Robert Thurman Expanding your circle of compassion

I want to open by quoting Einstein’s wonderful statement,

just so people will feel at ease that the great scientist of the 20th century

also agrees with us, and also calls us to this action.

He said, “A human being is a part of the whole, called by us, the ‘universe,’ –

a part limited in time and space.

He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings,

as something separated from the rest,

a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness.

This delusion is a kind of prison for us,

restricting us to our personal desires and to affection for a few persons nearest to us.

Our task must be to free ourselves from this prison by widening our circle of compassion,

to embrace all living creatures and the whole of nature in its beauty.”

This insight of Einstein’s is uncannily close to that of Buddhist psychology,

wherein compassion – “karuna,” it is called –

is defined as, “the sensitivity to another’s suffering

and the corresponding will to free the other from that suffering.”

It pairs closely with love, which is the will for the other to be happy,

which requires, of course, that one feels some happiness oneself

and wishes to share it.

This is perfect in that it clearly opposes self-centeredness

and selfishness to compassion, the concern for others,

and, further, it indicates that those caught in the cycle of self-concern

suffer helplessly, while the compassionate are more free

and, implicitly, more happy.

The Dalai Lama often states that compassion is his best friend.

It helps him when he is overwhelmed with grief and despair.

Compassion helps him turn away from the feeling of his suffering

as the most absolute, most terrible suffering anyone has ever had

and broadens his awareness of the sufferings of others,

even of the perpetrators of his misery and the whole mass of beings.

In fact, suffering is so huge and enormous,

his own becomes less and less monumental.

And he begins to move beyond his self-concern into the broader concern for others.

And this immediately cheers him up,

as his courage is stimulated to rise to the occasion.

Thus, he uses his own suffering

as a doorway to widening his circle of compassion.

He is a very good colleague of Einstein’s, we must say.

Now, I want to tell a story,

which is a very famous story in the Indian and Buddhist tradition,

of the great Saint Asanga

who was a contemporary of Augustine in the West

and was sort of like the Buddhist Augustine.

And Asanga lived 800 years after the Buddha’s time.

And he was discontented with the state of people’s practice

of the Buddhist religion in India at that time.

And so he said, “I’m sick of all this. Nobody’s really living the doctrine.

They’re talking about love and compassion and wisdom and enlightenment,

but they are acting selfish and pathetic.

So, Buddha’s teaching has lost its momentum.

I know the next Buddha will come a few thousand years from now,

but exists currently in a certain heaven” – that’s Maitreya –

“so, I’m going to go on a retreat and I’m going to meditate

and pray until the Buddha Maitreya reveals himself to me,

and gives me a teaching or something

to revive the practice of compassion in the world today.”

So he went on this retreat. And he meditated for three years

and he did not see the future Buddha Maitreya.

And he left in disgust.

And as he was leaving, he saw a man –

a funny little man sitting sort of part way down the mountain.

And he had a lump of iron.

And he was rubbing it with a cloth.

And he became interested in that.

He said, “Well what are you doing?”

And the man said, “I’m making a needle.”

And he said, “That’s ridiculous. You can’t make a needle

by rubbing a lump of iron with a cloth.”

And the man said, “Really?” And he showed him a dish full of needles.

So he said, “Okay, I get the point.”

He went back to his cave. He meditated again.

Another three years, no vision. He leaves again.

This time, he comes down.

And as he’s leaving, he sees a bird making a nest on a cliff ledge.

And where it’s landing to bring the twigs to the cliff,

its feathers brushes the rock – and it had cut the rock

six to eight inches in. There was a cleft in the rock

by the brushing of the feathers of generations of the birds.

So he said, “All right. I get the point.” He went back.

Another three years.

Again, no vision of Maitreya after nine years.

And he again leaves, and this time: water dripping,

making a giant bowl in the rock where it drips in a stream.

And so, again, he goes back. And after 12 years there is still no vision.

And he’s freaked out. And he won’t even look left or right

to see any encouraging vision.

And he comes to the town. He’s a broken person.

And there, in the town, he’s approached by a dog

who comes like this – one of these terrible dogs you can see in some poor countries,

even in America, I think, in some areas –

and he’s looking just terrible.

And he becomes interested in this dog because it’s so pathetic,

and it’s trying to attract his attention. And he sits down looking at the dog.

And the dog’s whole hindquarters are a complete open sore.

Some of it is like gangrenous,

and there are maggots in the flesh. And it’s terrible.

He thinks, “What can I do to fix up this dog?

Well, at least I can clean this wound and wash it.”

So, he takes it to some water. He’s about to clean,

but then his awareness focuses on the maggots.

And he sees the maggots, and the maggots are kind of looking a little cute.

And they’re maggoting happily in the dog’s hindquarters there.

“Well, if I clean the dog, I’ll kill the maggots. So how can that be?

That’s it. I’m a useless person and there’s no Buddha, no Maitreya,

and everything is all hopeless.

And now I’m going to kill the maggots?”

So, he had a brilliant idea.

And he took a shard of something, and cut a piece of flesh from his thigh,

and he placed it on ground.

He was not really thinking too carefully about the ASPCA.

He was just immediately caught with the situation.

So he thought, “I will take the maggots and put them on this piece of flesh,

then clean the dog’s wounds, and then

I’ll figure out what to do with the maggots.”

So he starts to do that. He can’t grab the maggots.

Apparently they wriggle around. They’re kind of hard to grab, these maggots.

So he says, “Well, I’ll put my tongue on the dog’s flesh.

And then the maggots will jump on my warmer tongue” –

the dog is kind of used up –

“and then I’ll spit them one by one down on the thing.”

So he goes down, and he’s sticking his tongue out like this.

And he had to close his eyes, it’s so disgusting, and the smell and everything.

And then, suddenly, there’s a pfft, a noise like that.

He jumps back and there, of course, is the future Buddha Maitreya

in a beautiful vision – rainbow lights, golden, jeweled, a plasma body,

an exquisite mystic vision – that he sees.

And he says, “Oh.” He bows.

But, being human, he’s immediately thinking of his next complaint.

So as he comes up from his first bow he says,

“My Lord, I’m so happy to see you, but where have you been for 12 years?

What is this?”

And Maitreya says, “I was with you. Who do you think was making needles

and making nests and dripping on rocks for you, mister dense?”

(Laughter)

“Looking for the Buddha in person,” he said.

And he said, “You didn’t have, until this moment, real compassion.

And, until you have real compassion, you cannot recognize love.”

“Maitreya” means love, “the loving one,” in Sanskrit.

And so he looked very dubious, Asanga did.

And he said, “If you don’t believe me, just take me with you.”

And so he took the Maitreya – it shrunk into a globe, a ball –

took him on his shoulder.

And he ran into town in the marketplace, and he said, “Rejoice! Rejoice!

The future Buddha has come ahead of all predictions. Here he is.”

And then pretty soon they started throwing rocks and stones at him –

it wasn’t Chautauqua, it was some other town –

because they saw a demented looking, scrawny looking yogi man,

like some kind of hippie, with a bleeding leg and a rotten dog on his shoulder,

shouting that the future Buddha had come.

So, naturally, they chased him out of town.

But on the edge of town, one elderly lady, a charwoman in the charnel ground,

saw a jeweled foot on a jeweled lotus on his shoulder and then the dog,

but she saw the jewel foot of the Maitreya, and she offered a flower.

So that encouraged him, and he went with Maitreya.

Maitreya then took him to a certain heaven,

which is the typical way a Buddhist myth unfolds.

And Maitreya then kept him in heaven for five years,

dictating to him five complicated tomes

of the methodology of how you cultivate compassion.

And then I thought I would share with you what that method is, or one of them.

A famous one, it’s called the “Sevenfold Causal Method of Developing Compassion.”

And it begins first by one meditating and visualizing that all beings are with one –

even animals too, but everyone is in human form.

The animals are in one of their human lives. The humans are human.

And then, among them, you think of your friends and loved ones, the circle at the table.

And you think of your enemies, and you think of the neutral ones.

And then you try to say, “Well, the loved ones I love.

But, you know, after all, they’re nice to me.

I had fights with them. Sometimes they were unfriendly.

I got mad. Brothers can fight. Parents and children can fight.

So, in a way, I like them so much because they’re nice to me.

While the neutral ones I don’t know. They could all be just fine.

And then the enemies I don’t like because they’re mean to me.

But they are nice to somebody. I could be them.”

And then the Buddhists, of course, think that, because we’ve all had infinite previous lives,

we’ve all been each other’s relatives, actually.

Therefore all of you, in the Buddhist view,

in some previous life, although you don’t remember it and neither do I,

have been my mother – for which I do apologize for the trouble I caused you.

And also, actually, I’ve been your mother.

I’ve been female, and I’ve been every single one of yours' mother in a previous life,

the way the Buddhists reflect.

So, my mother in this life is really great. But all of you in a way

are part of the eternal mother.

You gave me that expression; “the eternal mama,” you said. That’s wonderful.

So, that’s the way the Buddhists do it.

A theist Christian can think that all beings, even my enemies, are God’s children.

So, in that sense, we’re related.

So, they first create this foundation of equality.

So, we sort of reduce a little of the clinging to the ones we love –

just in the meditation – and we open our mind to those we don’t know.

And we definitely reduce the hostility and the “I don’t want to be compassionate to them”

to the ones we think of as the bad guys, the ones we hate and we don’t like.

And we don’t hate anyone, therefore. So we equalize. That’s very important.

And then the next thing we do is what is called “mother recognition.”

And that is, we think of every being as familiar, as family.

We expand. We take the feeling about remembering a mama,

and we defuse that to all beings in this meditation.

And we see the mother in every being.

We see that look that the mother has on her face,

looking at this child that is a miracle

that she has produced from her own body, being a mammal,

where she has true compassion, truly is the other, and identifies completely.

Often the life of that other will be more important to her than her own life.

And that’s why it’s the most powerful form of altruism.

The mother is the model of all altruism for human beings,

in spiritual traditions.

And so, we reflect until we can sort of see that motherly expression in all beings.

People laugh at me because, you know, I used to say that

I used to meditate on mama Cheney as my mom,

when, of course, I was annoyed with him about all of his evil doings in Iraq.

I used to meditate on George Bush. He’s quite a cute mom in a female form.

He has his little ears and he smiles and he rocks you in his arms.

And you think of him as nursing you.

And then Saddam Hussein’s serious mustache is a problem,

but you think of him as a mom.

And this is the way you do it. You take any being who looks weird to you,

and you see how they could be familiar to you.

And you do that for a while, until you really feel that.

You can feel the familiarity of all beings.

Nobody seems alien. They’re not “other.”

You reduce the feeling of otherness about beings.

Then you move from there to remembering the kindness of mothers in general,

if you can remember the kindness of your own mother,

if you can remember the kindness of your spouse,

or, if you are a mother yourself, how you were with your children.

And you begin to get very sentimental; you cultivate sentimentality intensely.

You will even weep, perhaps, with gratitude and kindness.

And then you connect that with your feeling that everyone has that motherly possibility.

Every being, even the most mean looking ones, can be motherly.

And then, third, you step from there to what is called “a feeling of gratitude.”

You want to repay that kindness that all beings have shown to you.

And then the fourth step, you go to what is called “lovely love.”

In each one of these you can take some weeks, or months, or days

depending on how you do it, or you can do them in a run, this meditation.

And then you think of how lovely beings are when they are happy,

when they are satisfied.

And every being looks beautiful when they are internally feeling a happiness.

Their face doesn’t look like this. When they’re angry, they look ugly, every being,

but when they’re happy they look beautiful.

And so you see beings in their potential happiness.

And you feel a love toward them and you want them to be happy, even the enemy.

We think Jesus is being unrealistic

when he says, “Love thine enemy.”

He does say that, and we think he’s being unrealistic

and sort of spiritual and highfalutin. “Nice for him to say it, but I can’t do that.”

But, actually, that’s practical.

If you love your enemy that means you want your enemy to be happy.

If your enemy was really happy, why would they bother to be your enemy?

How boring to run around chasing you.

They would be relaxing somewhere having a good time.

So it makes sense to want your enemy to be happy,

because they’ll stop being your enemy because that’s too much trouble.

But anyway, that’s the “lovely love. "

And then finally, the fifth step is compassion, “universal compassion.”

And that is where you then look at the reality of all the beings you can think of.

And you look at them, and you see how they are.

And you realize how unhappy they are actually, mostly, most of the time.

You see that furrowed brow in people.

And then you realize they don’t even have compassion on themselves.

They’re driven by this duty and this obligation.

“I have to get that. I need more. I’m not worthy. And I should do something.”

And they’re rushing around all stressed out.

And they think of it as somehow macho, hard discipline on themselves.

But actually they are cruel to themselves.

And, of course, they are cruel and ruthless toward others.

And they, then, never get any positive feedback.

And the more they succeed and the more power they have,

the more unhappy they are.

And this is where you feel real compassion for them.

And you then feel you must act.

And the choice of the action, of course,

hopefully will be more practical

than poor Asanga, who was fixing the maggots on the dog

because he had that motivation, and whoever was in front of him,

he wanted to help.

But, of course, that is impractical. He should have founded the ASPCA in the town

and gotten some scientific help for dogs and maggots.

And I’m sure he did that later. (Laughter) But that just indicates the state of mind, you know.

And so the next step – the sixth step beyond “universal compassion” –

is this thing where you’re linked with the needs of others in a true way,

and you have compassion for yourself also,

and it isn’t sentimental only. You might be in fear of something.

Some bad guy is making himself more and more unhappy

being more and more mean to other people

and getting punished in the future for it in various ways.

And in Buddhism, they catch it in the future life.

Of course in theistic religion they’re punished by God or whatever.

And materialism, they think they get out of it just by not existing,

by dying, but they don’t.

And so they get reborn as whatever, you know.

Never mind. I won’t get into that.

But the next step is called “universal responsibility.”

And that is very important – the Charter of Compassion

must lead us to develop through true compassion,

what is called “universal responsibility.”

In the great teaching of his Holiness the Dalai Lama

that he always teaches everywhere, he says

that that is the common religion of humanity: kindness.

But “kindness” means “universal responsibility.”

And that means whatever happens to other beings is happening to us:

we are responsible for that, and we should take it

and do whatever we can at whatever little level

and small level that we can do it.

We absolutely must do that. There is no way not to do it.

And then, finally, that leads to a new orientation in life

where we live equally for ourselves and for others

and we are

joyful and happy.

One thing we mustn’t think is that compassion makes you miserable.

Compassion makes you happy.

The first person who is happy when you get great compassion is yourself,

even if you haven’t done anything yet for anybody else.

Although, the change in your mind already does something for other beings:

they can sense this new quality in yourself,

and it helps them already, and gives them an example.

And that uncompassionate clock has just showed me that it’s all over.

So, practice compassion, read the charter, disseminate it

and develop it within yourself.

Don’t just think, “Well, I’m compassionate,” or “I’m not compassionate,”

and sort of think you’re stuck there.

You can develop this. You can diminish the non-compassion,

the cruelty, the callousness, the neglect of others,

and take universal responsibility for them.

And then, not only will God smile and the eternal mama will smile,

but Karen Armstrong will smile.

Thank you very much. (Applause)

我想以爱因斯坦的精彩发言作为开场白,

让人们放心,这位20世纪伟大的科学家

也认同我们,也呼吁我们采取这一行动。

他说:“一个人是整体的一部分,被我们称为‘宇宙’——

一个在时间和空间上受限的部分。

他体验自己、他的思想和感受,

作为与其他人分离的东西,

一个 对他的意识的一种视觉错觉。

这种错觉对我们来说是一种监狱,将

我们限制在个人欲望和对离我们最近的几个人的感情中。

我们的任务必须是通过扩大我们的圈子来将自己从这个监狱中解放出来。 慈悲

,拥抱所有生物和整个自然的美丽。”

爱因斯坦的这种洞察力与佛教心理学的洞察力惊人地接近,

其中慈悲——它被称为“karuna”——

被定义为“对他人痛苦的敏感性

以及将他人从痛苦中解脱出来的相应意志”。

它与爱紧密结合,爱是让对方幸福的意愿

,当然,这需要一个人自己感受到一些幸福

并希望分享它。

这是完美的,因为它清楚地将自我中心

和自私与同情、对他人的关心对立起来

,并且进一步表明,那些陷入自我关心循环的人

无助地受苦,而富有同情心的人则更加自由,

并且含蓄地, 更愉快。

达赖喇嘛经常说慈悲是他最好的朋友。

当他因悲伤和绝望而不知所措时,它会帮助他。

慈悲帮助他摆脱痛苦的感觉,

这是任何人都曾经历过的最绝对、最可怕的痛苦,

并扩大了他对他人痛苦的认识,

甚至是对他痛苦的肇事者和整个众生的认识。

事实上,痛苦是如此巨大和巨大,

他自己的痛苦变得越来越不重要。

他开始超越自我关注,转向更广泛的对他人的关注。

这立即让他振作起来,

因为他的勇气被激发起来迎接这个场合。

因此,他利用自己的痛苦

作为扩大同情心的大门。

我们必须说,他是爱因斯坦的一位非常好的同事。

现在,我想讲一个故事,

这是印度和佛教传统中非常著名的故事

,伟大的圣无

着,与西方的奥古斯丁同时代

,有点像佛教的奥古斯丁。

无着在佛陀时代之后生活了 800 年。

他对当时印度人信奉佛教的状况感到不满

于是他说:“我受够了这一切。没有人真正遵守教义。

他们说的是慈悲、智慧和开悟,

但他们表现得自私和可悲。

所以,佛陀的教义已经失去了动力。

我知道下一个佛将在几千年后到来,

但现在存在于某个天堂”——那是弥勒——

“所以,我要去闭关,我要打坐

和祈祷,直到 弥勒佛向我显明自己,

并给我教法或其他东西,

以恢复当今世界的慈悲修持。”

于是,他踏上了这次撤退之路。 又打坐三年

,未见未来弥勒佛。

他厌恶地离开了。

当他离开的时候,他看到了一个男人——

一个有趣的小男人,坐在山下。

他有一块铁。

他正在用布擦它。

他对此产生了兴趣。

他说:“那你在做什么?”

那人说:“我在做针。”

他说:“太荒谬了。你不能

用一块布擦一块铁来做针。”

男人说:“真的吗?” 他给他看了一个装满针的盘子。

于是他说:“好吧,我明白了。”

他回到了他的洞穴。 他再次冥想。

再过三年,没有远见。 他又离开了。

这一次,他下来了。

当他离开时,他看到一只鸟在悬崖壁架上筑巢。

在它着陆的地方把树枝带到悬崖上,

它的羽毛刷过岩石——它已经把岩石切了

六到八英寸。

由于几代鸟类的羽毛刷过,岩石上出现了一个裂缝。

所以他说,“好吧。我明白了。” 他回去了。

又是三年。

再一次,九年后没有看到弥勒佛。

然后他又离开了,这一次:水滴落,

在岩石上做了一个巨大的碗,水滴在溪流中。

所以,他又一次回去了。 12年后仍然没有远见。

他吓坏了。 他甚至不会向左或向右

看,看到任何令人鼓舞的愿景。

他来到镇上。 他是一个破碎的人。

在那里,在镇上,一只像这样来的狗接近了

他——我认为在一些贫穷的国家,

甚至在美国,在某些地区,你可以看到这种可怕的狗——

而且他看起来很糟糕。

他对这只狗产生了兴趣,因为它太可怜了

,它试图吸引他的注意力。 他坐下来看着那条狗。

并且狗的整个后躯是一个完全开放的疮。

有的像坏疽,

肉里有蛆。 这很可怕。

他想,“我能做些什么来修复这条狗?

好吧,至少我可以清理这个伤口并清洗它。”

所以,他把它带到了一些水里。 他正要打扫卫生,

但随后他的意识集中在蛆虫身上。

他看到了蛆虫,蛆虫看起来有点可爱。

他们在狗的后躯里快乐地蛆虫。

“嗯,我打扫狗,我就杀了蛆。那怎么可能?

就是这样。我是个没用的人,没有佛,没有弥勒

,一切都没有希望了

。现在我是 去杀蛆虫?”

于是,他有了一个绝妙的主意。

他拿起一块东西,从他的大腿上切下一块肉,

放在地上。

他并没有真正考虑过ASPCA。

他立刻就被这种情况抓住了。

于是他想,“我会把蛆虫放在这块肉上,

然后把狗的伤口清理干净,然后

我再想办法处理这些蛆虫。”

所以他开始这样做。 他抓不到蛆虫。

显然,他们扭来扭去。 它们有点难抓,这些蛆虫。

所以他说,“好吧,我会把我的舌头放在狗的肉上

。然后蛆虫会跳到我温暖的舌头上”

——狗有点累了——

“然后我会吐一个 一个倒在这件事上。”

所以他倒下了,他像这样伸出舌头。

他不得不闭上眼睛,这太恶心了,还有气味和一切。

然后,突然,有噗噗,类似的声音。

他跳回来,当然,未来弥勒佛

在一个美丽的幻象中——他看到的彩虹光、金色、宝石、等离子体

、精致的神秘幻象。

他说,“哦。” 他鞠躬。

但是,作为人类,他马上就会想到他的下一个抱怨。

所以当他第一次鞠躬时他说:

“我的主,我很高兴见到你,但是你在哪里呆了 12 年?

这是什么?”

弥勒说:“我和你在一起。密先生,你认为是谁在为你做针

、筑巢、滴在岩石上?”

(笑声)

“亲自找佛,”他说。

他说:“直到此刻,你才拥有真正的慈悲。

而且,除非你拥有真正的慈悲,否则你无法认识爱。”

“弥勒”在梵文中意为爱,“爱的人”。

所以他看起来很可疑,无着也是。

他说:“如果你不相信我,就带我去吧。”

于是他把弥勒佛——它缩小成一个球体,一个球——

把他扛在肩上。

他在集市上跑进城里,说:“欢喜!欢喜

!未来的佛陀出人意料地出现了。他来了。”

然后很快他们就开始向他扔石头和石头

——不是肖托夸,而是另一个城镇——

因为他们看到一个神情发狂、骨瘦如柴的瑜伽士,

就像某种嬉皮士,腿上流着血, 一只烂狗扛在肩上,

喊着未来佛来了。

所以,很自然地,他们把他赶出了城外。

但在城边,一位老妇人,一个在墓地里的女佣,

看到他肩上的宝莲上的宝脚,然后是狗

,她看到弥勒的宝脚,她供养了一朵花。

所以这鼓励了他,他和弥勒一起去了。

弥勒随后将他带到了某个天堂,

这是佛教神话展开的典型方式。

然后,弥勒让他在天堂里待了五年,

向他口授了五

部关于如何培养慈悲的方法的复杂书籍。

然后我想我会和你分享那个方法是什么,或者其中一种。

著名的一种,叫做“发慈悲七因法”。

它首先由一个人冥想并想象所有的生命都与一个人在一起——

甚至动物也是如此,但每个人都是人类的形式。

这些动物在他们的人类生活中。 人是人。

然后,在他们当中,你想到了你的朋友和亲人,餐桌上的那个圈子。

你会想到你的敌人,也会想到中立的敌人。

然后你试着说,“好吧,我爱的亲人。

但是,你知道,毕竟他们对我很好。

我和他们吵过架。有时他们不友好。

我生气了。兄弟可以打架。 父母和孩子可以打架。

所以,在某种程度上,我非常喜欢他们,因为他们对我很好。

而中立的我不知道。他们都可以很好

。然后是我不知道的敌人 就像因为他们对我很刻薄。

但他们对某人很好。我可以成为他们。

然后佛教徒当然认为,因为我们都有无限的前世,所以

我们实际上都是彼此的亲戚。

所以你们大家,在佛家看来,

在前世,虽然你们不记得了,我也不记得了,但

你们都是我的母亲——为此我为给你们带来的麻烦表示歉意。

而且,实际上,我一直是你的母亲。

我曾经是女性,在前世我也是你们每个人的母亲

,就像佛教徒所反映的那样。

所以,我这辈子的妈妈真的很棒。 但在某种程度上,你们所有人

都是永恒母亲的一部分。

你给了我那个表情; “永远的妈妈,”你说。 那好极了。

所以,这就是佛教徒的做法。

一个有神论的基督徒可以认为所有的生物,甚至我的敌人,都是上帝的孩子。

所以,从这个意义上说,我们是相关的。

所以,他们首先创造了平等的基础。

所以,我们在某种程度上减少了对我们所爱的人的执着——

就在冥想中——我们向那些我们不认识的人敞开心扉。

我们肯定会减少对

我们认为是坏人、我们讨厌和不喜欢的人的敌意和“我不想同情他们”。

因此,我们不恨任何人。 所以我们均衡。 这是非常重要的。

然后我们要做的下一件事就是所谓的“母亲识别”。

也就是说,我们认为每个人都像家人一样熟悉。

我们扩大。 我们带着想起一位妈妈的感觉,

并在这个冥想中将这种感觉化解给所有众生。

我们在每个生命中都看到了母亲。

我们看到母亲脸上的表情,

看着这个孩子,这是

她从自己的身体中创造出来的奇迹,作为哺乳动物

,她拥有真正的同情心,真正是他者,并且完全认同。

对她来说,另一个人的生命往往比她自己的生命更重要。

这就是为什么它是最有力的利他主义形式。

在精神传统中,母亲是人类所有利他主义的典范

因此,我们一直在反思,直到我们能够在所有众生身上看到那种母性的表达。

人们嘲笑我是因为,你知道,我曾经说过,

我曾经把切尼妈妈当作我的妈妈来冥想

,当然,当我对他在伊拉克所做的所有邪恶行为感到恼火时。

我曾经冥想乔治布什。 他是一个非常可爱的女性形式的妈妈。

他有他的小耳朵,他微笑着,他在他的怀里摇晃着你。

你认为他在照顾你。

然后萨达姆侯赛因的严重胡子是一个问题,

但你认为他是一个妈妈。

这就是你这样做的方式。 你选择任何你觉得奇怪的存在

,你会看到他们对你来说是如何熟悉的。

然后你会这样做一段时间,直到你真正感觉到。

你可以感受到所有众生的熟悉。

没有人似乎是陌生的。 他们不是“其他人”。

你减少了对众生的差异感。

然后你从那里开始记住一般母亲的善意,

如果你能记住自己母亲的善意,

如果你能记住你配偶的善意,

或者,如果你自己是母亲,你和孩子的相处方式 .

你开始变得非常多愁善感; 你强烈地培养多愁善感。

你甚至会哭泣,也许,带着感激和善意。

然后你把它与你的感觉联系起来,即每个人都有那种母性的可能性。

每个人,即使是最卑鄙的人,都可以是母性的。

然后,第三,你从那里踏入所谓的“感激之情”。

你要报答众生对你的恩情。

然后第四步,你去所谓的“可爱的爱情”。

在其中的每一个中,您都可能需要几周、几个月或几天的时间,

具体取决于您的操作方式,或者您可以连续进行,这种冥想。

然后你会想,当他们快乐、

满足时,他们是多么可爱。

当每个人内心感到幸福时,他们看起来都很美。

他们的脸看起来不像这样。 当他们生气时,他们看起来很丑,每个人,

但当他们高兴时,他们看起来很漂亮。

所以你看到众生在他们潜在的幸福中。

你对他们感到爱,你希望他们快乐,甚至是敌人。

我们认为耶稣

说“爱你的仇敌”是不切实际的。

他确实这么说,我们认为他是不切实际的

,有点属灵和傲慢。 “他说得很好,但我不能那样做。”

但实际上,这很实用。

如果你爱你的敌人,那意味着你希望你的敌人快乐。

如果你的敌人真的很高兴,他们为什么还要和你做敌人?

跑来跑去追你多无聊。

他们会在某个地方放松,玩得开心。

所以希望你的敌人快乐是有道理的,

因为他们将不再是你的敌人,因为那太麻烦了。

但无论如何,那是“可爱的爱

”。最后,第五步是慈悲,“普世慈悲”。

这就是你看到所有你能想到的存在的实相的地方。

你看着它们,你会看到它们是怎样的。

你意识到他们实际上是多么不快乐,大多数时候,大部分时间。

你看到人们皱起的眉头。

然后你意识到他们甚至对自己没有同情心。

他们受到这种责任和义务的驱使。

“我必须得到那个。我需要更多。我不配。我应该做点什么。”

他们四处奔波,压力很大。

他们认为这是某种男子气概,对自己严格的纪律。

但实际上他们对自己很残忍。

而且,当然,他们对他人残忍无情。

然后,他们永远不会得到任何积极的反馈。

而他们越成功,拥有的权力

越大,他们就越不快乐。

这就是你真正同情他们的地方。

然后你觉得你必须采取行动。

当然,行动的选择

希望

比可怜的无着更实际,因为他有这种动机,所以在狗身上固定蛆虫

,无论谁在他面前,

他都想提供帮助。

但是,当然,这是不切实际的。 他应该在镇上建立 ASPCA

并为狗和蛆虫获得一些科学帮助。

我敢肯定他后来这样做了。 (笑声) 但这只是表明心态,你知道的。

所以下一步——超越“普世慈悲”的第六步——

就是把你与他人的需求真正联系起来

,你也对自己有慈悲心

,这不仅仅是感性的。 . 你可能会害怕一些事情。

一些坏人正在让自己越来越不开心,

对别人越来越卑鄙,

并在未来以各种方式受到惩罚。

而在佛教中,他们会在来生捕捉到它。

当然,在有神论的宗教中,他们会受到上帝或其他什么的惩罚。

而唯物主义,他们认为他们只是通过不存在,通过死亡来摆脱它

,但他们没有。

所以他们重生了,你知道的。

没关系。 我不会进入那个。

但下一步被称为“普遍责任”。

这很重要——慈悲宪章

必须引导我们通过真正的慈悲来发展,

这就是所谓的“普遍责任”。

达赖喇嘛尊者在他处处教导的伟大教义

中说

,那是人类共同的宗教:仁慈。

但“善良”意味着“普遍的责任”。

这意味着发生在其他生命身上的任何事情都发生在我们身上:

我们对此负责,我们应该接受它,

并在我们能做的任何小层面

和小层面上做任何我们能做的事情。

我们绝对必须这样做。 没有办法不这样做。

然后,最后,这导致了一个新的生活方向

,我们为自己和他人平等地生活,我们

快乐而幸福。

我们绝不能想到的一件事是同情会让你痛苦。

慈悲让你快乐。

当你得到大慈悲时,第一个快乐的人就是你自己,

即使你还没有为别人做过任何事。

虽然,你思想的改变已经对其他众生有所帮助:

他们可以感觉到你自己的这种新品质

,它已经帮助了他们,并给了他们一个榜样。

而那个无情的时钟刚刚向我表明一切都结束了。

所以,练习同情心,阅读章程,传播它

并在你自己内部发展它。

不要只是想,“嗯,我很有同情心”或“我没有同情心”,

然后就认为你被困在那里了。

你可以开发这个。 你可以减少对他人的不慈悲

、残忍、冷酷、忽视,

并为他们承担普遍的责任。

然后,不仅上帝会微笑,永恒的妈妈也会微笑

,凯伦·阿姆斯特朗也会微笑。

非常感谢你。 (掌声)