Give karma a chance…

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 19 of the root text of Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones.

heart treasure

“There’s no time to be happy; happiness is over just like that;

You don’t want to suffer, so eradicate suffering with Dharma.

Whatever happiness or suffering comes, recognize it as the power of your past actions,

And from now on have no hopes or doubts regarding anyone at all.”

 

 

Explain to someone else (making it my own)

When I was a little girl I had a book about dinosaurs. It was beautifully illustrated. It talked about how big they were, how it would have felt like an earthquake if a herd of them ran past your house, and how some of them could fly. This fascinated me. I would spend hours looking out my bedroom window, sort of wishing a T-Rex would rumble past. I’d go to sleep and dream of dinosaurs, then I’d wake up mildly disappointed because there weren’t any in my waking world.

dinotopiaWe all have dinosaur-dreams. We all spend a lot of energy and time wishing for the impossible. Then when we don’t get it, we feel betrayed, disappointed, angry, even disillusioned. We wish for the perfect marriage, then when the other person doesn’t fulfill our dreams of perfect love and happiness, we feel they have betrayed us. We look for the perfect job, only to find that the same annoyingly petty nonsense is in the new workplace and the only change is cosmetic.

We go on and on like this without ever paying attention to the causes for happiness or suffering we’re bringing into our lives. If we change workplaces, but have the same mental habits of aggression, jealousy, and envy, then the new workplace will be the same (or worse). If we are unhappy with ourselves, and we get married, then we’ll be even more unhappy because the other person will simply mirror our unhappiness.

Karma is inescapable cause and effect. It is inevitable activity. This sounds like doom and gloom, but it’s actually the key to freeing ourselves of the cycle of hope and fear that is such a constant in the suffering of samsara. In the sixties, the chant to end a war was “Give peace a chance”. To this I say, let’s end our constant battle with hope and fear and give karma a chance.

***

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

Like most people, my entire life has been a drama defined by the supporting players of hope and fear. But if I had to point to just one situation, I’d say it was when I wanted to start my own business selling handmade children’s clothes. When I left school, I was disillusioned with academia. I decided to leave it behind and go into business for myself. The product was upscale dresses for little girls about aged three to ten. I was very good at sewing. The dresses I made were gorgeous. I chose good fabric. I followed the patterns. I had a good product.

At the time I believed that just by wanting something badly enough, it would happen. I wasn’t into crystals or beads, but I was definitely influenced by New Age thinking. I might have even considered making a vision board. I knew nothing about marketing. I had no investors. I had no overall plan for my dress‘business’. But I figured if I stuck with it, good things would happen. After about six months, I gave it up. I’d only sold a few dresses. And lost money. I felt stupid. I wanted to throw away my sewing machine.

Looking back at that situation, I can notice that I had put no causes in place for a business to flourish. I didn’t network with any local business people. I didn’t do any market research. I didn’t take actions that would lead to a business coming into being. Had I noticed that, I could have taken a step back and asked myself what ‘starting a business’ was really all about. If I’d been honest with myself, I would have seen that the business was a way of escaping the discomfort of leaving school before I finished my PhD studies.

Having noticed this, I might have breathed with that discomfort, gotten to know it well, and eventually, I would have been able to free myself from it. Had I done this, the epic drama of hope and fear, driven by the attempt to escape that deeply painful discomfort of leaving school with ‘only’ a Masters would have had less power in my life. I would have had more peace and clarity. More peace and clarity would have led to more skillful acts. More skillful acts would have led to more causes for my future happiness.

***

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

The biggest ongoing situation in my life right now is the Pilgrimage of 62. At nine days into it, there is much greater clarity of the connection between what I do now, and what “happens” to me tomorrow or an hour from now.  What I’m really learning these past few days is that there are no exceptions to karma. That should be self-evident. But in a way, before the pilgrimage, I’d sort of disregard ‘little’ things. Recently I left the pen that I use to write in my journal on a different table, and I thought, “I don’t feel like putting it back. I’ll forget I left here, but that’s okay.” But the consequence was bigger than I thought it would be. What actually happened was that I finished meditating, I was ready to write, and…no pen. It took me a minute to remember where it was. I got agitated, and I forgot what I’d originally started out to write.

This sounds very mundane, but I think our whole lives are like this. Most times we don’t even notice the tiny causes for suffering that we put in place. This lack of clarity leads us to have hopes and fears regarding everyone. We become sort of professionally paranoid. We hold others responsible for the outcome of our own past actions.

On the flip side, by scrutinizing my actions, I have been able to put in place small causes for happiness. This doesn’t lead to a fairytale life of ongoing ecstasy, but it does lead to fewer struggles in my ordinary life. I’m tempted to say things fall into place. But I think what’s actually happening is that the causes for broken chainshappiness I put in place are constantly manifesting. Ordinary life feels like less work.

When something unpleasant does happen, I’m able to pause for a moment and recognize that the unpleasantness is a result of my past action. And this is where the Dharma really supports us. If we come to see the Dharma—which is to say, see the world as it truly is—we gain the power to free ourselves of the entanglements of hope and fear in samsara.

***

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

On Friday in a meeting at work a topic was brought up by our manager. I pointed out that it was a non-issue because it was standard procedure to do what she was telling us to do. I asked why it was being brought up. After much hemming and hawing, it turned out that Salem [my co-worker] had made a very basic mistake in handling a whole slew of emails. This is something I went over with her constantly in the beginning. She blew it off. Then I decided to let go, and just let what happened, happen. Her mishandling of the emails resulted in double-billing for a whole bunch of products to the client.

Wow.fury 2

Sitting in the meeting, ego was on it. How dare you point this out to me? When did I ever do something so idiotic as not check dates? When did I ever open orders that didn’t need to be opened? How many mistakes will it take before you notice Salem’s utter incompetence? And on and on and on.

Then I noticed something.

The meeting was still going on. Salem was doing her usual smoke and mirror “it’s not my fault” routine. My manager was doing her usual routine of buying into it. The only one suffering intensely with thoughts of aggression and frustration and resentment was…me.

Hmmmmm…this ain’t right, I thought. And right then and there I realized I could go on thinking those thoughts for years, eons, and all that would change was the degree to which I would suffer. Those same thoughts came up all day long. Each time they came up I worked with them by breathing and doing mantra. Sometimes I had to escalate the situation to the Dharma Brigade and recite a verse of prayer.

My normal reaction to an incident like that would be to go to work tomorrow morning with a demeanor of rejoicing in Salem’s mistake, and hoping she makes an even bigger mistake that makes the client complain all the way to the top. But, especially after working with this stanza, I can see how that would be putting in place causes for my own future suffering.

So I’ve decided that tomorrow I’m going to be like a farmer clearing rocky ground for planting. Tomorrow when I go to work, I am going to genuinely look for three things to do that will help Salem. My only guideline is that it has to be of genuine help (not a smarmy…here, looks like you need this), and that I offer these three things with the intent to help. I’ve already thought of one thing, possibly two.

I am going to do this for purely selfish reasons. I am coming to see very, very clearly that the only way to decrease my suffering in samsara is to offer my help to the Salems who manifest in my life due to my past actions. I didn’t get it right before, but now karma is giving me a second chance.

I don’t know if karma can be healed, but just the genuine intent, the desire to help Salem feels very healing.

Post Script: 

I went to work with the intent to do three helpful things, but before I knew it, mind was on the job! It was subtle at first, but by the end of the day, mind was like an enthusiastic child…’this would be helpful…and this..and this…how about this?’ I actually did five things.

The same mind that had unleashed fury the day before became a torrent of helpful, right in line with my intent. There were so many things, I couldn’t do them all in a day. And what really surprised me was that they weren’t out of left field. Every ‘suggestion’ was right on.

I’m glad I gave karma a chance…

On living deceitfully…

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 5 of the root text of Heart Treasure of the Enlightened Ones.

heart treasure

“Alas for people in this age of residues!

The mind’s wholesome core of truth has withered, and people live deceitfully,

So their thoughts are warped, their speech is twisted.

They cunningly mislead others—who can trust them?”

 

 

Explain to someone else (making it my own)

If we look around our world today, we see deceit in many and wondrously endless flavors. Want to look young forever? No problem. Plastic surgeons will take your money and tighten your face like a living rubber mask.

Want to have the perfect job? No problem. Pour every last ounce of your energy into the corporate plantation fields and you will get the ‘perfect job’. But by then you will have committed so many atrocities against yourself and others that you will blacken every mirror in your mansion to avoid the sight of what you’ve become.

Want to live the good life for cheap? No problem. Buy consumer goods made in China, where slavery has a new politically correct name, “offshore labor”.

Want to relax after a long day? No problem. Turn on the television, which will inundate you with an endless stream of propaganda, most of it based on you living forever while staying young and beautiful and achieving a state of bliss that includes wealth, good sex, and vacations in Paradise. Operators are Standing By.

We live in an age where the word ‘all’ has come to mean ‘me, and the people I like.’ I’m not quite sure pets are included. The animals we slaughter for food certainly aren’t included. In this age, compassion is dying a slow withering death. The wrong view of separation is so pervasive that we sponsor wholesale slaughter of beings on the other side of the planet under the name of a Just War.

We convince ourselves that if we just take the right vitamins, visit the right spas, get the right guru, chant the right prayers about light and peace, we will not die. And more important than that, I think, we somehow delude ourselves into believing that karma has nothing to do with our thoughts, deeds, or words.

icebergEssentially, we live in a state of extraordinary delusion. This constant denial of the Dharma (what is) is a full-time, high-energy pursuit, a race to outrun the truth of how things really are: birth, aging, disease, death. And this race leaves us exhausted, frantic, confused, afraid. It creates this terrible longing for something we can’t name. To cover up the pain of this confusion, this fear, this anxiety, this unbearable longing (which is nothing more than our Buddha Nature trying to come out), we live deceitfully. We live on the deck of the Titanic, rearrange the furniture, turn up our iPods and tell ourselves that the iceberg looming on the horizon is really no big deal.

***

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

Until I began studying the Dharma, every part of my life was lived deceitfully. Compassion was nearly wholly absent from my life, not for myself, and certainly not for others. I was convinced that ‘other people’ had absolutely nothing to do with me. In fact, I went out of my way to sustain that delusion.

If I had to think of one situation where I was spectacularly deceitful with myself, it would have to be romance. There was a particular relationship where no matter what happened, mind was the ultimate Spin Doctor. There was no fault I could not delude myself into seeing as a virtue.

Applying this line, I might have noticed how hard I was working to sustain the delusion. I might have noticed how feeding the delusion demanded abehind the mask moment to moment denial of compassion for myself. And that meant I could have no compassion for others. And that meant my world was very, very small and very lonely. I could have noticed how sustaining the delusions demanded to stay in that relationship put in place causes for resentment, fear, aversion, confusion, and indifference.

Having noticed this, I could have taken a step back. A half-step is all it would have taken from me to sense the sheer weight, the oppressively heavy drudgery of carrying the delusion of ‘romance’ from one breath to the next.

Having seen this, I could have worked with the truth of what stared me in the face every day. I could have seen that sustaining a delusion is as hard and back-breaking as tending furnaces in the depths of Hell. But seeing truth, stripped of delusion, if only for a moment, is as easy as seeing a daisy’s yellow petals on a sunny day. It simply is. Truth is not something to be looked for or sought out. My experience is teaching me that truth is something that becomes self-evident when we let go of delusion.

***

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

Each day as I get up and go to work, it is so very tempting to delude myself with thoughts like “It’s not so bad.” Such a lie. It is very bad. “I can deal with it.” So not true. It’s making me certifiably insane. And perhaps the biggest lie, “If I meditate enough, practice enough, pray enough, I’ll be able to deal with Salem.” This is a lie on par with the government claiming to have no links to the mafia. It’s a HUGE lie, a brazen deceit. It’s not that the Dharma isn’t effective; it’s simply that, as a practitioner, I’m not there yet.

In applying this line to the situation of going to work five days a week, I can know that my thoughts of aggression, and resentment, and frustration all arise from a deluded mind. My deluded mind would have me believe that these afflicted emotions, the nearly unbearable anxiety of going to work come from or are caused by ‘people’ outside of myself.

Reading this line, I know in fact that what is happening at work arises from my wrong views and afflicted emotions. I can notice that for more than a decade I have wholeheartedly participated in the deceitful dance of wrong view and afflicted emotions. I can notice that I have deceived myself into believing that I could remain in that situation forever, that I was somehow impervious to change. And now, I’m so angry that I’m subject to change, like every other element of this realm.

But now I have noticed how my mind’s wholesome core of truth has withered and how I have lived deceitfully. Each day that I wake up from the delusion of the last decade seems more painful than the last. But, with the support of the Dharma, I see that I am merely smelling the smoke of the burning house that I have lived in for over ten years. I am noticing that the burning house is blazing. This has been a blessing. It has spurred me to intelligent action.

alarm clockPerhaps that is the intent of these lines that seem so harsh and cruel at first glance—wake up! Wake up, my friends! The house is blazing! Get out of the delusion. Free yourself.

***

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

Tomorrow morning when I wake up, I will have a different perspective on the situation at work. All along, as I’ve looked for a job, I’ve thought that the act of looking would make being at work more tolerable. It doesn’t. That was another part of me deceiving myself.

When I go to work tomorrow, I will know that I am entering a burning house. I will know that I will experience afflicted emotions all day long. And I will know something else that isn’t said in this line, but is implicit.

That burning house where flames lick at me hourly, and where I am constantly vigilant lest my afflicted emotions goad me to action, this blazing torment…is the path. I may have wrong view and afflicted emotions, and they may be the ultimate source of my torment there, but that’s not the whole story.

Even inside that burning house (maybe especially inside it), my innate perfection, my Buddha Nature is there. And this is a very good thing because Buddha-me knows the best path out of that particular burning house.

So, will I experience tomorrow the withering of my mind’s wholesome core of truth? Undoubtedly. All it will take is one word from Salem or anyone that strikes me the wrong way.

Will I live deceitfully? Oh yes. Even in the midst of that infernal torment, there will arise fleeting moments of peace, and I’ll think, “It’s not so bad. I don’t really have to leave.”

But now I know. I’ll know the house is blazing and I have got to get out. My Buddha Nature knows that and makes it known to me in no uncertain terms. And this seeing, this knowing of the truth of things will pop the bubble of delusion each time it arises, like a sharp needle to a balloon.

Post Script:path in water

This was written in early January.

Since then, I’ve come to a place where I can bring the situation in my work place to the path.

It took me almost eight months, but it was worth it for the measure of peace that I have now around that situation.