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En iyi yüksek kazanım

En iyi yüksek kazanım

Metinden bir dizi ayetle ilgili bir dizi öğretinin parçası Kadam Ustalarının Bilgeliği.

  • What spiritual practice is about
  • Transforming our minds is the central purpose of Dharma practice
  • Arasındaki fark bakıyor like spiritual practice, and actual practice

Wisdom of the Kadam Masters: The best higher attainment (indir)

We’ll continue with the Kadampa teachings. The second line says,

The best higher attainment is the lessening of your mental afflictions.

That describes really what Dharma practice is about, what we’re trying to do. We’re trying to lessen our mental afflictions: our ignorance; our yapışan ek and greed; our öfke and resentment. And this is the best spiritual attainment, and that’s what the purpose of what we’re doing is. Sometimes people think, “Oh, I’ll practice Buddhism, then I gain exotic powers, I can read people’s minds, I can fly in space….” Or some kind of…. “I’ll become a special person and everybody will think I’m wonderful.” But that’s not the purpose of what we’re doing. The purpose is to transform our minds. And right now it’s true, we are afflicted by ignorance and yapışan ek ve öfke, aren’t we? They’re there. They pop up in our minds. So do jealousy and arrogance and all sorts of other delightful mental states that make us totally miserable. And what we’re trying to do is subdue those and instead cultivate love, compassion, wisdom, generosity, friendship, ethical conduct, metanet, all sorts of good qualities, and that’s what spiritual practice is really about. It’s not about becoming someone special. It’s not about doing all sorts of ceremonies and rites and things that look exotic and mysterious. It’s about transforming our minds.

Many of you have heard this story already, but I’ll tell it again. I remember one time when I was in Hong Kong. I lived in Hong Kong for a while. And I was invited to speak at the American school there. So I gave just a general talk to the students. They were little kids. It was the elementary school. And one little child raised her hand and…. This was in the days of Uri Geller. Remember him? This was the guy who had some kind of power who at a distance could bend a spoon. So this child said, “Can you bend a spoon without touching it?” And I said, “No. But even if I could, I don’t think it would do any good.”

Those kinds of things are not the purpose of what we’re doing. We’re trying to transform our mind so we can make a positive contribution to society and make a positive contribution to the people around us.

How we are as one single human being makes a big difference in this world, because every day we deal with so many different people, and we all know if we’re in a foul mood then everybody around us gets hit by our foul mood, and then it affects them, and they affect others, and so forth. Whereas if we have a positive attitude and are optimistic and kind, that’s infectious, and that also influences the people around us. So even if we don’t do magnificent works for a worldwide charity to benefit others, still we’re doing something that is at least benefiting the people around us and having that kind of ripple effect. And so that’s what our practice is about, what we’re trying to do. And the nice thing about Buda’s teachings is that the Buda taught us the way to do it. Buda didn’t just say, “Don’t be angry.” Because that doesn’t get rid of our öfke at all. Does it? Since we were little kids people used to say, “Don’t be angry.” But we still got angry. But the nice thing about the teachings is that they say, okay, if you’re angry here’s how to work with your öfke so that you can subdue it. And then if we practice those teachings, which involve looking at the situation in another perspective, then our öfke naturally dissipates at that moment and there’s nothing to suppress or express. Of course, the öfke may come again later, we have to practice some more, but the more we practice the more the öfke loses its strength. And that’s really the aim of what we’re trying to do: subdue those disturbing mental factors, increase the positive ones.

I know my teachers can’t emphasize that enough to us, and I try and repeat what they say. Because really, so many people come into a spiritual or religious tradition thinking that it’s all about doing some kind of ritual or worship or something. If that changes our mind, fantastic. Then it’s serving its purpose. But if it doesn’t change our mind and it’s just something you do because you’re supposed to do it, then it really doesn’t serve its purpose at all, and it may look like a spiritual practice, but it doesn’t fulfill that purpose. So we have to always make sure that we’re in the process of lessening our afflictions.

Saygıdeğer Thubten Chodron

Muhterem Chodron, Buddha'nın öğretilerinin günlük hayatımızda pratik uygulamasını vurgular ve özellikle bunları Batılılar tarafından kolayca anlaşılan ve uygulanan şekillerde açıklama konusunda yeteneklidir. Sıcak, esprili ve anlaşılır öğretileriyle tanınır. 1977'de Dharamsala, Hindistan'da Kyabje Ling Rinpoche tarafından Budist rahibe olarak atandı ve 1986'da Tayvan'da bhikshuni (tam) koordinasyon aldı. Biyografisinin tamamını okuyun.