Fearless Simplicity
The Dzogchen Way of Living freely in a Complex
World

Excerpt chapter:
Motivation
Whether our Dharma practice will progress
in the right direction depends on our attitude, our intention. Motivation
is extremely important: it is what everything stands or falls with,
and this is true not only in spiritual practice but in whatever we set
out to do. Therefore, in Buddhist practice it is of utmost importance
to continually correct and improve our attitude.
The attitude we need to cultivate is one that is suffused with bodhichitta.
This enlightened attitude has two aspects. The first aspect is the urge
to purify our negativity: “I want to rid myself of all shortcomings,
all ego-oriented emotions such as attachment, aggression, stupidity,
and all the rest.” The second aspect is the sincere desire to
benefit all beings: “Having freed myself of all negative emotions,
I will benefit all sentient beings. I will bring every sentient being
to the state of complete enlightenment.”
This compassionate attitude of bodhichitta should encompass oneself
as well as all others. We have every reason to feel compassionate toward
ourselves. In the ordinary state of mind we are helplessly overtaken
by selfish emotions; we lack the freedom to remain unaffected when these
emotions occupy our mind. Swept away by feelings of attachment, anger,
closed-mindedness, and so forth, we lose control, and we suffer a great
deal in this process. In such a state, we are unable to help ourselves,
let alone others. We need to relate to our own suffering here with compassion
in a balanced way, applying compassion toward ourselves just as we would
do with others. In order to help others, we must first help ourselves,
so that we can become capable of expanding our efforts further. But
we shouldn’t get stuck in just helping ourselves. Our compassion
must embrace all other beings as well, so that having freed ourselves
of negative emotions we are moved by compassion to help all sentient
beings.
At this point in our practice, it’s okay if our attempts to experience
the attitude of bodhichitta are a little bit artificial. Because we
haven’t necessarily thought in this way before, we need to deliberately
shift or adjust our intention to a new style. This kind of tampering
with our own attitude is actually necessary. We may not yet be perfect
bodhisattvas, but we should act as if we already are. We should put
on the air of being a bodhisattva, just as if we’re putting on
a mask that makes us look as if we are somebody else. The true, authentic
bodhichitta only arises as a natural expression of having realized the
view. Before experiencing this spontaneously and fully, however, we
need to consciously try to move in that direction. Even though our efforts
may feel a little artificial at this point, it is perfectly okay—assuming
of course that this is the good and necessary kind of artifice.
The need to improve our attitude, to correct our motivation, is not
particularly difficult to understand, nor is it that difficult to actually
do. Although it may be simple, this does not mean that we should belittle
its importance. At this point, we should repeatedly cultivate the bodhisattva
attitude. This is very important. To look down upon it as an inferior
or unimportant practice seriously detracts from real progress in spiritual
practice. Therefore, again and again, in all situations try your best
to motivate yourself with bodhichitta.
In Tibet there is a lot of livestock: many cows, sheep, yaks. The skin
from these animals needs to be cured in order to be useful; it needs
to be softened by a special process. Once the hide has been cured, it
becomes flexible and can be used in all sorts of ways: in religious
artifacts, to bind up certain offerings on the shrine, as well as for
all kinds of household purposes. But first it needs to be prepared in
the right way: it needs to be softened, made flexible. If the hide is
simply left as it is, it hardens and becomes totally stiff; then it
is nothing but an unyielding piece of animal skin. It is the same way
with a human being’s attitude. We must soften our hearts, and
this takes deliberate effort. We need to make ourselves gentle, peaceful,
flexible, and tame, rather than being undisciplined, rigid, stubborn
egocentrics.
This softening of our heart is essential for all progress, and not just
in terms of spiritual practice. In all we do, we need to have an attitude
that is open-minded and flexible. In the beginning this act of improving
our attitude is definitely artificial. We are deliberately trying to
be a bodhisattva, to have the compassionate attitude of wanting to help
all sentient beings. This conscious effort is vital, because it can
genuinely soften us up from deep within. If we do not cultivate this
attitude, our rigidly preoccupied frame of mind makes it impossible
for the true view of ultimate bodhichitta to grow. It’s like trying
to plant seeds in a frozen block of ice atop Mount Everest—they
will never grow, they will just freeze. When, on the other hand, you
have warmed up your character with bodhichitta, your heart is like fertile
soil that is warm and moist. Since the readiness is there, whenever
the view of self-knowing wakefulness, the true view of Dzogchen that
is ultimate bodhichitta, is planted, it can grow spontaneously. In fact,
absolutely nothing can hold it back from growing in such a receptive
environment! That is why it is so important to steadily train in bodhichitta
right from the very beginning.
The word “Dharma,” in the context of this book, means method.
The Dharma is a method to overcome the delusion in our own stream of
being, in our own mind—a way to be totally free of the negative
emotions that we harbor and cause to proliferate, and at the same time
it is a way to realize the original wakefulness that is present in ourselves.
There are ten different connotations of the word “Dharma,”
but in this context we are speaking of two types: the Dharma of statements
and the Dharma of realization. The Dharma of statements is what you
hear during a lecture or a teaching session. Within the Dharma of statements
are included the words of the Buddha, the Tripitaka, as well as the
commentaries on the Buddha’s words made by the many learned and
accomplished masters of India and Tibet.
Through hearing the explanations that constitute the Dharma of statements,
and through applying these methods, something dawns in our own experience.
This insight is called the Dharma of realization, and it includes recognizing
our own nature of mind. In order to approach this second kind of Dharma,
to apply it, we need the right motivation. Again, this right motivation
is the desire to free oneself of negative emotions and bring all beings
to liberation. We absolutely must have that attitude, or our spiritual
practice will be distorted into personal profit seeking.
Basically there are three negative emotions: attachment, aggression,
and closed-mindedness. Of course these three can be further distinguished
into finer and finer levels of detail, down to the 84,000 different
types of negative emotions. But the main three, as well as all their
subsidiary classifications, are all rooted in ignorance, in basic unknowing.
These are the negative emotions we need to be free of, and their main
root is ignorance.
Someone might think, “I approach Dharma practice because my ego
is a little bit upset. My ego is not very intelligent, not quite able
to succeed. I come here to practice in order to improve my ego.”
That attitude is not spiritual.
Here’s another attitude: “My ego works so hard. I must take
care of my ego. I must relax. I come here to practice and become relaxed,
so that my ego gets healthier and I can do my job.” That type
of attitude is okay, but merely okay; it’s just one drop of a
very small motivation.
We can, in fact, have a much larger perspective. As long as we harbor
and perpetuate the negative emotions of attachment, anger, closed-mindedness,
pride, and jealousy, they will continue to give us a hard time, and
they will make it difficult for others to be with us as well. We need
to be free of them. We need to have this attitude: “I must be
free of these emotions.”
When you leave this retreat at Gomde, I want you to go home naked. You
can think that you left your negative emotions there as a donation!
Honestly, that is the purpose of such a place. It is not right to go
on retreat or hear teachings with the attitude, “I must go there
in order to get something; I must achieve something.” Instead,
have this attitude: “I am practicing a spiritual path in order
to lose something—to get rid of my attachment, my anger, my closed-mindedness,
my conceit, my competitive jealousy.”
Next, I would like to suggest that you practice in such a way that you
are at ease with the whole process. Gradually expand that attitude of
ease to encompass more and more. Once you’ve freed yourself of
all these annoying emotions and become naked, it’s not like you
can just lean back and take it easy. That is not sufficient. You can
awaken a sense of responsibility for all the other sentient beings who
are exactly the way you used to be, tormented by negative emotions.
You can begin helping them—first one, then two, then three, and
finally all sentient beings.
Otherwise, what Gampopa said may come true: If you do not practice the
Dharma correctly, it could become a cause for rebirth in the lower realms.
That may happen for many people. In fact, it happens more frequently
among old practitioners than with beginners.
Someone may relate to Dharma merely as a kind of remedy to be used when
confused or upset. This of course is not the real purpose of spiritual
practice. In this kind of situation, you do some practice till you have
settled down, and then you set it aside and forget all about it. The
next time you get upset, you do some more practice in order to feel
good again. Of course, reestablishing one’s equilibrium in this
way is one of the minor purposes of practice, but it’s not the
real goal. Doing this is a way of using the Dharma as if it were a type
of therapy. You may of course choose to do this, but I do not think
it will get you enlightened. Feel a little bit unhappy, do some Dharma,
get happy. Feel a little bit upset, then feel fine, then again feel
unhappy. If you just continue like this, holding this very short-term
view in mind, then there is no progress. “Last night I didn’t
sleep—my mind was disturbed, and the dog was barking next door.
Now my mind is a little upside down, so I need to do a session to cure
it. Okay, this morning I’ll meditate.”
Do not practice in this way. Dharma practice is not meant merely to
make oneself feel better. The whole point of spiritual practice is to
liberate oneself through realization and also to liberate others through
compassionate capacity. To practice in order to feel better only brings
one back up to that same level—one never makes any real progress.
At the end of one’s life, one just happens to feel good till the
end of one’s last session and then that’s it—nothing
happens beyond that. With this attitude of merely feeling good becoming
the type of Buddhism that spreads in the West, we may see a huge scarcity
of enlightened masters in the future. They will become an endangered
species.
Please understand that the pursuit of “feeling better” is
a samsaric goal. It is a totally mundane pursuit that borrows from the
Dharma and uses all its special methods in order to fine-tune ego into
a fit and workable entity. The definition of a worldly aim is to try
to achieve something for oneself with a goal-oriented frame of mind—“so
that I feel good.” We may use spiritual practice to achieve this,
one good reason being that it works much better than other methods.
If we’re on this path, we do a little spiritual practice and pretend
to be doing it sincerely. This kind of deception, hiding the ego-oriented,
materialistic aim under the tablecloth, might include something like
“I take refuge in the Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha, so I must be
pure.” Gradually, as we become more astute at spiritual practice,
we may bring our materialistic aim out into the open. This is quite
possible: people definitely do it. But if this is how you practice,
you won’t get anywhere in the end. How could one ever become liberated
through selfishness?
There comes a point when we start to lose faith in the illusions of
this world: our level of trust in illusions begins to weaken, and we
become disappointed. Using spiritual practice to nurture our ego back
into good health while still retaining trust in these illusory aims
does not set us free. True freedom does not mean having a healthy faith
in illusions; rather, it means going completely beyond delusion. This
may not sound particularly comforting, but it is true. It may be an
unpleasant piece of news, especially if we have to admit to ourselves,
“I have really been fooling myself all along. Why did I do all
this practice? Am I completely wrong?” What can you do to pretend
this isn’t true? Facing the truth is not pleasant.
The real help here lies in continually correcting and improving our
motivation: understanding why we are practicing and where we are ultimately
heading. Work on this and bring forth the noble motivation of bodhichitta.
Then all methods and practices can be used to help you progress in that
direction.
Again I must emphasize this point: if we want to approach ultimate truth,
we must form a true motivation. This includes compassion for all other
sentient beings who delude themselves continuously with the contents
of whatever arises in their minds. Compassionate motivation says, “How
sad that they believe so strongly in their thoughts, that they take
them to be so real.” This deluded belief in one’s own thoughts
is what I call the “granddad concept.” First, we hold our
thought as true. Next, we accept that delusion, and it becomes our granddad.
You know what it’s like to suffer from this delusion yourself,
in your own experience. Bring to mind all other sentient beings who
let themselves get caught up in their granddad delusion and, with compassion,
form the wish to free them all. That’s the true motivation: please
generate it.
Unless we have completely pure and true motivation, the practice of
Vajrayana and Dzogchen doesn’t turn out well. Paltrul Rinpoche
was a great Dzogchen master. He did not have any major monastery, but
he had an encampment of thousands of practitioners that was called Paltrul
Gar, Paltrul’s Camp. Over and over again, he taught those gathered
around him the importance of having pure motivation. He created a situation
named the Three Opportunities to improve the motivation of these practitioners.
The first opportunity was at the sound of the wake-up gong in the early
morning. Upon hearing the sound, people had the opportunity to think,
“Yes, I must improve my motivation. I must put myself into the
service of others; I must get rid of negative emotions and assist all
sentient beings.” They would repeatedly bring that to mind in
order to adjust their aim.
The second opportunity arose at Paltrul Rinpoche’s main tent.
To get into it, you had to pass by a stupa, and at the opening to the
enclosure, you had to squeeze yourself by to get through. The entranceway
was deliberately made narrow so that you paused for a moment and thought,
“This is the second opportunity to adjust my motivation.”
The third one occurred in Paltrul Rinpoche’s teaching itself,
at the times when he would say directly, “You must correct and
improve your motivation”—just like I am telling you now.
If these Three Opportunities did not work, then for the most part, Paltrul
Rinpoche would kick you out of the encampment. He would say, “You
are just fooling me and I am just fooling you. There is no point in
that, so get out. Go away and become a businessman, get married, have
children, get out of here! What’s the use of being neither a spiritual
practitioner nor a worldly person? Go and be a worldly person! Just
have a good heart occasionally.” What he meant was, it is not
all right to dress up as a Dharma practitioner and merely pretend to
be one. To act in this way is not being honest with others, and especially
not with oneself.
Motivation is easy to talk about yet sometimes hard to have. We always
forget the simplest things, partly because we don’t take them
seriously. We would rather learn the more advanced, difficult stuff.
And yet the simple can also be very profound. When a teaching is presented
as a brain teaser and is hard to figure out but you finally get it,
then you may feel satisfied. But this feeling of temporary satisfaction
is not the real benefit. To really saturate yourself, your entire being,
with the Dharma, you need the proper motivation. Please apply this thoroughly,
all the time.
In Vajrayana teachings, we find many instructions on how to improve
our motivation. In fact, if you really learn about how this motivation
should be, the whole bodhichitta teaching is contained within that.
Cultivate the correct motivation within your own experience, and it
turns into bodhichitta all by itself.
I have been teaching now for fifteen years. To teach on the view, on
emptiness and so forth, all of that is of course great, but when I look
through the whole range of teachings, the real dividing line between
whether one’s practice goes in the right direction or the wrong
direction always comes down to motivation. That is the pivotal point.
Without pure motivation, no matter how profound the method is that we
apply, it still turns into spiritual materialism. To train in being
a bodhisattva and cultivate bodhichitta so that “I can be happy”
means something is twisted from the very beginning. Instead, embrace
your practice with the genuine bodhichitta motivation.
Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche, who is one of my root gurus, would teach on motivation
over and over again. He talked about it so much that, frankly, I sometimes
felt a little bored, thinking, “He talked about it yesterday,
he talked about it today, and he will probably talk about it tomorrow.
This is a little too much. I’ve already heard it.” This
kind of resistance is actually very good proof that ego doesn’t
like teachings on pure motivation. Right there, at the moment one feels
resistance against the altruistic attitude, that is the precise spot
to work with, touchy as it may be. To admit this and be willing to deal
with it right at that point is very practical, very pragmatic. I think
that the whole point of practice is using Dharma teachings at the exact
point of resistance. Otherwise, we just end up practicing when we feel
good, and we avoid it when we feel bored or restless. At the very moment
of feeling depressed, restless, or unhappy, take these moods as a really
good training opportunity, as a blessing, and put the Dharma to use
right on the spot. Think, “I am so glad I have this opportunity
to practice meditation. I am deeply delighted. Please come here, unhappiness,
depression, every type of suffering! Please come closer, I am so happy
to see you!” When we train in this type of “welcoming practice”
on a daily basis, we can progress and become truly transformed. Otherwise
we are just postponing the main problem until some indefinite future
time, tomorrow and then again tomorrow. We postpone it again and again,
until the doctor says, “Sorry, your time is up! No more tomorrows.”
I can promise you that the Dharma works well if you use it well. I have
a great deal of trust that the teachings of the awakened Buddha are
extremely profound and precious. Their practice can solve our basic
problem permanently and completely. All our confusion, all our emotional
obscurations can be completely undone. Not only can we achieve liberation
for ourselves personally, but we can expand our capacity to benefit
others at a deep and true level, not just superficially. All these tools
and insights are presented in the Buddha’s teachings. To use them
only for temporary, shallow purposes, as is often the case with therapy—approaching
practice as a bit of self-improvement—degrades the Buddha’s
teachings to the level of a self-help book. There is no need for that.
There are already more than enough of those—stacks of them, mountains
of New Age self-help books suggesting this or that kind of therapy.
If this is all we want out of Buddhism, we can turn to the easily understood
self-help books that already exist. They are actually very useful. But
if the future of the Buddhist tradition is no more than another self-help
variation, I feel somewhat sad. Someone who simply wants a stronger
ego to face the world, make more money, influence people, and become
famous maybe doesn’t need Buddhism.
This sort of Dharma talk was probably not heard in the past in Tibet.
It wasn’t necessary then, because the country was full of true
practitioners. You just had to look up the mountainside and somebody
was sitting there practicing. You could see the dwellings of hermits
from wherever you were, scattered all over the sides of mountain ranges.
At any given time throughout history, the Drukpa Kagyu tradition abounded
with great practitioners who had given up all material concern. These
people were happy to just get by on whatever came along, happy to let
whatever happened happen; they were free of all emotional baggage and
worry for themselves. Maybe they did worry somewhat in the beginning,
let’s say the first six months of practice, but then they went
beyond petty worries. They did not spend their whole lives trying to
deal with emotional issues. They dealt with them and went on to the
real practice. They did not remain inside the cocoon of spiritual materialism.
Wouldn’t it be sad to die like that, wrapped up in selfish worry?
Particularly when we come to Vajrayana practice, we must also have a
certain amount of courage, a certain kind of mental strength, and together
with that, an openness and softness of heart. This quality does not
mean we are spaced-out or preoccupied with one thought after another.
Rather, we should have a willingness to understand how to practice,
along with the open-mindedness. This quality of inner boldness is very
important in Vajrayana: being bold not in an aggressive way, as when
you’re ready to fight whoever opposes you, but rather being ready
to do whatever needs to be done. That is a very important quality.
To be a Vajrayana practitioner requires a certain degree of inner strength
that grows out of confidence. This is not the aggressive strength of
a fighter; it is more a preparedness that refuses to succumb to any
obstacle or difficulty: “I am not going to give in, no matter
how hard it is. I will just take whatever comes and use the practice
to spontaneously liberate that state!” Be this way rather than
timid and afraid, always shying away from difficult situations. It is
very hard to be a Vajrayana practitioner with a timid, chicken-hearted
attitude toward life.
The teachings I discuss here belong to the vehicle of Vajrayana. The
Sanskrit word vajra literally means “diamond,” which is
the hardest of all substances. A diamond can cut any other substance,
but it cannot itself be cut by anything else. The diamond’s strength
and impenetrability signify that when the true view of Vajrayana has
dawned within our stream of being, we develop a quality of being unmoved
or unshaken by obstacles and difficulties. Whatever kind of harm may
present itself, whether it be a negative emotion or a physical pain,
we have a certain quality of being unassailable, instead of immediately
becoming lost and being defeated by that obstacle. The true practitioner
of Vajrayana is unassailable in the face of difficulty.
We can succeed in really improving our motivation, and that would be
wonderful, not only for ourselves, but also for being able to benefit
others.
260 pp, 6 x 9, paper, $22, ISBN 962-7341-48-7
