Sunyata
Lately I've been focused on deepening my understanding of Emptiness. It's been slow going - this is where it is obvious to me that being able to participate in a local sangha would be good.
I started my exploration of sunyata after reading an excerpt from Bodhi magazine (Vol. 8, No. 3) in Buddhadharma's Spring 2007 issue. There's an article there by Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche called "Emptiness First, Then Compassion." He writes:
When we try to practice compassion without the view of egolessness, or emptiness, we are often not really helping because we ourselves are so confused. Our own lack of clarity only produces further confusion. If we have an idea that we think will help someone, it is usually based on our own interpretation of what we think they require or want. We are not looking at their situation from their point of view. Instead of giving them what they truly need, we give what we think they need. There is a difference between the two. Furthermore, we have value judgments about how they should accept our help, and so we "help"them further by imposing conditions and guidelines.I do understand what he is saying. However, for myself, I come to the idea of egoless compassion and loving-kindness through my attempts to broaden my ability to be compassionate. There was a point when I realized that to be truly compassionate and loving I needed to move beyond my own concepts and try to understand the needs and feelings of others in order to better "serve" them. (I wish I could think of a better word than "serve" - the best thing I can think of is my own crudely-realized idea of bodhicitta, though it is only in recent years that I've come to have a (beginner's) understanding of this concept.)
Compassion and loving-kindness that is free from ego clinging allows us to see the suffering of others from their own perspective. We can see beyond our own ideas and beliefs. We can see what they need from their point of view, and we can apply our own wisdom at the same time. with this more open and clear view, we can see more realistically what will meet their actual needs and be truly beneficial.
I guess it's a matter of perspective. For me, the idea of linearly studying one concept before another does not work as well as a more holistic approach studying many aspects of Buddhism at one time. I'm not suggesting a scattered approach leading to little understanding. It's more about the concepts of interdependence extending into my understanding of the Dharma - no one concept being free of others.
Perhaps the Venerable Dzogchen Ponlop Rinpoche and I have different styles of thinking. Or perhaps I am just not knowledgeable enough to have a separate perspective, and I am just deluding or confusing myself. ^_^
Links I've recently been looking at on the topic:
2 comments:
Have your read through the Heart Sutra? Maybe a good read. It certainly is scripture-like, but there's lots there to contemplate. Hope that pointer helps.
I've actually been considering it of late. Thank you for your very good suggestion. ^_^
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