Fire Falls, Yosemite
Practice like Your Hair’s on Fire
Gelek Rimpoche
All sentient beings, including myself, have gone
through continuous ups and downs, life after life, experiencing the sufferings
of samsara. The reason we keep having all of these problems is because we
haven’t managed to fulfill our life’s mission.
What is our mission? In the most basic sense, we all
have a desire for peace and happiness, and we all wish to be free from pain and
suffering. But though we may experience happiness here and there, it is not the
kind of happiness that has never known suffering. In fact, for most of us it is
the kind of happiness that is based on suffering.
The kind of comfort most of us seek is a kind of
stopgap comfort. We haven’t really addressed the root of suffering or developed
the true cause of happiness.
We put a lot of effort into having material comforts,
and on top of that we want mental and spiritual comfort. But even when we think
we are working for spiritual benefit, if we dig deeply we may find that it is
simply attachment—the attachment of bringing ourselves to a state of material
or spiritual or emotional comfort.
The kind of comfort most of us seek is a kind of
stopgap comfort. We haven’t really addressed the root of suffering or developed
the true cause of happiness. Once we realize that, and reflect and meditate on
it, we can begin to see the true nature of suffering and the cessation of
suffering. From there, one can make the decision to seek true peace, nirvana,
which means freeing ourselves and others once and for all from suffering and
its causes.
Why haven’t we been able to achieve that yet? Why
haven’t we fulfilled our mission? Because we don’t yet realize how important
this life is. We don’t realize the limitless capacity of our human body and
mind, and how difficult it is to find. We don’t have a sense of urgency because
we don’t realize how easily this human life can be lost. Instead, we keep
ourselves busy chasing after happiness and running away from suffering, life
after life.
Many of us complain, “I have no time.” I like to call
that a good, fancy, stylish excuse. Everybody likes to say, “I’m too busy,”
because everybody would like to seem important. It is a great excuse that
offers several benefits: you can avoid what you don’t want to do; it gives you
a showbiz idea of being important; and all the important people do it, so you
can include yourself with them.
Even if we have time, we put the most important thing in our
life—our spiritual development—on the back burner. Our laziness is well suited
to these upside-down priorities.
I refer to that as busy laziness. We experience
this kind of laziness because we have a problem recognizing our real
priorities. Even if we have time, we put the most important thing in our
life—our spiritual development—on the back burner. Our laziness is well suited
to these upside-down priorities. The sense of urgency becomes a monetary issue
for us, because we live in an age where we have to pay our bills for every
little thing we need. If we don’t pay our bills then not only will the bill
collectors chase us, but even our electricity and water will eventually be shut
off.
As spiritual practitioners, we need to balance our
priorities. This means being able to balance the needs of this particular life
with our long-term spiritual goals. Of course we have to manage our bills and
make sure we have a place to live and food to eat. And we have to meet our
responsibilities to our friends and family. But we also need to make our
spiritual work a priority. If we can balance that, we are intelligent and
capable. If we cannot, we are just the opposite.
But to do that, we have to convince ourselves that
this life is important. It shouldn’t take too much convincing, since we already
have some sense that our life is precious. We recognize this when our life is
threatened, but on a day-to-day basis we tend to take our precious human life
for granted. For the most part, we keep ourselves busy meeting one urgent
requirement after another, and that makes us think we’re managing. But the
truth is, we don’t want to think about changing our priorities. We think we’ll
squeak by with some spiritual development at the last minute. For those who do
have a regular practice, how many leave it until the very last thing at night
or rush through it like some chore you have to finish? That’s what most people
do. But the Buddha told us that unless we reflect on the rarity of this human
life and how easily it can be lost, and also think about how capable we can be
if we apply ourselves, we will never be able to utilize the richness of this
life.
By richness, I’m not speaking about wealth but about
opportunity. Our most important opportunity is that we are human beings. We may
think the samsaric gods and spirits are able to do much more than us. Forget
it. They are equally miserable, even more than us sometimes.
In old Tibet , we had to keep reminding
ourselves that human beings can do anything. These days we don’t have to,
because science clearly shows us what human beings are capable of. Human beings
alone are responsible for tremendous scientific achievements, not the ghosts
and samsaric gods. Those achievements are because of the extraordinary
capabilities of our human minds. We really have brilliant minds. As human
beings, we all have tremendous capacity. But if we don’t utilize it, then it
remains weak.
If you have a car and you leave it sitting outside
for two years, it won’t work when you try to start it. You can push it and bang
it, but nothing works. Then you have to tow it to a garage and pay a mechanic a
fortune to fix it, if you’re lucky. Otherwise you have to send it to the
junkyard, and it’s wasted. If we don’t use the capacity of our minds, that’s
what we can expect. If we make the effort to develop ourselves, our capacity
will be limitless. That is the example that the Buddha and all the other
enlightened beings have provided for us.
If you want to be fully enlightened, if your ultimate
spiritual goal is to achieve enlightenment, then this life is capable of
delivering that.
In short, our human life, with the limitless capacity
of our minds, is capable of producing any result we wish. If your goal is to
get rich, your human life is capable of producing it. If you want to become
famous, your life is capable of doing it. Hollywood
is full of such people. It’s the same with anything else you choose to do.
Whether you are satisfied with the results or not is a different story, but
human life is capable of delivering the goods. If you want to be fully
enlightened, if your ultimate spiritual goal is to achieve enlightenment, then
this life is capable of delivering that as well. From our point of view we may
fail, but it won’t be because our human life lacked the capacity for total
enlightenment. It’ll be because we didn’t take advantage of it.
Consider the Buddha, who had a human life just like
ours. There was nothing extraordinary in his life, except that he happened to
be an Indian prince. From the point of view of the capability of human life, his
opportunity was no different than ours is now. Everyone has the same potential.
Not only that, but we are fortunate enough in this life to have access to the
teachings and the shared experience of the Buddha. It is a message that has
survived in a living tradition. And we also have many other non-Buddhist
traditions that teach us the value and potential of our human lives and what we
can achieve if we put our minds to it. As well, we have a sangha that is with
us on this journey, and we have spiritual teachers who can give us the
teachings and also offer their own example. In fact, within this life we have
everything we need to achieve freedom and perfection.
Once we realize the importance of life, we begin to
let go of our attachment to wasting time. Things we once viewed with great
urgency gradually seem less important. We begin to make choices that help our
spiritual development rather than hinder it. We rearrange our priorities, and
the push and pull of busyness begins to lose its hold on us. We no longer want
to waste time. That is the sign that we have begun to understand the value of
our lives.
A few people might take this the wrong way. They can
become very rigid about it and say, “Well, that’s it. I’m not going to waste
time. I’m not even going to waste a second with useless activities like paying
my bills or visiting the doctor.” That can become a neurosis; it is a form of
nervousness and fear, rather than a realization of the importance of this life.
When you have a realization of life’s importance, you actually become much
gentler and calmer and sweeter and develop a better personality, instead of a
rigid and twisted one. Realizing the rare and precious opportunity of human
life helps make us better human beings.
When you realize the importance of this life, you
become motivated to find the right balance. Right now, most of our priorities
are on one side—the material side. That’s what I mean by unbalanced. Sometimes
people throw everything on the spiritual side and completely neglect their
responsibilities as family members, citizens, students, or whatever their roles
might be. That’s not so good either, unless you happen to live in a cave.
I also want to touch on another aspect of
appreciating human life, one that has to do with realizing the difficulty of
finding this human life. The Buddha used an example to describe just how rare
it is to obtain this human life. He was asked by a king, “How many human beings
from the lower suffering realms will be able to come up to the wonderful human
life that you talk about?” The Buddha looked around and saw a big mirror. He
picked up a handful of peas and threw them at the mirror, and all the peas fell
down. Buddha said that the chances of getting a precious human life are even
less than the chance of any peas sticking to the mirror.
The life we have is not just a gift; it didn’t just happen
to you. You have earned this life—this opportunity, this capability and
potential for the ultimate achievement of enlightenment.
And then there is a very famous example in which the
Buddha said that if this whole continent became a huge ocean, and within that
ocean you had a yoke floating on the waves and a blind tortoise that popped up
once every five hundred years, the chances of obtaining precious human birth
would be equal to the chances of that blind tortoise emerging with his head
poking through the yoke.
Actually, the life we have is not just a gift; it
didn’t just happen to you. You have earned this life—this opportunity, this
capability and potential for the ultimate achievement of enlightenment. You
have earned it because of the great karma you have accumulated. According to
the teachings, the basis of that karma is a pure morality.
Sometimes we ignore the issue of morality, and we
just enjoy whatever we are doing. But morality is very important. Even our
normal human understanding can tell you how important morality really is. I
cannot emphasize this enough. Would you like to be an immoral person? Nobody
will say yes, right? Common sense tells us how important morality is. It is
morality, with the help of the other six activities—generosity, patience,
enthusiasm, concentration, and wisdom—that enabled us to achieve the karma of
this wonderful human body and mind. These virtues are the support for the basic
morality that has brought us this life.
We need to recognize the rarity of this life. We need
to realize how difficult it is to obtain, and we need to understand that it is
unlikely to come again unless we lay the groundwork of perfect morality and the
other virtues right now. It is almost too late already.
But understanding and realizing the preciousness and
opportunity of human life won’t come from just hearing about it. We have to
meditate on it so that it becomes part of our lives and our way of thinking,
influencing our actions and shaping our personality. If we don’t meditate, it
remains merely as information. If we meditate and incorporate this knowledge
into our lives, then it becomes a quality within us. That is what makes a
difference. We need to fulfill our mission while we still have the time and
ability. The way to do this is to have a continuous relationship with the
enlightened ones and a connection to the teachings that the enlightened ones
have shared. By practicing that every day, we should be able to reach
enlightenment in a short time. If it takes three minutes, let it be three
minutes; if takes three years, let it be three years. But let it not be three
lifetimes.
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