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Meditation
is an essential aspect of Buddhist practice. In Tibetan
Buddhism, the ultimate goal is enlightenment, or the
continual awareness of our true limitless and compassionate
nature. As one proceeds down this path, one becomes
liberated from the habitual thought patterns that
cause misery to ourselves and others.
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For
each person the path is a different length depending
on where one is at the time he orshe sets foot upon
it, but the progression, if one practices with devotion
and sincerity, can strip the mind of the illusions
that cloud one's view of the lightness of existence.
All
Buddhist branches teach calm abiding (shamatha) and
analytic meditation (vipassana). In addition, Tibetan
Buddhism adds a vast array of skillful methods, including
mantra, visualization, tonglen (giving and taking),
chanting, esoteric yogas and Dzogchen. By virtue of
these methods, Vajrayana is thought to teach the quickest
path to enlightenment, and our particular school,
Nyingma, is among the most "practice" (or
meditation) -oriented in Tibetan Buddhism.
Comments
by some renowned Buddhist masters on meditation appear
below. This section will be updated periodically.
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On Relaxation
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"In
the beginning of meditation, the important thing is
just to be present in a very relaxed manner. Nothing
in the world matters but becoming one with your breathing-
just flowing with it and letting the thoughts come and
go without taking notice. Focusing on something simple,
such as one's breath, reduces the sensory, emotional,
and cognitive static that usually swamps pure awareness,
allowing it to emerge. The point is not to concentrate
on anything- breath included- but rather to "relax
the mind into a spacious awareness that's the foundation
of all our consciousness."
-- Tenzin Palmo (nun), in Spiritual
Genius, by Winifred Gallagher
"When
we are relaxed, calm and open like a pool in a glade,
the quality of our inner nature stands out clearly.
We have a keen and direct perception of ourselves and
our interaction with everything that is going on around
us. Our energy is well-focused; able to think clearly,
we can plan and organize our thoughts effectively. We
are self-assured: We know what we want to accomplish,
what our obstacles are, and how to dissolve them. We
work with ease, moving fluidly, in tune with our work
rather than resisting its requirements, simply doing
what needs to be done."
-- Tarthang Tulku, Skillful Means
"This
is why the experience of the spiritual path is so significant,
why the practice of meditation is the most insignificant
experience of all. It is insignificant because you place
no value judgment on it. Once you are absorbed into
that insignificant situation of openness without involvement
in value judgment, then you begin to see all the games
going on around you. Someone is trying to be stern and
spiritually solemn, trying to be a good person. Such
a person might take it seriously if someone offended
him, might want to fight. If you work in accordance
with the basic insignificance of what is, then you begin
to see the humor in this kind of solemnity, in people
making such a big deal about things.
--Chogyam Trumpa, Cutting
Through Spiritual Materialism
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On
Dedicating the Merits of Your Meditation
from
"Buddhism for Beginners" by Thubten Chodren
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What
is merit?
The English word "merit"
doesn't convey the Buddhist connotation, because it reminds
us of getting gold stars in school and being rewarded because
we did well. That is not the meaning intended here, and therefore
"positive potential" is a better translation of
the Buddhist word. No one is rewarding us when we act constructively.
Rather, we leave positive imprints, or seeds, on our mindstreams,
and when the necessary cooperative conditions are present,
they will bear fruit. This isn't a physical seed or imprint,
but an intangible one, a positive potential.
Why
must merit be dedicated? What should it be dedicated for?
Dedicating
our positive potential is important in order to prevent it
from being destroyed by our anger or wrong views. Just as
a steering wheel guides a car, dedication guides how our positive
potential ripens. Dedicating for the most extensive and noble
goals is best. If we do so, all the lesser results will naturally
come. If we dedicate our positive potential, however small,
toward the ultimate happiness and enlightenment of all sentient
beings, this automatically includes dedicating for a good
rebirth and for the happiness of our relatives and friends.
Can
merit be transferred to deceased relatives or friends?
"Dedicating"
positive potential (merit) rather than "transferring"
it conveys the meaning better. We cannot transfer merit the
way we can transfer the title to a piece of property or the
way I can give you my car because you don't have one. Those
who create the causes are the ones who experience the results.
I cannot create the cause and have your experience the result,
because the imprint or seed of the action has been implanted
on my mindstream, not yours. So if our deceased relatives
and friends didn't act constructively while they were alive,
we cannot create good karma and then give it to them.
However,
our prayers and offerings on their behalf can create the circumstances
necessary for a positive action they created to bear fruit.
A seed planted in a field needs the cooperative conditions
of sunshine, water, and fertilizer to grow. Likewise, a seed
or imprint of an action will ripen when all the cooperative
conditions are present. If the deceased have done beneficial
actions while they were alive, the additional positive potential
we create by making offerings or engaging in virtuous actions-reciting
and reading Dharma texts, making statues of the Buddha, contemplating
love and compassion for all beings, and so forth-can help
them. We can dedicate the positive potential from these actions
for the benefit of the deceased, and this could help their
own virtuous seeds to ripen.
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Buddhism in Nashville
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