Remain Present Even As Thoughts Arise

 

[From a teaching on Treasury of Eloquence: Songs of Barway Dorje by Bardor Tulku Rinpoche. Translated by Lama Yeshe Gyamtso. Free video of this teaching is available.]

What is the practice of mahamudra? In practical terms it is a gradual process, and it must begin with the cultivation of tranquility. As long as we do not have the ability to remain free of distraction, we are not going to be able to discover, let alone rest in, our mind’s natural state. But ultimately, the presence or absence of thought in and of itself is irrelevant to the practice of mahamudra. If you can remain present, that is to say if you can remain aware of the present moment of experience, then even if a hundred thoughts pass through your mind it’s irrelevant because you won’t be distracted by them. Thoughts will arise, but to be distracted by a thought you must stray, you must be somehow captured by that thought, either because you mistakenly regard it as a special case, “Oh, this thought is important; I’d better follow it,” or because you have the habit, as we all do, of simply following thought blindly and surrendering your autonomy to the thoughts that happen to flit through your mind. But if you don’t do that, if you don’t allow thoughts to capture you, the mere presence of a thought, the mere passing of a thought through your mind does not in itself impede or obstruct present awareness.

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Chenrezig is Compassionate Emptiness

[From a teaching on Essence of Wisdom: Stages of the Path, Part 6, by Lama Tashi Topgyal. Translated by Lama Yeshe Gyamtso.]

Chenrezig is compassionate emptiness. Chenrezig is not a flesh and blood person who has to sit there for eternity and who has to hold his two arms up. He is the affect of the realization of emptiness. The affect of the realization of emptiness is compassion, the natural feeling of realizing emptiness. So Chenrezig’s form is that as appearance. Chenrezig’s mantra – OM MANI PEME HUNG – is that as sound.

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Because You Care So Much

[From a teaching on Essence of Wisdom: Stage of the Path, Part 6 taught by Lama Tashi Topgyal. Translated by Lama Yeshe Gyamtso.]

There is only one reason to receive authentic vajrayana empowerment, and that is that you care so much about other beings that you are in a hurry to achieve buddhahood for their benefit. Sometimes people think that vajrayana is intended for those who are frightened by the common path, which takes three periods of innumerable eons. That’s incorrect. Vajrayana is for those who are in a hurry to help beings as much as possible and therefore who do not want beings to continue to suffer unnecessarily while it takes you three periods of innumerable eons to achieve buddhahood. (Innumerable means ten to the power of sixty in this context, which is what it will take according to the path of the sutras.) Because if you receive empowerment, keep samaya, and pursue the vajrayana path properly, it has been taught by Vajradhara that you can achieve buddhahood in this one life. This is not something I’m making up or that scholars have made up, this was said by the Buddha. You do that; you subject yourself to the intense discipline of the vajrayana, which begins with empowerment, because you care so much about beings that you cannot stand to take your time achieving buddhahood.

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