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Buddhism In Modern Society
by Venerable Thubten Chodron©
Appreciating Our Advantageous Circumstances
We are extraordinarily fortunate to have the
circumstances for Dharma practice that are presently available to
us. In both 1993 and 1994 I went to Mainland China on a pilgrimage and visited many temples there. Seeing the situation of Buddhism
there made me appreciate the fortune we have here. However, we often
take our freedom, material prosperity, spiritual masters and the
Budda's teachings for granted and are blind to the wonderful opportunity
that we have to practice. For example, we take for granted our ability
to gather together to learn the Dharma. But this is not the case
in many places. For example, when I was on a pilgrimage at Jiu Hua
Shan, Kshitigarbha's Holy Mountain, the abbess of a nunnery asked
me to give a talk to the pilgrims there. But my friends from Shanghai
who were traveling with me said, "No, you can't do that. The
police will come and all of us will get in trouble." We had
to be careful about even an innocent activity like teaching the
Dharma. Only when the abbess said that she was a friend of the police
did my friends say it was safe for me to teach.
It is important that we reflect on the
advantages and good circumstances that we have to practice right
now. Otherwise, we will take them for granted and they will go to
waste. We tend to select one or two small problems in our life,
emphasize them, and blow them out of proportion. Then we think,
"I can't be happy. I can't practice the Dharma," and this
thought itself prevents us from enjoying our life and making it
meaningful. We human beings are very
funny: when something bad happens in our lives we say, "Why
me? Why is this happening to me?" But when we wake up every
morning and are alive and healthy and our family is well, we never
say, "Why me? Why am I so fortunate?"
Not only should we open our eyes to all the
things that are going right in our lives, but also we should recognize
that they are results of our own previously-created positive actions
or karma. It is helpful to think, "Whoever I was in a previous
life, I did a lot of positive actions which make it possible for
me to have so many good circumstances now. So in this life I should
also act constructively by being ethical and kind so that in the
future such fortune will continue."
Appreciating Our Problems
Appreciating our advantageous circumstances
is important as is appreciating our problems. Why
appreciate our problems? Because the difficult situations in our
lives are the ones that make us grow the most. Take
a minute and think about a difficult time in your life, a time when
you had a lot of problems. Didn't you learn something valuable from
that experience? You wouldn't be the person you are now without
having gone through those difficulties. We may have gone through
a painful time in our life, but we came out the other side with
stronger inner resources and a better understanding of life. Seen
in this way, even our problems enable us to become better people
and aid us on the path to enlightenment.
Before we take refuge in the Three Jewels --
the Buddhas, the Dharma, and the Sangha -- it is helpful to visualize
them in the space in front of us. That is, we imagine the Buddhas,
bodhisattvas, and arhats in a pure land. We are there too, surrounded
by all sentient beings. A pure land is a place where all the circumstances
are conducive to practicing the Dharma. When I visualized being
in a Pure Land, I used to imagine only the people I liked and left
out the people with whom I felt uncomfortable, threatened, insecure,
or fearful. It was nice to imagine being in a place where everything
was very pleasant and it was easy to practice the Dharma.
But one time when I was visualizing the pure
land, all the people who were giving me problems were there too!
I recognized that if a pure land is a place conducive for Dharma
practice, then I also need the people who harm me to be there, because
they help me to practice. In fact, sometimes those who harm us help
us more to practice the Dharma than those who help us. The people
who help us, give us gifts, and tell us how wonderful, talented,
and intelligent we are often cause us to get puffed up. On the other
hand, the people who harm us show us very clearly how much resentment
and jealousy we have and how attached we are to our reputations.
They help us to see our attachments and aversions and they point
out the things we need to work on in ourselves. Sometimes they help
us even more than our teachers do in this respect.
For example, our Dharma teachers tell
us, "Try to forgive other people, try not to be angry. Jealousy
and pride are defilements, so try not to follow them because they
will cause you and others difficulties." We say, "Yes,
yes, that's true. But I don't have those negative qualities. But
the people who harm me are very resentful, jealous, and attached!"
Even though our Dharma teachers point out our faults to us, we still
don't see them. But when people with whom we don't get along point
out our faults to us, we have to look at them. We can't run away
anymore. When we're outrageously angry or burning with jealousy
or attachment is eating away at us, we can't deny that we have these
negative emotions. Of course, we
try to say that it's the other person's fault, that we have these
horrible emotions only because they made us have them. But after
we've listened to the Buddha's teachings, this rationale doesn't
work any more. We know in our hearts that our happiness and suffering
come from our own mind. Then, even though we try to blame our difficulties
on other people, we know we can't. We are forced to look at them
ourselves. And when we do, we also see that they are incredible
opportunities to grow and learn.
The bodhisattvas, who sincerely wish to practice
the Dharma, want to have problems. They want people to criticize
them. They want their reputation to get ruined. Why? They see problems
as wonderful opportunities to practice. Atisha, a great bodhisattva
in India, helped to spread Buddhism to Tibet in the 11th century.
When he went to Tibet, he took his Indian cook with him. This cook
was very disagreeable, speaking harshly and being rude and obnoxious
to people. He even regularly insulted Atisha. The Tibetans asked,
"Why did you bring this person with you? We can cook for you.
You don't need him!" But Atisha said, "I do need him.
I need him to practice patience."
So when someone criticizes me I think,
"He is an incarnation of Atisha's cook." One time I was
living in a Dharma center and had big problems with one person there,
let's call him Sam. I was so happy when I left that place to go
back to the monastery and see my spiritual master. My master knew
of my difficulties and asked me, "Who
is kinder to you: the Buddha, or Sam?" I immediately replied,
"Of course the Buddha is kinder to me!" My teacher looked
disappointed and proceeded to tell me that Sam was actually much
kinder to me than the Buddha! Why?
Because I couldn't possibly practice patience with the Buddha. I
had to practice with Sam, and without practicing patience there
was no way I could become a Buddha, so I actually needed Sam! Of
course, that wasn't what I wanted my teacher to say! I wanted him
to say, "Oh, I understand, Sam is a horrible person. He was
so mean to you, you poor thing." I wanted sympathy, but my
teacher didn't give it to me. This made me wake up and realize that
difficult situations are beneficial because they force me to practice
and find my inner strength. All of us are going to have problems
in our lives. This is the nature of cyclic existence. Remembering
this can help us to transform our problems into the path to enlightenment.
Dharma Practice in Modern Society
This is an important aspect of Buddhism
in modern society. Dharma practice isn't just coming to the temple;
it's not simply reading a Buddhist scripture or chanting the Buddha's
name. Practice is how we live our lives, how we live with our family,
how we work together with our colleagues, how we relate to the other
people in the country and on the planet. We
need to bring the Buddha's teachings on loving-kindness into our
workplace, into our family, even into the grocery store and the
gym. We do this not by handing out leaflets on a street corner,
but by practicing and living the Dharma ourselves. When we do, automatically
we will have a positive influence on the people around us. For example,
you teach your children loving-kindness, forgiveness, and patience
not only by telling them, but by showing it in your own behavior.
If you tell your children one thing, but act in the opposite way,
they are going to follow what we do, not what we say.
Teaching Children by Example
If we're not careful, it is easy to teach our
children to hate and never to forgive when others harm them. Look
at the situation in the former Yugoslavia: it is a good example
of how, both in the family and in the schools, adults taught children
to hate. When those children grew up, they taught their children
to hate. Generation after generation, this went on, and look what
happened. There is so much suffering there; it's very sad. Sometimes
you may teach children to hate another part of the family. Maybe
your grandparents quarreled with their brothers and sisters, and
since then the different sides of the family didn't speak to each
other. Something happened years before you were born -- you don't
even know what the event was -- but because of it, you're not supposed
to speak to certain relatives. Then you teach that to your children
and grandchildren. They learn that the solution to quarreling with
someone is never to speak to them again. Is that going to help them
to be happy and kind people? You should think deeply about this
and make sure you teach your children only what is valuable.
This is why it's so important that you
exemplify in your behavior what you want your children to learn. When you find resentment, anger,
grudges, or belligerence in your heart, you have to work on those,
not only for your own inner peace but so you don't teach your children
to have those harmful emotions. Because
you love your children, try to also love yourself as well. Loving
yourself and wanting yourself to be happy means you develop a kind
heart for the benefit of everybody in the family.
Bringing Loving-Kindness to the Schools
We need to bring loving-kindness not
only into the family but also into the schools. Before I became
a nun, I was a schoolteacher, so I have especially strong feelings
about this. The most important thing for children to learn is not
a lot of information, but how to be kind human beings and how to
resolve their conflicts with others in a constructive way.
Parents and teachers put a lot of time and
money into teaching children science, arithmetic, literature, geography,
geology, and computers. But do we ever spend any time teaching them
how to be kind? Do we have any courses in kindness? Do we teach
kids how to work with their own negative emotions and how to resolve
conflicts with others? I think this is much more important than
the academic subjects. Why? Children may know a lot, but if they
grow up to be unkind, resentful, or greedy adults, their lives will
not be happy.
Parents want their children to have a
good future and thus think their children need to make a lot of
money. They teach their children academic and technical skills so
that they can get a good job and make lots of money -- as if money
were the cause of happiness. But
when people are on their deathbed, you never hear anybody wishfully
say, "I should have spent more time in the office. I should
have made more money." When
people have regrets about how they lived their life, usually they
regret not communicating better with other people, not being kinder,
not letting the people that they care about know that they care.
If you want your kids to have a good future don't teach them just
how to make money, but how to live a healthy life, how to be a happy
person, how to contribute to society in a productive way.
Teaching Children to Share with Others
As parents you have to model this. Let's say
your children come home and say, "Mom and Dad, I want designer
jeans, I want new rollerblades, I want this and I want that because
all the other kids have it." You say to your children, "Those
things won't make you happy. You don't need them. It won't make
you happy to keep up with the Lee's." But then you go out and
buy all the things that everybody else has, even though your house
is already filled with things you don't use. In this case, what
you are saying and what you are doing are contradictory. You tell
your children to share with other children, you don't give things
to charities for the poor and needy. Look at the homes in this country:
they are filled with things we don't use but can't give away. Why
not? We're afraid that if we give something away we might need it
in the future. We find it difficult to share our things, but we
teach children that they should share. A simple way to teach your
children generosity is to give away all the things you haven't used
in the last year. If all four seasons have gone by and we haven't
used something, we probably won't use it the next year either. There
are many people who are poor and can use those things, and it would
help ourselves, our children, and the other people if we gave those
things away.
Another way to teach your children kindness
is to not buy everything that you want. Instead, save the money
and give it to a charity or to somebody who is in need. You
can show your children through your own example that accumulating
more and more material things doesn't bring happiness, and that
it's more important to share with others.
Teaching Children About the Environment and
Recycling
Along this line, we need to teach children
about the environment and recycling. Taking
care of the environment that we share with other living beings is
part of the practice of loving kindness.
If we destroy the environment, we harm others. For example, if we
use a lot of disposable things and don't recycle them but just throw
them away, what are we giving to future generations? They will inherit
from us bigger garbage dumps. I'm very happy to see more people
reusing and recycling things. It is an important part of our Buddhist
practice and an activity that temples and Dharma centers should
take the lead in.
The Buddha did not comment directly on many
things in our modern society -- such as recycling -- because those
things didn't exist at his time. But he talked about principles
that we can apply to our present situations. These principles can
guide us in deciding how to act in many new situations that didn't
exist 2,500 years ago.
New Addictions in the Modern Society
However, the Buddha did talk directly about
intoxicants and discouraged us from using them. At the time of the
Buddha, the chief intoxicant was alcohol. However, extrapolating
on the principle he set down, the advice against intoxicants also
refers to using recreational drugs or misusing tranquilizers. If
we take this a step further, we have to observe our relationship
to the biggest intoxicant in our society: television. As a society,
we are addicted to TV. For example, after getting home from work,
we're tired and want to relax. What do we do? We sit down, turn
on the TV, and space out for hours, until we finally fall asleep
in front of it. Our precious human life, with its potential to become
a fully enlightened Buddha, gets wasted in front of the TV! Sometimes
certain TV programs are far worse intoxicants than alcohol and drugs,
for example, programs with a lot of violence. By the time a child
is 15-years-old, he or she has seen thousands of people die on the
television. We're intoxicating our children with a violent view
of life. Parents need to select the TV programs they watch with
a lot of care, and in that way be an example to their children.
Another big intoxicant is shopping. You may
be surprised to hear this, but some psychologists are now researching
addiction to shopping. When some people feel depressed, they drink
or use drugs. Other people go to the shopping center and buy something.
It's the same mechanism: we avoid looking at our problems and deal
with our uncomfortable emotions by external means. Some people are
compulsive shoppers. Even when they don't need anything, they go
to the mall and just look around. Then buy something, but return
home still feeling empty inside.
We also intoxicate ourselves by eating
too much or eating too little. In other words, we handle our uncomfortable
emotions by using food. I often joke
that in America the Three Jewels of Refuge are the TV, the shopping
center, and the refrigerator! That's where we turn when we need
help! But these objects of refuge
don't bring us happiness and in fact make us more confused. If we
can turn our mind to the Buddhas, the Dharma, and the Sangha, we'll
be a lot happier in the long-run. Even in this moment, our spiritual
practice can help us. For example, when we are tired or stressed
out, we can relax our mind by chanting the Buddha's name or by bowing
to the Buddha. While doing this, we imagine the Buddha in front
of us and think that much radiant and peaceful light streams from
the Buddha into us. This light fills our entire body-mind and makes
us very relaxed and at ease. After doing this for a few minutes,
we feel refreshed. This is much cheaper and easier than taking refuge
in the TV, shopping mall, and refrigerator. Try it!!
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