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About this section:
If you have wanted to accompany Venerable Thubten Chodron on her
teaching tours and pilgrimages but could not, this is now your chance!
In the following articles, Venerable Chodron invites us to participate
in her experiences of various teaching tours and pilgrimages and
the thoughts and feelings that moved her.
Return to 'Travels' Home Page.
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Traveling with the Dharma:
Some Thoughts After a Trip to Singapore and India, 1995
by Venerable Thubten Chodron©
- Practice the Dharma with love for your
teacher, love of the Dharma, love for yourself, love for sentient
beings, and the deep wish to make your life meaningful.
- Let the Dharma touch and transform your
heart. This is not the time for intellectual machinations.
- Integrate your life on and off the meditation
cushions. See the truth of the Buddha's teachings in the events
in your daily life. Practice the Dharma in all of these circumstances.
- Be aware of the results of living your
life carelessly. Such an awareness makes you alert; it does
not paralyze you with fear.
- Good relationships with your teachers is
important. Cultivate them. Remember the help you have received
from your teachers. Let your heart feel grateful, and thereby
connected to and supported by your teachers' care.
- Be courageous in admitting your mistakes.
That is the key to purification and growth.
- Before you get annoyed, don't assume you
know all the conditions that make up a situation.
- Whether a teaching is profound or not depends
on your mind.
- Seek help when you run into difficulties.
Even if you haven't sought it, be open when it comes.
- Listen well to what others have learned
in life.
- Be aware of the kindness of others, especially
the small things people do. Treat the people who help you kindly.
Avoid becoming arrogant toward them.
- Take care of the people around you. Remember
that your small kindness to them doesn't begin to scratch the
surface of their kindness toward you.
- Think deeply about the first two noble
truths. Recognize clearly the effects of attachment not only
in this life but also in keeping you bound in cyclic existence
again and again. Don't avoid or gloss over this, for it's only
when we recognize how we are trapped that we can generate a
pure and deep determination to be free.
- Always be humble. Remember you are the
servant of others. Don't think that because you are intelligent
or know a little Dharma that others should respect and wait
upon you. If this point is neglected, all your knowledge will
become poison for yourself and others.
- Be equanimous to how others treat you,
to whether they appreciate you, know who you are, and so forth.
- If a friend says something that disturbs
you, don't remain silent and close off to them. You may be imputing
something they did not mean to their words. With humility, not
anger, tell them what you thought and felt, and listen to what
they say to clarify.
- Be clear on your ethical values and resolute
in living according to the precepts. Don't let the opinions
of those who don't understand the Dharma deeply sway you.
- Karma is powerful. Don't diminish its importance.
- Don't discard a practice because it is
too difficult for you to do now. Practice at the level you're
at and aspire to do the more advanced practices in the future
when you're ready.
- With a kind heart, help your good friends
by pointing out when they are stuck. And when a trusted friend
points out your mistakes, listen with an open mind and honesty
with yourself.
- When you're angry, bitter or cynical, don't
look so much at the object of your attitude as at your own mind
and ask yourself, "How do I feel? Where is this disturbing
attitude coming from?" By understanding yourself, you will
be able to release it.
- Be willing to question and doubt your own
opinions. They are not you.
- Recognize that things assume great importance
simply because they are related to the self. They are not inherently
this way. Reflect on impermanence to help put your priorities
in order and to know clearly what is important.
- You never know who will help and who will
harm, so abandon attachment and aversion and respect all beings.
- Recognize your repeated patterns of unproductive
emotions. Feel them without getting distracted by the conceptualization
and stories that attend them. Know them, but don't take them
too seriously in the sense of thinking their way of viewing
the self and the world is correct.
- What may initially appear to be an obstacle
maybe for the better in the long run, so don't get stuck in
your current assessment of a situation.
- Don't manifest hierarchy where there isn't
any.
- Don't assume you're the only one with problems.
Be able to laugh at yourself and your difficulties.
- Accept the responsibility for how your
actions influence others and be willing to listen to others'
feelings.
- When you have lived through certain difficulties,
don't abandon the people who still have them. Compassion, not
arrogance, is called for.
- Watch the object to be negated.
- Rejoice and join into others' happiness.
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