苦、空、无常、无我
净空法师

第一、要觉悟人生是“苦”,第二、要觉悟人生是“空”。一般人到临终的时候,这一口气要断了,这个时候才知道是一场空。现在为什么不知道?其实聪明人、容易觉悟的人,他知道每天晚上睡觉眼睛一闭,跟死有什么两样?眼睛一闭,什么都空了,哪一样东西是你的?真的,连身体都不是,何况身外之物,要觉悟。你果然觉悟,真的会开智慧,会得自在。为什么?得失的念头就看轻了。损人利己的事情自然就不愿意做,也就不会做了。佛祖教我们断恶修善、积功累德,我们为什么做不到?就是不觉悟。佛讲“万法皆空”的经典,特别是大乘般若经讲得太多了,世尊当年在世讲般若讲了二十二年,般若就是告诉我们事实,这是真正智慧。

第三、要觉悟“人间是无常的”。不但世间环境是无常的,从大的来看,沧海桑田,我们现在讲地球地壳的变化,这是大的无常;小的,那真是剎那剎那都不住。物质环境如此,我们自己身体也是如此,人有生老病死;植物有生住异灭,矿物乃至于地球有成住坏空。这些事实我们不是不知道,而是在这事实里面,真的叫麻木不仁。真正觉悟的人,他是时时刻刻有高度的觉心。

第四、觉悟“人生无我”。这是真的,所有一切的罪业,都是从我执发生的。如果能够真正晓得这个道理,真正晓得这个事实,知道我这个身,佛经上常讲四大和合变现的。四大是讲物质,佛经用地、水、火、风这四字来代表。四大是什么?四大就是物质。《金刚经》讲世界是“一合相”,这个观察非常了不起!现在科学家承认,确实是一合相,就是一个基本的物质组合而成的。佛告诉我们:基本的物质有四种现象,叫四大。第一种性质,它是一个物质,虽然很小很小,它有体积,“地”代表体积,代表它是物质。第二种性质,它有温度,经典里称为“火大”,火代表的温度。第三种性质,它有湿度,湿度用“水”代表。我们现在讲带电,阳电就是火大,阴电就是水大。第四种性质,它是动的,不是静止的,动就用“风”来代表。诸位要晓得,四大是讲组织一切物质的基本,在佛法里面叫微尘,它太小了,它有这四种特性。这是物质组合的,组织聚合的时候,现这形状;它离开、分散了,形状就没有了。所以身不是真的,只是聚散而已,聚就有,散就没有了。

譬如我们这枝粉笔,里面是很多白粉的分子组合起来的,如果我们把它捏碎分散,这粉笔就没有了。这粉笔它的真相从这里就可以了解,只是粉末之聚散而已,聚的时候它没有生,散了它也没有灭,所以物质确实不生不灭。你明白这个道理,我们这个身就没有生灭。身没有生灭,所有一切万法都没有生灭,聚散无常,它是现相而已,你不要被这假相骗了,你要认清它的真相。所以佛讲大千世界就是一合相,一合相把它的真相说出来了。它是一合相,这是物质无常。

除物质之外,我们还有一部分叫精神,《心经》里讲的五蕴,叫“受、想、行、识”,这四个统统是属于“心”,即“心理作用”,这个也是无常的。我们心里面的念头,一个念头起,一个念头灭,念头的生灭无常。所以身跟心的真相,我们要认识清楚,然后才真正体会到佛经讲的“无我”。“人无我”,是讲我们自己本身,五蕴之身。佛又说“法无我”,“法”是讲的五蕴。五蕴里面也没有我,“我”就是主宰的意思,我们今天讲存在的意思,它没有,找不到,它是剎那剎那在那里变化的。所以真的是“苦、空、无常、无我”,我们要常常记住佛这句话,要常常在生活当中去体验这句话,这才算是一个觉悟的人!

Having the nature of being harmless and actual reality, it is not reversed through its opposites, even with effort, since mind adheres to this side that is its [nature].

— Dharmakīrti

How to Do Mahamudra Meditation
by 7th Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche

Buddhism is rich in methods for working with the mind. One of the most renowned and powerful is the ancient wisdom tradition known as Mahamudra. Originating in India, the view and practice of Mahamudra gradually spread across Asia and today has reached the West. As a philosophy, it aims to communicate clear knowledge of the true nature of the mind. As a meditation practice, it is designed to bring about that experience swiftly and unmistakably.

Mahamudra is a contemplative Buddhist tradition known for its simplicity. The practice is to be genuine, relaxed, and aware in every situation in life, to accept and appreciate who we are. To engage in its profound methods, we aren’t required to change our lifestyle, and any message contrary to that is not a true Mahamudra teaching. The practice of Mahamudra is an experience of our mind that’s completely free and joyful, no matter what our life brings us. It points us to mind’s true nature.

The meaning of Mahamudra is found in its name. Maha means “great” and mudra means “symbol” or “seal.” The Great Symbol referred to is the wisdom of emptiness, which is the very nature of our mind and of all phenomena — any object or idea the mind can observe or become aware of. Because it covers the totality of our experience, the Great Symbol is known as the all-encompassing reality from which there is no escape or exception.

So, how do we begin the practice of Mahamudra? First, we learn with an open and interested mind what Mahamudra is. Then we reflect on and personalise that knowledge so that it becomes our own experience, rather than a theory. Then, having digested the meaning, we simply sit, going beyond knowing about Mahamudra to becoming one with it.

Realising the true nature of our mind doesn’t happen just by accident, pure luck, or willpower alone. We need some help. We have to rely on key instructions of the Mahamudra lineage imparted to us through a trusted and realised teacher. Mahamudra has a tradition of skillful methods for directly pointing out the nature of mind, which is a unique feature of this lineage. If we have the opportunity to receive these instructions and a sincere interest in working with them, we have a good chance of understanding and realising Mahamudra wisdom.

Mahamudra is divided into three parts: ground Mahamudra, path Mahamudra, and fruition Mahamudra. Ground Mahamudra is where our discussion starts. It is fundamentally a view of the most basic reality of our mind and world. We will then look briefly at path Mahamudra, which is the actual meditation practice. Last, we have fruition Mahamudra, a description of what the path leads us to. That will give us a complete picture of the Mahamudra journey of awakening.

Mahamudra teaches us with a number of special techniques for looking at our mind to see its true nature. When we look inside with a clear, steady focus, the mind we see is transparent, spacious, and open. It feels like something’s there, but when we look for it, there’s no “thing” we can find. Our thoughts and emotions are vivid, yet we can’t put our hands on them. They melt away as soon as we notice them. Even sights and sounds, which seem to be real, distinct entities, evade our grasp when we search for their true identity. When we recognise the flowing, open, and spacious quality of all our experiences, even for a moment, that’s the emptiness side of the wisdom of emptiness.

When we look at our mind, however, we see that it’s not just spacious. There’s a luminous, clear, and creative energy that’s the source of our compassion and joy. There is also a quality of wakefulness, of all-encompassing awareness. This is the wisdom side of the wisdom of emptiness.

When we recognise the union of this brilliance, this awareness, and the open, transparent space, that’s what we call the recognition of the wisdom of emptiness, or the true nature of mind. In such a moment, we don’t experience just one side of our mind; we experience the wholeness of the mind. We see the union of space, compassion, and awareness, which is called Mahamudra.

This is a way of understanding the mind of enlightenment — buddha wisdom or buddhanature. This wisdom mind is rich in qualities that bring us boundless happiness, insight, and a corresponding desire to help our world. Right from the very beginning the minds of all beings have been free of any inherent faults or defects. We might ask, “What is this ‘very beginning’ that we are talking about? Twenty years ago? A billion years ago?”

Actually, it’s this very moment, now, when we fail to recognise the true nature of mind. This is the very beginning. If we can relax in this moment, we are resting in the ground or fundamental state of Mahamudra. The way we rest is through the practice of meditation, which is path Mahamudra. When we can rest well, we are naturally in union with the goal, or fruition, of the path. There’s no other Mahamudra to attain: we are buddha, awake and free, in this very moment.

But when we fail to recognise the basic nature of our mind, then we have a problem. The luminous, creative energy of original mind is misperceived as the dualistic world of self and other. Confusion arises, clinging begins, and then the whole world of suffering and bewilderment manifests. Instead of enjoying peace, illumination, and happiness, we experience our mind as afflicted with painful emotions. We’re bombarded by thoughts that lead us this way and that. We endure anxiety and fear while we long for peace and contentment.

That is what we call the spinning of samsara, or cyclic existence, which is endless until we decide to stop it by realising mind’s true state. So the beginning of samsara is when we fail to recognise that ground, and the end of samsara is nothing more complicated than recognising our own nature of mind. When mind recognises itself and can rest freely and relaxed in a state of openness, that is the end of our confusion and suffering.

Luminosity, the clarity nature of mind, manifests creatively as phenomena. Because we are habituated to solidifying our experience of this luminous display, it’s easier for most of us to see the luminous aspect of mind than to recognise mind’s empty nature. However, if we’re missing the experience of emptiness, we might start to think of luminosity as something that’s solid and real enough to hold onto. Then it becomes a source of suffering and confusion instead of freedom. It’s important to first learn what emptiness actually means, at least intellectually, before we jump to the conclusion that the nature of mind possesses all the qualities of enlightenment. Once we have a good understanding of the emptiness nature of mind, then we can further that view by seeing mind’s luminous nature.

So before undertaking Mahamudra meditation, we should first have a theoretical understanding of the true nature of mind — as empty, luminous, and aware. Second, we should understand how confusion develops when we don’t recognise that nature. Third, we should understand that the essence of our confused thoughts and emotions is free of any innate negativity or fixation, that all expressions and experiences of mind are empty and luminous.

These three aspects of ground Mahamudra are important to understand through conceptual mind first, and then through the process of reflection to make it more experiential. Finally, we bring our understanding to complete realisation through meditation.

In the beginning, Mahamudra meditation is a process of becoming familiar with our mind just as it is, and then learning how to relax within it. Our first glimpse is likely to show us that our mind often wanders aimlessly about, and there’s little organisation to our thinking. It’s like a house with junk piled up everywhere. So, what do we need to do first? We need to bring a sense of order and clarity to our mind. By being more mindful of our thought process, our awareness naturally becomes sharper, more precise, and more discriminating. Once we’ve created some mental space, we can begin to glimpse mind’s nature and the play of its creative energy. Gradually, we can further let go of the thoughts, labels, and judgments that keep our mind moving, unsettled, and tense. We can begin to relax, expand, and inhabit a new dimension of presence and openness.

There are two main types of meditation in the Mahamudra tradition: Mahamudra shamatha, or resting in the nature of mind, and Mahamudra vipashyana, or clear seeing. The focus of our attention is the mind itself, as opposed to anything external. If you have a background of sitting meditation and are familiar with that practice, then learning to rest in the nature of mind can be very simple, easy, and straightforward.

What does it mean to rest in the nature of mind, and how do we do it? We may think that to meditate, we have to concentrate, we have to focus on something. The actual meditation of Mahamudra is not really about that. It’s more about knowing how to rest our mind and let it relax in its own state. That can be tricky, because on one hand we need to be mindful and stay present, and on the other, we need to let go of any stress and just relax. So the best practice is the middle way, finding a balance between nondistraction and relaxation.

In the beginning, that may feel artificial, but if we keep doing it, it becomes effortless. It’s like when we start learning how to drive a car. It’s very stressful when we first get behind the wheel. Our eyes are glued to the road. We’re holding onto the steering wheel so tightly we can feel the tension in our shoulders. At first it’s an intense, scary experience, but the more we learn about driving, the more we relax.

In the same way, Mahamudra meditation can feel unnatural and stressful at first. We may be worried that we have too many thoughts and are not relaxed enough, or that our focus is not in the right place. But relaxation will come naturally if we keep doing it. That’s the key thing — to keep doing it. Then the experience of space, awareness, and relaxation will come naturally.

MEDITATION: MAHAMUDRA

First, take your seat on a cushion or chair in an upright and relaxed position. Take a moment to feel the cushion, the posture of your body, the attitude of the mind, and the movement of the breath. Sit quietly for several minutes, gently letting go of your thoughts until you feel a sense of calmness.

Next, bring awareness to the eyes and look directly into the space in front. Then simply relax at ease and rest in the present moment, in nowness. On one hand, there’s a sense of focusing on the space, but on the other, there’s no particular spot to focus on. The gaze is like space itself, wide and spacious.

Whatever comes up in the present, whether it’s a thought, emotion, or perception, try to meet it without judgment or comment. Rest the mind in that very experience, whether you regard it as good or bad, pleasant or unpleasant. There’s no need to change or improve it or look for a better place to rest. Rest the mind where it is and just as it is.

In Mahamudra meditation, it isn’t sufficient just to recognise the presence of thoughts and emotions; we need to recognise their true nature and rest within that experience. So from time to time in meditation, reflect on the three basic characteristics of mind: emptiness, clarity, and awareness.

The emptiness of the mind is something we can “see,” so to speak. When we look at the mind, it’s like infinite space. It has no limit. It has no material form, colour, or shape. There is nothing we can touch. That space, that openness, is the empty nature of our mind. When contemplating mind’s emptiness, experience the spacious, insubstantial, nonmaterial quality of mind, of thoughts and emotions, and leave the mind in a state of ease and total openness.

This mind is not just empty, however. It also has a vivid clarity, an infinite and vast luminosity, which is the radiance of emptiness itself. It’s like a wide, clear sky filled with light. This experience of space with light is the experience of great compassion and lovingkindness, or unbiased great love beyond concept. It manifests in the vibrant energy of our thoughts, emotions, and perceptions. We can see it in every experience of mind, especially in the powerful display of our emotions.

Once again, sit quietly until you feel a sense of calmness. Then contemplate the clarity aspect of mind. Look directly at whatever forms, thoughts, or emotions arise: all are the natural expression of this luminous nature. Look beyond the object and experience the radiance of emptiness, resting relaxed within that basic presence of clarity.

The clarity aspect of mind has the power of knowing, seeing, and experiencing the world. When a room is full of light, we can see all the objects surrounding us. In the same way, the light of our mind makes appearances clear and distinct. When we think about an object, our mind naturally produces an image for it. Whether we’re thinking about Bart Simpson or His Holiness the Karmapa, the image we see is an expression of mind’s clear, playful, creative energy.

Mind is not only empty and clear; it has the quality of panoramic and discriminating awareness. While clarity is the compassion aspect of mind, awareness is the wakeful aspect. It is the sharp, penetrating intelligence (prajna) that sees through any confusion and perfectly understands the world it sees. With clarity and awareness coming together, we experience the full power and benefit of compassion and wisdom in our lives.

As before, now rest the mind for a few moments. Let go of any thoughts of hope or fear, and calm the mind. Rest the gaze in the open space in front. Bring our mind into the present moment and relax, simply experiencing the quality of awareness. Then let go of even that and relax without any thought. Again, we bring ourselves back into the present moment of awareness. Relax at ease and experience the mind as empty and luminous.

With awareness, we experience the three aspects of mind in union and the wholeness of mind’s nature. When we hear instructions to meditate on the mind or to rest in mind’s true nature, it is this union of emptiness, clarity, and awareness. When we are able to rest in this nature without too much stress from trying too hard to focus or concentrate, we can begin to experience genuine relaxation.

Relaxing in this space is one of the most powerful meditations leading to a direct experience of buddha mind. With this experience, we can bring a new level of understanding and skill into our everyday life. The wisdom and compassion we manifest will transform the once disturbing energies of our thoughts and emotions into something very useful and powerful that can bring about the experience of enlightenment.

Ponlop Rinpoche 28.

To let the mind become vast and open like the sky, is the key instruction for enhancing practice.

— Shri Singha

Buddhists all over the world come together to celebrate the Birth, Enlightenment and Parinirvana of Lord Buddha on this day. May we have the aspiration to strive for enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings and may all sentient beings have the right conditions and causes for enlightenment. May all be free from fear, hunger and harm. May all be happy and healthy. May we wish for the world to put aside differences to build a place that is conducive for all living beings. May all rejoice on this auspicious day and have a wonderful Vesak.

TAYATA OM MUNI MUNI MAHA MUNI SHAKYAMUNI YE SOHA

南无本师释迦牟尼佛!

达雅塔 嗡 牟尼牟尼 玛哈牟尼 释迦牟那耶 梭哈!

I now bathe the Tathágata. His pure wisdom and virtue adorn the assembly. I pray that those living beings of this period of the five impurities may quickly witness the pure Dharma body of the Tathágata. May the incense of morality, meditation, wisdom, and the knowledge and experience of liberation constantly perfume every realm of the ten directions. I pray that the smoke of this incense will likewise do the Buddha’s work of salvation without measure or limit. I vow to put a stop to the three hells and the wheel of samsara, completely extinguishing the fires and obtaining the coolness of relief, so that all may manifest the thought of unsurpassed enlightenment, perpetually escaping the river of desires and advancing to the other shore of Nirvana.

— The Sutra on the Merit of Bathing the Buddha

Buddha 516.

浴佛与供养的意义
文|邝野

每逢卫塞节,佛弟子就会到寺院里供花浴佛,祈增福慧;又或是参与传灯仪式,你可知道个中的意义吗?

浴佛

“浴佛”是为了纪念佛陀的诞生。事关佛陀出世时,步踏莲花,连走七步,然后一手指天,一手指地说:“ 天上天下,唯我独尊。” 此时,大地震动,天女散花,四大天王以香花清水沐浴佛身,九龙亦吐出甘露为佛沐浴,人天无一不欢欣鼓舞,因为佛陀降临,为三界苦恼众生带来清凉无比的佛法,为众生提供一个解脱之道。

基于上述的典故,每逢卫塞,佛徒就会以香花净水灌沐悉达多太子圣像庆祝佳节,以表示对佛陀尊敬的供养。

虽说《浴佛功德经》记载着浴佛有“现受富乐,无病延年;于所愿求,无不遂意;亲友眷属,悉皆安稳;长辞八难,永出苦源;不受女身,速成正觉”等功德,可修道的佛弟子不应该只为功德,而是要通过沐浴佛身,来审视自身,反省己过,并通过忏悔心,清净身口意三业。

所谓“外沐佛身,内净自心”,在浴佛的同时,佛弟子亦应该藉着机会,提醒自己远离身垢,减除心染,维持身心清净,培养慈悲与智慧,才是浴佛的真正意义。

供花

除了浴佛,佛弟子也喜欢献花,向佛陀致最高的敬意。

花,其实与佛教很有深的渊源。阅读过佛典的人,一定读过不少描述“诸天赞叹、雨众妙华”等庄严盛景。典籍中亦有不少以花来开启佛弟子智慧的公案,例如:拈花微笑、花开见佛等,成为不少法师用以教育弟子的修行工具。

在《佛为首迦长者说业报差别经》中,明确地记载了供花的功德果报:

“若有众生,奉施香华,得十种功德:一者、处世如花;二者、身无臭秽;三者、福香戒香、四者、随所生处,鼻根不坏;五者、超胜世间,为众归仰;六者,身常香洁;七者、爱乐正法,受持读诵;八者、具大福报;九者、命终生天;速证涅槃。是名奉施香花得十种功德。”

佛徒向佛陀献花,除了对佛陀深表感恩与尊敬之外,同时也愿意接受佛陀的教化,谦卑地放下自己的身段,从头学习。

佛弟子也可从一朵花的盛衰枯荣,联想到人的生老病死,从而体会到生命的短暂与无常,抓紧宝贵的光阴,在菩提道上勇猛精进。

供灯

灯,在佛教中一直被视为光明与智慧的象征。燃起一点火,点亮一盏灯,就好比点燃修道者的光明自性,提醒着修道者在菩提道上需要精进、努力。

供灯,发心是很重要的。在《贤愚经》中的“难陀品”就通过贫女难陀筹钱供灯的事件,强调供养时必须发菩提心才有意义。佛陀住世的时候,贫女难陀很想供养佛陀,但是苦于家贫没钱,于是她四处乞讨,终于化得一文钱,这一文钱就只能供她买得一盏小灯,可她还是抱着挚诚的心将这一盏小灯供于佛前,并许下心愿:“ 愿此光明照彻十方,令一切有情皆得出离生死,浴佛与供养的意义得无上乐!”

当时,佛前的供灯千千万万,很多的灯火比贫女的还大还亮,闪亮得光芒亮彻夜空。可是,再珍贵的油灯也耐不住漫漫长夜的消耗,随着黎明的降临,所有灯火悉皆燃尽,唯有贫女的灯,仍在悠悠发亮。

佛陀便说:“ 这供灯的主人,发了救度众生的大愿,由于至诚恳切,所以灯明无尽。”

除了供灯,佛弟子喜于在卫塞时进行传灯仪式。传灯,象征着三宝弟子辗转相传佛陀的教诲,就如一盏灯点燃另一盏灯, 再点燃另一盏灯⋯⋯有着灯灯相续,代代相传,让正法长住,摄化众生;破除黑暗,给予光明的意涵。

供花也好,供灯也好,重点还是在于供养的心,而不是供品本身。供养者应该之视为本身修持的一部分,通过供养审视内心,改进自己,完善自己,致力于道业上的增长,将供养发挥至最大的力量。

Putting down all barriers, let your mind be full of love. Let it pervade all the quarters of the world so that the whole wide world, above, below, and around, is pervaded with love. Let it be sublime and beyond measure so that it abounds everywhere.

— The Buddha, Digha Nikaya

Just When You Think You’re Enlightened
by Andrew Holecek

Sooner or later it’s going to happen — it might be the very first time you meditate or only after years of dedicated practice, but someday you’re going to have a spiritual experience. These experiences come in many forms, ranging from simple tranquillity to radiant ecstasy. In their fullest expression, they are spiritual earthquakes that can transform your life. The Tibetan sage Marpa shared one such experience:

I was overwhelmed with joy. The hairs on my body stood on end, and I was moved to tears… My body was intoxicated with undefiled bliss… There dawned an experience beyond words.

— from The Rain of Wisdom, translated by the Nalanda Translation Committee

At more modest levels, they can manifest as the total cessation of thought, an out-of-body experience, or sensations of bliss and clarity. You might have an experience of profound meditation, or of union with the entire cosmos, and say to yourself, “This is it! This is what I’ve been waiting for.” Like the endorphin released in a runner’s high, these experiences are the meditator’s high. And they are addicting.

These events are a time for celebration — and a time for concern. They’re cause for celebration because they can be genuine markers of progress. You’re getting a glimpse into the nature of mind and reality; you’re starting to see things the way they truly are. You’re waking up. But such experiences are also cause for concern precisely because they feel so good. Surprising as it may sound, the spiritual path is not about making you feel good. It’s about making you feel real.

Spiritual experiences can be the sweetest honey covering the sharpest hooks. Because they can be so transformative and blissful, it’s almost impossible not to grasp after them. You want more. That’s the hook. And anytime grasping is involved, even if it’s for a spiritual experience, you’re back in samsara, hooked into the conditioned world of endless dissatisfaction.

Spiritual experiences are by-products of meditation. The problem is that we think they’re the final product of meditation. Traleg Rinpoche said, “The main cause of misperceptions regarding meditation experience is that after the loss of the initial fervour, we may forget to focus on the essence of meditation and its purpose and instead place more and more emphasis on the underlying meditative experience itself.”

Spiritual experiences are called nyam in Tibetan, which means “temporary experience,” and every meditator needs to be aware of them. Nyam is set in contrast to tokpa, which means “realisation.” Nyam is like pleasant vapour. No matter how good it feels, it always evaporates. Tokpa is like a mountain. It stays. A nyam always has a beginning and an end. One day you soar into the most heavenly meditation, but eventually you drop back to Earth. There are no dropouts with authentic realisation.

Tsoknyi Rinpoche refers to nyams as “meditation moods” and says, “Nyam has thickness; tokpa is light and fine. The problem is we like thickness more; it’s more substantive and satisfying.” We like the substance of our moods.

Nyam and tokpa are themselves the last two phases of a three-phase process of complete assimilation or incorporation of dharma: understanding, experience, and realisation. This shows us that experience is indeed a good thing, a necessary but intermediate phase in absorbing the dharma. We start with understanding, which is traditionally referred to as a patch because eventually it falls off. With study and practice, understanding develops into experience, which is like the weather — it always changes. With sustained practice, experience matures into realisation, which like the sky never wavers. This is the three-stage process of full embodiment; it is how we ingest, digest, and metabolise the dharma until it almost literally becomes us.

If you relate to a nyam properly, it blossoms into realisation. If you don’t, it rots and becomes the most subtle and serious of all spiritual traps. Tai Situ Rinpoche said that you can get stuck in a nyam for an entire lifetime. More commonly, people waste precious years thinking that because they had a spiritual experience they’re enlightened, when in fact they’re merely shackled to a nyam. If you’re attached to your grand experience and start to identify with it, you have simply replaced a chain made of lead with one made of gold. Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche said:

Meditators who run after experiences, like a child running after a beautiful rainbow, will be misled. When you practice intensely, you may have flashes of clairvoyance and various signs of accomplishment, but all they do is foster expectations and pride — they are just devilish tricks and the source of obstacles.

— from Journey to Enlightenment, by Matthieu Ricard

Attachment to anything, no matter how spectacular, is still attachment.

I have a special interest in nyams because I, too, have been hooked. The first nyam to get me was the experience of non thought. This caught me when I was introduced to Transcendental Meditation (TM) nearly forty years ago. As my TM instructor guided me into meditation, I slipped into profound meditative absorption. For the first time in my life, I felt fully awake without a single thought running through my mind. I had never thought such a blissful state was even possible.

What made the experience so striking was the contrast of having arrived for my instruction feeling speedy and anxious, and then within thirty minutes dropping into a state completely free of thought. It was like diving below choppy waves into tranquil deep water. Because the contrast was so dramatic, I thought I had attained some level of enlightenment. It took me years to realise that this is a common experience and that I was far from enlightened.

The good news was that I had tasted an aspect of the awakened mind and wanted more. The experience inspired me to pursue meditation with gusto. I began a daily practice that hasn’t waned in four decades. The bad news was that I tied myself in knots trying to reproduce that experience. I had set a bar that was ridiculously high and caused me all sorts of unnecessary anguish when I couldn’t measure up.

RELATING TO SPIRITUAL EXPERIENCE

Because these exalted states are so delicious, it’s hard not to cling to a nyam. On one level, they’re just spiritual candy; having some of these sweets is okay now and again, but feasting on them will make your meditation sick.

How do we properly relate to a nyam? Let’s say that you have an experience of bliss in your meditation. It’s okay to celebrate it. Give yourself a pat on your back. But then let it go. Reinstate the conditions that brought about the experience in the first place. In other words, most of these experiences arise when the mind is open, spacious, and relaxed. William Blake, in Songs of Innocence and Experience, wrote:

He who binds to himself a joy
Doth the winged life destroy
But he who kisses the joy as it flies
Lives in Eternity’s sunrise.

If you grasp after the event and try to repeat it, that contraction around the experience ironically prevents it. In order to let realisation come, we first have to let experience go.

Another aspect of improper relationship is talking about the experience. It’s very tempting to share, proclaim, or even advertise your awakening, but it’s important to check your motivation. Ask yourself, why do you want to do this? Do you want others to know how realised you are? If so, let your actions speak louder than your words. Live your awakening. Don’t voice it.

Spiritual experiences often arise in the sanctuary of silence, and they should be kept in that sanctuary. There is a reason for secrecy in the traditions. If you remain silent, the experience tends to stabilise and mature. The nyam evolves into tokpa. If you talk about it, the experience trickles away. The nyam degenerates into a distant memory. Don’t be a leaky container and dribble onto others. Keep your experience hermetically sealed so it doesn’t spoil.

It may be okay to share your experience with intimate spiritual friends; after all, it could inspire them. But even here, always check your motivation first. When people talk about their experiences, they usually just want them to be confirmed. The one person you should talk to is your teacher or meditation instructor. An authentic teacher will keep you on track by telling you the experience is neither good nor bad, or by ignoring you, or encouraging you to let it go.

During one long retreat, I had another nyam. When I came out of retreat, I raced to share my “realisation” with my teacher, Khenpo Tsultrim Gyamtso Rinpoche. As I shared my enlightenment experience, he yawned and looked out the window. My so-called “awakening” was putting him to sleep! When I was done, he spoke about a topic that had nothing to do with my experience. I came in all puffed up with my nyam and left punctured and deflated. It wasn’t what I wanted, but it was exactly what I needed.

When you talk about your experience inappropriately, you transform opportunity into obstacle. The blessed event flips into a cursed one. Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche said that talking about spiritual experiences is like being in a dark cave with a candle and then giving your candle away — you’re left in the dark. This is one way to tell the difference between a truly realised master and one stuck in a nyam. True masters never talk about their realisation; those infected with a nyam are happy to talk. As Taoism puts it, “He who speaks does not know. He who knows does not speak.”

The essence of a proper relationship to spiritual experience is silence and release. Keep your mouth closed and your heart open. Use the experience to inspire you to keep going, but go forward without the nyam holding you back. Relate to whatever arises — the good, the bad, and the ugly — with equanimity. That’s how experience matures into realisation.

Since spiritual experiences can be so ecstatic, and the grasping correspondingly extreme, sometimes our fingers need to be pried away from the nyam. Khenpo Rinpoche said that you nurture meditative experience by destroying it. Patrul Rinpoche echoed this advice:

The yogin’s meditation improves through destruction… When experiences of stillness, bliss, and clarity occur and feelings such as joy, delight, or pleasant sensations arise, you should blast this husk of attachment to experience into smithereens.

— from Lion’s Gaze: A Commentary on Tsig Sum Nedek, by Khenchen Palden Sherab Rinpoche and Khenpo Tsewang Dongyal Rinpoche

What’s blasted is not the experience itself but our grasping onto it. Tsoknyi Rinpoche also points out, “Ordinary people don’t get enlightened because they don’t meditate. Yogis don’t get enlightened because they don’t stop meditating.” They can’t get enough of their high.

There is no tyranny as great as the tyranny of success — material or spiritual. Success leads to pride and attachment. Nyams are markers of success, but the tyranny of that triumph can boomerang. When nyams are solidified, they must be defeated. Honest meditators invite that defeat; charlatans shun it.

GURU VS. GURUISM

There’s another reason why it’s dangerous to talk about spiritual experiences. When you talk about your spiritual experience, you reify it and begin to identify with it and believe it. The more you talk, the more you convince yourself that something special really did happen. Worse still, others might start to believe it and feed the reification. Word of your awakening can spread like a virus, and before you know it, everybody may become infected with strains of your nyam.

When this happens, a subtle codependent relationship develops between “master” and disciple. The disciple unwittingly enables the “master” by revering their nyam (and projecting their psychological issues onto the “master”); the “master” then enables the disciple by showering them with attention (and similarly gets tangled in a swarm of their own projections and shadow elements). They think they’re lifting each other up, but they’re actually pulling each other down. Everybody buys into the experience of the “master,” and soon a cult is born. A “guru” has been forcefully delivered into the world.

This is not the beautiful birth of a realised guru but the deformed birth of guruism. Guruism is based on the spiritual experience of the “master,” and the cult is all about spreading that experience like a disease. Everybody catches the fever and wants to have the experience. These “gurus,” in an effort to protect the nyam and their exclusive role as its transmitter, often quarantine their disciples from outside influences. They claim they’re protecting their disciples, but in reality they’re just defending their own egos and empire. The Branch Davidians, Jonestown, and countless other cults have followed this classic formula. It’s another expression of grasping after elite experiences, a natural consequence of a nyam run wild.

The danger in confusing authentic gurus with guruism is that both involve surrender. Surrender has a powerful place in spirituality, if you surrender to the proper authority. When you intelligently surrender to a guru, their pure realisation can pour into your open heart. The result is awakening. If you ignorantly surrender to guruism, that tainted experience can also penetrate your heart, and the result is often catastrophic.

In my years on the spiritual path, I have seen many teachers cemented to their nyam. There’s no doubt that many had genuine spiritual experiences, but there’s also no doubt that they were super-glued to that experience. These “masters” tend to pop up in the West, where spirituality is ruled by convenience and instant gratification, and where the need for disciplined practice is too often supplanted by the desire for rapid results.

Because nyams are desirable, they are marketable and they sell. Who wouldn’t pay for an experience of bliss, clarity, or non-thought, the three most famous nyams? Teachers stuck in a nyam also sell, because they often exude an aura of the nyam itself. They usually extol the extraordinary and ecstatic aspects of meditation and easily snag others just as they’ve been snagged. Their experiences sound so delectable, so “spiritual,” that it’s tempting to follow their bliss. I saw one such “master” who glided toward her throne, draped in white silk and surrounded by her flock of adoring students. She spoke in a seductive voice about the euphoric nature of her awakening. To me, she was clearly stuck in the nyam of bliss.

Teachers stuck in a nyam tend to work alone, and while they may have studied with authentic masters, they either pay lip service to their lineage or jettison it altogether. I know Western “masters” who rejected their own teachers because they didn’t confirm their nyam or otherwise endorse their awakening. The one person who could have put them back on track by destroying their attachment to the experience is dismissed as not understanding their experience.

Once such a “master” gains traction and establishes a following, it’s almost impossible to extract them from their nyam. The enabling is too deep and the success too addictive. It would take tremendous honesty and courage to turn to their adoring students and admit that they’ve all — teacher and students — been seduced into a nyam. It’s much easier to remain stuck in spiritual co-dependence.

WAKING UP FROM NYAM

In the world of dreams, there’s an event called false awakening. This is when someone wakes up from a dream and discovers later that they were still asleep. In other words, they wake up from one level of dreaming into what they think is waking reality, only to then realise that what they’ve woken up to is yet another dream. It’s like in the movie Inception, where there are dreams within dreams, deceptions within deceptions.

As a student of dream yoga, I’ve experienced a number of these false awakenings. It can be shocking when the alarm clock rings and I’m jarred into waking consciousness when I thought I was already awake! It’s equally jolting when someone asleep in a nyam is finally roused from their false awakening. Most prefer to sleep. False awakening is a term that describes what happens when people mistake their nyam for genuine tokpa.

Those stuck in a nyam rarely submit to the discomfort of being jerked away from their heavenly trap. One way to detect if you’re stuck in a nyam, therefore, is to see how you react when your special experience is interrupted or challenged. If you get irritated, defensive, or angry, you’re probably infected with a nyam.

Are you becoming more kind, patient, and generous? Is your heart opening? Are you more understanding and compassionate? Are you learning how to love? That’s where you’ll find the signs of realisation.

There is a place for spiritual highs, but it’s the same place reserved for spiritual lows. Relate to both with equanimity and you will be liberated from them. Left alone, spiritual experiences are wonderful events. They can inspire you to practice more and really lift you up. But if you don’t relate to them properly, they can drag you down.

Chögyam Trungpa Rinpoche said, “Enlightenment is ego’s ultimate disappointment.” From ego’s perspective, enlightenment is a downer. It will let you down — from the heights of inflated spiritual experience to the plateau of ordinary life, which is where true realisation awaits.

Lotus 180.

Without an altruistic, compassionate, kind and righteous heart, even if one is extremely beautiful and attractive, or one’s wealth is comparable to the treasure of a country, or one’s name resonates in the entire world, the person is still not reliable. Inner nobleness far surpasses external gloss.

— Khenpo Sodargye Rinpoche

Kong Meng San Phor Kark See Monastery

Attended a Vesak Day concert featuring two Buddhist music powerhouses Ani Choying Drolma and Venerable Sik Kwang Sheng last night. Both join hands to bring us a night of spiritual performance to a house full of people. It was an event that lifted our spirituality just by listening to the mantras chanted and numerous Buddhist songs. A night to remember for a long time.