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  • I've been studying the "Precious Garland" by Nagarjuna during the retreat and I thought

  • I'd share with you a little bit of what he covers. Because in the first section he really

  • makes the point that our spiritual goals kind of fall into two camps. One is what they call

  • "high status," meaning having an upper rebirth. And the second is "definite goodness," meaning

  • attaining liberation or full awakening. And these two are related because chances are

  • we won't attain full awakening in this lifetime so we need to create a series of good rebirths--in

  • other words, rebirths of high status--so that we can, in each of those, again practice the Dharma.

  • Our principal goal is definite goodness--liberation or, in our case as Mahayana practitioners,

  • full awakening. But the essential thing we have to do right now--the most imminent thing--is

  • make sure we get a good rebirth in a future life so that we can continue practicing.

  • Nagarjuna then goes on to explain that faith is the cause of a good rebirth and that wisdom

  • is the cause of definite goodness. What he means here by faith is having faith in the

  • law of karma and the functioning of our actions and their results. In other words, our actions

  • have an ethical dimension and they bring results. That is called faith because understanding

  • the law of karma and its results is not an obvious thing and it's not something that

  • we can even realize by inference by the power of the fact. It's something that we have to

  • rely on the authoritative testimony of a reliable being such as the Buddha to be able to understand

  • full. So we try and cultivate that faith in the Buddha and in the scriptures that teach

  • about karma, because when we have that faith then we'll want to keep good ethical conduct,

  • we'll want to create virtuous actions, and then on the basis of creating those virtuous

  • actions we will have another good rebirth in which we can continue to practice, have

  • another good rebirth in which we continue to practice, and on and on. And in all of

  • those rebirths, also developing our wisdom until the point where our wisdom becomes strong

  • enough where it can completely dismantle all of the self-grasping forever. So as we have

  • that series of good rebirths and grow our wisdom we'll slowly be able to have better

  • control over our minds and then we'll reach a certain point on the path where we'll eliminate

  • all the acquired afflictions, then we'll be able to start eliminating from the root all

  • of the innate afflictions, and then eventually they'll be completely eliminated. And if we

  • continue on from there then also cleansing the mind of all the subtle stains and the

  • subtle dualistic view and then finally resulting in full awakening. So he's saying this is

  • the way that we have to go.

  • I was thinking that so often when we come to the Dharma it's like, well karma it's like

  • [brushes it away] "I don't understand that anyway, it's kind of moralistic and so I want

  • to go directly to definite goodness." And so that sometimes gets us into trouble because

  • we're.... (What do they call it?) We turn out to be the bunny rather than the turtle.

  • Something like that. We're making shortcuts. That's what we're doing. Trying to do a shortcut.

  • Then in the text Nagarjuna goes on to describe the causes for upper status, causes for a

  • good rebirth. We've heard this all in the context of the lamrim, but "Precious Garland"

  • was written before the lamrim texts came into being. So it's very interesting to see it

  • from Nagarjuna's perspective and to see how the lamrim was based on what Nagarjuna taught

  • in "Precious Garland."

  • So he starts out with the causes for upper rebirth are abstaining from the ten non-virtues.

  • I'm not going to go into those because you know what they are already. But he says there

  • are sixteen causes of upper rebirth. Sixteen factors that we have to bring into our practice.

  • The first ten are abstaining from the ten non-virtues. Then there are three others that

  • are called "blameworthy actions to abandon," and three others that are things to practice.

  • So, also to be abandoned is taking intoxicants, because that makes our mind, you know, bad

  • decisions, quite fuzzy, and difficult to meditate when you're intoxicated. Although when I first

  • went to Kopan in 1975 most of the people there were hippies coming up from Freak Street....

  • And saying, "Oh Lama, what do you think about dropping acid and then meditating." Your visualizations

  • must be really good when you do that. [Laughter] The colors are very bright. You make a really

  • good case to Lama (Yeshe) for the values of smoking dope and dropping acid before meditating.

  • And Lama would just look at us and say, "Your mind is already hallucinating, dear. You don't

  • need to do that." And then he'd give a talk on emptiness to explain how we're hallucinating already.

  • Then the next one to abandon is (what did I write down here?) Wrong livelihood. So in

  • the context of a lay practitioner it's making or selling armaments, poisons, or pornography,

  • or intoxicants, or anything that damages others. Or even doing a legitimate business but deceiving

  • people by the weights you use, or lying and cheating to your clients or your customers.

  • In terms of the monastics it's the five wrong livelihoods which I've gone through before

  • so I won't talk about. I'll just list them: hinting, flattery, giving a small present

  • to get a big one, putting somebody in a position where they can't decline to give you something

  • (or being pretentious, making somebody think you're really important so they'll give you

  • something), and then hypocrisy.

  • So that's the second thing. Intoxicants to abandon, wrong livelihood to abandon.

  • And then harming others is the third thing to abandon. This could be harming them physically

  • even by things short of killing them--you know, beating them up, having unprotected

  • sex and giving them a disease, or harming others emotionally or things like that.

  • So those are the other three blame-worthy things to abandon.

  • Then there are three more [to practice] (to get to our total of sixteen).

  • The first one is making offerings to those who are worthy. Offering is always a practice

  • that's encouraged within all religions, especially within Dharma. And those who are worthy, Nagarjuna

  • says, are our preceptors, our Dharma teachers, people who show us a good example, and actually,

  • in general, all sentient beings. So the practice of being generous. Being generous with material

  • goods. There's the generosity of protecting others from danger. The generosity of love

  • and encouraging and supporting people when they need it. And the fourth one is the generosity

  • of Dharma, sharing the Dharma with others. So we want to practice generosity.

  • Then honoring those who are worthy of honor. So again, our preceptors, Dharma teachers,

  • even people who aren't our Dharma teachers but who know more than we do. People who have

  • many excellent qualities, who create a lot of virtue. Paying respect and honoring those people.

  • By the way, when he talked about generosity he called it "respectful giving." It wasn't

  • just giving. It was giving with respect. So here when there's a chance to make the offering,

  • to make it ourselves when we can instead of asking others. Of course, maybe you're asking

  • a friend to take an offering to Bodhgaya to make offerings, so that's fine. But when we

  • can, do it ourselves.

  • (By the way, Dan was very pleased with the warm welcome he received yesterday here and

  • the offerings he received. That's a good example of what the community did.)

  • And then also respectful giving is giving with both hands. Some people when they give

  • something they're kind of walking by and they just put it in front of you and keep going.

  • And that's not really giving. You know? You are failing to really make the connection

  • with the other person. So it's very good to really give with both hands and pause for

  • a minute and make the offering a time of connection when we can. Instead of "well, I'm in a hurry,

  • here's this, and I go on...."

  • And then the third thing to practice, in the text it just says "love." But what he means

  • is the four immeasurables: love, compassion, joy, and equanimity. Really practicing those,

  • because it makes our own mind joyful and it improves our relationships. And by changing

  • our own attitude and lessening some of our very gross afflictions it's going to make

  • it easier to practice the preceding fifteen.

  • So this is-- You know, i just summarized several verses into a short time, but I think you

  • got the essence. But there's really quite a bit to think about in this. You know, whenever

  • we hear a Dharma teaching or read something, checking our life with the Dharma teaching--so

  • how does my life correspond to what, in this case, Nagarjuna is teaching us. And am I following

  • those sixteen or am I kind of brushing some of them off or ignoring others or too lazy

  • to do a few of them or rationalizing several more... So really using it as a way to think

  • about how can I improve myself.

  • This is a lot of the kind of contemplation that we want to be doing during retreat where

  • we have a period of silence where we can actually think about these things in depth instead

  • of 18 million things pulling at our attention, we can actually sit and think about the teachings

  • and apply them to our lives.

I've been studying the "Precious Garland" by Nagarjuna during the retreat and I thought

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