Knocking others down to get ahead

A lot of people think that the way to get ahead is by knocking others down. A lot of people think nice guys finish last. A lot of people think the way to be treated with respect is to make others fear you. A lot of people think the way to get what you want is fight aggressively to get it. A lot of people think the only way to get what they want is through brute force. But people who think these things are dead wrong.

It may seem in the short run that such strategies are successful, but pursuing them sacrifices the long run stable success on the alter of short term gains and seeming victories. Those who work with such people generate in their hearts the wish to bring down such people. Perhaps in the beginning they can’t, but overtime they will gradually undermine the person and bring them down. Such people engender resistence in all around them, and as such they create even more problems which they then have to resolve with brute force. Karmically speaking, if you are getting ahead through knocking others down you are laying the foundation for your own inevitable downfall. And in the meantime, you are making life a struggle, yourself and all those around you miserable, and generally spreading poison in the world.

I will inevitably have to work with such people. I need to learn how to respond to and deal with such people.

Accepting that there will always be problems and embracing that there is work to be done

Deep down inside, the overwhelming majority of our problems come from us expecting things to go smoothly and for their to not be problems. Then, when things go wrong, we wish it was otherwise and we become frustrated. We then make ourselves miserable, our frustration makes those around us miserable, and when we act based upon that frustration we almost invariably respond to the problem in such a way that we make the situation worse. One of the main reasons we need to ‘know suffering’ is because we need to learn that the very nature of samsara is problems. There will always be problems, the only question is which ones will arise today. We should not be surprised when problems arise, they always will. We need to accept this fact as just the nature of things. So the focus is not on wishing it was otherwise, rather it is accepting that this is part of life. The question of each day is not whether there will be any problems, because there always will be. The question is which problems will arise today. Our day is then to work through those problems with a happy, accepting mind.

A related problem is we expect to not have to work. We wish we had no responsibilities and that we did not have to do anything. Then, when life obliges us to do things, we become frustrated or resentful of that fact. We then have to force ourseves to work. Everything becomes a struggle. I see occasionally these people who so don’t want to do anything that they can barely hold their heads up. They usually rub their faces a lot and hold their heads in their hands. They are exhausted and everything for them is a giant struggle. The reason is they wish they did not have to do anything, and so they are resentful of the fact that they do, they feel put upon that they have to. We need to learn to fully embrace the fact that there will always be work to do. Work is not something to be avoided, rather it is something that we grow through. Just like there will always be endless problems in samsara, so too there will always be endless work to do. This is not a problem, it is just the way things are. The sooner we embrace this fact, we will stop resisting this and start working with it. It is through working that we move ourselves forward and grow as a person.

These two mistakes: expecting there to not be any problems and expecting to not have to do any work are at the source of the overwhelming majority of frustrations and problems faced by people of the modern world.

Understanding older women

I have a lot of karma with older, single women.  Many such women find their way to Dharma centers in search of answers and a framework for rebuilding new lives.  Many of these women grew up in an age when their job was to look after the men in their lives.  Their husbands grew rich, successful, they grew older and less appealing, and the marriage ended (usually with the husband going off with some younger woman).  Now they have few skills, very low employment prospects, no money, feel old and unattractive, face a society that is uninterested in them.  Their sense of worth and value before was grounded in how they look, but since that is now gone they lack in self-confidence.  They have given everything they had to raising their kids, but their kids are now largely on their own and don’t need them anymore and in fact want the mother out of their life.  WHen their kids are failures, they feel like it is a reflection on them and that they have failed as a mother.  Sometimes, they will interfere with the ability of their children from fully becoming adults on their own because they want to still feel useful and so they clean up all of the messes their adult children make, creating dependencies, irresponsibility in the kid, etc.  THey try be strong, but feel alone and with nothing meaningful to do. 

We once rented ‘It’s Complicated’ which is a movie about more or less this situation.  It touched on pretty much all of these themes.  The movie basically was the fulfillment of every such woman’s hopes and aspirations.  She was divorced for 10 years after her husband left her for a Barbie.  She had rebuilt her life, opened up a bakery business, her kids were now all off to college, her ex-husband is having a tough time with his new wife (former mistress), he comes wanting her back and falls back in love with her realizing that he was wrong and a jerk before.  He charms her, wants her, she tries to keep her distance but then gives it a go.  She feels new energy and vitality, her family becomes reconstituted just like old times, everyone is happy, some of his old bad habits resurface, she realizes that she has moved on and no longer needs him, she has outgrown him.  She then rejects him, but now they become good friends.  She then establishes something adult with a really nice guy.  She is also of course a really great cook, her children have all turned out great.  They wanted their parents to get back together again, she wanted to make them happy in this regard, but ultimately this wasn’t the right thing to do because she had moved on, and finally they understood.  In the meantime, she was finally having built the addition to her house that she has always wanted (her new kitchen and view of the sea from her bedroom).  She was of course a great cook, her children adored her, her ex-husband finally realized what a great mother she was, and she had spent a year in Paris in her 20s learning to cook really well.  She had a close circle of friends who she could confide in talk to.

Another recurring theme in so-called “chick flicks” these days is the woman is with some really nice, but ultimately incompetent guy.  She is bored with him, but he is a good guy.  She wants him to find his balls and his backbone, be able to take charge more so that she does not have to carry all of the load (which she is doing very well, because he has no idea how to do things and she doesn’t trust him to do things right).  Some crisis then happens, forcing her man to rise to the occasion, he discovers his strength, they are able to let go and have a good time, their relationship becomes revitalized.  And now she has a nice, strong and capable man who respects her and appreciates her. 

The other thing I have noticed recently is the life of older and retired people generally revolves around good food – buying it, preparing it and enjoying eating it.  This is true for my Dad and Helen (though they also have the toys my Dad plays with), Irv and Eva (though they also have their grandkids who they support outstandingly), and that movie A Year in Provence.

While I could make lots of Dharma commentary about all of the above, I think it is valuable in and of itself to better understand different groups of people, their stuggles and their aspirations.  On this basis, you can better help people.  Of course all of this is not meant as a gross generalization, rather just some recurring themes I have observed, etc.

Motivation for becoming a diplomat

(I wrote this just after I passed the exam for getting into the State Department in August 2010)

Much has happened.  First, I passed the OA with a very high score, so it is essentially certain that I will get the diplomat job.  I made billions of requests to Dorje Shugden, so there is no scope for thinking anything other than this is what he has arranged for me.  He has taken care of my career wise my whole life.  In the end, my motivation for becoming a diplomat is manyfold:

  1. I wish to be able to provide for my family.  This is part of my karmic circumstance and responsibility, and it is not a problem.  It is easy to grasp at it as if it is a problem because we judge ourselves against those who are able to dedicate their lives to causing the Dharma to flourish (direct Dharma activities).  But these are not my conditions and this is not a problem.  We need people gaining realizations of all sorts of different lives, not just Eupames.  Living up to my traditional responsibilities is part of my path that has been given to me by Dorje Shugden.
  2. A Kadampa Spiritual Guide is, in effect, the Ambassador of all the Buddhas in this world.  The goal of a diplomatic career is to produce the result of an Ambassador.  Within the Foreign Service, rank is embedded in the person as they acquire the skills and competencies of a higher and higher ranked diplomat, culminating in being an Amassador.  I wish to gain all the skills and qualities of a good Ambassador so that I may later use them an employ them in the service of flourishing the Dharma.  Bodhichitta, at its most practical, is the wish to improve oneself so as to be able to better serve others.  A career in the foreign service will enable me to do exactly that.  These skills and qualities will become part of me as a person, not just knowledge I possess that I will lose when I die.  My focus throughout my career should be on skill building.  I need to strive to do my job with a higher and higher degree of quality, understanding that I need to develop these skills so that they stay within me in all of my future lives as tools which enable me to be a more qualified Kadampa Spiritual Guide.  In other words, the skills and qualities of an Ambassador are components of the skills and qualities of a Kadampa Spiritual Guide, and I have been given this job to learn these skills.  If I learn these skills with this intention, then they will ripen in this way. 
  3. Along the same lines, Bjorn had a Chosang (a dedicated and effective helper) because he had done the same for others in the past.  So I need to learn to become a model helper/employee for those I work for to create the karma to have model helpers/employees when I strive to flourish the Dharma – just like Bjorn.  Specifically, I need to learn to work to fulfill the wishes and objectives of my superiors.  I need to help them complete their goals and objectives.  I need to be loyal to them without getting drawn into clan-like conflict with other groups.  I need to learn how to let go and be happy for the Foreign Service to determine my next assignment.  Ordained RTs submit themselves to the wisdom and decisions of VGL when it comes to where they are posted, trusting that this is what is best for their practice.  I need to have a similar mindset, viewing the HR people as Dorje Shugden!  There are many other ideas along these lines which I will have to learn.
  4. My hope is when I retire, I can then do long retreat, and especially focus on writing my own commentaries to VGL’s teachings.  The commentaries will be my sharing of what I have learned and understand of the Dharma he has taught, not an attempt at providing definitive Dharma.  He has given us the definitive Dharma, but it is still useful to have different commentaries to these teachings.  I likewise want to write the Kadampa Quest books.  And throughout my career and my being a parent, I also wish to maintain my blog/journal.  Perhaps at some point I will go public with it, but in the meantime, I write it.  This too can also later become books.  Perhaps I will have a website where I make all of this freely available to others.  These are things which still need to be resolved.

While I may not have conditions that enable me to be near the NKT in terms of my activity, my commitment to practicing Dharma remains the same.  When I met with Olivier and Flavia a few summers ago, I had in my gut a feeling that this would happen, and that it would be sometime in my mid 50s when I reintersect with them in terms of being able to teach and spread the Dharma directly again.  We will see.

Wisdom, compassion and teaching your children to sleep through the night

One of the hardest things about being a parent of small children is sleepless nights.  This is actually an issue of spiritual concern. 

  1. If we do not sleep properly then we will not be able to do our daily practice.  If we don’t do our daily practice, then everything will fall apart.
  2. If you are exhausted, then during the day you will have less capacity to respond positively to the challenges that parenthood bring.  You will then get upset more often, spoil your relationship with your child, create all sorts of negative karma and generally be miserable day and night.  If you can get the sleeping down, you will be able to deal with anything.  If you can’t get proper sleep, you won’t be able to deal constructively with anything. 
  3. Attachment to sleep is one of our biggest delusions, and this gives us a chance to work on overcoming it.
  4. We will suffer from sleepless nights to the extent that we are thinking about ourselves.  This is an excellent opportunity to practice cherishing others
  5. Learning the proper wisdom/compassion balance when it comes to teaching our children to sleep through the night helps us in many other areas of parenting.  Unfortunately, this is something we often mess up. 

The bottom line is this:  we are not helping our children by not helping them learn to fall alseep on their own and to sleep through the night.  But at the same time, we need to acknowledge their capacity and gradually work to expand it.  Our compassion without wisdom will not be able to tolerate our kids crying, and so we will rush in to console them.  But if we do so, we deprive them of the opportunity of learning how to calm themselves down and fall alseep on their own.  We can in fact create a dependency on us for them to fall alseep, which will make them less confident in themselves and also make them more tired because they too are not having very restful nights.  Eventually, every parent must let their child cry to fall asleep, the only question is how many sleepless nights will they inflict upon themselves and their children before they do so.  Therefore we should unapologetically adopt as a goal to teach our children how to sleep from the very beginning of their life.

How do we do this?

  1. Rhythm is everything.  We should establish a night time sequence of events that we stick to every night that starts a couple of hours before they go to bed.  Then, when you start this sequence, the child already knows what comes next and where this particular sequence leads.  For example, our ritual for our older kids literally starts as soon as we get home.  We walk in the door, the first thing we do is take baths.  Then dinner, then a video/reading, then brush our teeth, then bed.  We do the same thing every day, the kids learn and know the rhythm, and it works.  For the little ones, we do bath, bottle, bed.   
  2. We should put our children down to bed before they have fallen alseep.  We first make sure all of their needs are met (clean diaper, well fed, blankets in order, pacifier, right temperature, etc.), then we put them down into their bed while they are still awake (but calm). 
  3. Once we put them down, there is no picking them back up unless things are really really extreme.  We can go back and give them their pacifier when they lose it, we can pat them lovingly, we can say things like ‘you can do it’, but we don’t pick them back up.  Then gradually, over time as their capacity increases, you go back less often, you stay less time, you start to not pat them but just console them with your words, etc.  Then, you start to not go back at all but just say something reassuring like ‘you can do it’ from a distance.
  4. We need to learn to distinguish between fussing and really needing something.  Often what happens is the baby will be crying or wimpering or making frustrated sounds, but they are working through them.  If you let it ride, they then have various points where they calm down (sometimes just through having exhausted themselves with their cries).  They have a moment or two of calm, and then they start up again.  But they cycle back to calm again.  Gradually, the amount of time fussing decreases and the amount of time calm increases until eventually they are alseep.  When they are cycling in this way, you don’t need to go back to them – just let it ride.  But if they lose their pacifier or teddy bear, reach a point of total hysteria where they will not likely be able to calm themselves back down without some consolation, or they have pooped something awful and need to be changed, then you should go address that need and then leave them again.  You have to be prepared to do this for several nights, possibly even weeks, before they start to get the hang of it.  Don’t plan on doing anything else during this time because you will then just get frustrated with them.  Know that it may take several hours every night of dedicated work before they finally settle down.  Investing the time to teach them will save you countless hours in the future when you can just put your kid to bed, close the door and not have to go back until morning.  So while difficult, it is worth the effort.
  5. Get them attached to a good teddy bear.  This can become their support and means of consolation.  We have found that those teddy bear security blankets are ideal.  They are both a teddy bear and a security blanket in one.  It should have things on it, like ears or tails or tags, that the kid can pull at.  One thing we also do is we have the mother sleep with it several nights so that she gets her smell all over it.  You can even consider putting it in the mother’s bra!  It may seem non-Dharma to encourage an attachment, we should not let the best (non-attachment to anything) be the enemy of the good (attachment for the teddy bear instead of the parent walking them around until they fall alseep!).  Eventually the child will outgrow their teddy bear, but if in the meantime they can use it to calm themselves down and enable both yourself and your child be properly rested, it is a small price to pay.  If it helps, mentally engage in the guru yoga of the teddy bear.  By nature, the teddy bear is the spiritual guide, but he is appearing in the aspect of a teddy bear.  So you are not cultivating an attachment in a samsaric object, you are teaching reliance upon the spiritual guide!!!
  6. Resist the temptation to go ‘save’ them from their crying.  Once you make the decision you are going to let them cry and that you are not going back, then you have to stick with it all the way (barring, of course, something really extreme).  If you let them cry for 15 minutes and then crack and go get them, then you are not helping them.  The only thing you are doing is guarranteeing that tomorrow night they will cry for at least 15 minutes before they settle down because they will think crying for 15 minutes is how you get a parent to come.  They will then cry even more the next night.  But if instead you let them cry for as long as it takes, then the next night it will be less time crying, then less again the next night and so on until eventually they don’t cry at all.

When it comes to the child sleeping through the night, again, you need to work gradually.

  1. Time everything so that you feed the kid a bottle when you, as parents, go to bed.  Typically, in the early days, the kid can go 2-3 hours between feedings.  So if you go to bed at 10:45, make sure you feed them a bottle at 7:45 so that they are sufficiently hungry at 10:45.  Likewise feed them at 4:45 and so forth going backwards in the day.
  2. Try expand the time-scale between feedings during the night, not during the day.  During the day, you want to stuff them like a sausage.  But at night, you practice expanding the scope of time between feedings.  For example, if your child normally does 3 hours between feedings, then when they start to wake up after 3 hours, instead of feeding them give them their pacifier, console them, etc., but don’t feed them until 4 hours.  Then feed them a bigger than usual bottle (since they will be hungry).  Then do the same thing again, trying to stretch it out to 4 hours again.  If you can do this, you will get them down to one feeding a night.  You feed them before you go to bed, once in the middle of the night, and then once again when you wake up.  This is a major accomplishment.
  3. Once you have done this, continue to stuff them full of lead during the day, especially just before they go to bed, and then try stretch it to 5 hours before you feed them in the middle of the night using the same tactics as above.  You can still feed them again when you wake up, even if it is less than 4 hours between feedings.  Once you have stabilized 5 hours, repeat the same process for 6 hours, then 7 hours until finally they can do 8 hours!  As a rule of thumb, a baby can do their weight in  pounds minus 2 hours.  So a 6 pound baby can stretch at most 4 hours before you really should feed them.  A 7 pound baby can stretch at most 5 hours, an 8 pound baby 6 hours and so forth.  But every baby is different, so really you need to figure this out according to your own kid’s capacity.  This has at least been our experience after 5 kids.

One final note on doing your daily practice during the training of your children.  Pre-children, our routine was say sleep 8 hours, then do our practice for 1 hour, for a total time period of 9 hours (this is an example, modify the number of hours accordingly to your individual circumstance).  So when you are training baby, when you get up to feed them the middle of the night bottle, instead of trying to go back to bed do your practice in the middle of the night, then go back to bed and wake up at the end of the same 9 hour period.  In this way, you will still get the same number of hours of sleep and the same number of hours doing your practice, but it will just be in a different order.  There are several advantages to doing this:

  1. The hours you do sleep will be more effective.  The problem I have had is when I wake up to feed the bottle, I tend to become more awake.  It then takes me longer to fall alseep so these hours are wasted.  Then when I wake up to do my practice, I am too tired to do so, and my practice is of poor quality (or sometimes not at all if I am really tired).  If instead you do your practice, your mind becomes more subtle and collected so then when you do go back to bed you will fall right asleep.  The reason why we can’t sleep is our gross winds do not dissolve.  If you make your mind more subtle through your practice, they will dissolve more easily.
  2. You willl have more virtuous dreams, leading up to sleep yoga.  Just as the last mind we have at the time of death determines the quality of our next rebirth, so too the quality of our mind we have as we fall alseep determines the quality of our dreams.  If we fall alseep with a virtuous mind, we are more likely to carry that virtue into our sleep and dreams.  Eventually, as our mindfulness improves, we will be able to carry it into our sleeping state and do lucid dreaming.  When we first start lucid dreaming we will want to fly around or do other such things, but eventually we can teach ourselves to meditate in our dreams.  Some of my most profound meditation experiences have come from doing this because at this point we are meditating with our subtle mind.  Think Shantideva!

I hope all of this proves useful to all those sleepless Kadampa parents out there!

The Dharmakaya and Ehwa

I watched Avatar with the kids recently, and was struck by the relationship between Ehwa, the divine entity of Pandora, and the Dharmakaya.

The idea of Ehwa is that all life on Pandora is actually part of a larger living entity called Ehwa, like different cells in one fully integrated, seamless organism.  Physically, each being may appear separate, but spiritually they are all different aspects of the same single entity.  A being arises from Ehwa, returns to Ehwa when they die, and can even pass from one body to another through Ehwa.  Bliss arose when the consciousness of two different beings ‘bonded’, or realized their non-duality, such as when they went on the horses or the birds.  They ceased to function as two separate entities, but became and functioned like one.  The more the Navi realized the non-duality between themselves and Ehwa, the more they became one with Ehwa.  In dependence upon Jake’s prayer, he was able to invoke all of Ehwa, in other words the whole planet and all of its aspects (the different beings) towards the end of ridding the planet of those who would destroy it.  The planet functioned and acted as one entity.  Jake’s evolution as a character was his moving from viewing himself as separate from Ehwa to becoming one with Ehwa, and as he did so he grew in capacity and understanding.

In the same way, all beings are in reality different aspects or different parts of one seamless entity, the Dharmakaya.  It is only due to our ignorance that we conceive of and relate to ourselves as a separate entity.  Due to this ignorance, we grossly limit ourselves and isolate ourselves experientially from what we really are.  Due to our ignorance, different aspects of ourselves enter into conflict each other.  But when we realize our non-duality with all beings and all things, then we naturally come to live in harmony with all of reality.  The more we realize this non-duality, the more our experience becomes bliss and wisdom instead of the pain and suffering of delusion and ignorance. In reality, we are  everything.  All of life, all of the universe, is in reality one single, fully integrated, seamless entity.  This is our true nature.  This is who we really are.  We are not this small, isolated, individual self we think we are.  We ignorantly conceive of ourselves as a wave that is somehow independent from its ocean.  We somehow grasp at a universe of independent waves and deny the ocean entirely.  Because we conceive of things this way, this is how we experience them, and as a result we experientially cut ourselves off from the underlying splendor of it all. 

But just because we conceive and experience things this way doesn’t make it true.  No matter what we think, we are, in fact, the ocean.  Our task as a completion stage practitioner is to experientially make the transition from conceiving ourselves as an independent wave to becoming the ocean itself, to experience ourselves as the ocean itself.  To experience ourselves as one single entity which is all things.  To experience ourselves as the one entity which is all things. 

Knowing that we are the one entity which is all things, in our present state we have two problems:

  1. We are in conflict with ourselves.  Different aspects of ourselves (the different beings of this world) are in conflict with each other. 
  2. We are in the wrong shape.  The cummulative effects of our delusions and ignorance since beginningless time have completely disfigured and distorted the shape of ourselves.  We are currently in the aspect of a samsara, a distorted contaminated world at war with itself. 

If we realized we were one entity, we would come to live in harmony with all the other aspects of ourselves.  Delusion leads to conflict, wisdom leads to harmony.  We need to completely reconfigure ourselves into the shape or aspect of a pure land with all beings living in harmony as different aspects of the one entity of the Dharmakaya.  We would then all share in the bliss of all beings experiencing themselves as one.  Ultimately we exist and function as one, conventionally we have many different aspects or waves of the single entity.  We are not one and not different but both simultaneously.  In our tantric practice, we first realize ourselves and the whole universe as being the ocean of the Dharmakaya.  Then, out of compassion and an effort to undo all of the harm and disfigurement we have done to ourselves, the one entity, we reconfigure ourselves in the aspect of a universal pure land with all beings in harmony as the one entity of the Dharmakaya, partaking of its shared blissful wisdom – one single consciousness and many different consciosnesses simultaneously.  This mental action functions to slowly and gradually reconfigure ourselves, the one entity, as the pure land itself and all of its inhabitants.  Once this is our living experience, we have reached the outer pure land.  We then turn our attention to the Dharmakaya itself, and gradually gather, aborb and purify all phenomena into the complete purity of the ocean of the clear light Dharmakaya.  Until we are a Buddha, any conventional appearance comes mixed with contaminated appearance (even if we know better), so even the pure land appears contaminated by ignorance.  But when we aborb completely into the Dharmakaya, all duality dissolves away into clear light.  Only once we have fully realized that state can we then appear ourselves as conventional appearance without ever leaving the ocean of bliss and emptiness.  We shape ourselves as the pure land and as countless emanations in the ordinary conventional world so as to gradually draw all beings back into the bosom of ourselves completely gathered and purified in the Dharmakaya.

Being listened to by those in power

Throughout my life, I have had the problem of not being listened to by those in positions of power.  At the same time, it has appeared to my mind why those in positions of power are wrong or could benefit from the ideas I want to share with them, but they are not open to listening.  Sometimes they just dismiss me, sometimes they are closed minded and not willing to listen, sometimes they are just not willing to put in the effort to read anything more than a Twitter-length explanation of something.  When they don’t listen, yet I think they are wrong, I then lose faith in those in power, become frustrated by them, become discouraged that things will never change, etc.  This has happened in many contexts of my life, professionally, personally and in the Dharma.

So what is at play here?

  1. The first thing to check is my pride.  Are my ideas genuinely right, or is it just my pride that makes me think they are?
  2. Next, I need to check my attachment to my own ideas.  It is very easy to become attached to one’s own ideas, and then frustrated when those ideas do not move forward.
  3. Next, I need to take the time to try see things from their perspective.  They are not resisting my ideas just because they are wrong and stubborn, but because of their world view accumulated through their own experiences which are different than my own.  Different people see issues differently depending upon where they are sitting.  Even the same person can view things differently by changing where they are sitting.  So I should try understand things from their perspective, not just reject their position from my perspective.
  4. Next, I need to improve my modes of communication and delivery.  Perhaps the problem is not the ideas, but how I am delivering them.  I need to learn to deliver them in a way that people can accept.  I should not deliver the message like an attack or I am breaking down the doors or that others are wrong, but rather work with people trying to help them, etc.

But if after all of that, I still feel like they are wrong but not listening, what should I do?  Why is this happening

  1. This comes from my negative karma of idle chatter.  When you say a bunch of nonsense, then people do not listen to you even when you do later have something valid to say.  So I need to purify this and stop engaging in idle chatter in any form.
  2. This comes from my negative karma of not listening to others when I have been in positions of power.  I have done the same things to others – not listening to them when I was wrong and could have benefited from what they had to say.  I need to purify this too and not make this same mistake again when I later assume positions of power.
  3. I need to accept the karma that is in play.  Karmic inertia is sometimes quite slow as it takes time for already activated karma to play itself out and for new karma to assert itself and become the dominant force.  I need to patiently accept this, and during this time I need to work on assembling the causes and conditions for the karma to actually change.
  4. I need to cease to be the perpetual outsider.  I always construct myself as an outsider when it comes to authority and power.  I construct myself as the unlistened to outsider who knows better.  I need to become an insider, but in the good sense, not the bad sense.  One of the reasons why I am an outsider is I find it easy to work on projects that are my idea, but I find it difficult to commit energy to other people’s projects.  Since I am unwilling to volunteer to help other people accomplish their projects, they do not let me ‘in’ to a position of greater power.  So I remain an outsider.  I need to learn to help those in positions of power accomplish their vision and their projects, then they will naturally want to bring me in.  The goal here is not to become a sychophant, but to become a productive, contributing member of the team.  To make this transition, I need to contemplate the worthiness of the projects that they are working on, come to appreciate them myselves so that I want to contribute to them, then I volunteer. 

You don’t need friends, you need to be a friend

You don’t need friends, you need to be a friend.  You don’t need people to love you, you need to love people.  You don’t need others to do things for you, you need to do things for others.  Other people don’t need to like you for you to feel fulfilled, you need to simply like others.  Don’t be upset when others don’t contact you, rather contact them.  Don’t wait for others to come to you, go to them.  Don’t let anything be an obstacle, make it an opportunity to grow.  Don’t want, instead give.  Don’t wait for things to satisfy you, rather bring satisfaction to them.  Don’t expect anything from others, rather be grateful for what you have.  Don’t judge people if they don’t live up to your expectations, rather strive to live up to your own expectations for yourself.  Don’t fish for compliments, rather give them unconditionally.  You don’t need to say anything, you need to listen.  You don’t need others to understand you, you need to understand others.  You don’t need anybody to do anything for you, you need to do things for others.  You don’t need to receive anything from others, you need to offer things to others.  Don’t blame others for your experience of life, take responsibility for it.  Don’t wish you were with somebody else, be delighted to be who you are with.  Don’t judge a situation in terms of what it can do for you, rather look at what you can do in  a situation.  Don’t create problems, resolve them.  Don’t judge, accept.  Don’t focus on what you are doing, focus on why you are doing it.  Don’t expect things to change quickly, just be happy to create causes which take you in the right direction.  Don’t keep going down roads you know lead nowhere, just decide to do the right thing.  Don’t base your sense of self-worth on what others think of you, rather base it on your potential to get better with effort.  Don’t try to change others, change yourself.  Don’t blame others for your problems, blame your delusions.  Don’t wish things were different, realize they are perfect just the way they are.  Don’t waste your time chasing rainbows, spend your times planting seeds.  Don’t get angry when confronted with the truth, realize it is your pathway to freedom.  Don’t waste the days you are given, make the most of them.  Don’t expect yourself to already be perfect, rather joyfully but patiently work on perfecting yourself.  Don’t lament that things are unfair, just treat others fairly.  You don’t need to be anywhere else, you need to be where you are.  You don’t need to be with anybody else, you need to love who you are with.  Don’t take half-measures, deal with things definitively.  Stop making excuses, know you can do it.  Don’t try go it alone, pray for the strength to change.

Engaging in your daily practice for the benefit of all living beings

The only thing we can take with us when we die is the karmic causes we have created for ourself.  A pure practitioner is not concerned with results, but is exclusively focused on creating good causes.  We have a fininte amount of time in this life to create good causes, so we need to make sure that every moment we dedicate to doing so we get the most karmic bang for the time invested.

The basic daily practice we do is the Yoga of Buddha Heruka (adding Dorje Shugden on at the end).  So the question is how do we engage in this practice in such a way as to create the maximum amount of good causes while we do it?

There are three things we can do:

First, we should take the time before we begin the practice to generate a qualified bodhichitta motivation.  Bodhichitta multiplies the power of our practice by the number of living beings – in other words, infinitely.  But it is not enough to just say ‘bodhichitta’, you need to actually generate the mind of bodhichitta.  To do this, I find it most helpful to recall that every living being is an aspect or a part of my mind and my dream.  I have imprisoned all living beings into contaminated aggregates and they are suffering terribly as a result.  I have made a terrible mess of the universe of my mind, and now I need to clean up the mess I have made, I need to right the wrongs I have committed, I need to undo the samsara that I have created.  Since the enitre universe and all of the beings within it are only the fabric of my mind (my mind is currently in the shape of a samsara filled with suffering beings), to correct for everything I need to reshape my mind in the aspect of a pure land in which all beings are free.  My mind is currently uncontrolled and is shaping itself as a samsara, but now I need to gain control of my mind and intentionally shape it as a pure land.  Only a Buddha can do this fully and compltely and irreversibly, therefore I need to become a Buddha.  How?  By engaging in the practice of the Yoga of Buddha Heruka, the method for reshaping my mind.  The advantage of this contemplation is it also functions to make our practice a practice of purification.  We acknowledge all the wrongs we have committed, and we resolve to do right by all living beings by undoing all that we have done.  This mind is absolutely orthogonal to all of the negativities we have ever created, and so therefore functions to purify all the negative karma we have with respect to all living beings very very quickly.  For me, bodhichitta is my main purificaton practice.

Second, we need to practice guru yoga throughout our practice.  Every visual apsect, every mind we generate, every intention we should correctly see as a manifestation of and inseparable from our guru.  The Guru functions karmically as the focal point for all the countless Buddhas.  We recall this fact, so that we have the feeling that when we make offerings, prostrations, requests, etc., we are doing so to all the countless Buddhas.  We are calling upon all of them, we are mixing our mind with all of them.  When we generate a visual form in the practice we recognize the nature of this visual form as being all of the Buddhas, so throughout the entire practice we are cognizant of the fact that we are mixing our mind with the minds of all the Buddhas in every aspect of the practice.  Since there are countless Buddhas, this too multiplies the power of our practice by the number of Buddhas.  We receive a flood of blessings, because they are all trying to bless our mind.  The most important mind to generate with guru yoga (besides the recognition that the guru is the synthesis of all the Buddhas) is the mind of total and complete surrender to him.  From the perspective of our Dharma practice, there are three things:  the conditions of our practice (outer, inner and secret), our practice itself (what we are doing) and the final objective/destination of our practice (the enlightenment of all beings in the aspect of ourselves and all beings abiding in Keajra as Heruka).  We surrender completely the outer, inner and secret conditions of our practice to Guru Dorje Shugden.  We surrender our practice itself completely to Guru Tsongkhapa (he guides us as to what to do and he even engages in our practice for us within our mind).  We surrender the final objective/destination of our practice as being Keajra.  We have no other objective, we let go of and leave behind (renounce) all other goals and objectives.  Renunciation in this context is not a foregoing something good that we are depriving ourselves of, rather it is a leaving behind of all things less worthy, desirable and meaningful. 

Finally, when we engage in the practice itself, we should do so either as all living beings or for all living beings.  Living beings are currently samsaric beings in our dream because we have been having them engage in samsaric actions.  By engaging in the practice as all living beings, in other words, recognizing ourselves as all living beings and imagining that they are all engaging in the practice, we karmically reshape our mind such that in the future living beings will appear to us to be engaging in the stages of the path to enlightenment – engaging in pure actions instead of contaminated actions.  Imagining they are doing this is one of the most virtuous things we can do towards them, and for us it creates several great causes.  First, we get the karma as if we were engaging in our practice countless times since in effect we are doing so.  Second, we create the causes to have Buddhas engage in our practice for us within our own mind, we are doing it for living beings creates the causes for Buddhas to do it for us.  Since they know how to engage in the practices perfectly, if we learn to surrender to their engaging in our practices within our mind for us, we too will come to practice perfectly.

Within the context of the Yoga of Buddha Heruka, how specifically do we do this?

  1. When we do refuge, bodhichitta, through to the mandala offering, we imagine that all living beings are around us and we are all collectively engaging in the practice, like a universal puja, towards Guru Sumati Buddha Heruka and the field of merit in front of us.
  2. When we engage in the Migstema prayer (which I add to the practice) and the request to GSBH, we dissolve all living beings into us, generate the mental recognition that they are in us, that we are them (imputing our I on all living beings in the aspect of us engaging in these requests).
  3. When we dissolve everything into the Dharmakaya, we imagine that we have freed all living beings from the samsara we normally project them in/imprison them in.
  4. When we arise as Heruka, we imagine that we are inside the minds of all living beings (in the aspect of the Dharmakaya), and that we are generating the Heruka Body Mandala within their mind in order to accomplish the function of the mandala in their mind, like a medical treatment of their mind. 
  5. When we do the checking meditation of the mandala we recall the symbolism of each aspect of the mandala, and we recognize that as we are performing these different functions inside of their mind as a means of healing/treating their minds.
  6. When we recite the mantras, we imagine each mantra is like a magical spell we are casting which functions to accomplish the function of each mantra on the mind of all living beings.
  7. When we do the Dorje Shugden part (which I add) we recall how all beings and the entire universe are empty (the fabric or ocean of our mind), and we request that he accomplish his function for all living beings within your dream, so that everything that happens to every single being function to channel or herd all living beings to enlightenment.
  8. When we dedicate, we once again recall emptiness and dedicate to reshape our mind according to the dedication prayers so that all beings are freed.

Yes, this is a lot to do and it takes time to become skilled at doing so, but if we do, the power of our practice will be augmented infinitely.  We will make the most out of the little time we have to engage in formal practice.

How we abuse the Dharma and destroy our relationships at the same time

An extreme I often fall into is the extreme of trying to change others with the Dhama motivated by attachment. 

Bodhichitta is the wish to become a Buddha so that we can lead all other beings to the same state.  We talk all the time in the Dharma about how everything we need to do needs to be for others and how it is only by abandoning our delusions that any being can find happiness.  I have a highly inflated sense of how much wisdom I actually possess and how I know exactly what everybody else’s delusions and problems are and what they need to do to overcome them.  Call this pretentious wisdom!  As with all prides, this pretentious wisdom is often accompanied by an attachment to everyone else sharing my exalted view of my own wisdom, and so I feel the need to go around and “save everybody” by getting them to realize how I am right about everything – “if only they saw things as I did, they would not suffer…”

At the same time, I am still very much controlled and dominated by my delusions, in particular I still have a strong aversion to people being deluded around me and a strong attachment to people “succeeding” around me, in particular with my family.  If I am honest, I still have a “need” for others to change around me.  I still think my happiness depends upon whether those around me are happy.  Out of an attachment to a life of ease, I wish those who I interact with often had no problems so that I didn’t need to deal with their problems.  In short, I also have a strong attachment to those around me changing.  Additionally, an attachment to others changing actually functions to block any wisdom knowing how to help others from arising in our mind.  Instead of thinking about how to help others motivated by compassion, we “meditate” on their faults motivated by an anger wishing them to change.  Any “solutions” to their problems that such “meditations” produce, no matter how much they sound like Dharma wisdom, will not be the right ones.

These two together, namely pretentious wisdom and an attachment to those around me changing, are a very dangerous cocktail.  I tell myself I am being the good bodhisattva trying to bring wisdom to others, but in reality I am trying to change others with the Dhama motivated by an attachment to them changing.  People are not stupid.  They know when we are trying to change them, and they know when we are doing so motivated by an attachment.  Unless the other person already possesses great wisdom (and if they do, who are we to try chang them?), if we try change others motivated by attachment the only thing it does is cause them to reject the very advice we are trying to give and to resist the “help” we are trying to offer. 

Using the Dharma in this way is quite simply abusing the Dharma.  It is using it for our own purposes to fulfill the wishes of our attachment.  It also destroys our relationships with others because we start fighting with them and having all sorts of problems.  It is also the exact opposite of the bodhisattva path because it causes people to reject the Dharma.

So what should we do instead?  Just focus on changing ourselves and working on our own delusions.  This can still be bodhichitta in that the main activity of the bodhichitta wish is improving ourselves.  It is only after we have actually acquired some wisdom and skilful means and are completely free from the need for others to change that we can then start helping others.  Who we are is a far more effective “teacher” than anything we have to say, so it is only by ourselves living the example of somebody working on improving themselves without trying to or needing to manipulate or change others that we can help bring about change in others.  In short, if we are saying all the right things but still trying to change others motivated by attachment, we will create only problems and help nobody.  If we say nothing, but just be the example (not try “show” the example) of somebody working on themselves, we will help everybody around us.

We therefore very easily fall into the extreme of trying to change others with the Dharma