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Question: When the Buddha first ordained monastics, there
were no precepts. The precepts were gradually made afterwards, when some
monks and nuns misbehaved. Thus there must have been a deeper meaning or
purpose that the Buddha had in mind for monasticism, beyond the keeping
of precepts. Please talk about the deeper essence or meaning of being a
monastic.
His Holiness the Dalai Lama: First, on the individual level,
there is a purpose in being a monk or nun. The Buddha himself was an example
of this. He was the prince of a small kingdom, and he renounced this. Why?
If he remains in the kingdom with all of the householders' activities, those
very circumstances compel one to become involved in attachment or in harsh
attitudes. That is an obstacle for practice. With family life, even though
you yourself may feel content, you have to take care of your family, so
you have to engage in more worldly activities. The advantage of being a
monk or nun is that you do not have to be entrapped in too many worldly
engagements or activities. If, after becoming a monk or a nun, as a practitioner
you can think and develop genuine compassion and concern for all sentient
beings--or at least the sentient beings surrounding you--then that kind
of feeling is very good for the accumulation of virtues. On the other hand,
with your own family, your concern and wish is to repay your family members.
Perhaps there are some exceptional cases, but generally speaking, that burden
is a real burden, and that pain is a real pain. With that, there is no hope
of accumulating virtue because your activities are based on attachment.
Therefore, becoming a monk or nun, without family, is very good for the
practice of the Buddhadharma because the basic aim of Dharma practice is
nirvana, not just day-to-day happiness. As monastics, we seek nirvana, permanent
cessation of samsaric suffering, so we want to pacify the seed or the factors
that bind us in the samsaric world. The chief of these is attachment. Therefore
the main purpose of being a monastic is to reduce attachment: we work on
no longer being attached to family, no longer being attached to sexual pleasure,
no longer being attached to other worldly facilities. That is the main purpose.
This is the purpose on the individual level.
Q.: Please speak about the advantage of taking higher ordination
as a bhikshu or bhikshuni. Why did you chose to become a bhikshu rather
than to remain as a sramanera? What is the best way to prepare to take ordination
as a bhikshu or bhikshuni?
H.H.: Generally, in our tradition, with higher ordination,
all your virtuous activities become more effective, more powerful, more
forceful. Similarly, the negative activities are more powerful (he chuckles),
but we usually tend to look more on the positive side. The teachings of
the bodhisattva vehicle and tantric vehicle, for example Kalachakra, express
great appreciation for the bhikshu vow. We feel it is a great opportunity
to take higher ordination. A bhikshu or bhikshuni has more precepts. If
you look at them point by point, sometimes you may feel there are too many
precepts. But when you look at the purpose--to reduce attachment and negative
emotions--then it makes sense. In order to reduce our negative emotions,
the Vinaya puts more emphasis on your actions. So Vinaya contains very detailed
and precise precepts about physical and verbal actions. The higher vows--the
bodhisattva vow and the tantric vow--put more emphasis on the motivation.
If you look at how the bhikshu and bhikshuni precepts work, you will get
a better understanding of their purpose.
Generally speaking, those Buddhist practitioners who are really determined
to follow this practice according to the Buddha's guidance of course become
sramanera(ika), then bhikshu(ni). Then they take the bodhisattva vow and
finally the tantric vow. I feel the real preparation for taking bhikshu
or bhikshuni ordination is not the study of the Vinaya, but more meditation
about the nature of samsara. For example, there is a precept of celibacy.
If you just think, '"'Sex is not good. Buddha prohibited it, so I can't
do it,'"' then it is very difficult to control your desire. On the
other hand, if you think of the basic aim, the basic purpose--nirvana--then
you will understand the reason for the precept and it will be easier to
follow it. When you do more analytical meditation on the Four Noble Truths,
you will gain conviction that the first two truths are to be abandoned and
the last two to be actualized. Having examined whether these negative emotions--the
cause of suffering--can be eliminated, you will become confident that they
can. You can see clearly there is an alternative. Now the whole practice
becomes meaningful. Otherwise, keeping precepts is like a punishment. When
you do analytical meditation, you will realize there is a systematic way
to reduce the negative emotions, and you will want to do that because your
aim is nirvana, the complete elimination of negative emotions. Contemplating
this is the main preparation. Study the Four Noble Truths, and do more analytical
meditation on these topics. Once you develop genuine interest in nirvana
and feel it is possible to attain, you will feel, '"'That's my purpose,
that's my destination.'"' The next question is, '"'How can I reduce
negative emotions step by step on the emotional level and on the practical
level?'"' Thus, you progressively becomes an upasaka, a full upasaka,
an upasaka with celibacy, a sramanera, and a bhikshu. For women, one is
first upasika, then sramanerika, shiksamana, and bhikshuni. Gradually taking
the various levels of precepts is climbing the steps to liberation.
Q.: Is there a different way of practicing the Vinaya for
someone who is in the Vajrayana tradition? How do we integrate our study
and practice of Vinaya with our study and practice of the tantra?
H.H.: According to our tradition, we are monastics and
are celibate, and we practice the Tantrayana simultaneously. But the way
of practice is through visualization. For example, we visualize the consort,
but we never touch. We never implement this in actual practice. Unless we
have reached a stage where we have completely developed the power to control
all our energy and have gained the correct understanding of sunya (emptiness,
reality), unless we truly possess all the faculties through which those
negative emotions can be transformed into positive energy, we never implement
practice with an actual consort. Although we practice all the higher practices,
as far as implementation is concerned, we follow Vinaya. We never follow
according to Tantrayana. We can't drink blood!! (everyone laughs). In terms
of actual practice, we have to follow the stricter discipline of Vinaya.
In ancient India, one of the reasons for the degeneration of the Buddhadharma
was the wrong implementation of certain tantric explanations.
Q.: It is difficult to follow the Vinaya literally in all
situations nowadays. Can adaptations be made to how we live it?
H.H.: Obviously, we must make every effort to follow the
Vinaya teachings and precepts. Then in certain cases, if there is sufficient
reason to make certain adaptations, it is possible. But we should not make
these adaptations too easily. First we should give preference to following
the Vinaya precepts as they are. In cases where there are enough sound reasons
that necessitate an adaptation, then it is permissible.
Q.: What is the source of joy in the mind? How do we maintain
a sense of joy? How do we deal with doubt and insecurity that may arise?
H.H.: As a practitioner, once you gain some inner experience
as a result of your spiritual practice, that gives you some deep satisfaction,
happiness, or enjoyment. It also gives you some kind of confidence. I think
that is the main thing. This comes through meditation. The most effective
method for your mind is analytical meditation. But without proper knowledge
and understanding it is difficult to meditate. There is no base for knowing
how to meditate. To be able to do analytical meditation effectively, you
should have knowledge of the whole structure of Buddhism. So study is important;
it makes a difference in your meditation. But sometimes in our Tibetan monasteries
there is too much emphasis on the intellectual side, and the practice side
is neglected. As a result some people are great scholars, but as soon as
their lecture finishes, then ugliness appears. Why? Intellectually, they
are a great scholar, but the Dharma is not integrated with their life.
Once you personally experience some deeper value as a result of our practice,
then no matter what other people do, what other people say, your happiness
will not be affected. Because through your own experience you will be convinced,
'"'Yes, there is some good thing there.'"' The Buddha made it
very clear. Right at the beginning he said it was extremely important for
each individual to make his or her decisions and make effort in the practice.