On all the forests made into paper…

Currently I’m studying Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones with a Dharma friend, the Venerable Tashi Nyima.

This is my contemplation on the final line of verse 22 of the root text of Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones.

heart treasure

“Ah! Fount of compassion, my root teacher, Lord Chenrezi,

You are my only protector!

The six-syllable mantra, essence of your speech, is the sublime Dharma;

From now on I have no hope but you!

 

 

Explain to someone else (making it my own)

I was shopping for laundry detergent the other day. One of the glossy orange packages said something like ‘guaranteed clean’. Guarantees like that always make me wonder. Who’s to say what’s ‘clean’?  Is it mass annihilation on the level of microbes in my clothes? Does it bleach my clothes so that the dirt’s still there, but invisible to my eye? What if it’s not clean enough for me? Will they refund the cost of my water and the wear and tear on my washing machine? Guarantees like that don’t make sense to me.guarantee

We live in a realm dominated by entropy. Nothing becomes more whole with movement through the aspect of space we call ‘time’. On the contrary, integrity is lost with every tick of the clock. With every heartbeat, we are one moment closer to crossing the threshold of death. Yet we seek guarantees. We seek assurances that things will not fall apart. We seek a faith that will speak of things staying as they are. In samsara, there is no such assurance, no such faith.

For such assurance we must look beyond the realm of samsara to the Buddhas. They offer a guarantee that is unfailing because it is not subject to the entropy of samsara. Dilgo Khyentse tells us that the merit generated by a single recitation of om mani peme hum is so immeasurable that “…even if all the forests on earth were made into paper, there would never be enough to write down more than the minutest part.” Now that’s what I call an assurance—it’s so good, we can’t even tell you how good it is.

Although Patrul Rinpoche specifically refers to Chenrezig—compassion—experience has taught me that sincere practice of any aspect of the Dharma brings immeasurable benefit into our lives. In this Dharma Ending Age, such a guarantee is priceless.

***

Apply to a past situation (how would it have been different?)

I used to be the kind of person who made hope a religion. No kidding. At Christmas time, I would hope for exactly the Barbie I wanted. I never got it. On my birthday, I would hope for my very own tape recorder. I got it and got bored with it. barbieWhen things got really bad at home, I’d fall asleep hoping my parents would stop hating each other. They got divorced.

Hope played a big part in my life right up until last year when I finished writing a book and hoped it would be a bestseller. Only then did I learn the true faces of hope: fear, disappointment, betrayal, despair, dejection. By then I was already studying the Dharma, but it was something separate from my writing; or at least I thought it was.

Looking back on that time, I can notice how I had allowed hope to calcify my writing into something very rigid and nearly completely leeched of creativity. Had I noticed this, I may have been able to take a step back and notice what my ‘hope’ amounted to. Having done this, I may have seen that I was desperately afraid that not only had I wasted the last year and a half of my life, maybe I’d wasted the last twenty years. I may have noticed that what I was ‘hoping’ for was redemption (from outside myself) from my own fears.

Had I been able to see this, I may have been able to breathe, and begin to learn mantra. I may have been able to glimpse the true permanence, true bliss, true self that is always within us, whole and untouched by the entropy of samsara. Had I been able to do that, I may have realized that in the constantly disintegrating realm of samsara, the Dharma is the only real hope any of us have.

***

Apply to an (ongoing) present situation (how does it matter today?)

The biggest ongoing situation in my life right now is the company I work for being bought by another company. I won’t work for a bank anymore. That’s a big plus for me. I’ll be glad to escape the stench of that particular manure field.

The hardest thing about this situation for me is the uncertainty that comes with anticipation. It’s a little like going to the dentist to get a tooth pulled. I’ve done this twice. They give you anesthesia. During the procedure, you feel nothing. But you feel all these metal things in your mouth; you hear that whining drill; you feel a really, really hard pull, and then the dentist mutters something like ‘missed a piece’, and the drill starts up again. The whole time I’m sitting there thinking…when all this pain stuff wears off, this is going to seriously hurt. I hope it doesn’t. But I know it will.

Work is like that. They keep saying it’s a transition. We’re ‘transitioning’ to Interplanetary Title, Inc. They’re the best in the business. This is going to be smooth. Sure, we’re a smaller company. Sure, Interplanetary Title, Inc. has bought lots of companies, but your company is important to us.

The lies are hip deep. It’s like bad anesthesia. It hurts just enough for you to know there is some heavy duty pain coming your way. These men, who have gotten to their six figure salaries by making a career of lying and deceiving others…are nervous. They try to hide it. But to me, it’s all over their syntax, their body language, their constant repetition of pet words like ‘transition’.

All of this has led to levels of anxiety for me that feel unbearable at times. It used to be that when  my internal storms reached hurricane strength (currently Cat 6), I’d hunker down and just hope it would pass before it wore me out.

But this time is different. I could even say that these anxiety levels have come at the perfect time on my spiritual path. In the midst of the storms, at the very height of the howling winds of anxiety rattling the windows of my sanity, I turn to the Dharma. Sometimes it feels like I can’t breathe. No problem. I don’t need my breath to do mantra.lighthouse

Doing mantra doesn’t calm the storm. Repeating those words (om mani peme hum or om amideva rhih) lets me resonate with a part of myself that is utterly whole, utterly untouched by the storm—my Buddha Nature. This is the hope the Dharma offers all of us at any time, regardless of the storms raging around us. For me, those moments are bliss.

***

Apply to a potential situation (bringing it home to play)

Later today, as my anxiety builds about going to work tomorrow, I will want to do everything. Let me be clear. This is a short sampling of what I will want to do:

Go through my recipe binder and try out a couple dozen recipes

Finish the novel I started a couple years ago

Finish the Dharma collaboration project that I’m working on with a friend (only about eight prayers and roughly 60,000 words to go)

Try out a new sourdough starter (this takes hours)

Re-decorate my apartment

Pack my books and donate them to the library (I have at least a hundred)

Make banana bread

Finish the book I’m reading (I’m on page 30-something of about 400)

Re-organize the kitchen cupboards

Do my nails

Finish my latest assassin novella

Submit my novellas to a publisher who’s inviting writers from my publisher that shut down

This is maddening. This is anxiety manifesting. It’s part of the storm. The later in the day it gets, the more of this list I will want to do. I’ve never really understood this, but I think the general idea is to work myself into a state of exhaustion and thereby avoid thinking about anxiety. It doesn’t work. I have to sleep sometime. And my anxiety loves, loves, loves to dream.

Knowing this is what’s coming today, I am going to try a new strategy. Whenever one of these ‘Conquer the World Today’ thoughts arises, I will breathe (if I can), and deliberately, slowly recite a mantra a minimum of ten times. This has a very calming effect. It’s like keeping my head above water.

The thoughts will come back with a ‘New and Improved Plan to Conquer the World Today’. They always do. I’ll do mantra again.

In doing this painstaking process of working with these waves of anxiety, I will deal with my confused mind in a compassionate way. When I recite mantra today I will be aware of joining an eons old river of recitation, as Tashi put it.

riverIt certainly feels that way. Mantra feels like something that has preceded the vagaries of samsara, and will continue long after samsara and our Ozymandias-like delusions of permanence fall away. In this we can all find the kind of hope Patrul Rinpoche speaks of. We can find peace, find clarity in the midst of our confusion.

On Chenrezi’s rain…

Currently I’m studying Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones with a Dharma friend, the Venerable Tashi Nyima.

This is my contemplation on the second line of verse 22 of the root text of Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones.

heart treasure

“Ah! Fount of compassion, my root teacher, Lord Chenrezi,

You are my only protector!

The six-syllable mantra, essence of your speech, is the sublime Dharma;

From now on I have no hope but you!”

 

 

Explain to someone else (making it my own)

In the west, particularly in the United States, we’re very fond of encouraging and supporting the so-called ‘pioneer spirit’. There are so many inspirational posters that talk about making your own path where there isn’t one or climbing to the top of huge mountains. I’ve always wondered about those in particular. What do you do once you get to the top of the mountain?ambition

If we stop a minute and look at historic pioneers, we can see that the underlying context of the pioneer spirit is conquest fueled by greed and self-interest. Compassion is nowhere in sight. Pioneers went out to the west armed to the teeth, settled land that didn’t belong to them, and slaughtered any Native Americans who had the temerity to want their land back. This does not seem to me a skillful paradigm for living a life rooted in compassion.

Dilgo Kyhentse tells us, “The rain of Chenrezi’s compassion falls everywhere on the fields of sentient beings impartially; but the crop of happiness cannot grow where the seeds of faith have shriveled.” Knowing that samsara is a realm defined by suffering; knowing that we will all fall before Death’s scythe, where can we turn for protection? Who in samsara can protect us from samsara? No one. The pioneer spirit only adds to the aggression, greed, and fear roaring through samsara like the hundred-years hurricane on Jupiter.

Where then, can we turn for protection? If we found ourselves locked in a prison cell, would we expect our cellmate to have the key to free us? No. We would know instinctively that we must look beyond the prison bars for the key to freedom. Who is outside the prison of samsara? The Buddhas. Their rain of compassion, their offer of a key to free ourselves from the prison of samsara falls on us in every moment. They are our only true protectors. It is their quality of being outside samsara that makes the Buddhas an unassailable refuge in the very midst of suffering.

***

Apply to a past situation (how would it have been different?)

stormy boatThere was a time when I felt buffeted by life. I felt I was on a sailboat constantly tossed on the stormy sea of life, constantly in danger of falling overboard and drowning. I yearned for protection from the perils of that storm. I yearned for someone to come and calm the storm for me, or to at least toss me a life jacket. I looked to samsara for my protection.

I found Prince Charming in all his splendor. My Prince seemed a very font of protection. At last, I felt safe. But as time went by, the Prince’s glamour rubbed off and I found that, far from feeling protected, I felt my life was constantly lived on a sea in the upheavals of a hurricane raging around me at every moment. And no life jacket in sight.

Looking back on that time, I can notice that my constant fear of my afflicted emotions was a major fuel that fed the storm. I could have taken a breath, breathed out and taken a half step back from my life. Had I done that, I might have noticed that the storm that felt so uncontrollable was inside me, not outside. Had I noticed this, I may have realized that no one outside myself could calm that storm. I may have noticed that any protection I sought from the storm in samsara would inevitably crumble and fall away like the illusion it was.

Having noticed that the storm was arising from within me, I may have noticed that what I caused, I could stop. Had I known mantra then, I might have been able to turn to Amideva, the Buddha I feel the most affinity with, and sought refuge in His boundless radiance. Had I been able to do this, I may have noticed that the storm was gradually calming and subsiding, as it was to do many years later.

***

Apply to an (ongoing) present situation (how does it matter today?)

The biggest ongoing situation in my life right now is the shutting down of the company I work for. It’s being bought by another company. At work, the ‘senior leadership’ is billing this as a ‘transition’. There is no talk of shutting down, but that’s what’s happening.

The announcement was made eleven days ago. Since then my afflicted emotions have spun out scenarios of Dire Consequences from failing the background check (presumably because my Lizzie Borden ways will become public knowledge), to being the only person at work that the new company decides not to hire (presumably because I’m so important, they’ll violate the terms of their million dollar sale contract).

There was a time when I would have sought protection from the threatening storm of my emotions by joining the never-ending conversations at work about the upcoming transition. But when I listen, what I hear is people feeding each other’s fear. This doesn’t seem like a skillful means to me.

The last eleven days have been turbulent for me. My unskillful habits from years ago have risen up, seducing me with empty promises of comfort and protection. I’ve even craved a cigarette. I haven’t smoked in over six years now.

I lived in Fort Lauderdale for more than a decade. I’ve seen many hurricanes. In the hours before a hurricane makes landfall, the skies are very threatening. If you watch the clouds, you see them manically racing in great circles, and it suddenly hits you that the storm is inevitable. It’s going to come. The howling winds and rattling windows, and pebbles smashing against the walls are going to scare the hell out of you. The storm is going to destroy things. The power is going to go out. Once you see those clouds, you don’t need a weather forecast. The circling clouds give you an up-close, personal feel of the inevitability of what is to come.florida hurricane

Right now, as I go through this transition, my mind feels like those racing storm clouds. There is a feeling of inevitability that a storm will come, and it will terrify me with its fury. Sometimes I am mesmerized by the clouds of thoughts. I can’t help watching them, fascinated by their awe-inspiring speed and belligerence.

When I look to the storm of my thoughts, I call on Amideva (om Amideva rhih) and I ask him to shine his boundless radiance into the darkness of my fear. Seeking his protection from this brewing storm has been the first time in my life that I can actually feel a level of confidence in the face of my afflicted emotions. Yes. The storm may come. It may even knock me over. But when I call on Amideva as my protector, I am sure of one thing: the storm will pass.

They always do.

***

Apply to a potential situation (bringing it home to play)

At work, people are scared. They have the look in their eyes of refugees who’ve washed up on an island that may be inhabited by man-eating beasts. Fear, and its companion, aggression, are everywhere. I am finding (to my great surprise) that this is a very fertile ground for practicing compassion.

In the last eleven days, I have made it my practice to consciously bring compassion to my interactions with my co-workers. The response—‘how can you be so calm?’—makes me laugh. I want to answer, “Got Buddha?”

Today as I go to work, I want to really work with om Amideva rhih. For me, when my confused mind begins its litany of fear, this mantra brings calm. It brings a kind of radiance that lets me see the utter transparency of my thoughts. This is a great protection. It’s like looking up at a hurricane sky and seeing a ray of brilliant sunshine. You realize—yes, the sky is very stormy right now, but behind those storm clouds is a brilliant sun.

When I go to work today, I want to share this comfort I feel in taking refuge in Amideva’s boundless radiance. I’m not sure how to do that. Bu I know from experience that if I look for ways, I’ll find them. It may be as simple as a genuine smile when I say good morning. It may be as simple as not participating in the conversations that feed everyone’s fears. It may be a genuinely uttered ‘thank you’.

I don’t know precisely how to alleviate the suffering I see at work. But I do know that being aware of the suffering of others and having a true desire to alleviate their suffering–somehow, this makes my suffering less. I also know that every single person I see at work is suffering far more than I am. They are turning to elements of samsara for protection, and that’s only miring them deeper in the quicksand of despair and fear and hope.

golden sunAs I go to the workplace today, I will be aware that Amideva’s compassion and protection—his boundless radiance—rains on everyone impartially. Knowing this, I can know that a small act of genuine kindness can resonate with the innate Buddha Nature of those beings around me, and perhaps offer them a moment’s respite from their suffering. I may not hold back the storm, but I won’t add to it either.

When I shared this contemplation with my Dharma friend, Tashi, he offered this thought:

Serene Trust: that is the gift of the Buddhas, their font of compassion.
When we invoke Amideva, it is not to ask, beg, cajole, or barter, but to express our gratitude for the blessings of peace and clarity.
With my Christian penchant for prayer to an outside deity, it’s pretty hard to conceive of being grateful for something that I don’t feel I have. But…I’m going to work with this…