [[Tibetan Buddhist]] practice.
  
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In 1989,I interpreted for the [[Dalai Lama]] in a [[Mind and Life]] Conference with a group of [[neuroscientists]] in New-port Beach, California.9 Most [[neuroscientists]] believe that the [[mind]] is a by-product, or epiphenomenon, of the {{Wiki|brain}}; [[mind]] vanishes when {{Wiki|brain}} [[dies]] and that is all there is to it. The [[neuroscientists]] were disturbed when the [[Dalai Lama]], a very {{Wiki|intelligent}} man, discussed the continuity of con-sciousness from one [[lifetime]] to the next. The [[scientists]] pointed out that retrospective accounts of [[reincarnation]], however numerous they may be, are not {{Wiki|scientifically}} com-pelling due to lack of proper controls. For example, a child's [[experiences]] in the first years of [[life]] are largely unknown. We can't know for certain what the [[parents]] told the child, where he went, or what he saw on television. It was further pointed out to [[His Holiness]] that only a prospective study would be impressive {{Wiki|scientifically}}. If [[scientists]] interviewed a dying [[Tibetan]] [[yogi]] and were told by him the specific de-tails of his [[rebirth]] and these details were later confirmed by a child [[reincarnation]] of the same late [[yogi]], this would be very hard for [[scientists]] to explain away as coincidence. [[His Holiness]] is very [[interested]] in collaborating with [[scientists]] on a prospective study of [[reincarnation]].
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[[Continuity of consciousness]] and [[karma]] are not [[elements]] of a [[religious]] [[creed]] [[Buddhists]] are required to believe. The [[extraordinary]] premise of [[Buddhism]] is that [[the nature of reality]] can be experientially determined through diligent [[spiritual practice]]. Being [[Buddhist]] means only that you [[trust]] and follow the [[Buddhist path]], critically.
  
All of us have attitudes. Some of them accord with [[reality]] and serve us well throughout the course of our [[lives]]. Others are out of alignment with [[reality]], and they [[cause]] us unnec-essary problems. [[Tibetan Buddhist]] practice isn't just sitting in [[silent]] [[meditation]]; it's developing fresh attitudes that align our [[minds]] with [[reality]]. Attitudes need adjusting, just like a [[spinal column]] that has been knocked out of alignment. Among the many types of practices in [[Tibetan Buddhism]], in this [[book]] I will explain a type of [[mental]] {{Wiki|training}} Tibet-ans call [[lojong]], which is designed to shift our attitudes so that our [[minds]] become [[pure]] wellsprings of [[joy]] instead of murky pools of problems, anxieties, fleeting [[pleasures]], frus-trations, [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]], and {{Wiki|fears}}. The [[Tibetan]] [[word]] [[lojong]] is made up of two parts: lo means [[attitude]], [[mind]], [[intelligence]], and {{Wiki|perspective}}; and [[jong]] means to train, {{Wiki|purify}}, remedy, and clear away. So the [[word]] [[lojong]] could literally be translated as attitudinal {{Wiki|training}}, but I'll stick with the more common translation of [[mind-training]].
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One key to the {{Wiki|contemplative}} exploration of [[the nature of reality]] is [[meditative concentration]], the ability to stabilize the [[mind]] and enhance its clarity. The refined and stabilized [[mind]] is the tool [[Buddhists]] use to investigate the whole of [[reality]], from [[cosmology]] to the [[nature]] of [[awareness]]. Such [[meditative]] technology gives you access to [[exceptional]] states of [[awareness]].
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The [[continuity of consciousness]] from [[lifetime]] to [[lifetime]] is not contingent upon any [[belief]] or disbelief in reincarna-tion. From the [[Buddhist point of view]], even if you personally don't believe in [[continuity of consciousness]], there is still continuity. An analogy from [[physics]] is that if you roll a ball down a ramp, it accelerates, even if you believe its {{Wiki|velocity}} remains [[constant]]. In the {{Wiki|future}} there may be contemplatives, maybe even [[Western]] contemplatives, who will take up the prospective challenge of the [[neuroscientists]] and [[die]] under [[scientific]] {{Wiki|scrutiny}}.
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If [[continuity of consciousness]] is a fact and if, as Bud-dhists tell us, it is possible to pass through the dying process with complete [[awareness]], then an important question arises. Is [[rebirth]] random? Does [[Nature]] play roulette so that in one [[life]] you are [[human]] but in the next, for no [[reason]] at all, you are a {{Wiki|frog}}? If there is coherence to [[rebirth]], what is the [[nature]] of that coherence? The [[Buddha's]] claim was that, from the {{Wiki|perspective}} of an [[awakened awareness]], there is coherence—certain types of [[actions]] give rise to certain types of {{Wiki|consequences}}. The coherence is called [[karma]].
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The fundamental cornerstone of [[existence]] as a [[sentient being]] is seeking [[happiness]] and avoiding [[suffering]]. The at-tainment of [[enlightenment]] may be the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] goal but in the meantime, a [[sentient being]] would rather be well than sick, have enough to eat rather than starve, have harmoni-ous relationships and not [[painful]] ones, have a [[fortunate]] [[life]] rather than a [[miserable]] one. We all [[desire]] these things. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] that certain types of [[actions]] give rise to
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certain types of {{Wiki|consequences}}. The question then becomes: what types of [[actions]] give rise to the things we wish for, and what types of [[actions]] give rise to the things we seek to avoid?
  
Over the {{Wiki|past}} millennium, [[Tibetan lamas]] have devised many lojongs, but the most widely [[taught]] and practiced of all lojongs in the [[Tibetan language]] was one based on the teachings of an [[Indian Buddhist]] [[Wikipedia:Sage (sophos|sage]] named [[Atisha]] (982-1054), whose [[life]] spanned the end of the first millennium of the common {{Wiki|era}} and the beginning of the second. [[Atisha]] brought to [[Tibet]] an [[oral tradition]] of [[lojong]] teachings that was based on instructions that had been passed down to
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The natural inclination is to believe that this is easy enough to figure out for oneself. Unfortunately, the undis-ciplined [[mind]] tends to be subjected to [[delusion]]. As the eighth-century [[Indian Buddhist]] [[Wikipedia:Sage (sophos|sage]] [[Shantideva]] wrote in A Guide to [[Bodhisattva Way]] of [[Life]], "Those [[desiring]] to escape from [[suffering]] hasten right toward [[suffering]]. With the very [[desire]] for [[happiness]], out of [[delusion]] they destroy their [[own]] [[happiness]] as if it were an enemy."10 In other words, de-luded [[desires]] for [[happiness]] lead us to engage in [[actions]] of [[attachment]] that inevitably result in [[aversion]]. Our goal is [[happiness]], but our [[actions]] lead to [[suffering]].
him through the [[lineage]] of the [[Indian Buddhist]] [[teachers]] Maitriyogin, [[Dharmarakshita]], and [[Serlingpa]]. This [[oral tradition]] may represent the earliest such practice that was explicitly called a [[lojong]], and it is probably the most widely practiced in the whole of [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. This {{Wiki|training}} was initially given only as an [[oral instruction]] for those stu-dents who were deemed sufficiently {{Wiki|intelligent}} and highly enough motivated to make good use of it. Only about a century after [[Atisha's]] [[death]] was this secret {{Wiki|training}} writ-ten down and made more widely available in [[monasteries]] and hermitages, [[Tibet's]] unique kinds of attitudinal correc-tion facility. This delay probably accounts for the minor variations in the different versions of the text we have today. For centuries we in the [[West]] have wondered whether {{Wiki|intelligent}} [[life]] [[exists]] elsewhere in the [[universe]]. If there are highly advanced, {{Wiki|intelligent}} [[beings]] out there, what might they have to teach us? What have they learned that we have not? Along similar lines we can ask: is there {{Wiki|intelligent}} [[life]] on our {{Wiki|planet}} outside of our Euro-American {{Wiki|civilization}}? Of course that {{Wiki|sounds}} like a dumb question, but it's still worth asking, since there still persists an [[attitude]] in our [[society]] that we know more about everything than any pre-vious generation and more than any other, "less developed" [[society]] today. It takes quite an ethnocentric leap of [[faith]] to swallow that, but many [[people]] seem to manage it. [[Indian]] {{Wiki|civilization}} a thousand years ago, during the time of [[Atisha]], had evolved with very little influence from {{Wiki|European}} civi-lization; and [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|civilization}}, tracing back more than two millennia, was hardly influenced by the [[West]] until the mid-twentieth century. Ironically, [[Tibetans]]' first major en-counter with [[Western]] [[thought]] occurred due to the invasion of their homeland by the {{Wiki|Chinese}} {{Wiki|Communists}} in 1949, who forced upon them the economic [[doctrine]] of [[Marxism]] and [[scientific]] {{Wiki|materialism}}.
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[[Continuity of consciousness]] is a {{Wiki|continuum}} through dif-ferent states of [[awareness]]: [[sleep]], [[dreams]], the waking [[state]], the dying process, the [[intermediate state]], and [[rebirth]]. {{Wiki|Freud}} wrote, "in [[mental]] [[life]] nothing which has once been formed can perish...everything is somehow preserved and...in suit-able circumstances... it can once more be brought to light."11 This statement, taken out of the context of the rest of [[Freud's]] [[views]], is reminiscent of the [[Buddhist theory of karma]], [[actions]], and their {{Wiki|consequences}}.
Have [[Indian]] and [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|civilizations}} made any great discoveries of their [[own]] that we have not, and might they have anything to teach us? I will be tackling these questions throughout this [[book]], drawing on a thousand-year-old set of {{Wiki|aphorisms}} that embody much of the [[wisdom]] of {{Wiki|ancient India}} and [[Tibet]]. If these {{Wiki|aphorisms}} strike a chord of wis-dom for us living today, whose [[lives]] span the end of the second millennium and the beginning of the third, that wis-dom will be something that is not uniquely Eastern or [[Western]], and not [[ancient]] or {{Wiki|modern}}. It will be a type of [[wisdom]] that cuts across such {{Wiki|cultural}} divides and eras, something [[universal]] that speaks deeply to and from the hearts and [[minds]] of [[humanity]].
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The [[Buddhist]] premise is that all [[actions]], [[including]] men-tal [[actions]], leave [[seeds]], or imprints, on a {{Wiki|continuum}} that is not only a continuity of [[experience]], but also a kind of reposi-tory. This {{Wiki|continuum}} is laden with {{Wiki|tendencies}} and configured by [[experience]]. When something happens to you, whether traumatic or [[joyful]], the [[experience]] imbeds itself in the [[form]] of [[memory]], resulting in [[emotional]] and {{Wiki|behavioral}} tenden-cies. In this way, the {{Wiki|continuum}} of [[consciousness]], or [[mind-stream]], is configured by the cumulative effects of [[parents]], friends, [[education]], and our general {{Wiki|environment}}.
  
Over the {{Wiki|past}} millennium, [[Tibetan Buddhism]] has main-tained its [[vitality]] from generation to generation by [[teachers]] passing on oral commentaries to [[traditional]] "[[root texts]]" such as the [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]]. [[Root texts]] preserve the depth and [[wisdom]] of the teachings, and the oral com-mentaries link these texts with the [[experiences]] and [[views]] of practitioners of each generation. In the explanation of the text I offer here, I draw upon the earliest [[Tibetan]] com-mentary I have been able to find, composed by Sechil Buwa, who was a direct [[disciple]] of [[Chekawa Yeshe Dorje]] (1101-1175), who first wrote down this [[mind-training]]. [[Chekawa Yeshe Dorje]] had received the [[transmission]] of this [[teaching]] from [[Sharawa]], and the [[lineage]] before him goes back to [[Langri Thangpa]], [[Potowa]], [[Dromtonpa]], and [[Atisha]]. I also draw on a very recent commentary entitled [[Enlightened]] [[Courage]]: An Explanation ofAtisha's Seven Point [[Mind]] Train-ing by the late [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]], one of the greatest [[Tibetan]] [[meditation masters]] of the twentieth century.
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The [[mental continuum]] is also configured by our [[actions]]. Engaging in a certain type of [[action]] develops a tendency, a pattern, or [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]] that is [[initiated]] and then reinforced. If the [[action]] was difficult at the beginning, it becomes easier as the [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]] becomes more deeply ingrained. Some [[habits]] de-velop much more easily than others. Responding with [[irritation]] when something [[disagreeable]] happens is a very easily acquired [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]]. But [[irritation]] and [[indignation]] are only two of many possible responses to something [[disagreeable]]. When a driver is rude on the freeway, gesturing and firing off a {{Wiki|sermon}} on the [[nature]] [[humanity]] can get to be a [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]]. Another option is simply moving out of the way. A [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]] reinforced by subsequent [[actions]] triggered by outside events is one type of [[karma]].
The [[teacher]] from whom I received the oral commentary on this {{Wiki|training}} was a learned, [[humble]], and [[compassionate]] [[Tibetan]] named Kungo Barshi. I was living in {{Wiki|Dharamsala}},
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Being held {{Wiki|morally}}, or [[karmically]], accountable for one's [[thoughts]] is daunting. Fortunately, there is a loophole. When an [[unwholesome]] [[thought]] arises, it is [[grasping]] onto it, think-ing, "I want this ... I want to do that...," that starts the [[karma]] meter ticking. If you are [[meditating]], and a disgusting im-age or [[desire]] arises, no problem. A [[malevolent]], [[jealous]], or [[selfish]] [[thought]] [[arising]] in the [[space]] of your [[mind]] does not [[accumulate]] [[negative karma]]. No harm is done by the pres-ence of negative [[thoughts]] as long as you don't [[grasp]] onto them. When [[thoughts]] are allowed to play themselves out and vanish of their [[own]] accord, your [[mind]] remaining like [[space]], there is no [[accumulation of karma]]. The problem is having sticky [[awareness]] that latches onto negative [[thoughts]] with, "How could I be [[thinking]] this stuff ... but I like this [[thought]]... Oh,but I shouldn't...." Identification, [[grasping]], is the problem, not the [[thoughts]] themselves.
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I mentioned a loophole. If [[thoughts]] of [[anger]], [[jealousy]], or [[craving]] arise that distort the [[mind]], you can choose not to identify with them and create a [[space]] around them. You can sever [[grasping]] and the [[accumulation of karma]] by
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honing [[attention]] to focus right in on the [[nature]] of the men-tal process itself. This is a powerful technique that works if you hit the mark. If you can attend right at the onset, right when the [[mind]] begins to be drawn into the vortex of a nega-tive [[thought]], simply by observing the [[nature]] of the [[thought]], the [[karmic]] effect is cut just as if with a knife. Effective spiri-tual practice includes developing the attentional skill to remain outside the vortex of {{Wiki|afflictive}} [[thoughts]] and [[emotions]] without slipping in.
  
[[India]], at the time, in 1973, and there were many erudite [[lamas]] from whom I could have sought this instruction. But I was particularly drawn to Kungo Barshi for various rea-sons. At that time, he was the [[chief instructor]] in [[Tibetan medicine]] at the [[Tibetan]] Astro-Medical Institute, and he was renowned for his [[mastery]] of many of the fields of [[traditional]] [[Tibetan]] [[knowledge]]. But he was not only an outstanding [[scholar]]. As a member of the [[nobility]] [[in Tibet]], he had owned several estates and devoted himself to the [[life]] of a gentle-man [[scholar]], while his wife largely took over the {{Wiki|practical}} affairs of running their estates. But when the {{Wiki|Chinese}} {{Wiki|Communists}} invaded [[Tibet]] and especially targeted the {{Wiki|aristocracy}} for imprisonment and torture, he, his wife, and one of his sons fled to [[India]]. Others of his children remained behind, only to be killed by the {{Wiki|Chinese}}, and the son who fled with him into exile also met a tragic end. Adversity mounted upon adversity in Kungo Barshi's [[life]], and yet when he was passing on this [[teaching]] to me, he told me, "Personally, I have found the [[Wikipedia:Battle of Chamdo|Chinese invasion]] of [[Tibet]] to be a [[blessing]]. In [[Tibet]] before this cataclysm, I took much for granted, and my [[spiritual practice]] was [[casual]]. Now that I have been forced into exile and have lost so much, my [[dedication]] to practice has grown enormously, and I have found greater [[contentment]] than ever before." Rarely have I met anyone whose presence exuded such [[serenity]], quiet good cheer, and [[wisdom]] as he did. He was for me a living [[embodiment]] of the efficacy of this [[mind-training]], and his inspiration has been with me ever since.
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The fundamental [[moral]], or [[karmic]], framework of Bud-dhism is a list of [[ten virtues]] and [[ten non-virtues]]. These do's and do not's cover the most common problems in [[life]]. Committing an [[unwholesome]] or [[non-virtuous]] [[deed]] [[plants]] a seed that can potentially produce a negative impact as it matures in the [[mind-stream]] in this [[lifetime]] and the ones to follow. In this list of ten, there are three [[unwholesome deeds]] of the [[body]], four of {{Wiki|speech}}, and three of the [[mind]]. The three of the [[body]] are intentional {{Wiki|killing}}, [[stealing]], and {{Wiki|sexual}} mis-conduct. These three [[non-virtues]] are negative because they inflict harm and [[suffering]]. The [[physical]] [[misdeeds]] are be-haviors we can make decisions about; we can usually decide not to engage in them. There is nothing [[metaphysical]] here.
As I pass on my [[own]] commentary to this text, I address many {{Wiki|practical}} and {{Wiki|theoretical}} issues that uniquely face us in the {{Wiki|modern}} [[world]]. This [[book]] is based on a series of pub-lic lectures I gave in {{Wiki|Santa Barbara}}, [[California]], during the years 1997-1998. Tapes of those lectures were transcribed and edited by my old and dear [[friend]] Lynn Quirolo, to
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The next four [[unwholesome]] acts [[concern]] {{Wiki|speech}} and are more difficult to [[recognize]] and deal with than [[physical]] [[non-virtues]]. The first is harsh and [[abusive speech]]. The [[non-virtues]] of {{Wiki|speech}} are difficult because, as the [[Buddha]] said, nothing in the [[world]] is faster than the [[mind]]; but the {{Wiki|mouth}} is a close runner-up. Harsh {{Wiki|speech}} engages a [[mental affliction]], frequently [[anger]], sometimes [[attachment]] or de-lusion, and turns {{Wiki|speech}} into a {{Wiki|subtle}} and sophisticated weapon, at times more damaging than a punch to the jaw. Harsh {{Wiki|speech}} includes sarcasm. [[Tibetans]] liken sarcasm to throwing a rock covered in fluffy wool—it is initially mistaken for a friendly puffball until it meets its target.
whom I owe a deep debt of [[gratitude]]; then I made final revisions to the edited transcripts. I have tried at all times to be [[faithful]] to the original teachings I received, while making them thoroughly contemporary to [[people]] living in a [[world]] so different from that of [[traditional]] [[Tibet]]. If even a fraction of the [[wisdom]] and inspiration of [[Atisha]], Sechil Buwa, Kungo Barshi, and [[Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche]] is con-veyed to the readers of this [[book]], our efforts will have born good fruit.
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The second type of [[verbal]] [[non-virtue]] is {{Wiki|lying}}. {{Wiki|Lying}} is intentionally saying what is not true and can have many motivations. [[Slander]] or divisive {{Wiki|speech}} is the third [[verbal]] [[non-virtue]] and an [[interesting]] one. [[Slander]] may be {{Wiki|lying}} with a twist or it may be the simple [[truth]] coupled with a [[motivation]] to do harm or create conflict.
  
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Idle {{Wiki|gossip}}, [[the fourth]] of the [[verbal]] [[non-virtues]], is con-sidered the lightest of all the [[ten non-virtues]] but, as one of my [[lamas]] remarked, it the easiest way to waste an entire [[life]]. Idle {{Wiki|gossip}} is {{Wiki|speech}} motivated by [[mental afflictions]] such as [[attachment]], [[anger]], [[jealousy]], [[pride]], and [[delusion]]. The net effect of idle {{Wiki|gossip}} is worse than just wasting time; it reinforces [[mental afflictions]] and accumulates [[negative karma]].
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The next grouping in the list of [[ten non-virtues]] is the three [[non-virtues]] of the [[mind]]. The first is [[malice]]. [[Malice]] is the [[intention]] to inflict harm. [[Avarice]], [[craving]] another person's possessions, is the second [[non-virtue]] of the [[mind]]. The third of the [[non-virtues]] of the [[mind]] is holding onto [[false views]], which is regarded as the most harmful of all [[ten non-virtues]]. "[[False views]]" refers to misconceptions about [[the nature of reality]]. An example of a [[false view]] is the [[belief]] that [[actions]] have no [[moral]] {{Wiki|consequences}}.
  
The First Point:
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Paralleling the [[Buddhist]] list of [[ten non-virtues]] is a list of [[ten virtues]]. These are the flip side of each of the non-vir-tues. For example, the [[virtue]] opposite to {{Wiki|killing}} is protecting [[life]] and the [[virtue]] [[corresponding]] to harsh {{Wiki|speech}} is {{Wiki|speaking}} gently.
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All [[virtuous]] and [[non-virtuous]] [[deeds]] place imprints upon the [[mind-stream]] that are potent [[karmic seeds]] that will ripen in this or a {{Wiki|future}} [[lifetime]]. Once [[karma]] is imbedded in a [[stream of consciousness]], it is carried from one [[lifetime]] to another until it is catalyzed. Just as a plant seed can remain dormant in the desert for decades and sprout to [[life]] at the
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first [[contact]] with [[water]], a [[karmic seed]] can lie dormant for a long time, from [[lifetime]] to [[lifetime]], before a catalyst triggers its ripening.
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Another [[characteristic]] of [[karma]] is that its effect is simi-lar to its [[cause]]. For example, if one cultivates a tendency to help those in need, the [[karmic]] effect carried into the next [[life]] would be being born with an {{Wiki|altruistic}} tendency, being gifted in [[compassion]]. [[Buddhists]] explain the differences be-tween babies, obvious to any [[parent]], as partly due to [[karma]]. This does not deny {{Wiki|genetic}} and {{Wiki|environmental}} [[influences]]. Many [[influences]] come together in an intricate weave to [[form]] this [[life]]. The [[interesting]] point here is that [[Buddhists]] don't consider the [[mind]] of an {{Wiki|infant}} to be a blank slate. Due to the influence of [[past lives]], [[sentient beings]] are strongly [[conditioned]] even before {{Wiki|conception}}. Therefore, [[cultivating]] [[wholesome]] {{Wiki|tendencies}} is a top priority of [[Dharma practice]].
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The view that [[karma]] affects the {{Wiki|continuum}} of conscious-ness from one [[life]] to the next is of fundamental importance in [[Buddhist practice]]. Many [[Buddhists]] [[acknowledge]] that [[attaining buddhahood]] in one [[lifetime]], although possible, is highly improbable. [[Understanding]] [[karma]] and its effect on the [[continuity of consciousness]] elevates [[spiritual]] prac-tice from an all-or-nothing, one-life-only proposition. If [[spiritual practice]] has continuity and coherence, if greater [[kindness]], [[wisdom]], and [[balance]] have developed and the various {{Wiki|afflictive}} {{Wiki|tendencies}} have declined, then these quali-ties are embedded in the [[mind-stream]]. Even if you don't become [[enlightened]] in this [[lifetime]], if you [[practice Dharma]] diligently, because of the [[nature]] of [[actions]] and their conse-quences, you will be able to pick up where you left off in the next [[lifetime]].
  
The Preliminaries
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In the [[Tibetan Buddhist tradition]], [[reincarnations]] of ex-ceptionally mature practitioners are sometimes identified
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in childhood. These [[tulkus]], which literally means "emana-tion [[bodies]]," are a source of inspiration for [[Tibetan Buddhists]]. The {{Wiki|recognition}} of [[tulkus]] acknowledges that [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|maturation}} is preserved as [[karmic]] propensities from one [[life-time]] to the next. This is true not only for [[tulkus]], but for all practitioners.
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A third type of [[karmic]] effect, and the most difficult to understand, is {{Wiki|environmental}}. The various types of envi-ronments encountered in your [[life]] are also a result of [[karma]]. Being born in a {{Wiki|hostile}} {{Wiki|environment}}, amid plague, famine, drought, [[war]], is a {{Wiki|maturation}} of [[karma]] [[manifesting]] as an {{Wiki|environment}}. The same {{Wiki|reasoning}} also holds true for a harmonious, beautiful {{Wiki|environment}}.
  
First, train in the preliminaries.
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The [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is that humanness is very much contingent upon a [[human body]] and we are not thoroughly as [[human]] as we believe. When the [[human body]] [[dies]], what remain are {{Wiki|tendencies}}. According to the [[Buddha's]] teach-ings, it is difficult to [[conceive]] being born in a {{Wiki|non-human}} [[form]] because we identify so much with [[human]] [[intelligence]] and [[human form]]. But we have more in common with other [[realms]] than we like to think. For example, if [[cravings]] domi-nate your life—"I want a nice car, a bigger house, more of my fair share"—then this is comparable to the [[life]] of a [[preta]], a [[hungry ghost]]. Similarly, leading a [[life]] driven by one's "[[animal]] appetites," not taking advantage of [[human]] intelli-gence and [[experience]], for all {{Wiki|practical}} purposes, is a [[human]] facsimile of living the [[life]] of an [[animal]]. The general Bud-dhist [[teaching]] is that a [[life]] heavily dominated by [[delusion]] directs one toward [[rebirth]] as an [[animal]]; a [[life]] heavily domi-nated by [[craving]] leads to [[rebirth]] in a [[hungry ghost realm]]; and a [[life]] heavily dominated by [[malice]] or [[cruelty]] heads one toward [[rebirth]] in a [[hell realm]].
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I will give you an example of a [[rebirth]] in a [[Buddhist]] [[hell]]. Keep in [[mind]] these [[rebirths]], all of them, are no more
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substantial than [[dreams]]. A [[Buddhist]] [[hell]] is not a place in the center of the [[earth]] or on the back of the [[moon]]. If one takes [[rebirth]] in a [[hell]], the [[hell]] you [[experience]] comes into [[existence]], like a [[dream]], at the time you are born there and, also like a [[dream]], seems very real while you are there. One of the [[Buddhist]] [[hell realms]] is called "again and again revi-talized." In this [[hell]], you and all the [[people]] around you have [[weapons]]. You are in [[constant]] hand-to-hand combat, maybe {{Wiki|killing}} a few of the other inhabitants of the [[dream]] before someone rams you through with a big spike and you [[die]]. But then you come right back to [[life]] and fight again. This happens over and over: fight, kill and get killed, come right back. That situation continues until the tendency that propelled you there wears itself out.
  
The goal of [[Dharma practice]] is to realize a [[state]] of genuine well-being that flows from a wellspring of [[awareness]] that is [[pure]] and unobscured. The {{Wiki|ancient Greeks}} called such a [[state]] eudaimonia, a truth-given [[joy]]. The [[ancient]] {{Wiki|Indians}} called it [[mahasukha]], great [[bliss]] that arises not from [[pleasurable]] {{Wiki|stimuli}}, but from the [[nature]] of one's [[own]] [[pure awareness]] itself. This is not simply a [[happy]] [[feeling]]; it is a [[state]] of be-ing that underlies and suffuses all [[emotional states]], that embraces all the joys and sorrows that come our way. It is a way of engaging with [[life]] without [[confusion]]. The {{Wiki|ancient Greeks}} knew about it. The {{Wiki|Indians}} and [[Tibetans]] know about it. Funny that we don't have a [[word]] for it in {{Wiki|modern}} En-glish. Maybe it has something to do with the fact that we know a lot more about [[mental]] {{Wiki|disease}} than we do about {{Wiki|mental health}}.
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In [[non-human realms]], unfortunately, the laws of [[karma]] also hold. There is a caveat, however. The greater your in-telligence, the greater your [[understanding]] and [[wisdom]], the greater impact your [[actions]] have. [[Animals]] [[accumulate]] a small amount of [[karma]] for [[aggression]], but a [[human being]] with the same {{Wiki|behavior}} accumulates much heavier [[karma]].
Years ago I asked the Director of the National Institute of {{Wiki|Mental Health}} how the {{Wiki|medical}} profession defined {{Wiki|mental health}}. He replied that they didn't have any widely agreed upon [[definition]], for they didn't have enough {{Wiki|data}}! They have plenty of {{Wiki|data}} on {{Wiki|mental disorders}}, though, and according to conservative estimates, one in five persons, at least in
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The {{Wiki|metaphor}} of the [[tortoise]] cruising around in the ocean surfacing for [[air]] every hundred years is also descriptive of what is necessary for an [[animal]] to be [[reincarnated]] in a hu-man [[realm]]. From the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, [[compassion]] is rare in the [[animal realm]] but it is there. In the [[hungry ghost realm]], [[compassion]] is even rarer, and rarer still in the [[hell realms]]. However, again there is a loophole. Because of the [[relative]] difficulty of [[compassion]] in [[non-human realms]], the [[karmic]] significance of even a little bit of [[compassion]] is great. It is said that in a [[hell realm]], a being who has [[compassion]] for another is immediately {{Wiki|liberated}}.
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Think of an example from your [[own]] [[life]] when you felt you were in [[hell]]. How difficult was it to [[feel]] genuine com-passion for someone else? Not impossible, but certainly
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difficult because we tend to be absorbed in our [[own]] feel-ings and problems. It is not easy for [[virtue]] to arise in the midst of [[craving]] and [[obsession]], or when the [[mind]] is de-luded. This is why once you take [[rebirth]] in a [[miserable]] [[state]] of [[existence]] it is very difficult to get out.
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From the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, the type of [[fortune]] we encounter, [[happiness]] or [[sorrow]], is not due to somebody doing something to us. If I win the lottery, it is not because [[Buddha]] selected me for a bonus. No [[god]] or [[buddha]] is re-sponsible for what happens to us. Rather, our circumstances are fundamentally created by previous [[actions]]. This is a [[dangerous]] statement if misunderstood. A very unfortunate misinterpretation of what the [[Buddha]] was getting at in his [[teaching]] about [[karma]] is the conclusion that other people's [[suffering]] is simply their [[own]] fault. The [[Buddha]] did not teach that a child [[suffering]] from {{Wiki|disease}} or hunger brought this [[suffering]] upon himself. The [[Buddhist]] explanation of [[suffering]] is that a [[deed]] embedded in the {{Wiki|continuum}} of con-sciousness eventually gives rise to {{Wiki|consequences}}. The [[deed]] may have occurred in this [[life]] or many lifetimes ago. This does not imply that a [[suffering]] [[person]] is {{Wiki|morally}} degener-ate any more than [[suffering]] the {{Wiki|consequences}} of eating con-taminated [[food]] does. The [[suffering]] we [[experience]] is due to [[karma]] [[accumulated]] under the influence of [[delusion]] and [[mental afflictions]]. This is true for all [[sentient beings]].
  
the [[Wikipedia:United States of America (USA)|United States]], will have a serious, diagnosable, and treatable {{Wiki|mental disorder}} some time during their lifetime.1
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The [[person]] witnessing another person's [[suffering]] has only one appropriate response: "How can I help?" When [[karma]] comes to [[fruition]] and [[causes]] [[suffering]], the response should never be, "This is your [[karma]]. It's your [[destiny]], so I can't help." Your [[own]] [[karma]] may very well {{Wiki|present}} itself as an opportunity to help a [[suffering]] [[person]]. Misunder-standing [[actions]] and their {{Wiki|consequences}} can be disastrous.
Even for those of us who are not presently [[suffering]] from a diagnosable [[mental]] {{Wiki|disease}}, it's high time to ask: what's so great about being normal? When we're normal, we're still [[subject]] to a wide range of [[mental]] problems, with their resultant {{Wiki|distress}}. Let's now ask the provocative question: how [[mentally]] healthy could we possibly we be? Is there a limit? How in {{Wiki|touch}} with [[reality]] would we have to be to achieve supreme {{Wiki|mental health}}? A [[path]] that has stood the test of centuries is the [[practice of Dharma]]. And what is [[Dharma]]? One meaning of "[[Dharma]]" is simply [[truth]], spe-cifically those [[truths]] that, when [[realized]], lead to a [[state]] of genuine, lasting [[happiness]] that is not contingent upon plea-surable {{Wiki|stimuli}}. In terms of our overall well-being, [[Dharma]] includes important [[truths]] concerning [[diet]], exercise, and medication, as well as [[spiritual practice]]. Indeed, the theories and practices of [[traditional]] [[Tibetan medicine]] are commonly viewed by its practitioners as integral [[elements]] of Dharma.2
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The [[Buddhist]] response to the [[non-virtues]] we all commit while strapped to the [[wheel of samsara]] can be inspiring
In the [[Tibetan Buddhist]] context, there are several criteria for discriminating between what is and is not [[Dharma]]. One criterion for [[Dharma]] is whether or not a {{Wiki|theory}} or practice leads to [[spiritual awakening]]. From a [[traditional]] viewpoint, another criterion for [[Dharma]] is anything that aids [[spiritual awakening]] in this [[life]] or beyond this [[life]]. Using this crite-rion, there are ways of conduct and ways of viewing [[reality]] that are beneficial beyond the context of this [[present life]]. There is a third very {{Wiki|pragmatic}} criterion for determining what can be considered [[Dharma]] that doesn't depend on [[belief]] in [[enlightenment]] or [[reincarnation]]. This criterion of practicing [[Dharma]] is engaging with all events in ways that are {{Wiki|realistic}} and conducive to one's [[own]] and others' well-being. When things go well, are there ways to [[experience]] deeper [[joy]] and [[satisfaction]]? When things go wrong, is there
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and encouraging. The [[Buddhist teaching]] is that it is pos-sible to neutralize negative [[karmic seeds]] embedded in the [[stream of consciousness]]. [[Deeds]] cannot be undone, but it is possible to {{Wiki|purify}} one's [[mind-stream]] so that the impact of [[karmic seeds]] will be nullified.
anything we can do that would still enhance our overall well-being? Ways of bringing forth a [[sense]] of fulfillment and meaning during the inevitable ups and downs of [[life]] are also considered [[Dharma]].
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The method used to {{Wiki|purify}} the [[mind-stream]] is the "four remedial [[powers]]." The {{Wiki|metaphor}} for the effectiveness of the four remedial [[powers]] is that of burning a seed. [[Karma]], like a seed, can be scorched in the [[fire]] of [[purification]] so that it will not sprout. The seed won't vanish, but it will not sprout.
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The first of the four remedial [[powers]] is [[remorse]], regard-ing a misdeed as detrimental. [[Remorse]] is sincerely focusing on a misdeed, taking {{Wiki|responsibility}} for it, and regretting having done it. [[Remorse]] also includes [[acknowledging]] con-sequences. Just as [[remorse]] is a step toward nullifying the impact of a negative [[karmic seed]], [[rejoicing]] in [[virtue]] em-powers its [[positive karma]]. [[Tsongkhapa]] said that the easiest way to [[empower]] the [[mind]] in [[virtue]] is to take [[delight]] in [[virtue]]. In the same vein, [[rejoicing]] about something malevo-lent, such as congratulating yourself on sarcasm, [[empowers]] the negative {{Wiki|propensity}} of the [[karmic seed]].
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[[Rejoicing]] enhances and [[remorse]] helps neutralize the effect of [[karmic imprints]] on the [[mind-stream]]. Another ex-ample: If you give a [[homeless]] [[person]] five dollars but walk away [[thinking]], "He would have [[thought]] I was just as gen-erous if I had given him only two dollars. Then I could have bought myself a coffee and newspaper," that [[remorse]] just neutralized the [[karmic]] [[benefit]] from your five-dollar beneficence.
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[[Remorse]] is hazardous when conflated with [[guilt]]. Re-morse is [[wholesome]] because it focuses on an event. [[Guilt]] is an {{Wiki|afflictive}} [[state of mind]] focused on the [[self]] as in, "I am an unworthy [[person]]." [[Guilt]], a [[reification]] of the [[self]] around
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negative {{Wiki|tendencies}}, is simply another [[mental affliction]]. Properly directed [[remorse]], on the other hand, can be very helpful for disengaging from [[unwholesome]] {{Wiki|tendencies}}.
  
These three criteria define [[Dharma]] but are not exclusive to [[Buddhism]]. [[Dharma]] can be found in [[non-Buddhist]] [[paths]] and even outside of [[religious practice]] altogether. The test of whether a practice or {{Wiki|theory}} is [[Dharma]] is whether it re-sults in [[benefit]] throughout the inevitable [[vicissitudes of life]].
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The second remedial power is reliance. When we have harmed other [[sentient beings]], the remedial power of reli-ance is [[cultivating]] [[compassion]] for others; and when we have behaved wrongly toward [[spiritually]] [[realized beings]] or their teachings, the power of reliance is entrusting ourselves to their guidance.
On the one hand, we may [[feel]] [[Dharma practice]] seems difficult, time-consuming, and filled with problems. From another {{Wiki|perspective}}, if what we really want is to [[practice Dharma]], we get immediate gratification. [[Dharma]] can be practiced anytime: on [[happy]] occasions or when we are sick. Just as soon as we want to practice, we can. But if [[Dharma]] is practiced only as a means to an end, such as to get more [[money]] or have [[people]] like us, then we are in a situation of delayed gratification.
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The third of the four remedial [[powers]] is resolve, turning away from {{Wiki|misconduct}}. The power of resolve is stopping [[unwholesome]] {{Wiki|behavior}} by the strength of [[determination]] and [[decision]].
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The final remedial power is [[purification]]. This is also called "applying the antidote," and entails doing something that counteracts or neutralizes the negative [[deed]]. For ex-ample, if the [[deed]] involved {{Wiki|killing}}, applying the antidote would be protecting [[life]].
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[[Buddhist tradition]] teaches that through the four reme-dial [[powers]] it is possible to completely extinguish the [[potency]] of even the most virulent [[deeds]]. There is no [[deed]] so [[evil]] that it cannot be [[purified]]. [[Milarepa]] said that the aim of his [[Dharma practice]] was to [[die]] without [[remorse]]. His point was that if you have engaged in [[non-virtuous]] [[deeds]], it is im-portant to {{Wiki|purify}} their [[karmic imprints]] on your [[mind-stream]] while you have the freedom to do so; {{Wiki|purify}} [[karmic]] [[deeds]] in this [[life]] so that you don't carry negative imprints into the dying process. Crossing the threshold of [[death]] is a really bad time for [[remorse]] to arise.
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The [[Buddhist]] scheme also accounts for grace, influence from outside the cycle of [[suffering]], which is a powerful source of [[purification]]. It is said that the power of compas-sion, [[mercy]], and grace of the [[enlightened ones]] is [[infinite]]. To open ourselves to grace, just as in [[Christianity]] and other
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[[religions]], we need to open to it with [[faith]]. If you don't have [[faith]], follow carefully the tenfold law by engaging in vir-tue and avoiding [[non-virtue]] and you will still come out all right.
  
What does it mean to "[[practice Dharma]]"? It is not one technique, not just [[meditation]]. You can develop a reper-toire of [[Dharma practices]] for every occasion. When you start to understand the richness and diversity of [[Dharma practice]], you will see that even if you are stressed out, tired, or {{Wiki|depressed}}, you can still practice. Even when you are dying, you can [[practice Dharma]]. You can become a [[skillful]] chef of [[Dharma]] using its rich and varied recipes to make any situation into a source of fulfillment and [[happiness]]. When what you really want is to [[practice Dharma]], you find more and more ability to do so in a wider variety of situa-tions. [[Dharma]] is like [[medicine]]; it is designed to help stop the habitual behaviors and attitudes that impede the ca-pacity of the [[mind]] to heal itself. The more you [[practice Dharma]], the more [[Dharma]] unveils your natural inborn [[happiness]].
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We have now covered the First Point of the [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]]: "First, train in the preliminaries." The preliminaries are four discursive [[meditations]] upon the pre-ciousness of a [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]] of leisure and opportunity; [[death]] and [[impermanence]]; [[suffering]]; and [[karma]]. The preliminar-ies accelerate disillusionment with false [[dharmas]] so that we don't have to learn their lessons by long hard [[experience]]. At whatever age you start, ten years or eighty, you can get on the fast track to [[spiritual awakening]] if you realize at the outset what doesn't work.
The [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]] is the [[essence]] of [[Dharma]], a concise array of [[methods]] to achieve genuine [[happiness]] no {{Wiki|matter}} what our circumstances. In its fullest [[dimension]], the Mind-Training is also a [[complete path to enlightenment]]. The seven points begin, "First, train in the preliminaries," and lay the foundation for effective [[Dharma]]. You don't have to be [[spiritual]] or [[intellectual]] to [[practice Dharma]] effectively. What's needed is to saturate the [[mind]] with two challenges: a thorough {{Wiki|evaluation}} of ordinary [[life]] and a thorough {{Wiki|evaluation}} of [[human]] potential.
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Disillusionment with the [[mundane]] pursuits of [[happiness]] is not enough, nor is fathoming the depth of [[suffering]] or the variety of [[evil]] in the [[world]]. [[Knowledge]] of these might make you a good [[existential]] [[philosopher]], but it won't give you the inspiration to devote yourself to [[spiritual practice]]. {{Wiki|Theoretical}} [[understanding]] comes from reading, hearing lec-tures, conversing, [[thinking]]. But {{Wiki|theoretical}} [[understanding]] is like a recipe in a cookbook, and a recipe is not the same as a meal. It is only from practicing [[Dharma]] that sustained inspiration for [[spiritual practice]] is derived. The practice [[it-self]] nourishes you with a [[sense]] of [[happiness]] and well-being. [[Suffering]] is diminished. The benefits of [[Dharma]] are tested by [[Dharma practice]] itself.
This First Point, a single line of a text of only about four pages, represents a vast [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[teaching]]. In the {{Wiki|metaphor}} of [[spiritual practice]] as a journey, the [[practitioner]] must find a qualified guide, a reliable [[vehicle]], an accurate map, and the best [[methods]]. The "preliminaries" serve as a {{Wiki|compass}}, keeping efforts directed toward the [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] goal. The preliminaries address unexamined {{Wiki|assumptions}} not easily identified and even more difficult to [[root]] out. There-fore, at the beginning of [[Dharma practice]] and periodically afterward, returning to the preliminaries keeps [[spiritual practice]] well-tuned and prevents wasting time in detours.
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The Second Point:
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[[Cultivating]] [[Ultimate and Relative]] [[Bodhichitta]]
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The [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]] is a quintessential guide to [[enlightenment]], which is defined in the Second Point as "[[cultivating]] [[ultimate and relative]] [[bodhichitta]]." The San-skrit [[word]] [[bodhi]] means [[awakening]], and one who [[is awake]] is called a [[buddha]]. [[Chitta]] means [[mind]], [[heart]], and [[spirit]], so I translate [[bodhichitta]] as a [[spirit]] of [[awakening]]. With [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[bodhichitta]] we probe [[the nature of reality]] to realize its [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] [[nature]]. [[Relative bodhichitta]] is the {{Wiki|altruistic}} aspi-ration to realize {{Wiki|perfect}} [[spiritual awakening]] for the [[sake]] of all [[sentient beings]].
  
"Preliminary" isn't a code [[word]] for "skip this and get to the important stuff." The important stuff starts here. This is it, no warm-up. When I went to {{Wiki|Dharamsala}}, [[India]], in 1971 to study [[meditation]], I received teachings from the [[Tibetan lama]] [[Geshe Ngawang Dhargyey]]. He spent weeks discuss-ing the preliminaries and I kept wondering when he was going to get around to [[meditation]]. Slowly it dawned on me that he was [[teaching]] discursive [[meditation]]. [[Meditation]] is not only settling your [[mind]] and finding stillness, it is also bringing shape and meaning to [[conceptual thought]] by refining the way we view the [[world]]. It is the [[quality]] of practice of the preliminaries that determines over the long run whether what we are practicing is genuine [[Dharma]] or
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The [[cultivation]] of [[relative bodhichitta]] is like a mountain climber skillfully throwing a grappling hook up to a ledge to which he is climbing. The climber, confident in his hook, puts all his {{Wiki|weight}} on the line, and starts the upward [[ascent]]. A skillfully placed grappling hook is a climber's connec-tion with his [[Wikipedia:Absolute (philosophy)|ultimate]] destination. [[Bodhichitta]] is the grappling hook for the [[attainment]] of [[enlightenment]]. [[Bodhichitta]] is also the basis of continuity of practice. If you [[die]] suddenly or become so ill that your capacity for practice steeply de-clines, bodhichitta—the [[aspiration]] for {{Wiki|perfect}} [[awakening]] in order to be of service to others—will provide continuity over the lapses in practice and continue to draw you like a magnet toward [[enlightenment]] from one [[lifetime]] to the next.
a [[dharma]] look-alike. The preliminaries are discursive [[meditations]], situated at the very beginning of the Mind-Training to save time.
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After solid grounding in the discursive [[meditations]] of the preliminaries, the Second Point of the [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]] moves directly to [[enlightenment]] itself, the [[cultivation]] and {{Wiki|integration}} of [[ultimate and relative]] [[bodhichitta]]. The Second Point begins the {{Wiki|training}} in for-mal daily [[meditation]] to integrate [[Dharma]] into active daily [[life]].
All of my [[Tibetan]] [[teachers]] have emphasized the prelimi-naries, but none more so than [[Gyatrul Rinpoche]]. He was raised and trained [[in Tibet]] and has [[taught]] [[Dharma]] in the [[West]] for twenty-five years. He sees his long-term students struggling with the same old stuff and asks us, "Why do I teach you all the advanced practices of [[Dzogchen]] and [[Mahamudra]] when you are still in kindergarten? Go back and learn your ABC's." He is referring to the preliminaries, especially relevant for [[Westerners]] who tend to put a lot of muscle into [[spiritual practice]] and later, sometimes years later, [[wonder]] why there is so little result. The preliminaries are [[Dharma]] insurance to prevent [[spiritual practice]] from just being new packaging for old [[habits]].
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In [[traditional]] [[Buddhist practice]], one begins every ses-sion by [[taking refuge]], entrusting oneself to the "[[three jewels]]": those who have achieved {{Wiki|perfect}} [[spiritual]] awak-ening, [[Dharma]] as the [[path]] to such [[awakening]], and the [[spiritual community]] that is committed to [[enlightenment]]. Upon the foundation of [[refuge]], [[bodhichitta]], the [[highest]] mo-tivation, is cultivated with the heartfelt [[prayer]]: "May my practice be of [[benefit]] for the [[spiritual awakening]] of all [[sentient beings]]." This [[prayer]] nurtures our [[highest]] possible [[motivation]], [[enlightenment]] for the {{Wiki|welfare}} of others.
The preliminaries are four [[traditional]] discursive medi-tations called "the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]]." These [[meditations]] turn our [[minds]] toward our [[highest]] [[aspirations]] and progressively reorder priorities. Discursive [[meditation]] is [[thinking]] deeply about a chosen [[subject]] and can be done in spare moments during the day. No special [[posture]] is required. Discursive [[meditation]] is a very {{Wiki|practical}} way of integrating [[Dharma practice]] into everyday [[life]].
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Once you have achieved stability, reveal the {{Wiki|mystery}}.
The Rare and [[Precious Human Life]] of Leisure and Opportunity
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The Second Point moves directly to the {{Wiki|contemplative}} in-vestigation of [[the nature of reality]] and [[consciousness]] itself. The brief {{Wiki|mnemonic}} of the text encapsulates some of the deepest [[insight]] practices in [[Tibetan Buddhism]]. The [[insight]] practices [[taught]] here probe the [[nature]] of [[consciousness]] and its [[relation]] to [[reality]], which is the {{Wiki|mystery}} to be revealed. The stability referred to is [[meditative]] stability, [[mental]] bal-ance, the prerequisite to the {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[investigation]] of the [[ultimate nature of mind]] and [[reality]]. The [[mind]] is stabi-lized and refined into an instrument of [[investigation]], which is the foundation for [[the cultivation of wisdom]] and com-passion. This is the quintessential method for revealing the {{Wiki|mystery}}.
  
The first of the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]] is: "the [[precious]] and rare [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]] of leisure and opportunity." Each of the terms in this phrase—precious, rare, leisure, and opportunity—is a {{Wiki|mnemonic}} to bring to [[mind]] instan-taneously and deeply specific teachings and [[experience]].
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The [[hand gesture]], or [[mudra]], commonly used in the medi-tative [[posture]] [[symbolizes]] the goal of the Second Point, the union of [[ultimate and relative]] [[bodhichitta]]: the right hand,
In the line "[[precious human life]] of leisure and opportu-nity," leisure means time. Some [[people]] live in situations in
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[[symbolizing]] [[compassion]], rests on the left hand, which [[symbolizes]] [[wisdom]]. The [[touching]] of the two thumbs [[symbolizes]] the union of [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]], both the [[path]] and the goal of [[Buddhist practice]].
which there is no leisure, in which every [[breath]] is commit-ted to finding [[food]], keeping warm, or dodging bomb shells. If you live in an area of pestilence, famine or [[war]], you have no leisure. Leisure means having time to [[breathe]] the {{Wiki|present}}, and it makes it possible to drench the [[heart]] and [[mind]] in [[Dharma]]. Leisure is an [[empty]] vessel that can be filled with the [[nectar]] of [[Dharma]].
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Achieving stability is central to the Second Point of the Mind-Training and has two {{Wiki|interrelated}} aspects. One as-pect of stability is [[faith]], or [[confidence]], which is a theme shared by all [[religious]] [[traditions]]. The other aspect is medita-tive stabilization, a practice highly developed in the [[Buddhist tradition]].
Leisure is one of the greatest benefits of {{Wiki|civilization}}. Without {{Wiki|civilization}}, [[life]] is absorbed with growing, {{Wiki|killing}} or protecting the next meal. With {{Wiki|civilization}}, we can ar-range time off, vacations, weekends, a lunch break. We can decide how to use leisure. This first discursive [[meditation]] increases [[appreciation]] for free time. Unfortunately, in our {{Wiki|culture}} leisure time is often devoted to catching up, getting ahead or battery recharging for a return to work. We have this weird [[phrase]] that leisure time is "time to kill." We need to work and we need to [[sleep]], but the critical point here is that leisure should not just be a way to revitalize after a hard day at work. Using leisure time beneficially within a workaholic [[ethic]] requires shifting our priorities. This means gradually having work support [[spiritual practice]] and en-suring that [[spiritual practice]] does not just become a tool for improving work performance.
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[[Faith]]
Opportunity is the second [[quality]] of this [[precious human life]]. [[Tibetans]] have a list of ten kinds of opportunities that focus on the ability, [[desire]], open-mindedness, and [[faith]] to engage in [[spiritual practice]]. Opportunity also includes find-ing the appropriate circumstances for practice, [[including]] a [[spiritual]] [[tradition]] that is compatible with your [[own]] aspi-ration and {{Wiki|temperament}}. The benefits of [[Dharma]] arise from leisure and opportunity, the fortuitous combination of abil-ity and circumstances. The coming together of these factors, at any time in any [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]], is "rare." These factors are "[[precious]]" because they are what is necessary to obtain the
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In our {{Wiki|modern}}, highly {{Wiki|secular}} [[world]], we are not only over-whelmed with [[information]], but we are cast into an ocean of conflicting [[religious]], [[philosophical]], and [[scientific]] claims about the [[nature]] of the [[universe]] and [[human existence]]. No [[human]] [[society]] in recorded history has ever been presented with such a diversity of [[views]], many of them presented as if with great authority. Now in the midst of this cacophony of {{Wiki|voices}}, we are presented with the teachings of the Bud-dha and later [[teachers]] who have followed the [[path]] he revealed. When we first encounter the [[Buddha]] indirectly through his teachings, we meet with a stranger from a faraway time and a faraway place. It doesn't get much stranger than that. And when we first encounter [[Buddhist teachings]], many of them certainly do seem strange, for they fly in the face of many [[views]] held by our [[society]] at large.
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The [[Buddha]] himself as well as contemporary [[Wikipedia:Authenticity|authentic]] [[Buddhist teachers]] do not {{Wiki|present}} themselves as unques-tionable authorities on [[the nature of reality]], nor as [[masters]] who instruct us infallibly on how to lead our [[lives]]. These [[teachers]] offer themselves to us above all as friends, specifi-cally as [[spiritual]] friends, and as guides to lead us on an experiential journey in the pursuit of [[knowledge]] and [[personal transformation]]. But when we first meet them, they are strangers, and it is perfectly appropriate to respond to their teachings with [[agnosticism]] and {{Wiki|skepticism}}. After all, when assuming a stance of [[agnosticism]], we are quite realistically [[acknowledging]] that we don't know—the first step toward [[wisdom]]! And by taking a position of {{Wiki|skepticism}}, we are in effect saying, "I [[doubt]] that you know either." Considering the wide range of authoritative claims being made today about everything from the [[nature]] of [[consciousness]] to UFOs, in many cases such {{Wiki|skepticism}} has to be well founded.
  
[[jewel]] of [[life]], genuine [[happiness]], and [[spiritual awakening]], the results of successful [[spiritual practice]].
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But if we want to know, if we want to make genuine dis-coveries about matters that are of life-and-death importance to us, we have to move beyond [[agnosticism]]. If we are totally convinced that no one else has discovered what we want to know, then we have no one to rely but ourselves. But what are our grounds for being so certain that no one else [[knows]] about what we are after? If we are to be skeptical, surely we should start by being skeptical about how much we know about how much everyone else [[knows]]! If I'm re-ally agnostic, I have to start with the premise that I don't know whether you might have made important discover-ies that I have not. Likewise, just because our {{Wiki|Western civilization}} is [[ignorant]] in some respects, it would be silly to assume that no other {{Wiki|civilization}} has made important discoveries where we have not.
[[Spiritual practice]] is not a shortcut to the [[American]] [[Dream]] nor is it an embellishment to a comfortable [[life]]. [[Dharma]] addresses the [[root causes]] of [[suffering]] and requires that we take a hard look at the preconceptions that maintain our worldview and perpetuate our problems. As much as suc-cess seems to be the source of the good things in [[life]], [[happiness]] included, [[success]] isn't the goal of [[spiritual]] prac-tice. Our [[ideas]] about [[success]] are themselves based on preconceptions and are also part of a self-perpetuating cycle preventing us from achieving the genuine [[success]] and [[happiness]] that we seek.
 
The [[Buddhist tradition]] addresses preconceptions about [[success]] head-on with an eight-term differential diagnosis called "the eight [[mundane]] concerns," eight orientations toward the pursuit of [[happiness]] based on unexamined as-sumptions. Fixation on these concerns subverts our best efforts, leading either to counterfeit [[success]] or true [[frustration]].
 
  
The eight [[mundane]] concerns consist of four pairs of priorities: the pursuit of material acquisitions and the avoid-ance of their loss; the pursuit of stimulus-driven [[pleasure]] and the avoidance of discomfort; the pursuit of praise and the avoidance of blame; and the pursuit of good reputation and the avoidance of bad reputation. These eight concerns commonly sum up our [[motivation]] for the pursuit of hap-piness, and this is exactly the problem. The eight [[mundane]] concerns, not wrong in themselves, underlie our [[motivation]], and it is [[motivation]] more than any other single factor that determines the outcome of [[spiritual practice]].
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When it comes to [[knowledge]], {{Wiki|Western civilization}} has made enormous strides, especially since the [[Scientific]] Revo-lution. We can take great [[pride]] and [[satisfaction]] in our many discoveries concerning the [[world]] around us. But one do-main of [[reality]] in which we still remain {{Wiki|scientifically}} in the dark is the [[realm of consciousness]]. It's just not science's strong point. However, precisely where [[science]] is at its weakest, the [[Buddhist tradition]] makes its strongest and most astonishing truth-claims. The only way we know of
There is nothing bad about having material acquisitions— a car, a house; and, conversely, {{Wiki|poverty}} is not necessarily a [[virtue]]. There is nothing wrong with enjoying a sunset, a
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the [[existence]] of [[consciousness]] is by means of our first-per-son [[experience]], and the [[Buddhist tradition]] has devised many ingenious [[methods]] for enhancing and refining this mode of [[perception]] so that we can probe more deeply into the [[nature]], origins, and potentials of [[consciousness]]. In any early account of the [[Buddha's life]] and teachings, it is obvi-ous that he claimed to have made bold discoveries based on his [[own]] [[meditative]] [[experience]]. If you read how he re-sponded to many of the [[metaphysical]] assertions of his time, you will see that he wasn't one for simply adopting wholesale the [[beliefs]] of his contemporaries.
good [[book]], [[pleasant]] [[conversation]], or beautiful [[music]]. It is not a bad thing to be praised. Being loved and respected by others is not bad either. On the other hand, it is not bad to be rejected by others if you are leading a [[wholesome]] and meaningful [[life]]. Many accomplished [[Dharma]] practitioners are content and [[happy]] living in total {{Wiki|poverty}}. Reputation may go up and down, but it is possible for [[contentment]] to remain [[constant]]. The true [[source of happiness]] does not lie in [[mastery]] of the eight [[mundane]] concerns. Rich, poor, praised, blamed, stimulated, bored, respected, reviled— none of these [[mundane]] concerns are in themselves sources of [[happiness]]. Nor do they prevent [[happiness]].
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For example, the earliest account of his [[enlightenment]] makes it clear that his claims about the [[reality]] and signifi-cance of the continuity of [[individual consciousness]] after [[death]] were based on his [[own]] experiential knowledge.12 In evaluating his claims, we may conclude that he was right or that he was wrong, but there is nothing to imply that he was agnostic or that he lifted these [[ideas]] from someone else. His assertions about [[rebirth]] and [[karma]] were unique in his time. One of his remarkable claims that was inspired initially by other contemplatives is that the scope and pre-cision of [[mental perception]] can be enormously enhanced by {{Wiki|training}} in [[meditative concentration]]. In a broader [[sense]], he claimed that the [[mental afflictions]] that beset us—such as {{Wiki|hostility}}, [[craving]], [[anxiety]], and delusion—are not immu-table. With {{Wiki|training}} they can be attenuated, and with deep {{Wiki|training}}, they can be eliminated completely.
  
The problem is that when we focus on [[mundane]] con-cerns as a means to [[happiness]], [[life]] becomes a crap shoot. There are no guarantees. If you aspire to material [[wealth]], you may not get it, but if you do, there is no guarantee you will be [[happy]]. If you aspire to [[pleasure]], once a {{Wiki|stimulus}} is over, so is [[satisfaction]]. There is no lasting [[happiness]] in scur-rying after praise. [[People]] who are respected and famous tend to have the same personal problems as everyone else. The fatal shortcoming of the eight [[mundane]] concerns is that they are counterfeit [[Dharma]], misguided ways of seeking [[happiness]], and by habitually mistaking [[mundane]] concerns for genuine [[Dharma]], our efforts to achieve genuine [[happiness]] are continually undermined.
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How do we know whether he knew what he was talking about? Simply put, we don't. We start out as {{Wiki|agnostics}}. But if we want to find out, the only way to proceed is to put the {{Wiki|training}} to the test of our [[own]] [[experience]]. Here is a time not for {{Wiki|skepticism}}, but for {{Wiki|intelligent}} [[faith]]. {{Wiki|William James}} com-ments in this regard that where preferences are powerless to modify or produce things, [[faith]] is totally inappropriate, but
The First Point of the Mind-Training is to train in the preliminaries in order to be able to differentiate between genuine and counterfeit [[Dharma]]. If you bank on achieving genuine [[happiness]] and fulfillment by finding the {{Wiki|perfect}} mate, getting a great car, having a big house, the best insurance, a fine reputation, the top job—if these are your focus, wish also for [[luck]] in life's lottery. The [[objective]] of the First Point is to save time. Don't wait until you are eighty years old to realize the shortcomings of the eight [[mundane]]
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for the class of facts that depend on personal preference, [[trust]], or loyalty for actualization, "[[faith]] is not only licit and pertinent, but [[essential]] and indispensable. The [[truths]] can-not become true till our [[faith]] has made them so."13 We will never progress in [[Buddhist practice]], in [[education]], or in any other great venture without such [[faith]], starting with [[faith]] in our [[own]] ability to gain new [[knowledge]] and [[transform]] ourselves in meaningful ways.
concerns; examine your priorities now. There is no need to reject these [[mundane]] concerns altogether. What is necessary is to shift your primary investment elsewhere, to genuine [[Dharma]]. Once priorities shift, the [[mundane]] concerns serve as supports for [[Dharma practice]]. {{Wiki|Learning}} to distinguish between the many types of pseudo-success, the many fac-similes of [[happiness]], and genuine [[happiness]] saves time and [[grief]] in the long run. The goal of genuine [[Dharma]] is to achieve genuine [[happiness]].
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When we first meet the [[Buddha]] indirectly (through his teachings) or a contemporary [[Buddhist teacher]] directly, we are meeting with a stranger. But if we cultivate the rela-tionship, over time, we get to know the qualities of the [[teacher]], and he or she may earn our [[trust]]. Then the [[teacher]] becomes a [[friend]] on whom we can rely for matters that are important to us, [[including]] matters that are presently be-yond our ken. After getting to know a specific [[Buddhist teacher]], if we find him untrustworthy or unhelpful, then we are free to choose another [[teacher]]. Likewise, if upon careful {{Wiki|examination}} we find the teachings of a certain Bud-dhist [[tradition]] to be unreliable, we can check out another [[Buddhist tradition]]. And if we find the [[Buddhist teachings]] as a whole to be unsound, we are free to look elsewhere. A number of my [[lamas]] have commented after giving public teachings, "If you find these teachings to be [[sound]] and use-ful, by all means put them into practice. If not, keep on looking!"
  
We have covered two words, leisure and opportunity, in the first of four preliminary discursive [[meditations]], "pre-cious [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]] of leisure and opportunity." Leisure and opportunity mean having the time, [[motivation]], and circum-stances to engage in [[spiritual practice]]. "Preciousness" refers to our [[human]] potential to eliminate the sources of [[suffering]] within our [[own]] being, to [[transform]] the [[mind]] so that, no {{Wiki|matter}} what the circumstances, we need never [[suffer]] from [[mental afflictions]] again. How? By identifying and progres-sively eradicating the full spectrum of the [[afflictions]] that are the source of [[suffering]]. [[Buddhism]] takes a radical view on [[suffering]], presenting the {{Wiki|hypothesis}} that it can be elimi-nated altogether. [[Suffering]] is eradicated not by finding [[psychological]] {{Wiki|anesthetics}} or disengaging from the [[world]], but by working from within to [[transform]] the [[mind]] itself. The way to eliminate [[suffering]] is to [[transform]] the [[mind]]. The [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]] is a flash card owner's manual on how to [[transform]] the [[mind]] using the raw material of [[life]].
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At the same time, we need to apply discerning intelli-gence to our [[own]] way of putting the teachings to the test. Do questionable [[Buddhist]] truth-claims violate [[reason]] or compelling [[empirical evidence]]? Or do they just violate our {{Wiki|assumptions}} and what the [[people]] around us think? What do we really know, and what have we picked up as un-tested {{Wiki|assumptions}} and preconceptions from our [[society]]? This is a time for self-directed {{Wiki|skepticism}}. And if we put
The [[word]] "[[precious]]" in the first of the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]] serves to point out that this [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]] is not as it first appears; it is a [[precious]] and unique opportunity. A [[Wikipedia:Human life|human life]] of leisure and opportunity is "[[precious]]" be-cause it is an opportunity to eradicate [[suffering]] and achieve genuine [[happiness]]. As we {{Wiki|witness}} other people's [[suffering]]
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the teachings into practice and find them ineffective, where does the inadequacy lie: in the teachings or in our [[own]] implementation of them? For example, the [[Buddha]] and many later [[Buddhist]] contemplatives claim to have achieved irreversible freedom from various [[mental afflictions]]. If we fail to do so, what have we proven? That they didn't either, or simply that we did not practice with sufficient [[diligence]] and [[intelligence]]?
  
and [[experience]] our [[own]], freedom from personal [[suffering]] and having [[compassion]] for others appear to be mutually exclusive. [[Compassion]] for others' [[suffering]] seems to in-crease our [[own]] [[suffering]], making [[detachment]] seem like the only reasonable route to one's [[own]] {{Wiki|individual}} [[happiness]]. But is this really so?
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On the one hand I'm inclined to say there are no easy answers to these questions. On the other hand, there is one kind of response that is relatively easy and untroubling. While we are at sea in the midst of uncertainty about the [[nature]] and potentials of our [[existence]], we can [[cling]] to ag-nosticism and {{Wiki|skepticism}} as we would [[cling]] desperately to an anchored buoy. This can provide us with a bit of secu-rity and an easy answer: "who [[knows]]?" Intellectually there seems to be safety here, immune to the ridicule of others. But there's also an immobility to this position. We are at sea in the midst of [[confusion]], and there we remain.
In 1992, I went with a group of [[neuroscientists]] to the [[Himalayas]] to study the effects of [[meditation]]. One of our topics of [[investigation]] was [[compassion]]. We asked an old [[Tibetan monk]], a [[teacher]] of many of the other [[yogis]] who lived in the [[mountains]], about the relationship between [[suffering]] and [[compassion]]. It is said in the [[Buddhist tradition]] that a [[bodhisattva]], a [[person]] who is continuously motivated to help [[sentient beings]] achieve [[spiritual awakening]], looks upon all [[sentient beings]] as a mother looks upon her child. When a child is {{Wiki|hurt}}, the mother [[feels]] [[compassion]] and suf-fers. Since the goal of [[Dharma]] is to alleviate [[suffering]], the [[neuroscientists]] and I asked the [[yogi]] about the relationship between [[suffering]] and [[compassion]].
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The [[Buddha]] is like one who swims out to meet us and shows us the way to shore. He says he has been there, and many discoveries lie in wait for us on land if we will let go of the buoy of our uncertainty, our faint-heartedness, and our {{Wiki|skepticism}}. Of course, there is nothing to compel us to place our [[trust]] in him or in any later [[Buddhist teacher]]. We can remain agnostic and skeptical as long as we like. But if we choose to accept the challenge of the [[Buddhist path]] of {{Wiki|contemplative}} exploration, we need to let go of our insecu-rities and take the plunge into practice. And this requires that we accept some of the [[Buddha's]] assertions on [[faith]] as working {{Wiki|hypotheses}}. The [[Buddhist tradition]] speaks of [[three kinds of faith]], and this is the first kind: the [[faith of belief]].
The old [[monk]] explained the [[relation]] of [[compassion]] and [[suffering]]: "{{Wiki|Empathetic}} [[suffering]] comes before [[compassion]]." The first stage of [[compassion]] is {{Wiki|empathy}}. With {{Wiki|empathy}}, there is [[suffering]]. But the [[suffering]] you [[feel]] by empathiz-ing then becomes fuel for the [[fire]] of [[compassion]]. {{Wiki|Empathy}} combined with what [[Tibetans]] call sem-shuk, or "power of the [[heart]]," kindles [[compassion]]. The power of [[compassion]] is beyond personal [[suffering]] and focuses on solutions, what can be done. The old [[yogi]] explained to the [[neuroscientists]] that when [[compassion]] arises, [[suffering]] is transcended and one attends to how to be of service. [[Suffering]] is the fuel of [[compassion]], not its result.
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How can we believe [[Buddhist]] truth-claims when there are so many diverse claims attributed to the [[Buddha]], let
The cumulative [[wisdom]] of centuries of [[Dharma]] practitio-ners states that with this [[precious human life]] of leisure and opportunity we have a fathomless capacity for [[compassion]].
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alone the many points of disagreement among different [[Buddhist traditions]]? Two things need to be borne in [[mind]] here. The first is that, according to even the earliest recorded [[teachings of the Buddha]], not all his assertions were meant as definitive [[truths]] about [[the nature of reality]]. Some of them are called "provisional [[truths]]," which are culturally imbed-ded and are meant more as {{Wiki|heuristic}} devices to help specific {{Wiki|individuals}} or communities at specific points in their spiri-tual [[development]]. But the [[Buddha]] and many later [[Buddhist]] contemplatives made many other truth-claims, based upon their [[meditative]] [[experience]], that were meant to be defini-tive. That is, they were presented as genuine discoveries about [[the nature of reality]], not just {{Wiki|social}} constructs specific to a particular time and place.
This same [[wisdom]] [[tradition]] tells us we have a fathomless capacity for [[wisdom]] and power. The [[human]] potential for {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[wisdom]], [[compassion]], and power, known to [[Buddhist]], [[Hindu]], [[Wikipedia:Taoism|Taoist]], [[Christian]], [[Wikipedia:Judaism|Jewish]], and {{Wiki|Muslim}} contemplatives, remains virtually unexplored in the mod-ern [[West]]. We have a dismissive term for the potential of the [[mind]]— "placebo." {{Wiki|Western culture}} associates the power of the [[mind]] with the power of a sugar pill. During the {{Wiki|past}} four hundred years, while delighting in its growing scien-tific prowess, the [[West]] has neglected the exploration and [[development]] of the innate [[human]] potential for [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]].
 
  
In the early 1970s, a [[friend]] of mine complained to the [[Dalai Lama]] about how difficult it is to become [[enlightened]] in such a "degenerate time" as ours. This has been a famil-iar refrain throughout the [[history of Buddhism]], with just about every generation referring to its [[own]] {{Wiki|era}} as a degen-erate time. But the [[Dalai Lama's]] response cut him short. He told him that the only [[reason]] so few [[people]] attain en-lightenment these days is that they are not practicing with the same [[diligence]] as the great {{Wiki|adepts}} of the {{Wiki|past}}. If [[people]] were to practice today with the same [[dedication]] as such great contemplatives as the [[Tibetan]] [[yogi]] [[Milarepa]], they would achieve the same results, regardless of how degenerate their times are.
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How are we to discern which [[Buddhist teachings]] are pro-visional and which are definitive? [[Buddhist tradition]] states that the [[cultivation]] of that kind of discerning [[intelligence]] is a crucial [[element]] on the [[path]] to [[spiritual]] {{Wiki|maturation}}. Put the teachings to the test of [[reason]] and [[experience]], and see what you find. As for the many truth-claims across mul-tiple [[Buddhist traditions]] over the {{Wiki|past}} 2,500 years, it would be unreasonable to expect that they would all speak with one {{Wiki|voice}}. Just look at the history of [[Western]] [[science]] over the {{Wiki|past}} four hundred years! And even today, in any cut-ting-edge branch of [[science]] there are disagreements, many of them quite fundamental.14 Once again, grappling with such diversity is a central challenge in the pursuit of knowl-edge. If we're not up to this challenge, we can always slide back to the stagnant {{Wiki|comfort}} of [[agnosticism]].
A key [[element]] in [[realizing]] the potential of our [[precious human life]] of leisure and opportunity is [[faith]]. [[Faith]] is also a prerequisite for a successful career. If you don't have [[faith]] in your chosen field, [[physics]] for example, it will be diffi-cult to complete a [[Ph.D.]] As in many endeavors, in [[science]] it is necessary to take many things, such as research out-side your specialty, on well-grounded [[faith]]. Well-grounded [[faith]] in our potential for [[wisdom]], [[compassion]], and power is an important part of what [[Buddhists]] mean by "opportunity."
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The [[faith of belief]] as a working {{Wiki|hypothesis}} is one kind of [[faith]] that is regarded as indispensable in the [[Buddhist]] tra-dition. A second kind of [[faith]] entails admiration for those who have achieved high states of [[spiritual realization]] and for their teachings. Such [[faith]] is not simply a {{Wiki|matter}} of [[belief]],
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but rather arises out of one's [[understanding]] and apprecia-tion of the [[noble]] qualities of such {{Wiki|individuals}} and the [[truths]] they reveal. And a third type of [[faith]] in [[Buddhism]] is the [[faith of aspiration]]. With the [[faith of aspiration]], the possi-bility of making genuine, deep discoveries about the [[nature]] of [[consciousness]], its origins, and its potentials becomes more than a {{Wiki|matter}} of [[belief]]. It is more than an apprecia-tion based on [[understanding]]. It is a fervent [[desire]] to test the teachings oneself by engaging in the practice. Now is the time when the [[extraordinary]] claims made by the Bud-dha and later [[Buddhist]] contemplatives are truly adopted as working {{Wiki|hypotheses}} to be tested by [[experience]].
  
Another type of [[faith]], [[blind faith]] that has no basis in [[reality]], is useless at best.
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[[Faith]] is important but is no substitute for putting spiri-tual teachings to the test. Does practice help or not? Are [[mental afflictions]] decreased and does genuine [[happiness]] increase? [[Constant]] {{Wiki|vigilance}}, assessment, and reassessment are required to follow a [[path]] of [[spiritual awakening]]. What is required is consistent probing, not settling into dogma-tism or complacency, and continuously testing the [[path]] for its effectiveness. Of course, we are testing not just "the [[path]]" but our [[intelligence]] and perseverance in following it, so we must be equally critical of our [[own]] efforts. This brings a type of stability, or [[faith]], that is in {{Wiki|motion}}, part of the process itself.
The preciousness of [[life]] is having time and circumstances to fulfill what [[Tsongkhapa]], a great fifteenth-century [[Tibetan Buddhist]] {{Wiki|contemplative}}, called our "eternal longing." This is a very significant statement because the [[Buddhist]] mean-ing of "eternal" includes all previous lifetimes, a very long time. The [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]] advises us to recog-nize right at the beginning our opportunity and potential. Also, be effective; don't get sidetracked. In this [[life]], you have a [[precious]] opportunity to fulfill your eternal longing to find genuine [[happiness]].
 
Leisure and opportunity are [[precious]] and rare. The Bud-dhist meaning of "rare" is based on [[Buddhist cosmology]], which in some respects is similar to {{Wiki|modern}} {{Wiki|astronomy}} concerning the size and age of the [[cosmos]]. [[Western]] astrono-mers speak of {{Wiki|solar}} systems, {{Wiki|galaxies}}, {{Wiki|galaxy}} [[clusters]], and {{Wiki|galaxy}} [[super-clusters]]. [[Western]] [[astronomers]] attempt to pin-point the date of the [[Big Bang]], one estimate being thirteen billion years ago. [[Buddhist cosmology]] agrees in [[principle]] with the {{Wiki|theory}} of the [[universe]] oscillating between cycles of Big Bang/development/Big Crunch, another [[Big Bang]]/ [[development]] /Big Crunch, but it places the history of our {{Wiki|present}} [[universe]] at considerably longer than thirteen billion years.
 
  
The [[Buddhist]] meaning of "rare" is embedded in the Bud-dhist [[cosmological]] worldview. Within the vast, oscillating billion-fold [[world]] systems inhabited by [[sentient beings]], [[Buddhists]] speak of six different modes of [[sentient]] [[life]], each with a different range of [[experience]]. Some [[beings]] have in-credible [[misery]], some incredible [[bliss]]. [[Human beings]] have the widest spectrum of [[experience]] extending from [[misery]] to [[bliss]]. [[Hell]] and [[heaven]], it is all here, giving "rare" a special meaning.
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{{Wiki|William James}} addressed the issue of [[faith]] in the context of the [[dogmatic]] and {{Wiki|materialistic}} [[mood]] of late nineteenth-century [[science]]. At the close of the nineteenth century, many [[scientists]] felt that [[religious]] [[belief]] was [[Wikipedia:Anti-life|antithetical]] to the [[rational]] and skeptical stance of [[science]]. For example, Will-iam Clifford, one of the more prominent nineteenth-century [[scientific]] [[Wikipedia:materialism|materialists]], attacked [[religious]] [[faith]] on the grounds that "it is wrong always, everywhere, and for everyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence."15 Many [[scientists]] considered [[religion]] to be a failure of
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[[intellectual]] [[integrity]], and [[faith]] to be a [[path]] of least resis tance for those unable to handle the brute facts of [[science]]. Some [[scientists]] today express the same sentiment, claim ing that [[religious]] [[people]] hold onto their [[beliefs]] because of an unfortunate {{Wiki|genetic}} [[predisposition]]. ;
  
Within this [[cycle of existence]], [[rebirth]] after [[rebirth]], ex-tending back through [[immeasurable]] time in an [[infinite]] cycle of [[universes]], there are rare occasions when we rise to a hu-man [[rebirth]] of leisure and opportunity. The [[Buddha]] used a {{Wiki|metaphor}} to exemplify the rarity of a [[precious human life]] of leisure and opportunity: [[Imagine]] a [[tortoise]] swimming submerged in a vast ocean and resurfacing only once every one hundred years. The times of [[human]] [[rebirth]] are similar to the infrequent times the [[tortoise]] comes up for [[air]]. Now [[imagine]] an ox's [[yoke]] floating on the same ocean. Consider the tortoise's chances of poking his head through the [[yoke]] when he comes up for [[air]] every hundred years. This is the meaning of "rarity" in "rare and [[precious human life]] of leisure and opportunity." The [[object]] of discursive medita-tion on the rare opportunity of a [[precious human life]] of leisure and opportunity is to motivate us to use our rare opportunity wisely.
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What such [[Wikipedia:materialism|materialists]] ignore, however, is that [[scientists]] and [[religious]] [[people]] alike, without exception, place their [[faith]] in some [[belief]] system which {{Wiki|transcends}} the scope of their {{Wiki|present}} [[knowledge]]. As {{Wiki|William James}} pointed out, whether in [[scientific]] research or in daily [[life]],
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We often cannot wait but must act, somehow; so we act on the most probable {{Wiki|hypothesis}}, trusting that the event may prove us [[wise]]. Moreover, not to act on one [[belief]] is often {{Wiki|equivalent}} to acting as if the opposite [[belief]] were true, so inaction would not always be as 'passive' as the intellectualists assume.16
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[[Faith]], he asserted, is [[essential]], but as a {{Wiki|practical}}, not a [[dogmatic]], [[attitude]], and it must go with toleration of other [[faiths]], with the search for the most probable, and with the [[full consciousness]] of responsibilities and [[risks]]. Specifically, James defended one's right to believe ahead of the {{Wiki|evidence}} only in those cases where (1) much is at stake, (2) the evi-dence at hand does not settle the case, and (3) one cannot wait for more {{Wiki|evidence}}, either because no amount of evi-dence can settle the case, or because waiting itself is to decide not to believe.
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For many things studied by [[science]], personal [[beliefs]] are virtually irrelevant. Whether or not a [[scientist]] believes in the [[existence]] of {{Wiki|intelligent}} [[life]] in other {{Wiki|solar}} systems will have a negligible effect on the {{Wiki|data}} she collects from the Hubbell {{Wiki|telescope}}. In other domains of [[reality]], [[faith]] or in-tuition will significantly influence the [[reality]] that is being addressed: parenting, [[teaching]], and almost any domain in which we engage with [[people]]. There is an enormous range
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of [[experience]] in which [[faith]] and [[intuition]] influence the [[reality]] about which we have [[faith]].
  
There is another layer of meaning here which addresses basic {{Wiki|assumptions}} about our [[life]]. Just as [[Buddhist]] cosmol-ogy describes the outer [[world]] as [[infinite]] in {{Wiki|space and time}}, [[Buddhists]] also describe [[human]] potential, the [[inner world]], as [[infinite]]. [[Lama Yeshe]], a fine [[Tibetan Buddhist teacher]] who passed away some years ago, used to tell this [[parable]] to his [[Western]] students: "You are like beggars living in a shack, ignoring your {{Wiki|poverty}}. Meanwhile, just under the dirt floor, there is a [[treasure]] of [[immeasurable]] value. You just need to scrape off the dust and you will find it."
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What about personal [[reality]]? Do you have [[faith]] that the [[mental afflictions]] that [[cause]] [[suffering]] are genetically de-termined or do you believe that your [[mind]] is malleable and these [[afflictions]] can be alleviated? Do you believe that [[wisdom]], [[compassion]], [[virtue]], can be cultivated, or do you believe that the brain's [[physiology]] fixes an upper limit on these [[virtues]]? Our [[faith]] concerning the [[human]] potential for [[wisdom]] and [[compassion]] has an enormous impact on how we lead our [[lives]]. Even a small positive [[intuition]] that [[happiness]] and well-being actually could arise from our hearts and nurture us can have a tremendous influence on [[life]]. Alternately, if you have [[faith]] that all [[happiness]] comes from the outside, this [[faith]] will also profoundly influence the choices you make in [[life]].
The [[treasure]] is really within your [[own mind]] and [[heart]]. [[Teachers]], [[traditions]], [[techniques]], all have the single {{Wiki|purpose}} of helping unveil that which is already within you. If you think otherwise, if you believe [[happiness]] is "out there" in a [[religious]] [[tradition]] or "with your [[teacher]]" or "in the spiri-tual {{Wiki|community}}," you are missing the point. [[Dharma]] consists of [[methods]] to unveil what is already within you.
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{{Wiki|William James}} agreed with most [[scientists]] that there are things about which we should not have [[faith]]. But there are other domains of [[life]] in which [[faith]] or [[lack of faith]] will have an enormous impact. If we have no [[faith]] that we can develop [[insight]] or develop deeper [[compassion]], it's not likely that we will. In this way, our [[beliefs]] often act as self-fulfilling [[prophesies]]. We can have [[faith]] in our [[own]] potential, or we can remain skeptical and agnostic. Some [[people]] are skeptical of [[Buddhist]] truth-claims because they violate the [[beliefs]] of their [[religion]]. Others are skeptical of the truth-claims of all [[spiritual traditions]] because they violate the [[beliefs]] of [[scientific]] {{Wiki|materialism}}. And yet others are skepti-cal of all truth-claims, be they [[scientific]] or [[spiritual]], because they violate the [[beliefs]] of postmodernism. In [[Christianity]] references are often made to "believers" and "non-believ-ers," with [[Christians]] being the former and everyone else being counted as the [[latter]]. But in [[reality]] we are all believers! It is a just a question of what we believe.
 
 
The preliminaries require us to examine our basic as-sumptions about the [[nature]] of [[life]] and its potential. This {{Wiki|examination}} shifts the focus of [[attention]] and shakes loose preconceptions. [[Buddhists]] aren't alone in [[realizing]] the crucial importance of focus and [[attention]] in the quest for well-being and [[psychological]] [[balance]]. {{Wiki|William James}}, the {{Wiki|eminent}} [[American]] {{Wiki|psychologist}}, said at the end of the sci-entifically over-confident nineteenth century, "our [[belief]] and [[attention]] are the same fact. For the [[moment]], what we attend to is reality..."3 When you begin to attend to facets of [[reality]] un-covered by discursive [[meditation]], when you notice, for example, that your opportunity for [[realizing]] your innate [[human]] potential is very rare and [[precious]], the [[practice of Dharma]] begins to flow naturally from your [[heart]]. [[Tibetan lamas]] {{Wiki|emphasize}} the importance of this [[life]] by advising their students, "If you have a [[precious human life]] of lei-sure and opportunity, use it well. If you don't have one, get one."
 
[[Death and Impermanence]]
 
The second of the [[four thoughts that turn the mind]] is dis-cursive [[meditation]] on [[death]] and [[impermanence]]. The first [[thought]] is about the preciousness of having a [[human body]], and the second [[thought]] is about that [[body]] being on loan. The {{Wiki|purpose}} of [[pondering]] [[death]] and [[impermanence]] is to invert the [[pernicious]] tendency of the [[human mind]] to view things as being more {{Wiki|stable}} than they are. Young [[people]] don't take getting old seriously; healthy [[people]] don't take {{Wiki|illness}} seriously. The [[mind]] has a deep-rooted tendency to interpret whatever is happening in the [[moment]] as "this is it." We even [[grasp]] onto [[emotions]] as enduring even though all [[experience]] indicates otherwise. We tend to hold a per-sonal worldview in which [[death]] and {{Wiki|illness}} are for other [[people]]. You will [[die]], but not me, at least not for a long,
 
 
 
long time. Our unexamined [[sense]] of [[immortality]] teams up with the eight [[mundane]] concerns to shape a working hypoth-esis that [[death]] is so far in the {{Wiki|future}} that it is functionally irrelevant. The [[intention]] of the second of the four dis-cursive [[meditations]], [[impermanence]], is to counteract this unexamined assumption about our personal [[immortality]]. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] that everything that is [[conditioned]] is [[impermanent]]. Even on a {{Wiki|subtle}} level, everything is in flux all the time. All that ascends to a high position will fall to a lower position, all that comes together comes apart, all that is gained will be lost, and all that is created will be destroyed. These are [[universal truths]]. Any situation [[dependent upon]] [[conditions]] will pass. This includes relationships, possessions, and our [[own]] [[bodies]].
 
When we overlook our [[own]] [[impermanence]], there is a natural tendency to [[grasp]] onto the good things that come along. We [[grasp]] onto nice [[people]], [[family]], nice material stuff as we try to create a comfortable {{Wiki|environment}}. Then we hold on for dear [[life]]. This is called [[attachment]], and once we are set in this pattern of holding on, only one of two things can happen—either the [[object]] of [[attachment]] will disappear or we will disappear. There is no third possibility. No {{Wiki|matter}} how [[skilled]] we are at [[attachment]], a [[life]] domi-nated by [[grasping]] is still ruled by the law of [[impermanence]].
 
What is the [[nature]] of these [[phenomena]] that we [[care]] so much about? What are these [[feelings]] and [[mental states]] that propel us through [[life]]? The pursuit of [[happiness]] and avoid-ance of [[suffering]] is the central axis of our [[lives]], and the [[feelings]] and behaviors these pursuits generate have a huge impact on our [[lives]]. Yet the source of the problem remains elusive. Why? Because we identify with our [[feelings]]. We know how we [[feel]] by identifying with [[feelings]]. The alter-native to identification is observation, attending to [[mental phenomena]] rather than [[grasping]] onto them.
 
[[Mindfulness of feelings]] is a key to [[understanding]] {{Wiki|subtle}} [[impermanence]]. The practice of observing [[feelings]] starts with very sharp [[attention]]. What is the [[nature]] of [[feelings]]? What is involved in the [[arising]] of a [[pleasurable]] [[feeling]]? When the {{Wiki|stimulus}} is withdrawn, what happens to the [[feeling]]? Closely observing the [[feelings]] that you take so se-riously, that guide your decisions, will radically alter the course of your [[life]], because [[feelings]] are {{Wiki|ephemeral}}, or, as the [[Buddhists]] say, "subtly [[impermanent]]."
 
 
 
Experiment with observing [[joy]] or [[sorrow]], [[feelings]] that arise every day. When one or the other of these [[feelings]] arises, attend to it and see if you can observe whether the [[mind]] that [[experiences]] the [[feeling]] has the same [[feeling]] as what it is observing. Is there a correspondence between the [[feeling]] tone of the observing [[awareness]] and the [[feeling]] that is being inspected? Can a [[mind]] in a [[state of equanimity]] observe [[misery]] or [[joy]]? This exercise leads to [[insight]] into the [[nature]] of {{Wiki|subtle}} [[impermanence]].
 
[[Meditation]] on the [[nature]] of gross and {{Wiki|subtle}} imperma-nence is also strongly emphasized in the [[Buddhist tradition]]. Going even deeper into the [[nature]] of [[impermanence]], Ti-betans [[meditate]] on [[death]]. There is a reasonable objection to [[meditation]] on [[death]]. Since we are alive now, why not attend to being alive and save [[meditating]] on [[death]] for when we are dying? After all, when your time comes to [[die]], you don't want to be nostalgic about [[life]].
 
The [[reason]] for [[meditating]] on [[death]] is not to spoil happi-ness, but to find it. [[Human beings]] tend to get into a lot mischief, and the [[religions]] of the [[world]] have taken on the {{Wiki|responsibility}} of reforming [[humans]] for the better (with mixed results!). Since much of our habitual {{Wiki|behavior}} is not good, we have to be persuaded to improve our {{Wiki|behavior}}. {{Wiki|Fear}} is a very effective method of {{Wiki|persuasion}}. [[Religious]] authorities have [[traditionally]] attempted to persuade [[people]]
 
to be good not only by {{Wiki|fear}} of [[death]] but also by {{Wiki|fear}} of the unknown and {{Wiki|fear}} of the very unknown, the [[afterlife]]. [[Religious]] [[doctrines]] on [[death]] are purposefully scary.
 
The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] that the {{Wiki|purpose}} of his [[teaching]] on [[death]] was not just to scare [[people]] into being good but to prepare for [[death]] in this [[lifetime]]. The teachings were not designed specifically to be frightening, but if there is already {{Wiki|fear}} of [[death]], better to [[acknowledge]] that {{Wiki|fear}}, engage with it and move through it so that when [[death]] actually arrives, there is no {{Wiki|fear}}.
 
By attending to the preciousness and rarity of our [[lives]], we [[recognize]] that [[life]] is passing right now. We will never have this day again. This enormous opportunity passes quickly and then comes to a complete stop. When your [[body]] is finished, your [[precious human life]] is finished. Attend-ing to the preciousness and [[impermanence]] of [[life]] provides incentive. If there is something worthwhile doing here, do it.
 
There is still more in these first two of the preliminary [[meditations]]. Consider again the eight [[mundane]] concerns— the acquisition of material belongings and the prevention of material loss, the [[desire]] for [[pleasure]] and the avoidance of discomfort, praise and blame, and the deeper concerns for [[good and bad]] reputation. The [[mind]] becomes disgruntled. [[Buddhists]] get compound [[interest]] on disgruntlement. Bud-dhists get irritated about being irritated and this gets out of hand. It is helpful to have a generally [[relaxed]] [[attitude]] and be [[passionate]] about one thing—spiritual practice.
 
 
 
[[Meditation]] on [[death]] helps extricate you from small preoc-cupations, the little stuff that gnaws away at your [[limitless]] potential. [[Meditation]] on [[death]] is a wake-up call. Its pur-pose is not to frighten you with what the boogie man will do to you after you are [[dead]], but to get you to look at the opportunities you have right now, realize they are for a
 
limited time only, and take advantage of them. Additionally, make sure what you are practicing is really [[Dharma]] and not one of the [[mundane]] concerns, which, in the face of [[death]], lose their allure altogether.
 
[[Buddhist meditation]] on [[death]] has three parts. The first is [[meditating]] on the inevitability of our [[own]] [[death]]. We can say we already know that. Easy. But are we attending to it? If we are not attending to it, we are not factoring it into our decisions. If we are not taking the inevitability of [[death]] seriously, then we don't really believe it.
 
However carefully we live, there will come a time when [[death]] arrives. [[Death]] will step forward. It will happen. It happened to [[Buddha]] and {{Wiki|Jesus}} and it happens to presi-dents and [[kings]]. Rich or poor, sooner or later you will [[die]] and your [[death]] will be yours alone. Inevitability is the first of the three parts of the [[meditation]] on [[death]].
 
 
 
When I was twenty-three, I was living in [[India]] and be-came very ill with hepatitis. In addition to hepatitis, I was [[suffering]] from malnutrition, intestinal parasites, and a {{Wiki|cat}} crawled into my [[sleeping]] bag and gave me lice. Each day of this {{Wiki|illness}} was like tumbling down the stairs of [[life]], and I was dying. There were a couple of nights when I figured I had a 50% chance of living through to morning. I was so close to [[death]] that the [[monks]] in my [[monastery]] began do-ing a [[death]] [[ritual]] for me. Dr. [[Yeshi]] Dhonden, the [[Dalai Lama's]] personal [[physician]] at that time, saved my [[life]]. My [[health]] turned around. I began climbing back up the stairs and knew I was not going to [[die]]. What really struck me as I lay on my bed dying was that everything else was just going on more or less normally. If I [[died]], my fellow [[monks]] would [[feel]] sorry for me and perhaps miss me for a little while, but classes in the [[monastery]] would be held the next day. My [[parents]] would grieve for a long time. But it would all go on. I came out of that [[experience]] with a very clear
 
[[sense]] that my [[life]] was not so much saved as my [[death]] was postponed. [[Death]] had just been shoved back. This is true for all of us.
 
The first part of the [[meditation]] on [[death]] is to become more and more {{Wiki|aware}} of its inevitability. Whatever we iden-tify with, all of it will come to a total halt. In [[death]] you lose everything. Your relationships are over, somebody gets all your stuff, and somebody else has to deal with your [[body]].
 
The second part of the [[meditation]] on [[death]] is that it can arrive any time. [[Death]] is unpredictable. It doesn't make an appointment. [[Tibetans]] have a list of times when [[death]] can arrive—in the [[womb]], at [[birth]], in infancy, childhood, youth, {{Wiki|adolescence}}, young adulthood, middle age, old age—any time is {{Wiki|perfect}} for dying. You can [[die]] in [[good health]] or bad, rich or poor, educated or not. A big one for [[Westerners]] is that you can [[die]] whether or not your projects are finished. [[Death]] can happen any time. What is the basis for [[confidence]] that [[death]] can come at any time but not for me? Wishful [[thinking]], nothing else. The second part of the [[meditation]] on [[impermanence]] is [[realizing]] death's unpredictability.
 
 
 
The third part of the [[meditation]] on [[death]] is attending to what is of value in the face of [[death]]. [[Death]] is part of [[life]], not life's {{Wiki|antithesis}}. With an [[awareness]] of [[death]], what is the value of [[life]]? This question is the basis upon which [[Dharma]] is defined. With an [[awareness]] of your [[own]] mor-tality, [[Dharma]] is that which is of [[highest]] value. What is of value—a [[mind]] of clarity, a [[heart]] of [[compassion]], a [[sense]] of [[wisdom]], [[equanimity]], [[patience]] and [[forbearance]], serving other [[people]]? [[Meditation]] on [[death]] is the most direct way to check and refine values.
 
The great [[Tibetan]] [[yogi]] and poet [[Milarepa]] is an inspiration as an example of the power of the [[Dharma]] to [[transform]] our [[lives]]. As a young man, [[Milarepa]] killed thirty-five [[people]] in an act of revenge. Afterward, [[deep remorse]] and the
 
[[desire]] to [[die]] without [[regret]] motivated him to immerse himself in [[Dharma]] for the rest of his [[life]]. [[Tibetans]] regard [[Milarepa]] as an example of the power of [[Dharma]] to trans-form anyone, no {{Wiki|matter}} what his {{Wiki|past}} {{Wiki|behavior}}, into an [[enlightened being]] in a single [[lifetime]].
 
The central question about [[death]], raised in all [[religious]] [[traditions]], is, Who is it that [[dies]]? {{Wiki|Jesus}} speaks of having to "[[die]]" to gain everlasting [[life]]. Similarly, the [[Buddha]] said he had [[attained]] the "[[deathless state]]," also called the "{{Wiki|unborn}} [[state]]." Who is it that is "{{Wiki|deathless}}"? References to a "death-less [[state]]" and "everlasting [[life]]" in the world's [[religious]] [[traditions]] bring into question {{Wiki|materialistic}} {{Wiki|assumptions}} taken for granted in the [[West]]. Are we inevitably death's {{Wiki|victims}}? [[Spiritual traditions]] point to a deeper [[reality]] in which the [[afterlife]] is malleable. Who is it that [[dies]]? Insofar as I identify with this [[body]], then I am going to [[die]]. If I identify with my [[intelligence]], my [[education]], talents and accomplishments, [[desires]], [[imagination]], projects, achieve-ments, [[thoughts]], [[memories]], I am going to [[die]]. All [[mental events]] contingent upon the [[human]] {{Wiki|nervous system}} will cease when the {{Wiki|nervous system}} [[dies]]. The [[mind]] and its intel-ligence, contingent upon the {{Wiki|brain}}, will [[die]] when the {{Wiki|brain}} [[dies]].
 
 
 
What is not contingent upon the [[body]] may not [[die]]. What [[Buddha]] referred to as "{{Wiki|deathless}}" is [[pure]] awareness—spa-cious, vivid, attentive without [[grasping]] or identification— [[awareness]] free from identification with the [[body]], and which observes [[sensations]] arise and pass, observes [[mental events]] and [[feelings]], observes all [[phenomena]] [[arising]] and passing into [[space]] like clouds dissolving into the sky. If I am not identified with [[body]], [[memories]], [[desires]] or [[feelings]], who [[dies]]?
 
I will give you a brief account of the [[Tibetan]] description of the dying process and then some {{Wiki|evidence}} to support it.
 
I was able to confirm the first stage of dying from my [[own]] [[experience]] when I had hepatitis at age twenty-three. Before this, I [[thought]] the {{Wiki|perfect}} [[death]] would be to [[die]] peacefully during [[sleep]]. When I started dying in my [[sleep]], I woke up. It wasn't [[peaceful]]. I was awake and entered the first stage of dying as described by [[Tibetans]]. The [[Tibetan Buddhist]] description of the [[death]] process is experiential. [[Senses]] gradually shut down and [[feeling]] of the [[body]] shifts. The first thing that happens is a tremendous [[sense]] of heavi-ness. There is a leaden [[quality]] to the [[body]] as you lose control and can't move. This first stage is called "the collapse of the [[earth element]]," the [[element of solidity]]. As the [[death]] sequence continues, the [[moisture]] of the [[body]] seems to dry up. This is the collapse of the [[water element]]. Heat dissi-pates from the [[body]] and you [[feel]] cold. This is the collapse of the [[fire element]]. Your [[senses]] shut down one by one— [[sight]], {{Wiki|taste}}, {{Wiki|smell}}, hearing—and in the deeper stages the {{Wiki|tactile}} [[sense]] also stops—you lose the [[sense]] of having a [[body]] at all. The [[air element]] has collapsed when the [[breath]] stops. But this is not [[death]] yet. In the [[Tibetan]] description of [[death]], the power of the [[elements]] is lost one by one, first [[earth]], then [[water]], [[fire]], and lastly, [[air]]. [[Death]] comes after the [[breath]] has stopped.
 
[[Death]] continues in the progressive withdrawal of [[life]] from the [[physical]] down into the [[mental]]. Gradually, the various [[mental]] operations shut down and dissolve into a [[state]] of [[simplicity]]. [[Memory]], the power of {{Wiki|recognition}}, imagi-nation, and [[emotions]] all dissolve. The [[Tibetan Buddhist]] account of the [[death]] process reports that first you will see a [[red]] sheen, then a whitish [[appearance]], then a total black-out. Many [[people]] believe the final phase of [[death]] is a total obliteration. The [[Tibetan]] account is that after a brief phase of obliteration, you emerge into the "[[clear light of death]]." The [[clear light of death]] is a [[state]] in which [[consciousness]]
 
has dissolved into its [[primordial state]], a [[state]] that is no longer [[human]] and is {{Wiki|independent}} of a functioning {{Wiki|brain}}. We don't know whether there is any kind of measurable {{Wiki|brain}} [[activity]] during the [[clear light of death]], but this is something that might be researched within the next few years.
 
 
 
When I went to {{Wiki|Dharamsala}} with the [[neuroscientists]] in 1992, we were presented with some stunning {{Wiki|evidence}} supporting the [[Tibetan]] account of the dying process. [[His Holiness the Dalai Lama]] encouraged us to visit a [[Tibetan]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} who had [[died]] six days before we arrived. The [[yogi's]] [[name]] was [[Rato Rinpoche]], and he had been born [[in Tibet]], only in the later part of his [[life]] escaping to [[India]] as a refugee from the {{Wiki|Chinese}} [[Communist]] invasion. All of his [[bodily]] functions stopped six days before we arrived. In the [[Tibetan]] view, [[Rato Rinpoche]] had entered into the [[non-conceptual]] [[state]] of the [[clear light of death]]; that is, his aware-ness had withdrawn into its [[primordial state]]. For six days his [[body]] did not deteriorate.
 
The [[clear light of death]] is described as "[[boundless space]]," "[[luminosity]]," "utter limpidity," and "[[innate bliss]]." This pri-mordial [[state]] is totally {{Wiki|transpersonal}} and yet it is the very [[essence]] of our being. During [[death]], everyone enters into the [[clear light of death]], but only a few [[recognize]] it. Failing this {{Wiki|recognition}}, after [[death]] most [[people]] [[feel]] disoriented and seek to be [[incarnated]] again from force of [[Wikipedia:Habit (psychology)|habit]]. For most [[people]], the [[clear light of death]] is a brief, unrecog-nized [[state]]. [[Rato Rinpoche]] [[recognized]] the [[clear light of death]] and sustained it. In the October heat of 65-70 degrees, six days after clinical [[death]], without [[breath]], his cheeks were rosy and there was warmth around his [[heart]]. [[His Holiness]] was {{Wiki|aware}} we had high-tech equipment with us and wanted to find out what could be measured in the {{Wiki|brain}} of [[Rato Rinpoche]] during the [[clear light of death]]. According to everything the [[neuroscientists]] knew, a [[dead]] [[body]] should be decomposing six days after [[death]], and they were a bit
 
intimidated by this [[phenomenon]] completely outside their [[experience]]. When we saw [[Rinpoche]] on the seventh day, his [[body]] remained untouched on the bed where he had [[died]], his face still had a bit of pink to it but the warmth at his [[heart]] had vanished. We missed the [[yogi's]] sustained [[clear light of death]] by just a few hours.
 
In the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|contemplative}} [[tradition]], if one experi-ences the ground [[state]] of all other [[forms]] of [[awareness]] prior to [[death]], then there is a good chance of being able to ascer-tain this "[[deathless state]]" during the dying process. This is the final opportunity presented to us in this [[life]] for trans-formation. Experiencing while in [[good health]] the [[nature]] of [[primordial awareness]], which later [[manifests]] as the [[clear light of death]], is one of the main goals of [[Tibetan Buddhist]] [[meditation]].
 
 
 
There are a lot of [[obstacles]] in meditation—knees ache, the back hurts, somebody makes a noise, duties and projects beckon, always something. The one [[meditation]] session in which all [[obstacles]] vanish is the dying process. There is no [[pain]] because your [[body]] has shut down and you won't hear noises because the [[senses]] have stopped. The great problem of [[meditation]], [[distraction]], is solved when you [[die]] because your {{Wiki|brain}} won't support a scattered [[mind]] any more. The [[Tibetan Buddhist tradition]] claims that it is possible to sus-tain the [[clear light of death]] and emerge from it with the clarity and freedom to choose [[conditions]] of [[rebirth]].
 
While [[death]] is inevitable and unpredictable, it is also mal-leable. In the [[Tibetan Buddhist tradition]], [[death]] is considered the most marvelous opportunity [[life]] presents for [[meditation]]. You have a choice whether to be prepared for the opportu-nity presented at [[death]] or to freak out at [[death]], [[clinging]] desperately to all the [[people]] and things we have to leave behind.
 
 
 
It is ever so easy to fall into uncritical complacency with regard to [[death]], based on the [[belief]] that [[death]] is just the [[cessation]] of [[life]] and therefore nothing to {{Wiki|worry}} about. I
 
have often heard the claim that [[religious]] [[people]] [[cling]] to [[beliefs]] in the [[immortality]] of the [[soul]] or the continuity of [[individual consciousness]] after [[death]] because they simply cannot cope with the [[reality]] of personal {{Wiki|annihilation}} at [[death]]. I find this {{Wiki|hypothesis}} dubious at best. Which is more daunting: to consider the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} that each of us will [[experience]] the [[ethical]] {{Wiki|consequences}} of our behav-ior in {{Wiki|future}} lifetimes, or to believe that [[death]] will simply terminate our [[experience]] forever, with no more problems and no more worries? I think in many cases [[people]] [[cling]] to the speculative notion of personal [[extinction]] at [[death]] as an [[absolute]] fact because they are intimidated by the [[thought]] that they might depart this [[life]] and [[consciously]] enter a vast unknown. Now that's scary!
 
While many [[people]] are committed to the [[belief]] that [[death]] brings the total [[cessation]] of personal [[existence]], many oth-ers claim to be agnostic, quite honestly admitting that they don't know what happens at [[death]] and therefore have no [[views]] on the {{Wiki|matter}} at all. At first glance, this seems quite a reasonable and {{Wiki|intelligent}} position to take, for, after all, who among us really does know what happens at [[death]]? On the other hand, if we examine our working {{Wiki|hypotheses}} regard-ing the significance of [[death]], I think we will all find that we do indeed hold onto [[beliefs]] in this regard, whether or not we regard ourselves as agnostic. In our day-to-day [[lives]], do we yearn for any kind of favorable [[experience]] or {{Wiki|hope}} to avoid any misfortune after [[death]]? If so, do these con-cerns actually influence the way we lead our [[lives]] and the kinds of choices we make from day to day? Do we have any plans, [[Wikipedia:Hope|hopes]], or {{Wiki|fears}} that are not confined to this [[life]] alone? If the answer to all these questions is no, then we are basing our [[lives]] upon the assumption that we will ex-perience nothing after [[death]]. Even if we say we do believe in the [[continuity of consciousness]] after [[death]], if all our
 
 
 
[[desires]] and concerns are confined within this [[lifetime]], we are still using the working {{Wiki|hypothesis}} that we will [[experience]] nothing after [[death]]. This assumption is as much a [[belief]] as the [[assertion]] of the continuity of [[individual consciousness]] after [[death]]. {{Wiki|Adherents}} of both positions are "believers."
 
The basis of the [[Buddhist]] [[assertion]] of the conservation of [[consciousness]] is the [[experience]] of the [[Buddha]] himself, corroborated by countless [[Buddhist]] contemplatives after him. The [[insights]] from such direct [[experience]] were then formalized within the context of a coherent, [[rational]] account of the [[nature]] and [[causes]] of [[consciousness]]. Many [[Buddhist]] and other contemplatives have claimed to know that con-sciousness continues on after [[death]], and many have given clear instructions on how to discover this [[truth]] for oneself.4 Many [[Wikipedia:cognition|cognitive]] [[scientists]], on the other hand, also claim to know that [[consciousness]] ceases at [[death]]. What is the basis of their [[assertion]]? {{Wiki|Modern science}} has no means of objec-tively detecting the presence or absence of [[consciousness]] in anything—human, [[animal]], plant, or mineral. It has no widely accepted [[definition]] of [[consciousness]], nor have cog-nitive [[scientists]] discovered either the necessary or sufficient [[causes]] that lead to the [[emergence]] of [[consciousness]]. They are discovering more and more {{Wiki|brain}} correlates to specific [[states of consciousness]], but they have yet to discover what it is about the {{Wiki|brain}} that enables it to produce or even have an influence on [[conscious]] states. In short, as the {{Wiki|materialist}} [[philosopher]] of [[mind]] {{Wiki|Daniel Dennett}} acknowledges, "With consciousness...we are still in a terrible muddle. Conscious-ness stands alone today as a topic that often leaves even the most sophisticated thinkers tongue-tied and confused."5 In the absence of clear [[scientific]] {{Wiki|evidence}}, it seems that the basis of the {{Wiki|materialist}} view of [[consciousness]] is simply a [[metaphysical]] predilection, or an article of [[faith]] in the primacy of {{Wiki|matter}}.
 
 
 
With [[science]] providing so little actual [[knowledge]] about the [[nature]] and origins of [[consciousness]], what grounds do we have for the [[belief]] in eternal, mindless [[death]]? As sooth-ing as this notion may be, it seems to be little more than sheer conjecture at this point. Moreover, it simply ignores the [[experiences]] of countless contemplatives throughout the [[world]] who have achieved deep states of [[meditative]] con-centration and claim to have seen for themselves the exist-ence of their [[own]] [[past lives]]. [[Buddhist]] contemplatives do not regard themselves in "terrible muddle" with regard to [[consciousness]]. Perhaps that's because they are part of a rig-orous heritage that has taken the experiential [[investigation]] of [[consciousness]] very seriously for over two millennia, whereas {{Wiki|modern science}} largely overlooked [[consciousness]] until the last decade of the twentieth century. And it still has no rigorous means of [[investigating consciousness]] firsthand, which is the only way we even know that conscious-ness [[exists]]. No [[wonder]] [[science]] is still so much in the dark in this regard!
 
When we accept the {{Wiki|theory}} of the continuity of conscious-ness beyond [[death]] as a working {{Wiki|hypothesis}}, [[meditation]] on [[death]] becomes a great remedy for [[mental afflictions]]. It is difficult to be [[arrogant]] if you are {{Wiki|aware}} you are going to [[die]]. [[Attachments]] lose their luster in the face of [[death]]. The [[Buddha]] said [[awareness]] of [[death]] and [[impermanence]] is the most powerful of all discernments to radically reorient one's [[life]] on the [[path of Dharma]].
 
The Unsatisfactory [[Nature]] of the [[Cycle of Existence]]
 
The First Point of the [[Seven-Point Mind-Training]], {{Wiki|training}} in the preliminaries, continues with the third of the "[[four thoughts]] that turn the mind"—meditation on the perva-siveness of [[suffering]] and {{Wiki|discontent}} in [[samsara]], the [[Buddhist]] term for the entire [[cycle of existence]] in which we are [[subject]] to [[mental afflictions]] and their results.
 
 
 
When [[Buddha]] [[attained enlightenment]], he doubted any-one would believe what he had discovered about [[the nature of reality]] and the [[human]] capacity for freedom and spiri-tual [[awakening]]. The [[Buddha]] left [[Bodh Gaya]], the place of his [[enlightenment]], and headed for [[Sarnath]] to seek his five previous companions with whom he had [[meditated]] and practiced austerities for six years. The [[Buddha]] considered them good candidates to be able to fathom what he would reveal. The [[Buddha's]] first [[teaching]] was not about [[bliss]]. The first thing he [[taught]] his previous companions was the [[reality]] of [[suffering]]. First, [[recognize]] the [[reality]] of [[suffering]].
 
There are so many [[happy]] things to talk about, why talk about [[suffering]]? We all believe we know a lot about suffer-ing. In the [[Buddha's]] first [[teaching]] on [[suffering]] and the [[nature]] of [[existence]], he lifted the surface layer of our strong [[habitual tendency]] to deny [[suffering]]. "[[Recognize]] [[suffering]]," the [[Buddha]] said and he proceeded to [[delineate]] the {{Wiki|subtle}} levels of [[suffering]].
 
There are different types of [[suffering]]. The first [[suffering]], "the [[suffering of suffering]]," is blatant [[suffering]], [[physical]] or [[mental]]. {{Wiki|Illness}} and [[physical]] [[pain]] are blatant [[suffering]]. There are also the [[mental]] [[sufferings]] of [[anxiety]], {{Wiki|fear}}, and [[unhappiness]].
 
As obvious and {{Wiki|omnipresent}} as blatant [[suffering]] is, we tend to deny it. Young [[people]] look at middle-aged [[people]] and their [[afflictions]] and think, "That's their problem." Middle-aged [[people]] look at [[people]] in nursing homes and think, "This is for old [[people]]." We habitually think the bla-tant [[suffering]] of [[sickness]] and [[aging]] is something that happens only to other [[people]]. Other [[people]] get {{Wiki|diseases}}, lose jobs, and have car accidents. Denial is the soothing and false reassurance that the [[suffering]] that afflicts other [[people]] won't happen to us.
 
There is a story about an [[Australian]] aborigine who was caught for [[stealing]], tried, and convicted. When he heard that the {{Wiki|punishment}} for [[stealing]] was hanging, he cried,
 
 
 
"You can't hang me! Hanging is for white [[people]]. They're used to it!" Likewise, we tend to think [[sickness]] and [[old age]] are for [[people]] who are used to it.
 
Also included in the "[[suffering of suffering]]" is the bla-tant [[suffering]] of disappointment. [[Suffering]] occurs when we want something very much and don't get it. [[Suffering]] also occurs when we have something we really want but lose it. For example, you may be totally in [[love]] with your significant other, so [[happy]]. Then he or she says, "I don't like you any more. Good-bye," and the result is blatant suf-fering. Blatant [[suffering]] includes not wanting something and getting it and also not being able to get rid of something you don't want. The [[Buddha's]] first [[teaching]] at [[Sarnath]] con-cerned the blatant [[sufferings]] of [[sickness]], [[old age]], [[death]], and the many varieties of disappointment we tend to think we are {{Wiki|magically}} immune from. But blatant [[suffering]] is only the tip of the iceberg of [[suffering]].
 
Recently, members of the [[Mind and Life Institute]] had a [[discussion]] with the [[Dalai Lama]] about potential topics for its next conference with [[Western]] [[scientists]]. One of the top-ics suggested to [[His Holiness]] was to compare [[Western]] [[views]] and [[Buddhist]] [[views]] of [[suffering]]. {{Wiki|Sounds}} interest-ing, right? But His Holiness's response was that [[Western]] [[Wikipedia:cognition|cognitive]] [[scientists]] and {{Wiki|psychologists}} generally focus only on blatant [[suffering]], whereas the [[Buddhist view]] is that the real problem with [[suffering]] is something [[Westerners]] don't regard as a problem at all. So he discarded that topic.
 
There are two deeper levels in the [[Buddhist]] taxonomy of [[suffering]]. The next level after the "[[suffering]] of suffer-ing" is the "[[suffering of change]]." Our stimulus-driven states of [[pleasure]], [[happiness]], and gratification depend on events working out one way and not another and are considered states of [[suffering]]. Things go the way you want or they don't and, either way, you [[suffer]]. This is one of the [[views]]
 
that have earned [[Buddhists]] the "sourpuss" label. How can having things go your way be [[suffering]]? Because there is something deeper going on. What the [[Buddhists]] are point-ing out is that whether you get something you want and hold onto it; or you get rid of something you don't want; or something you don't want to happen doesn't—all these events are [[conditioned]] and [[subject]] to change. [[Buddhists]] are very [[interested]] in sources and not merely effects, and stimulus-driven [[pleasures]] are not considered sources of genuine [[happiness]]. Does driving a Porsche, getting rid of a nuisance, or enjoying the fact that your home is not burning down, [[tap]] into a source of genuine [[happiness]]? If something is a genuine [[source of happiness]], then increased dura-tion and frequency of that {{Wiki|stimulus}} should result in more [[happiness]]. But how often does that happen, and for how long? The [[Buddha's teaching]] was to look deeper, far be-yond the law of diminishing returns, for the genuine [[source of happiness]].
 
 
 
The [[Buddhist]] analysis of [[pleasure]] appears bleak. The [[Buddha]] said that although stimulus-driven [[pleasures]] may produce [[relative]] well-being, they don't pass the test as genu-ine sources of [[happiness]]. For example, the [[Tibetan monk]] [[Palden Gyatso]] spent [[thirty-three]] years in a [[concentration]] camp operated by the {{Wiki|Chinese}} {{Wiki|Communists}}. He was starved and tortured for years on end. [[Imagine]] that every [[Tuesday]] you got tortured but on one [[Tuesday]], the [[person]] who tor-tures you doesn't come to work because he is sick. A message arrives in your cell, "I cannot torture you today because I don't [[feel]] well." What would you [[experience]]? [[Happiness]]! In a [[concentration]] camp when somebody brings you rotten [[food]] that fell in the dirt, what is your response? Happi-ness. [[Relative]] to having no [[food]], you are [[happy]]. But from a {{Wiki|perspective}} outside the [[concentration]] camp, it seems that everything inside is [[suffering]], every [[moment]], [[including]] the
 
[[Tuesday]] when the torturer was ill because, even on a day when he wasn't tortured, [[Palden Gyatso]] still starved. But inside the [[concentration]] camp there were good days and bad days. Getting a little bit of garbage for a meal makes it a good day. From outside the [[concentration]] camp, we could say that the {{Wiki|perspective}} of the prisoner is limited.
 
The [[Buddhist teaching]] is that from the viewpoint of an {{Wiki|individual}} who has gained [[realization]] of [[Ultimate Truth]], all of what we [[experience]] is [[suffering]]. But this is not dis-mal! If a prisoner in a [[concentration]] camp [[thought]] that everybody in the [[world]] was also imprisoned in a concen-tration camp that would be dismal. If the prisoner believes there are [[people]] outside who have enough to eat and are not tortured at all, that is an {{Wiki|optimistic}} and inspiring [[thought]]. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] that we are [[suffering]] in a type of [[concentration]] camp fenced in by our limited [[views]] and [[mental afflictions]]. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] that from the view-point of one who has experientially [[realized]] [[Ultimate Truth]], we are in the ocean of [[samsara]] and everything we [[experience]] is unsatisfactory.
 
The [[Buddhist]] position is that what we [[experience]] as plea-sure is merely a [[relative]] attenuation of our [[dissatisfaction]]. There is nothing wrong with the [[happiness]] derived from stimulus-dependent joys, but from the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, these states of [[happiness]] are merely a fleeting attenuation of [[suffering]]. When a [[pleasant]] {{Wiki|stimulus}} is removed, the [[mind]] falls back into its habitual [[state]], a [[state]] that is afflicted, and a [[state]] that is [[suffering]]. The true source of [[suffering]] lies deeper in our [[experience]] and underneath temporary attenuations.
 
 
 
There are some simple tests for the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}}. In situations of sensory deprivation, when {{Wiki|stimuli}} are re-moved, {{Wiki|boredom}}, a {{Wiki|subtle}} [[form]] of [[mental suffering]], sets in. Without anything to stimulate the [[mind]] in a [[pleasurable]]
 
fashion, we move beyond {{Wiki|boredom}} to loneliness, uneasi-ness, and [[unhappiness]]. Pascal said the primary [[affliction]] of {{Wiki|modern}} man is the "inability to sit quietly in one's cham-bers." Being alone for a sustained period is a type of torture called {{Wiki|solitary}} confinement. In a sensory deprivation tank where [[stimulation]] comes only from your [[mind]], over time the [[mind]] becomes chaotic and breaks down.
 
From the [[Buddhist]] {{Wiki|perspective}}, situations of {{Wiki|solitary}} con-finement or sensory deprivation do not create difficulties. Instead, these situations uncover problems that were al-ready there. What happens when we are alone or sensorily deprived is the same as what is happening all the time but is [[Wikipedia:burial|buried]] under [[stimulation]]. Circumstances are not the [[cause of suffering]]. The [[Buddhist view]] is that [[suffering]] is due to underlying [[afflictions]] of the [[mind]]. We fall into bore-dom, malaise, [[sadness]], [[anxiety]], and {{Wiki|depression}} when {{Wiki|stimuli}} aren't coming in not because we are {{Wiki|social}} [[animals]], not because we have [[bodies]], but because the [[mind]] is af-flicted, though not intrinsically or immutably. What appears as [[suffering]] when [[stimulation]] is removed is the afflicted [[nature of the mind]], what [[Buddhists]] call the "[[suffering of change]]." With [[respect]] to the afflicted [[nature of the mind]], the [[suffering of change]], everything else is a symptom. The [[Buddha's teaching]] that stimulus-driven [[pleasure]] is simply an attenuation of [[suffering]] directs us to look even deeper for the [[root cause]] of [[suffering]].
 
Blatant [[suffering]], the "[[suffering of suffering]]," is obvious as long as you are not in {{Wiki|denial}}. [[Understanding]] the "suf-fering of change" takes some thoughtful [[investigation]]. The next level of [[suffering]] is the "the {{Wiki|pervasive}} [[suffering]] of [[conditioned existence]]," or the fundamental [[suffering]] of vulnerability, and is deeper still. We are profoundly vulnerable due to the [[nature]] of the way we [[exist]]. At {{Wiki|present}} there is nothing that makes us immune to the [[suffering]] ex-
 
perienced in [[concentration]] camps. The layer of {{Wiki|skin}} between the {{Wiki|environment}} and our {{Wiki|nervous system}} is only microme-ters thick. The question as to what [[protection]] we can have against the {{Wiki|innumerable}} situations that [[cause]] [[suffering]] and {{Wiki|fear}} has proven to be a [[dead]] end for many great thinkers who argue that this is just the way it is; this is the way we are made; [[humans]] [[suffer]] because we are [[human]]. Another argument is that [[humans]] [[suffer]] because [[nature]] can't be con-trolled. Nor can we control time, so we age, we [[suffer]], we [[die]], no {{Wiki|matter}} what {{Wiki|medical}} treatment we receive. That is the way it is. [[Suffering]] is part of [[reality]]. As {{Wiki|Sigmund Freud}} observed, "We are so made that we can derive intense en-joyment only from a contrast and very little from a [[state]] of things...Unhappiness is much less difficult to [[experience]]."
 
 
 
The [[Western]] [[philosophic]] cornerstone "[[humans]] [[suffer]] be-cause we are [[human]]" is, in the [[Buddhist view]], a non-answer stemming from an incomplete analysis. The [[Buddhist]] analy-sis of vulnerability results in the [[extraordinary]] {{Wiki|hypothesis}} that we [[suffer]] because we identify with, or "closely hold onto," the constituents of our personal [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]]: "This is my [[body]]. These are my [[desires]], my [[thoughts]], my [[ambitions]], my {{Wiki|fears}}; this is me."
 
Given that we have a [[body]], [[thoughts]], and [[feelings]], is there an alternative to identifying with them? The [[Buddhist]] answer is yes. Realize the [[nature]] of your [[own mind]] and [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]], fathom the [[nature]] of your [[own]] [[body]], and with the sword of [[insight]], cut the [[root of suffering]]. I suspect this is what the [[Dalai Lama]] had in [[mind]] when he turned down [[suffering]] as a topic for an East-West [[mind]] [[science]] meeting. Blatant [[suffering]]? Not so [[interesting]]. Stop denying and there it is. [[Suffering of change]]? [[Western]] [[science]] assumes it can't be fixed because the problem is hard-wired. The [[suffering]] of vulnerability, what [[Buddhism]] considers the key to suffer-ing, is not [[recognized]] in the [[West]] at all. Why do we have the [[suffering]] of vulnerability? Because we [[grasp]] onto our [[body]], our [[Wikipedia:Identity (social science)|identity]], our [[self]]. Very deep. The key is inside.
 
A [[person]] who is {{Wiki|liberated}}, who has freed his or her [[mind]] of all [[mental afflictions]], still [[experiences]] [[physical]] suffer-ing. The difference between us and an [[arhat]], a [[person]] who has freed the [[mind]] from [[mental affliction]], is that an [[arhat]] doesn't identify with [[pain]]. [[Arhats]] [[experience]] [[physical]] [[pain]] vividly but don't [[grasp]] onto it; they can take [[action]] to avoid or alleviate [[pain]], but whether they do so or not, the [[physical]] [[pain]] doesn't come inside. What an [[arhat]] does not experi-ence is [[mental suffering]]. A [[buddha]], one who is perfectly [[spiritually]] [[awakened]], has gone a further step. A [[buddha]] has no [[mental suffering]] of his or her [[own]], but is vividly and non-dually {{Wiki|aware}} of the [[suffering]] of others.
 

Revision as of 14:04, 20 May 2020



Superficially, the arhat who is free from mental suffering can seem to us who lack this realization as numb and de-tached, in a state of existential anesthesia. A buddha, one who is fully awakened, presents the paradox of being free from suffering and also non-dually present with other people's joys and sorrows, hopes and fears. A buddha taps into immutable bliss, the ultimate ground state of aware-ness beyond the dichotomy of stimulus-driven pain and pleasure. The mind of a buddha has been purified of all obscuration and from its own nature there naturally arises immutable bliss, like a spring welling up from the earth. With the unveiling of the buddha-nature of unconditioned bliss, there is also a complete erosion of an absolute demar-cation between self and other. The barrier is gone. This is why buddhas are vividly and non-dually aware of the suf-fering of others, their hopes and fears, the whole situation, and at the same time are not disengaged from the purity and bliss of their own awareness. The mind of a buddha doesn't block out anything and nothing is inhibited, and this is why the awareness of an awakened being is frequently described as "unimaginable." Meanwhile, back in samsara, we are identifying—"This is my body. These are my problems. Your problems are not my problems." Our ground-state is the suffering of vulnerability, a very big problem. Many people assume that after death, the suffering of life is extinguished. Buddhists say that is wishful thinking. The Buddhist position is that whether you like it or not and regardless of your belief system, the nature of reality is such that there is an un-broken stream of consciousness not contingent on this body. Your body will eventually turn into fertilizer but your consciousness carries on. There are both theoretical and empirical grounds for the continuity of consciousness. There is currently no consensus in psychology, neuroscience, cognitive science, or philoso-phy of the mind, regarding an empirically based theory of consciousness. This is a major void in the edifice of modern science. Since object-oriented scientific methods themselves present obstacles to the effective study of consciousness, scientists are at odds even about the methodology of studying consciousness.

There are alternatives to the Western methods for the study of consciousness. The philosopher of science Tho-mas Kuhn observed that in order for a paradigm shift to occur, it is not enough to see that one's present paradigm is flawed. It is important to present a coherent alternative that accounts for what you know and makes intelligible what was previously unaccounted for. If you are in a boat that needs periodic bailing, you won't improve matters by be-ing rescued by a sinking ship—and you don't want just to swim for it either. What you want is another boat, preferably one without any leaks, otherwise your best bet is staying where you are. The Buddhist hypothesis is that, like the scientific theory of the conservation of mass/energy, there is conservation of consciousness. Consciousness doesn't arise from mass/ energy, but consciousness is conditioned by mass/energy. The brain, sense faculties, nervous system, and environment all condition consciousness. Just as mass and energy take different forms—gas, fluid, or solid—the Buddhist teach-ing is that under different conditions, consciousness mani-fests in different ways. Additionally, consciousness is not a by-product of matter, nor does it arise ex nihilo, out of noth-ing.7 The Buddhist view is that the brain does not produce consciousness, but it does condition consciousness. The stream of consciousness is a continuity that stores imprints, memories, and tendencies throughout a lifetime. Just as mass/energy changes form rather than disappearing alto-gether, consciousness changes as it disengages from the physical body.

The Buddhist theory of the origin of consciousness is that consciousness arises from consciousness. The Buddhist hy-pothesis is that an individual's consciousness does not arise from the consciousnesses of his or her parents. Parents have their own continua of consciousness. Individual conscious-ness exists prior to conception, arising from a preceding, unique continuum and will carry on after this life. When individual consciousness disengages from the body, the number of types of embodiments it can enter into is vast. There are states of re-embodiment that are condi-tioned by intense suffering; another state conditioned by unfulfilled desire; another conditioned by mental dullness; and another by great joy. If in this life as a human, we do not profoundly purify our minds and gain deep realiza-tion, we are vulnerable to rebirth in other less favorable realms of existence. The continuum of consciousness is tre-mendously malleable and can take on a wide variety of forms, some subtle and blissful, some very dense and mis-erable. There is nothing in this vast spectrum of modes of rebirth that we are automatically exempt from. Since we are no longer incorporated in a human body after death,

there is nothing human about us at all. According to Bud-dhist theory, re-embodiment is propelled by our habitual grasping. The sobering notion here is that not only is our mind basically in an afflicted state making us vulnerable to suf-fering, it doesn't get better by itself. If we continue in habitual patterns, there is no way out. When Buddhists say no way out, they mean it. Samsara never runs down. The cycle of existence from rebirth to rebirth is like being a ball in a per-petual motion pinball machine. Merely wishing, "I have been in samsara for countless eons and have had enough," won't get you out. Samsara runs of its own momentum as long as it is fueled by the same habitual patterns. The Bud-dhist hypothesis is that samsara stops only when we take radical measures and break through the habitual patterns of delusion. Buddhist psychology states that mental suffering is pro-duced by one of three primary mental afflictions. The first primary mental affliction is delusion. The Buddhist term "delusion" includes the philosophical term "reification" and means mistaking what has no inherent existence as being concretely real. Delusion results in grasping—"I am," "I am autonomous," "I am separate," "I am permanent." The primary delusion of our self as an inherently existent, autonomous entity is the source of all mental afflictions.

Out of delusion, the primary affliction, grows the sec-ond fundamental affliction, attachment. Attachment is not simply desire but entails superimposing desirable qualities upon objects and screening out undesirable qualities. The result is craving. Attachment is distorted awareness in which we idealize an object—"If only I could go there, have that job, that spouse, that car, then I would be happy." Ide-alization creates a fiction that we cling to. When we conflate a person with a superimposed fiction, we might fall in love with the wonderful fiction and later be disappointed that the person "changed." Anger, also referred to as aversion or hatred, is the third of the three primary afflictions. Anger is the natural complement of attachment. Anger regards its object with superimposed disagreeable qualities, and filters out desir-able or neutral qualities. The frequent result of anger is aggression. The Buddhist hypothesis is that from day to day, from moment to moment, whenever we experience mental suf-fering, its source is the arousal of one or more of the mental afflictions.

When we experience suffering, we habitually identify the source of suffering as "out there"—other people, situations, traffic, the government. In Buddhism, this is an incorrect analysis, a wrong view. The radical Buddhist diagnosis of our condition is that the source of suffering is mental afflic-tions. When mental afflictions are catalyzed in any of many ways, we suffer. The actual source of suffering is not "out there." External circumstances and other people merely serve as catalysts to trigger something already within us. The source of suffering is not our job, spouse, children or other variations on the theme "I am suffering because of them or it." The source of suffering is rooted in mental afflictions. What about happiness? Once again, Buddhism presents an extraordinary hypothesis. The Buddhist hypothesis is that happiness is your birthright; all you need to do is dis-cover it. When we stop the behavior that impedes natural, inborn happiness, when we stop throwing dirt in the wound, just stop, happiness starts to well up naturally. From a Buddhist perspective, what we need to do is stop making the great efforts smothering the natural happiness that is within us. A good definition of Dharma is: that which enables us to unveil the natural, genuine happiness within.

The purpose of discursive meditation on suffering, the third of the four thoughts that turn the mind, is to become disillusioned with all the mundane pursuits we value. Pleasure, reputation, comfort are all stimuli that result in rela-tive well-being but do not deal with the fundamental problem, our profound vulnerability to suffering, a problem that continues until we do something about it. Karma The last of the four thoughts that turn the mind is karma. "Karma" is the Sanskrit word for "action." In anthropo-logical terminology, "karma" is a thick, theory-laden term. Karma refers to the nature of actions and how their long-term consequences play out over time. According to Buddhism, the universe is not a mechanistic, sterile machine as some philosophies argue. Instead, reality has a moral dimension. Some modern Western Buddhists have shrugged off the significance of karma and the continuity of consciousness after death, claiming that the Buddha simply borrowed these ideas from the Indian culture of his time. Study of the prevalent views concerning the afterlife that were proposed in India during the Buddha's lifetime, however, shows that his assertions were profoundly unlike those of any of his contemporaries. Moreover, he claimed that he had directly observed the truth of his claims in this regard on the night of his enlightenment, and he showed others how they might verify these theories for themselves.8 Certainly we must consider that the Buddha's assertions in this regard may be wrong. But to claim that he adopted these from others as congenial metaphysical beliefs is simply a sign of ignorance. The repercussions of karma are deep because they affect not only this lifetime, but the entire continuity of conscious-ness extending over many lifetimes. The Buddhist belief in the continuity of consciousness from one life to another is backed with logical reasoning. Reasoning alone isn't utterly compelling, but Buddhism does present the continuity of consciousness as a coherent and rational hypothesis, and centuries of Buddhist contemplative experience have produced experiential evidence to support this hypothesis. There are many cases of remembered past lives, foretold future lives and, further, the subjective details of the tran-sitional, or intermediate, state between embodiments, called the bar do. Preparation for dying and taking rebirth is a very significant part of Tibetan Buddhist practice.

In 1989,I interpreted for the Dalai Lama in a Mind and Life Conference with a group of neuroscientists in New-port Beach, California.9 Most neuroscientists believe that the mind is a by-product, or epiphenomenon, of the brain; mind vanishes when brain dies and that is all there is to it. The neuroscientists were disturbed when the Dalai Lama, a very intelligent man, discussed the continuity of con-sciousness from one lifetime to the next. The scientists pointed out that retrospective accounts of reincarnation, however numerous they may be, are not scientifically com-pelling due to lack of proper controls. For example, a child's experiences in the first years of life are largely unknown. We can't know for certain what the parents told the child, where he went, or what he saw on television. It was further pointed out to His Holiness that only a prospective study would be impressive scientifically. If scientists interviewed a dying Tibetan yogi and were told by him the specific de-tails of his rebirth and these details were later confirmed by a child reincarnation of the same late yogi, this would be very hard for scientists to explain away as coincidence. His Holiness is very interested in collaborating with scientists on a prospective study of reincarnation. Continuity of consciousness and karma are not elements of a religious creed Buddhists are required to believe. The extraordinary premise of Buddhism is that the nature of reality can be experientially determined through diligent spiritual practice. Being Buddhist means only that you trust and follow the Buddhist path, critically.

One key to the contemplative exploration of the nature of reality is meditative concentration, the ability to stabilize the mind and enhance its clarity. The refined and stabilized mind is the tool Buddhists use to investigate the whole of reality, from cosmology to the nature of awareness. Such meditative technology gives you access to exceptional states of awareness. The continuity of consciousness from lifetime to lifetime is not contingent upon any belief or disbelief in reincarna-tion. From the Buddhist point of view, even if you personally don't believe in continuity of consciousness, there is still continuity. An analogy from physics is that if you roll a ball down a ramp, it accelerates, even if you believe its velocity remains constant. In the future there may be contemplatives, maybe even Western contemplatives, who will take up the prospective challenge of the neuroscientists and die under scientific scrutiny. If continuity of consciousness is a fact and if, as Bud-dhists tell us, it is possible to pass through the dying process with complete awareness, then an important question arises. Is rebirth random? Does Nature play roulette so that in one life you are human but in the next, for no reason at all, you are a frog? If there is coherence to rebirth, what is the nature of that coherence? The Buddha's claim was that, from the perspective of an awakened awareness, there is coherence—certain types of actions give rise to certain types of consequences. The coherence is called karma. The fundamental cornerstone of existence as a sentient being is seeking happiness and avoiding suffering. The at-tainment of enlightenment may be the ultimate goal but in the meantime, a sentient being would rather be well than sick, have enough to eat rather than starve, have harmoni-ous relationships and not painful ones, have a fortunate life rather than a miserable one. We all desire these things. The Buddha taught that certain types of actions give rise to certain types of consequences. The question then becomes: what types of actions give rise to the things we wish for, and what types of actions give rise to the things we seek to avoid?

The natural inclination is to believe that this is easy enough to figure out for oneself. Unfortunately, the undis-ciplined mind tends to be subjected to delusion. As the eighth-century Indian Buddhist sage Shantideva wrote in A Guide to Bodhisattva Way of Life, "Those desiring to escape from suffering hasten right toward suffering. With the very desire for happiness, out of delusion they destroy their own happiness as if it were an enemy."10 In other words, de-luded desires for happiness lead us to engage in actions of attachment that inevitably result in aversion. Our goal is happiness, but our actions lead to suffering. Continuity of consciousness is a continuum through dif-ferent states of awareness: sleep, dreams, the waking state, the dying process, the intermediate state, and rebirth. Freud wrote, "in mental life nothing which has once been formed can perish...everything is somehow preserved and...in suit-able circumstances... it can once more be brought to light."11 This statement, taken out of the context of the rest of Freud's views, is reminiscent of the Buddhist theory of karma, actions, and their consequences. The Buddhist premise is that all actions, including men-tal actions, leave seeds, or imprints, on a continuum that is not only a continuity of experience, but also a kind of reposi-tory. This continuum is laden with tendencies and configured by experience. When something happens to you, whether traumatic or joyful, the experience imbeds itself in the form of memory, resulting in emotional and behavioral tenden-cies. In this way, the continuum of consciousness, or mind-stream, is configured by the cumulative effects of parents, friends, education, and our general environment.

The mental continuum is also configured by our actions. Engaging in a certain type of action develops a tendency, a pattern, or habit that is initiated and then reinforced. If the action was difficult at the beginning, it becomes easier as the habit becomes more deeply ingrained. Some habits de-velop much more easily than others. Responding with irritation when something disagreeable happens is a very easily acquired habit. But irritation and indignation are only two of many possible responses to something disagreeable. When a driver is rude on the freeway, gesturing and firing off a sermon on the nature humanity can get to be a habit. Another option is simply moving out of the way. A habit reinforced by subsequent actions triggered by outside events is one type of karma. Being held morally, or karmically, accountable for one's thoughts is daunting. Fortunately, there is a loophole. When an unwholesome thought arises, it is grasping onto it, think-ing, "I want this ... I want to do that...," that starts the karma meter ticking. If you are meditating, and a disgusting im-age or desire arises, no problem. A malevolent, jealous, or selfish thought arising in the space of your mind does not accumulate negative karma. No harm is done by the pres-ence of negative thoughts as long as you don't grasp onto them. When thoughts are allowed to play themselves out and vanish of their own accord, your mind remaining like space, there is no accumulation of karma. The problem is having sticky awareness that latches onto negative thoughts with, "How could I be thinking this stuff ... but I like this thought... Oh,but I shouldn't...." Identification, grasping, is the problem, not the thoughts themselves. I mentioned a loophole. If thoughts of anger, jealousy, or craving arise that distort the mind, you can choose not to identify with them and create a space around them. You can sever grasping and the accumulation of karma by honing attention to focus right in on the nature of the men-tal process itself. This is a powerful technique that works if you hit the mark. If you can attend right at the onset, right when the mind begins to be drawn into the vortex of a nega-tive thought, simply by observing the nature of the thought, the karmic effect is cut just as if with a knife. Effective spiri-tual practice includes developing the attentional skill to remain outside the vortex of afflictive thoughts and emotions without slipping in.

The fundamental moral, or karmic, framework of Bud-dhism is a list of ten virtues and ten non-virtues. These do's and do not's cover the most common problems in life. Committing an unwholesome or non-virtuous deed plants a seed that can potentially produce a negative impact as it matures in the mind-stream in this lifetime and the ones to follow. In this list of ten, there are three unwholesome deeds of the body, four of speech, and three of the mind. The three of the body are intentional killing, stealing, and sexual mis-conduct. These three non-virtues are negative because they inflict harm and suffering. The physical misdeeds are be-haviors we can make decisions about; we can usually decide not to engage in them. There is nothing metaphysical here. The next four unwholesome acts concern speech and are more difficult to recognize and deal with than physical non-virtues. The first is harsh and abusive speech. The non-virtues of speech are difficult because, as the Buddha said, nothing in the world is faster than the mind; but the mouth is a close runner-up. Harsh speech engages a mental affliction, frequently anger, sometimes attachment or de-lusion, and turns speech into a subtle and sophisticated weapon, at times more damaging than a punch to the jaw. Harsh speech includes sarcasm. Tibetans liken sarcasm to throwing a rock covered in fluffy wool—it is initially mistaken for a friendly puffball until it meets its target. The second type of verbal non-virtue is lying. Lying is intentionally saying what is not true and can have many motivations. Slander or divisive speech is the third verbal non-virtue and an interesting one. Slander may be lying with a twist or it may be the simple truth coupled with a motivation to do harm or create conflict.

Idle gossip, the fourth of the verbal non-virtues, is con-sidered the lightest of all the ten non-virtues but, as one of my lamas remarked, it the easiest way to waste an entire life. Idle gossip is speech motivated by mental afflictions such as attachment, anger, jealousy, pride, and delusion. The net effect of idle gossip is worse than just wasting time; it reinforces mental afflictions and accumulates negative karma. The next grouping in the list of ten non-virtues is the three non-virtues of the mind. The first is malice. Malice is the intention to inflict harm. Avarice, craving another person's possessions, is the second non-virtue of the mind. The third of the non-virtues of the mind is holding onto false views, which is regarded as the most harmful of all ten non-virtues. "False views" refers to misconceptions about the nature of reality. An example of a false view is the belief that actions have no moral consequences.

Paralleling the Buddhist list of ten non-virtues is a list of ten virtues. These are the flip side of each of the non-vir-tues. For example, the virtue opposite to killing is protecting life and the virtue corresponding to harsh speech is speaking gently. All virtuous and non-virtuous deeds place imprints upon the mind-stream that are potent karmic seeds that will ripen in this or a future lifetime. Once karma is imbedded in a stream of consciousness, it is carried from one lifetime to another until it is catalyzed. Just as a plant seed can remain dormant in the desert for decades and sprout to life at the first contact with water, a karmic seed can lie dormant for a long time, from lifetime to lifetime, before a catalyst triggers its ripening. Another characteristic of karma is that its effect is simi-lar to its cause. For example, if one cultivates a tendency to help those in need, the karmic effect carried into the next life would be being born with an altruistic tendency, being gifted in compassion. Buddhists explain the differences be-tween babies, obvious to any parent, as partly due to karma. This does not deny genetic and environmental influences. Many influences come together in an intricate weave to form this life. The interesting point here is that Buddhists don't consider the mind of an infant to be a blank slate. Due to the influence of past lives, sentient beings are strongly conditioned even before conception. Therefore, cultivating wholesome tendencies is a top priority of Dharma practice. The view that karma affects the continuum of conscious-ness from one life to the next is of fundamental importance in Buddhist practice. Many Buddhists acknowledge that attaining buddhahood in one lifetime, although possible, is highly improbable. Understanding karma and its effect on the continuity of consciousness elevates spiritual prac-tice from an all-or-nothing, one-life-only proposition. If spiritual practice has continuity and coherence, if greater kindness, wisdom, and balance have developed and the various afflictive tendencies have declined, then these quali-ties are embedded in the mind-stream. Even if you don't become enlightened in this lifetime, if you practice Dharma diligently, because of the nature of actions and their conse-quences, you will be able to pick up where you left off in the next lifetime.

In the Tibetan Buddhist tradition, reincarnations of ex-ceptionally mature practitioners are sometimes identified in childhood. These tulkus, which literally means "emana-tion bodies," are a source of inspiration for Tibetan Buddhists. The recognition of tulkus acknowledges that spiritual maturation is preserved as karmic propensities from one life-time to the next. This is true not only for tulkus, but for all practitioners. A third type of karmic effect, and the most difficult to understand, is environmental. The various types of envi-ronments encountered in your life are also a result of karma. Being born in a hostile environment, amid plague, famine, drought, war, is a maturation of karma manifesting as an environment. The same reasoning also holds true for a harmonious, beautiful environment.

The Buddhist hypothesis is that humanness is very much contingent upon a human body and we are not thoroughly as human as we believe. When the human body dies, what remain are tendencies. According to the Buddha's teach-ings, it is difficult to conceive being born in a non-human form because we identify so much with human intelligence and human form. But we have more in common with other realms than we like to think. For example, if cravings domi-nate your life—"I want a nice car, a bigger house, more of my fair share"—then this is comparable to the life of a preta, a hungry ghost. Similarly, leading a life driven by one's "animal appetites," not taking advantage of human intelli-gence and experience, for all practical purposes, is a human facsimile of living the life of an animal. The general Bud-dhist teaching is that a life heavily dominated by delusion directs one toward rebirth as an animal; a life heavily domi-nated by craving leads to rebirth in a hungry ghost realm; and a life heavily dominated by malice or cruelty heads one toward rebirth in a hell realm. I will give you an example of a rebirth in a Buddhist hell. Keep in mind these rebirths, all of them, are no more substantial than dreams. A Buddhist hell is not a place in the center of the earth or on the back of the moon. If one takes rebirth in a hell, the hell you experience comes into existence, like a dream, at the time you are born there and, also like a dream, seems very real while you are there. One of the Buddhist hell realms is called "again and again revi-talized." In this hell, you and all the people around you have weapons. You are in constant hand-to-hand combat, maybe killing a few of the other inhabitants of the dream before someone rams you through with a big spike and you die. But then you come right back to life and fight again. This happens over and over: fight, kill and get killed, come right back. That situation continues until the tendency that propelled you there wears itself out.

In non-human realms, unfortunately, the laws of karma also hold. There is a caveat, however. The greater your in-telligence, the greater your understanding and wisdom, the greater impact your actions have. Animals accumulate a small amount of karma for aggression, but a human being with the same behavior accumulates much heavier karma. The metaphor of the tortoise cruising around in the ocean surfacing for air every hundred years is also descriptive of what is necessary for an animal to be reincarnated in a hu-man realm. From the Buddhist perspective, compassion is rare in the animal realm but it is there. In the hungry ghost realm, compassion is even rarer, and rarer still in the hell realms. However, again there is a loophole. Because of the relative difficulty of compassion in non-human realms, the karmic significance of even a little bit of compassion is great. It is said that in a hell realm, a being who has compassion for another is immediately liberated. Think of an example from your own life when you felt you were in hell. How difficult was it to feel genuine com-passion for someone else? Not impossible, but certainly difficult because we tend to be absorbed in our own feel-ings and problems. It is not easy for virtue to arise in the midst of craving and obsession, or when the mind is de-luded. This is why once you take rebirth in a miserable state of existence it is very difficult to get out. From the Buddhist perspective, the type of fortune we encounter, happiness or sorrow, is not due to somebody doing something to us. If I win the lottery, it is not because Buddha selected me for a bonus. No god or buddha is re-sponsible for what happens to us. Rather, our circumstances are fundamentally created by previous actions. This is a dangerous statement if misunderstood. A very unfortunate misinterpretation of what the Buddha was getting at in his teaching about karma is the conclusion that other people's suffering is simply their own fault. The Buddha did not teach that a child suffering from disease or hunger brought this suffering upon himself. The Buddhist explanation of suffering is that a deed embedded in the continuum of con-sciousness eventually gives rise to consequences. The deed may have occurred in this life or many lifetimes ago. This does not imply that a suffering person is morally degener-ate any more than suffering the consequences of eating con-taminated food does. The suffering we experience is due to karma accumulated under the influence of delusion and mental afflictions. This is true for all sentient beings.

The person witnessing another person's suffering has only one appropriate response: "How can I help?" When karma comes to fruition and causes suffering, the response should never be, "This is your karma. It's your destiny, so I can't help." Your own karma may very well present itself as an opportunity to help a suffering person. Misunder-standing actions and their consequences can be disastrous. The Buddhist response to the non-virtues we all commit while strapped to the wheel of samsara can be inspiring and encouraging. The Buddhist teaching is that it is pos-sible to neutralize negative karmic seeds embedded in the stream of consciousness. Deeds cannot be undone, but it is possible to purify one's mind-stream so that the impact of karmic seeds will be nullified. The method used to purify the mind-stream is the "four remedial powers." The metaphor for the effectiveness of the four remedial powers is that of burning a seed. Karma, like a seed, can be scorched in the fire of purification so that it will not sprout. The seed won't vanish, but it will not sprout. The first of the four remedial powers is remorse, regard-ing a misdeed as detrimental. Remorse is sincerely focusing on a misdeed, taking responsibility for it, and regretting having done it. Remorse also includes acknowledging con-sequences. Just as remorse is a step toward nullifying the impact of a negative karmic seed, rejoicing in virtue em-powers its positive karma. Tsongkhapa said that the easiest way to empower the mind in virtue is to take delight in virtue. In the same vein, rejoicing about something malevo-lent, such as congratulating yourself on sarcasm, empowers the negative propensity of the karmic seed. Rejoicing enhances and remorse helps neutralize the effect of karmic imprints on the mind-stream. Another ex-ample: If you give a homeless person five dollars but walk away thinking, "He would have thought I was just as gen-erous if I had given him only two dollars. Then I could have bought myself a coffee and newspaper," that remorse just neutralized the karmic benefit from your five-dollar beneficence. Remorse is hazardous when conflated with guilt. Re-morse is wholesome because it focuses on an event. Guilt is an afflictive state of mind focused on the self as in, "I am an unworthy person." Guilt, a reification of the self around negative tendencies, is simply another mental affliction. Properly directed remorse, on the other hand, can be very helpful for disengaging from unwholesome tendencies.

The second remedial power is reliance. When we have harmed other sentient beings, the remedial power of reli-ance is cultivating compassion for others; and when we have behaved wrongly toward spiritually realized beings or their teachings, the power of reliance is entrusting ourselves to their guidance. The third of the four remedial powers is resolve, turning away from misconduct. The power of resolve is stopping unwholesome behavior by the strength of determination and decision. The final remedial power is purification. This is also called "applying the antidote," and entails doing something that counteracts or neutralizes the negative deed. For ex-ample, if the deed involved killing, applying the antidote would be protecting life. Buddhist tradition teaches that through the four reme-dial powers it is possible to completely extinguish the potency of even the most virulent deeds. There is no deed so evil that it cannot be purified. Milarepa said that the aim of his Dharma practice was to die without remorse. His point was that if you have engaged in non-virtuous deeds, it is im-portant to purify their karmic imprints on your mind-stream while you have the freedom to do so; purify karmic deeds in this life so that you don't carry negative imprints into the dying process. Crossing the threshold of death is a really bad time for remorse to arise. The Buddhist scheme also accounts for grace, influence from outside the cycle of suffering, which is a powerful source of purification. It is said that the power of compas-sion, mercy, and grace of the enlightened ones is infinite. To open ourselves to grace, just as in Christianity and other religions, we need to open to it with faith. If you don't have faith, follow carefully the tenfold law by engaging in vir-tue and avoiding non-virtue and you will still come out all right.

We have now covered the First Point of the Seven-Point Mind-Training: "First, train in the preliminaries." The preliminaries are four discursive meditations upon the pre-ciousness of a human life of leisure and opportunity; death and impermanence; suffering; and karma. The preliminar-ies accelerate disillusionment with false dharmas so that we don't have to learn their lessons by long hard experience. At whatever age you start, ten years or eighty, you can get on the fast track to spiritual awakening if you realize at the outset what doesn't work. Disillusionment with the mundane pursuits of happiness is not enough, nor is fathoming the depth of suffering or the variety of evil in the world. Knowledge of these might make you a good existential philosopher, but it won't give you the inspiration to devote yourself to spiritual practice. Theoretical understanding comes from reading, hearing lec-tures, conversing, thinking. But theoretical understanding is like a recipe in a cookbook, and a recipe is not the same as a meal. It is only from practicing Dharma that sustained inspiration for spiritual practice is derived. The practice it-self nourishes you with a sense of happiness and well-being. Suffering is diminished. The benefits of Dharma are tested by Dharma practice itself. The Second Point: Cultivating Ultimate and Relative Bodhichitta The Seven-Point Mind-Training is a quintessential guide to enlightenment, which is defined in the Second Point as "cultivating ultimate and relative bodhichitta." The San-skrit word bodhi means awakening, and one who is awake is called a buddha. Chitta means mind, heart, and spirit, so I translate bodhichitta as a spirit of awakening. With ultimate bodhichitta we probe the nature of reality to realize its ultimate nature. Relative bodhichitta is the altruistic aspi-ration to realize perfect spiritual awakening for the sake of all sentient beings.

The cultivation of relative bodhichitta is like a mountain climber skillfully throwing a grappling hook up to a ledge to which he is climbing. The climber, confident in his hook, puts all his weight on the line, and starts the upward ascent. A skillfully placed grappling hook is a climber's connec-tion with his ultimate destination. Bodhichitta is the grappling hook for the attainment of enlightenment. Bodhichitta is also the basis of continuity of practice. If you die suddenly or become so ill that your capacity for practice steeply de-clines, bodhichitta—the aspiration for perfect awakening in order to be of service to others—will provide continuity over the lapses in practice and continue to draw you like a magnet toward enlightenment from one lifetime to the next. After solid grounding in the discursive meditations of the preliminaries, the Second Point of the Seven-Point Mind-Training moves directly to enlightenment itself, the cultivation and integration of ultimate and relative bodhichitta. The Second Point begins the training in for-mal daily meditation to integrate Dharma into active daily life. In traditional Buddhist practice, one begins every ses-sion by taking refuge, entrusting oneself to the "three jewels": those who have achieved perfect spiritual awak-ening, Dharma as the path to such awakening, and the spiritual community that is committed to enlightenment. Upon the foundation of refuge, bodhichitta, the highest mo-tivation, is cultivated with the heartfelt prayer: "May my practice be of benefit for the spiritual awakening of all sentient beings." This prayer nurtures our highest possible motivation, enlightenment for the welfare of others. Once you have achieved stability, reveal the mystery. The Second Point moves directly to the contemplative in-vestigation of the nature of reality and consciousness itself. The brief mnemonic of the text encapsulates some of the deepest insight practices in Tibetan Buddhism. The insight practices taught here probe the nature of consciousness and its relation to reality, which is the mystery to be revealed. The stability referred to is meditative stability, mental bal-ance, the prerequisite to the contemplative investigation of the ultimate nature of mind and reality. The mind is stabi-lized and refined into an instrument of investigation, which is the foundation for the cultivation of wisdom and com-passion. This is the quintessential method for revealing the mystery.

The hand gesture, or mudra, commonly used in the medi-tative posture symbolizes the goal of the Second Point, the union of ultimate and relative bodhichitta: the right hand, symbolizing compassion, rests on the left hand, which symbolizes wisdom. The touching of the two thumbs symbolizes the union of wisdom and compassion, both the path and the goal of Buddhist practice. Achieving stability is central to the Second Point of the Mind-Training and has two interrelated aspects. One as-pect of stability is faith, or confidence, which is a theme shared by all religious traditions. The other aspect is medita-tive stabilization, a practice highly developed in the Buddhist tradition. Faith In our modern, highly secular world, we are not only over-whelmed with information, but we are cast into an ocean of conflicting religious, philosophical, and scientific claims about the nature of the universe and human existence. No human society in recorded history has ever been presented with such a diversity of views, many of them presented as if with great authority. Now in the midst of this cacophony of voices, we are presented with the teachings of the Bud-dha and later teachers who have followed the path he revealed. When we first encounter the Buddha indirectly through his teachings, we meet with a stranger from a faraway time and a faraway place. It doesn't get much stranger than that. And when we first encounter Buddhist teachings, many of them certainly do seem strange, for they fly in the face of many views held by our society at large. The Buddha himself as well as contemporary authentic Buddhist teachers do not present themselves as unques-tionable authorities on the nature of reality, nor as masters who instruct us infallibly on how to lead our lives. These teachers offer themselves to us above all as friends, specifi-cally as spiritual friends, and as guides to lead us on an experiential journey in the pursuit of knowledge and personal transformation. But when we first meet them, they are strangers, and it is perfectly appropriate to respond to their teachings with agnosticism and skepticism. After all, when assuming a stance of agnosticism, we are quite realistically acknowledging that we don't know—the first step toward wisdom! And by taking a position of skepticism, we are in effect saying, "I doubt that you know either." Considering the wide range of authoritative claims being made today about everything from the nature of consciousness to UFOs, in many cases such skepticism has to be well founded.

But if we want to know, if we want to make genuine dis-coveries about matters that are of life-and-death importance to us, we have to move beyond agnosticism. If we are totally convinced that no one else has discovered what we want to know, then we have no one to rely but ourselves. But what are our grounds for being so certain that no one else knows about what we are after? If we are to be skeptical, surely we should start by being skeptical about how much we know about how much everyone else knows! If I'm re-ally agnostic, I have to start with the premise that I don't know whether you might have made important discover-ies that I have not. Likewise, just because our Western civilization is ignorant in some respects, it would be silly to assume that no other civilization has made important discoveries where we have not.

When it comes to knowledge, Western civilization has made enormous strides, especially since the Scientific Revo-lution. We can take great pride and satisfaction in our many discoveries concerning the world around us. But one do-main of reality in which we still remain scientifically in the dark is the realm of consciousness. It's just not science's strong point. However, precisely where science is at its weakest, the Buddhist tradition makes its strongest and most astonishing truth-claims. The only way we know of the existence of consciousness is by means of our first-per-son experience, and the Buddhist tradition has devised many ingenious methods for enhancing and refining this mode of perception so that we can probe more deeply into the nature, origins, and potentials of consciousness. In any early account of the Buddha's life and teachings, it is obvi-ous that he claimed to have made bold discoveries based on his own meditative experience. If you read how he re-sponded to many of the metaphysical assertions of his time, you will see that he wasn't one for simply adopting wholesale the beliefs of his contemporaries. For example, the earliest account of his enlightenment makes it clear that his claims about the reality and signifi-cance of the continuity of individual consciousness after death were based on his own experiential knowledge.12 In evaluating his claims, we may conclude that he was right or that he was wrong, but there is nothing to imply that he was agnostic or that he lifted these ideas from someone else. His assertions about rebirth and karma were unique in his time. One of his remarkable claims that was inspired initially by other contemplatives is that the scope and pre-cision of mental perception can be enormously enhanced by training in meditative concentration. In a broader sense, he claimed that the mental afflictions that beset us—such as hostility, craving, anxiety, and delusion—are not immu-table. With training they can be attenuated, and with deep training, they can be eliminated completely.

How do we know whether he knew what he was talking about? Simply put, we don't. We start out as agnostics. But if we want to find out, the only way to proceed is to put the training to the test of our own experience. Here is a time not for skepticism, but for intelligent faith. William James com-ments in this regard that where preferences are powerless to modify or produce things, faith is totally inappropriate, but for the class of facts that depend on personal preference, trust, or loyalty for actualization, "faith is not only licit and pertinent, but essential and indispensable. The truths can-not become true till our faith has made them so."13 We will never progress in Buddhist practice, in education, or in any other great venture without such faith, starting with faith in our own ability to gain new knowledge and transform ourselves in meaningful ways. When we first meet the Buddha indirectly (through his teachings) or a contemporary Buddhist teacher directly, we are meeting with a stranger. But if we cultivate the rela-tionship, over time, we get to know the qualities of the teacher, and he or she may earn our trust. Then the teacher becomes a friend on whom we can rely for matters that are important to us, including matters that are presently be-yond our ken. After getting to know a specific Buddhist teacher, if we find him untrustworthy or unhelpful, then we are free to choose another teacher. Likewise, if upon careful examination we find the teachings of a certain Bud-dhist tradition to be unreliable, we can check out another Buddhist tradition. And if we find the Buddhist teachings as a whole to be unsound, we are free to look elsewhere. A number of my lamas have commented after giving public teachings, "If you find these teachings to be sound and use-ful, by all means put them into practice. If not, keep on looking!"

At the same time, we need to apply discerning intelli-gence to our own way of putting the teachings to the test. Do questionable Buddhist truth-claims violate reason or compelling empirical evidence? Or do they just violate our assumptions and what the people around us think? What do we really know, and what have we picked up as un-tested assumptions and preconceptions from our society? This is a time for self-directed skepticism. And if we put the teachings into practice and find them ineffective, where does the inadequacy lie: in the teachings or in our own implementation of them? For example, the Buddha and many later Buddhist contemplatives claim to have achieved irreversible freedom from various mental afflictions. If we fail to do so, what have we proven? That they didn't either, or simply that we did not practice with sufficient diligence and intelligence?

On the one hand I'm inclined to say there are no easy answers to these questions. On the other hand, there is one kind of response that is relatively easy and untroubling. While we are at sea in the midst of uncertainty about the nature and potentials of our existence, we can cling to ag-nosticism and skepticism as we would cling desperately to an anchored buoy. This can provide us with a bit of secu-rity and an easy answer: "who knows?" Intellectually there seems to be safety here, immune to the ridicule of others. But there's also an immobility to this position. We are at sea in the midst of confusion, and there we remain. The Buddha is like one who swims out to meet us and shows us the way to shore. He says he has been there, and many discoveries lie in wait for us on land if we will let go of the buoy of our uncertainty, our faint-heartedness, and our skepticism. Of course, there is nothing to compel us to place our trust in him or in any later Buddhist teacher. We can remain agnostic and skeptical as long as we like. But if we choose to accept the challenge of the Buddhist path of contemplative exploration, we need to let go of our insecu-rities and take the plunge into practice. And this requires that we accept some of the Buddha's assertions on faith as working hypotheses. The Buddhist tradition speaks of three kinds of faith, and this is the first kind: the faith of belief. How can we believe Buddhist truth-claims when there are so many diverse claims attributed to the Buddha, let alone the many points of disagreement among different Buddhist traditions? Two things need to be borne in mind here. The first is that, according to even the earliest recorded teachings of the Buddha, not all his assertions were meant as definitive truths about the nature of reality. Some of them are called "provisional truths," which are culturally imbed-ded and are meant more as heuristic devices to help specific individuals or communities at specific points in their spiri-tual development. But the Buddha and many later Buddhist contemplatives made many other truth-claims, based upon their meditative experience, that were meant to be defini-tive. That is, they were presented as genuine discoveries about the nature of reality, not just social constructs specific to a particular time and place.

How are we to discern which Buddhist teachings are pro-visional and which are definitive? Buddhist tradition states that the cultivation of that kind of discerning intelligence is a crucial element on the path to spiritual maturation. Put the teachings to the test of reason and experience, and see what you find. As for the many truth-claims across mul-tiple Buddhist traditions over the past 2,500 years, it would be unreasonable to expect that they would all speak with one voice. Just look at the history of Western science over the past four hundred years! And even today, in any cut-ting-edge branch of science there are disagreements, many of them quite fundamental.14 Once again, grappling with such diversity is a central challenge in the pursuit of knowl-edge. If we're not up to this challenge, we can always slide back to the stagnant comfort of agnosticism. The faith of belief as a working hypothesis is one kind of faith that is regarded as indispensable in the Buddhist tra-dition. A second kind of faith entails admiration for those who have achieved high states of spiritual realization and for their teachings. Such faith is not simply a matter of belief, but rather arises out of one's understanding and apprecia-tion of the noble qualities of such individuals and the truths they reveal. And a third type of faith in Buddhism is the faith of aspiration. With the faith of aspiration, the possi-bility of making genuine, deep discoveries about the nature of consciousness, its origins, and its potentials becomes more than a matter of belief. It is more than an apprecia-tion based on understanding. It is a fervent desire to test the teachings oneself by engaging in the practice. Now is the time when the extraordinary claims made by the Bud-dha and later Buddhist contemplatives are truly adopted as working hypotheses to be tested by experience.

Faith is important but is no substitute for putting spiri-tual teachings to the test. Does practice help or not? Are mental afflictions decreased and does genuine happiness increase? Constant vigilance, assessment, and reassessment are required to follow a path of spiritual awakening. What is required is consistent probing, not settling into dogma-tism or complacency, and continuously testing the path for its effectiveness. Of course, we are testing not just "the path" but our intelligence and perseverance in following it, so we must be equally critical of our own efforts. This brings a type of stability, or faith, that is in motion, part of the process itself.

William James addressed the issue of faith in the context of the dogmatic and materialistic mood of late nineteenth-century science. At the close of the nineteenth century, many scientists felt that religious belief was antithetical to the rational and skeptical stance of science. For example, Will-iam Clifford, one of the more prominent nineteenth-century scientific materialists, attacked religious faith on the grounds that "it is wrong always, everywhere, and for everyone, to believe anything upon insufficient evidence."15 Many scientists considered religion to be a failure of intellectual integrity, and faith to be a path of least resis tance for those unable to handle the brute facts of science. Some scientists today express the same sentiment, claim ing that religious people hold onto their beliefs because of an unfortunate genetic predisposition. ;

What such materialists ignore, however, is that scientists and religious people alike, without exception, place their faith in some belief system which transcends the scope of their present knowledge. As William James pointed out, whether in scientific research or in daily life, We often cannot wait but must act, somehow; so we act on the most probable hypothesis, trusting that the event may prove us wise. Moreover, not to act on one belief is often equivalent to acting as if the opposite belief were true, so inaction would not always be as 'passive' as the intellectualists assume.16 Faith, he asserted, is essential, but as a practical, not a dogmatic, attitude, and it must go with toleration of other faiths, with the search for the most probable, and with the full consciousness of responsibilities and risks. Specifically, James defended one's right to believe ahead of the evidence only in those cases where (1) much is at stake, (2) the evi-dence at hand does not settle the case, and (3) one cannot wait for more evidence, either because no amount of evi-dence can settle the case, or because waiting itself is to decide not to believe. For many things studied by science, personal beliefs are virtually irrelevant. Whether or not a scientist believes in the existence of intelligent life in other solar systems will have a negligible effect on the data she collects from the Hubbell telescope. In other domains of reality, faith or in-tuition will significantly influence the reality that is being addressed: parenting, teaching, and almost any domain in which we engage with people. There is an enormous range of experience in which faith and intuition influence the reality about which we have faith.

What about personal reality? Do you have faith that the mental afflictions that cause suffering are genetically de-termined or do you believe that your mind is malleable and these afflictions can be alleviated? Do you believe that wisdom, compassion, virtue, can be cultivated, or do you believe that the brain's physiology fixes an upper limit on these virtues? Our faith concerning the human potential for wisdom and compassion has an enormous impact on how we lead our lives. Even a small positive intuition that happiness and well-being actually could arise from our hearts and nurture us can have a tremendous influence on life. Alternately, if you have faith that all happiness comes from the outside, this faith will also profoundly influence the choices you make in life. William James agreed with most scientists that there are things about which we should not have faith. But there are other domains of life in which faith or lack of faith will have an enormous impact. If we have no faith that we can develop insight or develop deeper compassion, it's not likely that we will. In this way, our beliefs often act as self-fulfilling prophesies. We can have faith in our own potential, or we can remain skeptical and agnostic. Some people are skeptical of Buddhist truth-claims because they violate the beliefs of their religion. Others are skeptical of the truth-claims of all spiritual traditions because they violate the beliefs of scientific materialism. And yet others are skepti-cal of all truth-claims, be they scientific or spiritual, because they violate the beliefs of postmodernism. In Christianity references are often made to "believers" and "non-believ-ers," with Christians being the former and everyone else being counted as the latter. But in reality we are all believers! It is a just a question of what we believe.