A GLIMPSE AT THE LIFE OF BUDDHA SHAKYAMUNI : The Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche
Excerpted from the transcript of a public talk on Buddhism (New Brunswick, Canada 1999)
Excerpted from the transcript of a public talk on Buddhism (New Brunswick, Canada 1999)
More than twenty-five hundred years
ago, in Nepal, a very inquisitive young prince began to explore his
world. He explored the environment of his lifestyle within the royal
palace, as well as the different walks of life outside. His father, the
King, had a great fear of his son discovering the true nature of life,
which from the Buddhist point of view, is full of suffering, pain, and
struggle. It was said that if the young Prince discovered this, he
might renounce his princehood and become a saint, a practitioner of the
spiritual path. Therefore, the King tried his best to prevent his son,
the Prince, from seeing the true nature of the world. Consequently, he
offered the Prince everything he wanted. The King did everything in
his power to prevent the Prince from seeing the true nature of life.
Recognizing The Nature Of Life
However, one day, the Prince looked
out of his window, and he accidentally saw several things. First, he
saw a very old person. Next, he saw a very ill person. Finally, he saw a
corpse being carried to a funeral. Afterwards, the Prince asked his
friends in the palace about what he had seen. The prince then thought
to himself that the nature of life is such that: you are born, you grow
up, you get old, and young or old, you sometimes you get sick, which
leads to death. That is the nature of life. The prince then asked, "How
can we prevent these sufferings of sickness, old age and death?"
Seeking Freedom From Suffering
The Prince found that there is only
one way to overcome this suffering, which is to discover the true path
of spirituality. Therefore, he renounced his life as a prince and ran
away from the palace. This is a very important part of the Buddhist
teachings: that he was born a prince and later ran away, renouncing his
palace. He ran away from his palace as we sometimes run away from our
house. However, we go back home, but the Prince never returned. He went
away for many, many years. He went into the jungles, somewhere in the
northeastern part of ancient India. There, he found many Hindu
practitioners, followers of the ascetic path of Hinduism, and he
practiced with them for many years.
The Middle Way
After a time, he discovered that
undertaking the religious trip of asceticism was not the way to overcome
our pain, our suffering and causes of suffering. At that point, he
renounced the path of asceticism. In other words, he renounced the path
of religious fanaticism. Now, we can see what he was going through.
First, he renounced ordinary life and entered the path of asceticism.
Next, he renounced the ascetic path or the trip of being a religious
fanatic. Then, where did he go from there? He found the "middle way,"
the path that does not fall into either of the "two extremes" of
completely trusting and believing in the religious path of asceticism,
or of totally ignoring our pain, our suffering and causes of suffering,
which we try to deny. Twenty-five hundred years ago, we did that and
the tradition of shielding ourselves from our pain still continues
today. In fact, we are finding better ways today to ignore our pain. We
have a highly developed medical science and other resources through
which we can totally deny our pain.
Complete Awakening
Through having found the middle way
devoid of these two extremes, the Prince achieved the spiritual
insight, the spiritual realization, which is called "complete
awakening," true awakening. That awakening is like waking from a dream
state. When we are sleeping, and we dream, we have a variety of
experiences; we might have the beautiful experience of hiking a high
Himalayan mountain. We are on top of a high mountain, seeing a
beautiful view from the peak of the mountain, even the clouds are in
the dream. There are such beautiful experiences in our life. At the
same time, we could have a dream in which we are being chased eternally
by a poisonous snake, like an anaconda. We could have that kind of
nightmare going on and on and on, but not being able to wake up. Being
in that state of dreaming and not recognizing that we are dreaming is
what the Buddha called "samsara," the confused state. Whereas, when we
wake up from that, it is called "enlightenment" or "buddhahood." We
become buddhas, awakened ones, fully awakened ones.
When the Prince achieved the state
of the inner awakening, in the northeastern part of India, in a place
called Bodhgaya, in his last stage of practice on the spiritual path,
he was sitting under a beautiful tree called a "bodhi" tree. "Bodhi"
means "awake" in Sanskrit; therefore, bodhi tree means something like
"awake tree." The prince was sitting under that tree on a cushion of
kusha grass. He was peacefully resting his mind, exploring further and
further the nature of mind, the nature of suffering, the pain that he
was going through in his mind, and the calmness that he was
experiencing through his meditative spiritual journey. Then, finally,
one day under that tree in the early morning (Rinpoche snaps his
fingers), he just clicked in. He just (snaps fingers) awakened in that
click, all the way; finally, (snaps fingers) he clicked in and that was
the experience of enlightenment, awakening.
Teaching
The Buddha shared his experience of
the path, the spiritual journey. He shared his experiences of
realization, of spiritual insight into the nature of mind. In one of
his earliest discourses, the Buddha addressed his audience of monks and
lay people and said, "You should examine my teachings thoroughly. Like
a gold merchant looking to acquire pure gold, you should thoroughly go
through the process of analyzing these teachings." Buddha said that a
substance could be examined to see if it were pure gold by first
striking it, then cutting it, then rubbing it with different cloths.
Through this testing, it is possible find out if a substance is pure
gold or fake gold. In a similar way, Buddha said, "It is extremely
important for you to analyze and examine my teachings, and then, in the
end, you can decide whether to adopt them. If there is any wisdom, you
can adopt it. If there is nothing, just leave it. You do not have to
accept these teachings." Buddha said, "Do not accept my teachings
because they are taught by a King, or a Prince. Do not accept them
because they are taught by someone called "Buddha." However, accept
them if they are logical, if they are reasonable, if there is wisdom in
them, and if there is some benefit."
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