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Shadow

Tilopa’s Ganges Mahāmudrā Session Two: How to Practice

Monlam Pavillion, Bodhgaya
9 January, 2019

In the first part of the afternoon session, His Eminence Kyabje the10th Sangye Nyenpa Rinpoche recapped and added to his commentary from the morning session. He began with the salutation to Vajradakini, the basis of all attainment—the ground, the path and the fruition—the embodiment of inconceivable transcendent wisdom and symbol of emptiness. Rinpoche then emphasised once more the importance of the guru-student relationship and the necessary qualities of the student on the mahāmudrā path.

Intelligent Naropa, who endures hardship,
Respects the guru, and bears suffering,
You who are fortunate, take this to heart.

Rinpoche explained that when teaching the profound nature, for there to be some benefit, there should be a profound connection between teacher and student, through the compassion of the teacher and the devotion of the student. Otherwise, the blessings of the lineage would go to waste. The student should not be someone merely interested in the Dharma but someone who, having had a connection with the Dharma in previous lifetimes, could give an uncompromised commitment to the teachings and hold a long-term view of Dharma practice. They needed the determination to continue to practise in future lifetimes, enduring hardship and suffering where necessary.

Having understood impermanence and knowing that death is certain, though the time of death is uncertain, the student should be highly focused on Dharma practice, realising that it would be foolish to procrastinate. In addition they should have developed a deep revulsion towards samsara which provides the motivation to liberate themselves.

On the basis of understanding impermanence, the student can develop devotion within their being to the guru, which is the root of the practice of Guru Yoga, the complete practice which brings the blessings of all three roots. What is this devotion? It’s not simply an outward display of respect towards the guru, but rather a yearning for and the wish to develop the guru’s special qualities, and the commitment to practice his or her teachings one-pointedly. This devotion is a commitment from now until we achieve enlightenment. As the Kadampa masters say, we should never be separated from the guru’s body, the guru’s speech or the guru’s mind. Genuine devotion does not depend on circumstances such as the guru’s pleasure or displeasure with us.

If a student can practise in this way, the adventitious stains which obscure the mind will definitely become thinner, Rinpoche assured everyone.

Also, a student must be able to withstand adversity and bear suffering. The prime example of this in the Tibetan tradition is Jetsun Milarepa, who served Lord Marpa unflinchingly. It is the ability to use everything, whatever happens to us, as a means on the path to enlightenment, and throughout, practising with fortitude and service to the guru. The root of suffering is ego-clinging. Through accepting and confronting suffering, it can become meaningful, and we can purify misdeeds and gather the accumulations.

When we understand cause and effect and the Four Noble Truths, when we wish for refuge from the suffering of samsara, we can request the refuge vows from the guru.

In the first stanza, Tilopa calls his student ‘intelligent Naropa’. This is not intelligence in the way in which we ordinarily use the term. The word here means prajña, the intelligence to discern. Without discernment, dharma practice cannot be properly effective. Through prajña we will be able to manifest both seen (in this lifetime) and unseen (in future lifetimes) qualities. Through prajña we are able to understand what is good and what is bad and enter the Buddha’s teachings. We are able to examine what we need to give up and what we need to practise, and then, with conviction, we can engage in ethical conduct and samadhi.

Without prajña we are bound by our thoughts, unable to escape. If we have prajña, self-liberation of hatred, delusion, envy and so forth without the need for an external antidote becomes possible. The actual presentation on mahāmudrā now begins:

Mahāmudrā cannot be shown.
Just as who can show space to whom?
Likewise, there’s nothing to show in the nature, mahāmudrā.

Mahāmudrā is ineffable and inconceivable, it transcends language. It is neither an object of conceptualisation nor is it dualistic, so there is nothing to be described or demonstrated. There is nothing to be shown. Similarly, Prajñāpāramitā, the perfection of transcendent wisdom, is also beyond all extremes and beyond language.

By cutting through external appearances, the projections of our own mind, we need to rest in the nature as we are. There is no need to look at external things to find the ultimate nature which is within us. The words of the Buddha and scriptures are aids to realisation.

Through meditation, we gain experience. Like waves in the ocean, our thoughts dissolve into the dharmakāya and arise out of the dharmakāya. When thoughts dissolve into the dharmakāya, this is known as uncontrived meditation. Usually, when the six consciousnesses engage with an external object, because of our dualistic thinking, we react with either attraction or dislike to that object, and this begins a chain of thoughts or actions which lead to the accumulation of karma. By realising the view of emptiness, we can stop this reaction, and eventually achieve the yogic conduct of the ‘single taste’.

When we meditate, we should relax and rest in the unaltered nature. We should not block thoughts, whether good or bad, but neither should we chase after them.

Relax and rest in the unaltered basic nature.

Thus, in meditation, we should rest in the ‘unaltered basic nature’, the unproduced primordial state of luminous mind. ‘Relax’ means not to block thoughts. Instead, we use thoughts as an aid to our meditation and look at their essence. At the same time, we have to ‘rest’; let things be without altering anything, and leave them there. Having seen the nature of all phenomena and realising that they are empty, the meditator relaxes and rests, and thoughts are self-liberated in the dharmakāya.

After the tea-break, Rinpoche’s teachings continued, focusing on how to practise.

If the bonds are loosed, there’s no doubt you’ll be freed.

The nature of our mind is the self-aware luminous wisdom, but we do not recognise it. Instead, because of our failure, we have tied ourselves up in delusion, grasping at things, ego-clinging and so forth. Though we claim to be meditators and practitioners, we are easily distracted from our Dharma practice. Whatever happens, whether good or bad, should not distract us but should be brought into our practice. This is a particular teaching of the Kadampa masters and of the mahāmudrā tradition which comes from Naropa.

Gampopa taught the practice for a whole lifetime. In the Milarepa Guru Yoga we recite, “Bless me on this very seat,” but, Rinpoche admonished, “Where is that seat?” We have no time to sit. We spend the day wandering around rather than meditating. Milarepa’s final pith instruction to Gampopa was to show him the callouses on his buttocks, the product of intense meditation practice. We need to develop such fortitude and determination. If we say we are Kagyupa, we have committed to becoming like those great beings. Just talking about it is pointless: it has to be put into practice.

We need to incorporate the mahāmudrā into our own beings so that when we die we can take death itself as part of the practice.

It is also important to guard our conduct in body, speech and mind outside the meditation session so that we do not lose ourselves. We have to train in the path until there are no doubts, and this only comes from continuous training.

We have to train to be undistracted in meditation, ‘in that fresh essence of thought’, as the Vajradhara Lineage Prayer says. Our aim should be to make all twenty-four hours of the day into yogic practice and cut through mistaken dualistic conceptions.

Thoughts are the Dharma nature. They cannot be stopped but, when we understand that thoughts are self-liberated, we will be liberated. We should not be distracted by appearances. Jamgön Kongtrul Lodrö Thaye in his Chöd: Taking Appearances on the Path writes:

I prostrate to my mother hell beings.
I prostrate to my mother hungry ghosts.
I prostrate my mother animals…

This might sound very strange, but a yogi understands that these are mere terms; it is looking at nature which is essential.

The text continues:

Just as when you look in the centre of space, seeing stops,
Likewise, when the mind looks at mind
Thoughts cease and unexcelled enlightenment is achieved.

The question, Rinpoche commented, is how to maintain our practice, how to sustain the natural mind, and how to sustain letting things just be. The analogy here is looking into space, because when you look into space, there is nothing to see, no form, no colour, and so seeing stops. When ‘mind looks at mind’ refers to the mind in a state of equipoise, sustaining the ordinary mind unchanged. Ordinary mind is the nature of all sentient beings, inseparable from the buddha nature—there is nothing to remove or add, to lose or gain. When ‘thoughts cease’ means not that they disappear but that they are naturally liberated. These ‘thoughts’ are the ones we particularly grasp at such as things as truly existent or non-existent. Thoughts of themselves are not an obstruction; our fixation and attachment to them are. When the mind looks at mind, thoughts will be pacified and subside into the dharma nature. Thoughts continue to arise but we are no longer attached to them, and they are no longer an obstruction. They become an aid to our practice.

Similarly, there is no difficulty when we have possessions if there is no attachment to them. Obstacles and adversity can also be aids to practice. The important thing is to be liberated within.

In mahāmudrā practice, it is essential not to view our own mind negatively.

The next stanza reads:

Just as clouds of mist dissipate in the expanse of the sky,
Not going anywhere, not staying anywhere,
So is it with the thoughts arising from your mind.
Seeing your own mind purifies the waves of thought.

In mahāmudrā, Rinpoche continued, we talk about stillness, motion and awareness of its nature. ‘Just as clouds of mist dissipate in the expanse of the sky ‘ refers to motion: just as clouds naturally dissipate into the expanse of the sky, similarly, when thoughts occur they are liberated into the Dharma expanse. The co-emergent mind essence is the dharmakāya; the unceasing appearances are the play of the dharmakāya.

This mist ‘not going anywhere, not staying anywhere‘ is a metaphor for the thoughts which arise in our mind, whether virtuous, non-virtuous or neutral. If you see the nature of mind, you will not need to apply an antidote to eliminate them: the waves of thoughts will be self-purified and subside, like the waves in the ocean, into the nature of the mind.

A doha by Saraha says: The mind, space, and the dharmatā, these three, are one in essence. They are inseparable, immutable, unaffected by conditions. Their separateness is just a projection of our mind and to claim that they are separate is mistaken and false.

Seeing your own mind purifies the waves of thought’. Like snow falling onto hot rocks, when we realise that thoughts are merely a display of the dharma nature, they are purified immediately. Consequently, by developing realisation in our mindstreams, the five afflictive thoughts [the five kleshas or mental afflictions: anger, attachment, ignorance, jealousy and pride] are cast out. It is unnecessary to use an antidote to transform them. This self-arising self-liberation is a very important point in the practices of both Mahāmudrā and Dzogchen, and makes it possible to practise anywhere and everywhere, whatever we are doing. Thus, the yogi has no need to distinguish between meditation and post-meditation.

Further, when we realise the nature of self we can overcome dualistic thinking which divides experience into two opposing parts: self and others, going and coming, motion and stillness, samsara and nirvana, and so on.

[Note: HE Drubwang Sangye Nyenpa’s teaching lasted more than three hours. This report can only cover a part of the extraordinary width and breadth of his teaching. It is not a transcript.]

20190109AM_The Ganges Mahamudra_Teaching 6-1

 

Tilopa’s Ganges Mahāmudrā Session One: Mahāmudrā cannot be shown

Monlam Pavillion, Bodhgaya

I, Tilo, have nothing to show you. Mahāmudrā cannot be shown.

Over a thousand years ago on the banks of the river Ganges, the Mahasiddha Tilopa offered the pith instructions on Mahāmudrā to his heart son Naropa. Not only had Naropa been the greatest scholar at Nalanda university but he had endured 12 years of inconceivable hardship following every ‘crazy’ command of his guru. The pith instructions of 29 quintessential verses spoken on the essence of non- meditation, flowed spontaneously, like the Ganges, from the ultimate realization of the supremely enlightened master. It is said that after Naropa heard these verses he fainted and when he revived, the enlightenment of Tilopa had merged with his mind. He had attained liberation entirely through devotion, seeing the guru as a Buddha, without a moment of meditation practice. In the 11th century the great Tibetan translator Marpa, to whom the lineage was passed, translated and edited the verses at Phullahari in the presence of Naropa.

The Ganges Mahāmudrā, as it came to be known, has accumulated an almost mythic reputation over the centuries as a classic ‘ear whispered’ pointing out. The guru has to reveal the essence at the right time in the right place to the right student. Pith instruction depends on experiential realization and is thus rarely given.

H.E. Kyabje 10th Sangye Nyenpa Rinpoche consented to illuminate this seldom taught text after being asked three times by His Holiness Karmapa. He interrupted the teachings he was giving in Bhutan to drive 25 hours to Bodhgaya, where he delivered a spontaneous commentary with great enthusiasm and passion to a rapt audience of more than 7000 monks and laypeople.

I feel that this opportunity to teach the dharma in Bodhgaya at the request of His Holiness the Gyalwang Karmapa is very fortunate and great merit for me. I felt the joy while meditating. The Karmapa asked me to teach the Ganges Mahāmudrā; I didn’t choose it for myself. However, I can only give a short teaching. The words and meaning have to be unmistaken. To be able to teach the pith instruction of Mahāmudrā we should rest in the luminosity of the basic nature. It’s not like study, not that kind of teaching at all. For me to sit and teach the Mahāmudrā is a sign of how degenerate this time is. In addition to that I have to apologize for sitting on this throne.

"Even if I haven’t received the realization of Mahāmudrā,” Rinpoche continued, “I have had many opportunities to discuss the words. Not just the discussion of the words, I believe I have the blessings of the unbroken lineage which I received from Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche who received it from the 16th Karmapa. This is a lineage of the practise of mudra not of words."

In this first teaching Rinpoche emphasized the practice lineage, the importance of guru devotion, and the meaning of Mahāmudrā. Serving the guru in the same way as Naropa was able to serve Tilopa, Milarepa served Marpa, and Gampopa served Milarepa means we are seeing the guru as the actual Buddha. "We have to get to that level of wisdom ourselves."

The pith instructions strike the point, he explained. They change the way we think. Pith instructions happen when a guru like Tilopa attains the state of Mahāmudrā. His Vajra words coming from experiential realization, flow without stopping. This self-aware wisdom transcends the path of words.

"Uphold your lineage means to uphold the practice of Mahāmudrā. Incorporate it into your being, develop realization. Listening contemplating and meditating is the offering of practice. Material offerings are the least of the offerings."

Sangye Rinpoche then gave an introduction to the Mahāmudrā.

The Unaltered ordinary mind is what we don’t recognize. When we recognize that all thoughts are the display of the mind, then we can recognize the nature of mind. That is the basic meaning of Mahāmudrā.

There is no need to change the naturally pure mind. Nothing to remove, nothing to add, nothing to engage, nothing new to be created, nothing to eliminate. All these concepts are projections of a dualistic mind. Suchness is the natural state of sentient beings, the original basis, unaltered, fresh, self-arisen awareness. Suchness is the way things exist. The nature left alone, is as it is. There is no difference between buddhas and sentient beings; the seed is the same in all. Recognise the nature as it is. When a yogi practices Mahāmudrā, the natural state becomes manifest.

There are no faults that are truly existent by their nature. If they did truly exist it would be impossible to eliminate the stains. The stains do not affect the nature. Pith instructions directly point it out. There is nothing to remove. Realizing they do not exist by their own nature is liberation.

Do not mentally engage the ineffable mind.

Rest in the nature as it is, in equipoise as it is. The basis to practice is to cut through the root of samsara and nirvana. Pith instructions are to bring the practice into ourselves. The basis of the mind has never been affected by the afflictions. There is no samsara that needs to be removed and no nirvana that needs to be taken up. The nature of how it actually is, is ineffable, indescribable. Dualistic thoughts are unable to realize it. The nature transcends dualistic mind. Do not mentally engage the ineffable-ness. The nature of mind transcends thoughts.

We need to meditate on ordinary mind. Unaltered, not affected by hopes and fears, not made up, that nature is unexcelled. We don’t know how to recognize it. We are attached to some things and have aversion to other things. When we talk about nature of mind it means the unaltered nature of mind. No need to change the naturally pure mind. It has never been deluded. By not knowing this, we are confused. If we recognise that, all thoughts are like waves. If we know how to sustain the nature of the mind when we have thoughts, there is no confusion. That nature of the mind is Mahāmudrā.

Nothing to remove, nothing to add, no fixation, the nature is unmoving.

The nature of mind is unaffected by conditions. It’s not affected by anything coarse or subtle. The internal nature never moves. It is not stained by faults. The luminous nature of mind is like space. Luminosity is the basis, like the sun. Now we follow our fixations on the object but the luminous nature stays as it is. The basic nature is like the trees on a mountain, no matter how hard the wind blows the mountain on which they are growing is not moved. Similarly, thoughts create samsara but it cannot change the nature of mind.

Letting things be as they are is ‘Cha’, the wisdom of emptiness. ‘Gya’ is liberation from samsaric phenomena, from concept.

The clear empty nature of mind seals or stamps all. Nothing is greater than the great seal. The essence is empty, the nature is luminous, and that seals all phenomena of samsara and nirvana. Mahāmudrā is Prajñaparamita, the great mother who gives birth to all the buddhas. ‘Cha’ is the wisdom of emptiness. It’s pure by its own nature. It’s not the conventional wisdom of the philosophical schools, whether something exists or doesn’t exist. That is created by dualistic mind. In the pith instructions truth is experienced by the yogi’s direct wisdom resting in equipoise. What the yogic mind sees is the ultimate truth. All dualistic conceptions are pacified. Rest in equipoise and find that nature. Things exist only relatively not ultimately.

The moving mental consciousness is ignorance. It is the foundation for karma and samsara. It is the first link of the 12 links of interdependence of samsara. If we can free that, we are liberated. When we don’t recognize the internal moving mind, that is samsara, according to Milarepa. Formation comes because of ignorance. If we realize it, then it becomes discriminating self-aware wisdom. Resting in equipoise, all the qualities will manifest. The Buddha cannot teach it in words.

The first line of Tilopa’s teaching: "I prostrate to the glorious Vajra dakini". Vajra refers to method. Dakini is prajña. Dakini means sky goers, that is, emptiness, the base of all phenomena. It doesn’t refer to the female. Dakini is emptiness, Vajra is the means, unchanging and indestructible.

In these 2 words are included all of ground path and fruition. The Ganges Mahāmudrā teaches the way it is.

The first verse: The pledge to give the pith instruction

Intelligent Naropa, who endures hardship,
Respects the guru and bears suffering.
You who are fortunate, take this to heart.

The vessel or disciple has to have 4 qualities.

  1. Endure hardship for the sake of dharma. Courage and fortitude to rest in equipoise
  2. Respect the guru see him as the buddha
  3. Bear suffering
  4. Intelligence.

Prajña is the main attribute. We have to recognise the afflictions. By the power of prajña we can understand the nature of things as they are. Understanding develops faith. If we don’t know this, it’s like torturing ourselves. We need it to pacify our afflictions, our thoughts. We need prajña to develop enthusiasm for enduring hardship, which leads to respect for the guru.

 

20190109AM_The Ganges Mahamudra_Teaching 6-1