Pages

Friday 31 December 2021

HAPPY NEW YEAR 2022

 


Our world has been greatly affected by the last two years of pandemic and climate change, a sad fact. I hope that the New Year will bring relief from this suffering and a healthier planet.

Today humanity needs more than ever the awareness of that sense of collective responsibility and care for our planet and global health. 

Best wishes for the New Year, even if the time is illusory. We are in the middle of Kali Yuga, but from a spiritual point of view, I believe that this is profoundly beneficial, since it sends the consciousnesses in the direction of their own inwardness, where realisation lies. In the words of the Christian teacher Meister Eckhart: "Demons are actually angels who cleanse our souls".
Best wishes for a happy 2022, may the 2 be the One and then the Zero, that is, the blissful emptiness.

Geshe G. THARCHIN 


Tuesday 20 July 2021

COMPASSION IN TIBETAN BUDDHISM

Advanced Training Course
La Sapienza University - Rome
"Compassion: practices, applications and neuroscience".
Friday, September 28, 2018

COMPASSION IN TIBETAN BUDDHISM
Geshe Lharampa Lama Gedun Tharchin

****

TIBETAN BUDDHISM

Good afternoon everyone, it is a great honor for me to be here with you to present some Buddhist concepts on today's topic, compassion in its connection to medicine and psychology.
The definition of Buddhism is uniquely Western, in Sanskrit and Pali it just says -the teaching or realization of the Buddha-, there is no codification that suggests a structured religion or ideological current.
The Buddha has not invented a new religion, but starting from the Indian culture has deepened, elaborated, renewed every aspect reaching an enrichment and an even clearer vision included in his thesis presentation of the "Four Noble Truths" of the philosophical concepts, Samsara Karma Nirvana and Dharma, already existing in the ancient Vedanta doctrine.
The term Buddhism should therefore be more correctly replaced with the three constituent concepts: "Buddha, Dharma, Sangha". Buddha is the enlightened one. Dharma is his teaching aimed to transform in the clear vision not only his own mind, but all the phenomena of the universe in which the single atom includes the whole and vice versa. These concepts have found confirmation today in quantum physics. In the Dharma we can therefore transform ourselves and the universe without separation, there is no division between the inner and outer worlds, in the end they are a single reality.
We should not think of the outer world as the things that appear to us concretely with the five senses, but it concerns every aspect, even the intangible, and it is what we perceive with wisdom, deep knowledge, inner transformation, so transforming our inner world, we automatically transform the outer reality.
In my doctoral thesis I have deepened the concepts of Abhidharmakośa, on the text of the great master Vasubhandu in which it deals with the analysis of all the phenomena of the universe, this fundamental text is divided into 75 chapters grouped into five parts. Vasubhandu's analytical knowledge was so great that in India he was considered the second Buddha. He described every phenomenon both material and intangible, both inner and outer.
I agreed on the structure of my thesis on the Abhidharmakośa with the Dalai Lama, who gave me the indication to deepen especially these topics: the first one was about karma, the second one was about Buddhist cosmology and the third one was about the mind and the mental factor, so my thesis was tripled compared to the initial project and, from the 200 pages planned, in the end it reached 600, but this work was really formative for me, a fundamental experience.
First of all I focused on karma in relation to the universe. Karma is an inner phenomenon and cosmology an outer phenomenon. So, as in the West the vision of the universe before Galileo Galilei was completely different, also in the Tibetan interpretation described in the Abhidharma there was the same conception and therefore the Dalai Lama suggested me to make a study in the light of current knowledge with the extrapolation of the essence of ancient cosmology to be interpreted in the correct vision of modern science.
To do this research I had to analyze in detail all the four schools of Buddhist philosophy, because it is a mistake to believe that Buddhism has a single point of observation of reality, each school highlights different aspects and it is therefore necessary to deepen and study carefully all the different philosophical currents, bearing in mind that there are important limits given by the different languages, in fact the first texts were in Sanskrit and then translated into Tibetan, and this inevitably leads to problems of translation and interpretation.
My first years in Rome at the University I studied the Summa Theologiae of Thomas Aquinas comparing the two texts, the Latin one with the English translation, and they were not really the same thing. This is what happens in the study of ancient texts because the majority of Tibetans know them only in this language, knowing nothing of Sanskrit or Pali, and this undoubtedly leads to differences.
Buddhism entered Tibet in the seventh century thanks to the marriage of King Songtsen Gampo with two Buddhist wives, a Nepalese princess and a Chinese princess. In this country he studied with the greatest masters in the university of Samye. But the complete diffusion took place at the beginning of the eleventh century with the arrival in Tibet of the great Indian master Atisha Dipamkara Shrijnana who revised and retranslated all the works, and Buddhism, so consolidated, spread in the country articulated in the four fundamental schools (Nyingmapa, Kagyupa, Sakyapa and Gelukpa) among them diversified in some interpretations as it happened in Christianity, in addition to the first Catholicism were formed more Protestant churches, while remaining always Christian.
The four major Buddhist philosophical schools are very important to understand the doctrine as a whole and are: Sarvāstivādin, Sotantrica, Yogācāra, and Mādhyamica. Sarvāstivādin is a more conventional and common current, Sotantrica is a little deeper, Yogācāra the mind-only school is very subtle and finally Mādhyamica is even more fleshing out, showing the mechanisms of illusion in relative knowledge, neither mind, nor I, nor anything, everything is in the emptiness.
These four schools represent the evolution of a single process, which began with the philosophical study, then descending to deeper and deeper levels of knowledge until Mādhyamica the school of pure vision founded by Nāgārjuna, a great mystic, whose main work is the Mūlamādhyamacakārikā, the foundation of the Middle Way.
For us it is essential in the approach to Buddhism to know Nāgārjuna's analysis of the Middle Way, collected in the text of Madhyamika Prasanghika, because it is the basis for being able to understand the real and deep concept of emptiness, and it is equally important to compare the study in all four schools.

COMPASSION

Today we must face together the theme of compassion that in the Buddhist conception cannot be limited to the description given by Western languages. In Sanskrit the original word is karunā, in Tibetan three words are used snyng-rje, tse-wa, champa. Snyng-rje amplifies the aspect of compassion, tse-wa that of love, and champa loving kindness, but all point to the inseparable whole.
In the texts, the classic definition of snyng-rje indicates participation in the pain of others with the intention of freeing these people from suffering. Champa, on the other hand, is addressed specifically to the absence in people of happiness, of joy, which induces us to desire to give them joy, to offer what is missing. These are two aspects of suffering and for this reason there are two different actions to put in place, the two ways of approach merge in tse-wa love, that's why you have to use three distinct words to define a single process.
Compassion can only exist in selflessness, shen phen gyi sem, the selfless mind that encompasses everything and can only be expressed in the fundamental realization of equanimity.
We come to the realization of compassion, loving kindness, and love only if these aspects are grounded in the basic ground of equanimity, which frees us from wanting to be too close, with attachment, and from being too distant, in indifference or aversion, and keeps us stable and balanced in the middle way. This inner freedom is given by equanimity, the essential first step, though still lacking in compassion, kindness, and love, but necessary for us to move forward.
The four aspects of compassion to be cultivated in order to develop the altruistic mind are called the four unlimited or immeasurable, the first being the mind of unlimited equanimity; the second the mind of unlimited compassion or benevolence; the third the mind of unlimited loving kindness; and the fourth unlimited sharing joy.
Let us begin to analyze how we can realize the first aspect, equanimity, by having to free the mind that wanders inexorably in the fog of attachment, aversion, ignorance, selfish indifference.
Question: What are the practices for cultivating equanimity?
Lama: According to the vision of Buddhism equanimity is the first step to be able to realize the ultimate goal which is the great compassion and to do this it is necessary to turn the concentration inward to find the true nature of one's own heart-mind and when you come to this authentic vision all attachment, aversion or ignorance automatically disappear because we are aware that we are all in the same condition, in the boat of samsāra. Recognizing the common suffering of samsāra makes us aware of being unity.
The main work of the great master Śāntideva, the "Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra" which literally means "The Entry into Bodhisattva Activity" or The Life of Boddhisattva, delves into the details of all aspects of compassion.
In the Bodhisattvacaryāvatāra it says: "How can an impermanent person attach himself permanently to another equally impermanent person? How can an impermanent person permanently hate another impermanent person?" Impermanence is characteristic of all phenomena, so since I am impermanent how can I harbor attachment or aversion to who or what is equally impermanent? This awareness is the first step toward equanimity.
Attachment and hatred, friendship and enmity, war and peace are extremely volatile, impermanent conditions, so what is the point of wasting life so senselessly? Instead, we must proceed step by step in the middle way, be in the equanimity that is wisdom.
I remember a Tibetan scholar, Gedun Choephel who died in 1951, a man of great genius, an excellent poet, but unfortunately as a result of his imprisonment in Tibet his work was completely plundered. His story is comparable to that of Giordano Bruno. In one of his most beautiful songs he says: "Ants have no eyes, yet they run straight to seek happiness, worms have no legs, yet they run to seek happiness, the whole world runs to seek happiness as in a marathon". We are all involved in the same race, therefore it is wise to proceed in the middle way, helping each other, so it will be easier to live in harmony and joy.
It is wise to set the goal of doing a good deed every day and this mental attitude will automatically develop, day after day, altruism in a real condition of open heart and equanimity.
Therefore, equanimity is the first fundamental step, and the second step, immediately following, is compassion.
This compassion causes loving kindness to grow in the heart with a sincere desire to relieve others of their suffering and a willingness to exchange oneself with others, give them one's joy, one's well-being, and take their pain.
This nature of compassion is pure, real, shared joy in which we fully savor the meaning of existence, enjoy the beauty and joyful essence of life.
We are not always aware of this, but no one can live only for himself, the meaning of all existence is in the sharing and sharing of every moment of every action, in being harmoniously human community.
The natural attitude of the human being is compassionate, any work, individual action serves to others, is collaboration, but, clouded by ignorance, we can destroy this collective spirit, the spontaneous offering of what we know how to do and that is a shared service and equally receive the fruit of the work of others. This cooperation is what makes our days comfortable and meaningful. Instead we foolishly weigh the value of our work and monetize it and want to earn more money, indifferent, ignoring the true value of action and closing our hearts in a narrow selfishness that thwarts all joy, all deep meaning of rich human cooperation.
Society is naturally altruistic, it is bright and joyful, but in ignorance we turn it into a gray and desolate selfish desert.
It is important to understand this concept, compassion can never be individualistic, the very reason for our existence on this planet is the compassionate sharing of reality in the awareness that we all belong to one big human family.
Wisdom makes us aware of the compassion that is present and acts in every action, but without this wise knowledge of the natural altruism inherent in the human heart, we inevitably fall into the pit of dark ignorance that turns into selfishness that sees nothing, knows nothing and drowns in the misery of attachment and aversion.

LO JONG

Love is not something that is created out of nothing, it is already inherent in the human heart, it must simply be recognized, cultivated in equanimity. All this is dealt with extensively in the work of Śāntideva.
Then there is another very important text of Nāgārjuna the "Ratnāvalī" translated as "The Precious Garland" or "The Garland of Jewels".
Both texts of the two Indian masters, Śāntideva and Nāgārjuna, are fundamental in the practice of compassion and love and are the basis of further development of Tibetan masters who unified them into a single essential practice: Lo Jong.
A great impetus to the practice of Lo Jong was given by the Bengali master, son of a king, Atīśa Dīpankara Śrījñāna, who, having come to Tibet in the eleventh century at the request of the masters of this country, was one of the major proponents of the second spread of Buddhism in Tibet, thus giving impetus and renewal to the first spread that had become weakened in the confusion of excessive dispersion.
Atīśa was given the task of restoring Buddhism to its proper message, and so he devoted himself to revising all that had been previously written and said. Atīśa noticed that Tibetans were lazier and less intelligent than the Indians, and therefore it would have been more difficult for them to base their practice on the study of the sūtras, and consequently he elaborated a concrete, direct path, which left no possible loopholes: the Lo Jong, which is the heart of the Lam Rim, the gradual path leading to enlightenment, and which collects the entire teaching of the Buddha.
Atīśa made it clear that the four philosophical schools and traditions developed in Tibet were in no way in contradiction with each other, but, on the contrary, complemented each other perfectly, constituting the complementary nature of the complete gradual path from the beginning to enlightenment, the "Lam Rim". Within that path, the Lam Rim focuses on the heart of Buddhist practice, compassion, goes into detail about what compassion is and how to practice it in the teaching of "Lo Jong". "Lo" means mind and "Jong" means training, in the sense of exercising, directing, educating, training, purifying, transforming the mind, there are endless translations, but literally it is: training the mind.
Atīśa introduced the Lo Jong that gradually became the heart of Tibetan Buddhism, which all masters, of whatever school, still accept as their main practice, the practice of Bodhicitta. Atīśa had many disciples, but the main one was Dromtönpa, a layman, a nomad who founded the Kadampa school, "Ka" meaning Buddha's teaching and "dampa" instruction, in which every teaching, every act, flows into a single reality: all teachings based on compassion and totally selfless love.
The followers of this school addressed each other simply by calling themselves Geshe, that is, spiritual friend or virtuous friend. The Kadampa practiced the most authentic simplicity, like the Friars Minor of St. Francis, there was no need for any title, no special study, just purity of heart in the practice of compassion, day and night.
The title of Geshe took on different meanings in the following schools and is still today an indication of high level of studies and conferred only to doctors in monastic school philosophy, but the true meaning, the one that I accept because it is really authentic, is still today "spiritual friend", the one who practices Lo Jong.

THE SEVEN POINTS OF MENTAL TRAINING

Among the followers of the Kadampa school, Geshe Chekawa was very important. He wrote down the Lo Jong teachings in a single comprehensive text, "Training the Mind in Seven Points". There are many other documents on Lo Jong but this is the most important, nothing is missing, it is substantial.
The Tibetan texts, to purify the practice from any obstacle, all begin with paying homage to the Buddha, or to a particular Deity, or protector, this one begins instead with: "Homage to the Great Compassion". Every gesture of respect and devotion, lighting a candle, incense, bowing in greeting with joined hands, prostrating, all are great compassion, for all of us, indiscriminately, are manifestations of great compassion.
We are one family that is born in the root of great compassion, only we must become aware of it, be fully aware of it, every human relationship in society is union, solidarity, compassion. The essence of Lo Jong is therefore similar to the nectar that nourishes, transforms and makes the heart-mind grow.
In Tibet the fundamental instructions are traced back to the lineage of the master who developed them, and Lo Jong derives from the Serlingpa lineage, a master whom Atīśa, in his travels through many countries, met on the island of Sumatra and from whom he received mental training in the great compassion, Bodhicitta. On his return to India and then Tibet, Atīśa spread this precious teaching of Lo Jong widely, and it therefore had its first origin in Sumatra.
Earlier we mentioned four schools of Buddhist philosophy and Atīśa belonged to the Mādhyamika current, the highest level of education, while the Sumatran teacher, Serlingpa, belonged to the Sarvāstivādin school, less refined, basic, but this was no obstacle, because the center of both was Bodhicitta, the Great Compassion.
Atīśa, a great scholar, an abbot in his own university, was therefore much better educated than his master, but this was of no importance; he continued to travel and with genuine humility to seek and learn from masters in other countries. Atīśa received the fundamental instruction of Lo Jong from Master Serlingpa with a profoundly concentrated awareness of the gift he was being given.
Let us now see what the seven points of mental training are: First Point (First Practice the Preliminary Practices), indicates the necessity of practicing with awareness the four preliminary practices: a) Recognizing the preciousness and rarity of one's human existence; b) Recognizing impermanence; c) Recognizing karma, the law of cause and effect; d) Recognizing the limits of one's life and the world.
The second point analyzes the two Bodhicitta: 1) the ultimate or absolute Bodhicitta and 

2), the conventional or relative Bodhicitta.
1) In the ultimate bodhicitta, Having obtained mental stability, one receives the secret teaching. Consider all phenomena as a dream. This does not mean that the phenomena are false, but simply that they are not concrete, not corresponding to what we perceive as real.
And then he analyzes the nature of the innate mind, it is the antidote itself that is liberated from itself in the vacuity of vacuity, it meditates on the fundamental nature of everything; the essence of the path. This is the conception expressed by the Cittamātra current, the school of "Mind only".
In the post meditative period he teaches to observe with awareness like the illusionist who observes what appears as if it were an illusionist's show.
He recognizes the Lo Jong instruction as a diamond of infinite potential, as the sun that illuminates all things, as the plant that cures all diseases, and, seeing the five degenerations [1) of vision, 2) of passions, 3) of times -kāliyuga-, 4) of the decline of life force, 5) of the increase of bodily defects in physical decay], he transforms them into the path of complete awakening through the uninterrupted development of compassion, love, equanimity, and joy.
2) The practice of conventional or relative Bodhicitta is explained in the following verses: It attributes the entire blame for problems to a single factor, which does not imply sin, individual responsibility, neither ours nor others', but indicates the very limit of human nature. The Tibetan word for expressing this stress-producing root is Rang chei zin. Ran means self - chei zin egocentric vision with very subtle attachment to oneself always putting oneself first mentally - We simply have to recognize this human condition and only in this way we can really transform it with joy, satisfaction, without unnecessary guilt, this is our task, what gives meaning to life, it is the philosophy of compassion, the philosophy of Dharma.
The most serious and strongest Tibetan practitioners are the ancient geshe Kadampa masters who silently and humbly practiced Lo Jong day and night.
Meditate on the great kindness of all beings. Conventional Bodhicitta meditates on the natural kindness of all beings and shows us the need to remain in a hidden way, never wanting to appear, in the attitude of great compassion. We often ask ourselves useless questions, we want to analyze the authenticity of our own or others' kindness and we get lost, the only thing to do then is to meditate on the ultimate Bodhicitta and consider all phenomena as a dream.
Now we come to the practice of Tong Len, the heart of Lo Jong, the practice of giving one's happiness to others and taking their suffering by using the alternation of breath, with inhalation we take the suffering of others and with exhalation we give our happiness.
Generally when we meditate with this breath movement we think that with each exhalation we throw out all our negativity, automatically becoming wise and better, while inhaling we take in all positivity, but in this way we only exponentially increase the ego.
Tong Len is the greatest practice of humanity, Jesus Christ is the most visible example. Taking upon oneself the cross, offering one's life, for the good of all beings.
But in our practice we must first learn to take upon ourselves our own suffering and, likewise, always give all goodness to ourselves. Only after learning to know ourselves and purified ourselves in this way, we can go into the depths of taking upon ourselves the suffering of others and give them every blessing, joy, serenity. In the end each breath becomes the practice of compassion.
Before proceeding we must be aware that in our relationships with others there are three objects, three poisons and three virtues. The three objects are friends, enemies, and those who appear neutral to us; the three poisons are attachment, aversion, and indifference; the three virtues are the transformation of attachment into love and compassion, of aversion into compassionate gratitude because these enemies towards whom we feel hatred are actually our best friends as they are authentic teachers who allow us to develop our qualities, and, likewise, our indifference towards those who are neutral to us becomes wisdom of compassion.
This is what transforms Lo Jong into the four immeasurable thoughts: unlimited equanimity, unlimited love or benevolence, unlimited compassion, and unlimited sharing joy. All of this is joy in living in the world regardless of the circumstances in which we find ourselves, because it is what gives meaning to every moment of life.
Time has flown by, there would still be many things to say and we have only managed to deal with the first two points, but we can postpone to another occasion the explanation of the remaining five and more. As soon as it will be ready, you will find the transcript of this conversation in my blog so you can deepen what we said today.

Thanks for your attention, and have a good evening.

Wednesday 30 June 2021

Dying and living

Dying and living 

a dharma talk delivered in 2003 

by
Geshe Gedun Tharchin


For Buddhism it is very important to have a correct motivation to undertake any activity, because through a change of intention and motivation, one can change and modify the way one sees things. All religious traditions use prayer as a means of developing this correct motivation; particularly in Buddhism, prayer is understood as a process of 'familiarisation' with the correct motivation. Prayer does not necessarily have to be something to be recited verbally, but rather something that comes from the heart; this is the most important kind of prayer. From a Buddhist perspective, the mind is the main key to transforming the other elements we are made of, which are, primarily, the body and consciousness. As Dharma practitioners it is very important, especially in the beginning, to put emphasis on our mental activity. All the chanting, rituals and ceremonies that we may attend are secondary tools for the development and transformation of the mind. The mind is understood as the element which, when transformed, allows us to change our intention towards whatever activity we wish to undertake in our daily lives; through changing one's intentions and motivations a person can change the course of their life and the course of all the lives that follow.

Today we are going to talk about dying and living in Vajrayana tradition. The concept of dying and living or living and dying is very important and should be brought into our practice, as our life can be seen as the result of many small daily deaths. I am a believer in this lack of certainty that when I go to sleep at night, I am not sure whether I will wake up the next morning. The process by which we arrive at the deep sleep phase is, in some ways, similar to the one we go through after we die. The subject of death is very interesting, and it is also a simple subject, more so than one might think; we should not see death as something frightening and difficult to face.

Being alive brings us joy precisely by virtue of our particular abilities, such as awareness and the ability to act, but, in fact, being alive in itself would not be possible except as the result of the death phase we mentioned earlier. For example, we can say that a good day is the result of a good night's rest. In fact, when we fall asleep we lose contact with a certain reality and remain in a state of semi-consciousness, but this state is necessary to regain energy and be more active during the day. So a good night's sleep is necessary to have a positive and active day. But the opposite is also true, namely that if we have a pleasant day, full of satisfaction and successful activities, it will lead to good sleep. So we see a certain interdependence between good sleep and an active and positive day, and between a boring day and a bad quality of sleep. It is very difficult to talk about techniques and methods for developing good sleep, but in the Buddhist tradition it is believed that there are 'ways' to decide what kind of sleep to facilitate, or perhaps decide what time one wants to wake up the next morning. So a person can become 'familiar' with these issues through mental activity. What I am trying to explain is the relationship between the night cycle, during which we sleep, and the active cycle of our day, one influencing the other and vice versa. When we sleep we generally reach a phase of relaxation during which we cannot do any particular activity. In the Vajrayana tradition, it is believed that there are some practitioners who are able to practise the Dharma more during sleep than during wakefulness. This means that a person can even use sleep as a tool for Dharma practice. So a high-level practitioner can use the entire twenty-four hours to practice the Dharma. By Dharma practice we mean proper development of intentions, proper awareness, and proper development of all our qualities. A person who approaches life as a tool for Dharma practice inevitably sees death as a time to use for Dharma practice. From the Vajrayana practitioner's point of view, death is a once-in-a-lifetime event and is something unique to be able to increase and grow one's realisation.

So for the great practitioner death represents a treasure, a precious opportunity to develop great qualities. In the course of this experience there is the possibility to expand and increase one's realisation. According to the Vajrayana tradition, the moment of death for ordinary beings, such as ourselves, is the only moment when the so-called "innate mind" appears. When this innate mind manifests at the moment of death, we are able to maintain a state of awareness and acknowledge this apparition, then we can use it to make use of all our experience and increase our achievements. At the moment of death we come into contact with the innate nature of the mind and have the opportunity to explore the truths expressed in the Dharma. If, on the other hand, we fail to develop this awareness and limit ourselves to a conventional, superficial knowledge of the truth we have developed throughout our lives, our perception of all the things we face will be that of ordinary beings with a rather unrefined level of mind.

In order to be able to acknowledge the manifestation of this innate mind it is necessary to first try to become familiar with what is the process of disintegration of the five aggregates that we will face at the moment of death. The Self is made up of the five aggregates, and during the process of death these five aggregates dissolve according to a process that develops in different stages, which has been studied and is more or less the same for everyone. The disintegration of the five aggregates is linked to the four elements. The five aggregates are made up of the four elements, so the disintegration of one produces the dissolution of the others. The four elements are earth, water, fire and air (wind). The order in which these four elements are stated is the same as the order in which they dissolve, so the first is earth, the second is water, the third is fire and the last is air (wind) which dissolves in the last stage of consciousness. In the dissolving stage of the earth element there are particular experiences that happen within ourselves. Similarly when dissolving the water element, there will be particular experiences specific to this stage. This is also the case when the element fire is dissolved and when the element air is dissolved. The latter element produces specific signals in the consciousness. This process of disintegration is correlated with our five senses, so that as the disintegration of the four elements progresses, so does the disintegration and dissolution of our five senses. Similarly in sleep some of these elements dissolve. That is why the five senses do not function and are not active. So practitioners try to follow the process by which we die, but also the moment of transition from wakefulness to sleep. For a great practitioner, going to sleep is an excellent opportunity to try to acknowledge these signals. So if we go to bed too late and are exhausted by daily fatigue, we cannot do this kind of practice. It would be good to go to sleep with some reserves of energy, both physical and mental, to be able to face this practice. After the dissolution of the four elements, our outer senses are completely shut down, at which time we are defined as clinically dead. However, in the Vajrayana tradition this stage cannot be defined as death as it is believed that there are four more stages to go through to reach the dissolution of consciousness.

Our consciousness can be observed from two main levels. The first level, which is coarse and superficial, consists of disturbing emotions, while the second is a more subtle level. With regard to the gross state of consciousness, we refer to three emotions: attachment, hatred and ignorance. These three disturbing emotions are dissolved in the order in which we have stated them, and once all three have been dissolved there appears what is called, in a very beautiful term, the 'clear light', which could be called the innate nature of the mind. To explain the concept of 'clear light' in language that everyone can understand, we can say that it is the essence of the very core of our mind. When we refer to attachment, hatred and ignorance, at this stage, we are not referring to their practical expression, but to the signs that the expression of these three disturbing emotions can generate, and when these three types of signs dissolve, then there are four signs that appear within ourselves.

The moment when the innate nature of the mind, the essence of our mind, emerges following the dissolution of our disturbing emotions, is the moment when we can implement into it a whole series of knowledge that we have accumulated over the course of our existence and then put to use. This is a very important phase because it is the one in which we give importance to our stream of consciousness.

The great practitioners (yogis) are able to take advantage of this innate mind, to use it to meditate, to practice and to implement all those realizations that they have achieved in the course of their existence. There are some great Lamas, and I have witnessed them, who actually die clinically and maintain the meditation position and in appearance, on the physical level, do not appear to be deceased, yet when they finish their meditation the body collapses and falls. In this case by great Lamas I do not mean people who have been entrusted with great offices and honorifics, but very simple people who have practiced Dharma for a long time. At the end of this meditation, using the innate mind, they separate the mind from the body and at the same time pass into the intermediate stage of life called "Bardo". All these words to define life, death and the various stages in between are important but not as important as our willingness to experience these events through daily practice and becoming familiar with it. So, in summary, it is about having a constant awareness of all our experiences throughout our daily lives.

According to what the historical Buddha said in the Sutras, a good practitioner is able to be aware at all stages of their life: when they are standing, when they are eating, when they are sleeping... and they are able to intuitively remember any moment of their life because they try to constantly remain in a state of good and correct awareness. Consequently, if we do not maintain this awareness on a daily basis, in the course of all our activities, it will be impossible, when we go to sleep or when we die, to be able to remember our experiences as something living to use. The Buddha himself said that in order to be able to maintain a good level of daily awareness, much introspection and attention is needed. This awareness, which is the ability to take a moment before performing an action, allows us to evaluate whether that action is more or less correct. This ability to take a little time before embarking or not on an activity is the practice of mindfulness. This practice is the only one that allows us to lead a virtuous life. In the Vajrayana tradition the practice of mindfulness is in some ways neglected because it is taken for granted that it is part of general practices and is not studied separately. In the Theravada tradition the word mindfulness occurs more frequently. When you ask a Theravada master what kind of practice we should do at the time of death he will surely say that we should live trying to maintain our awareness. If we go to a Vajrayana master, he will explain to us a whole series of complicated things like the four elements, all the processes of dissolution, and in the end we won't remember any of it. The meeting point of these two traditions is that they have in common that they want to die with a positive mental attitude, with a virtuous mind.

We must try to apply both methods since we are fortunate, living in the West, to live in a context where many Buddhist traditions have met. In order to become aware of the moment of death, even if we are not aware of all the phenomena of dissolution, we must have a good practice of awareness. Therefore, the focus is on maintaining a positive mental attitude and a virtuous mind. Since I have been in the West I have come across many different traditions: besides the Chan/Zen and Theravada, which were not part of the Tibetan context, other lineages like the Kagyu and the Nyingma, which I did not know much about when I was studying in my monastery, and of course Christianity. We can draw on all these beautiful traditions to enrich ourselves further.

This is one of the advantages of our western civilization, that of living in a multicultural and democratic context that allows us to learn about different things, without the closed-mindedness that leads us to say: "What I do is better than what others do". This attitude is wrong and shows the ignorance that is at the source of all our miseries. Destroying this attitude and opening up to others is one of the goals of Dharma practice, and when you open up to others, you have the opportunity to receive a lot and thus further your spiritual growth. So one must also have a good capacity for introspection and above all awareness because, without these qualities, there is a risk of taking not only good things but also bad things.

The word ignorance is a term that in Buddhism could be explained in many ways and with different levels of introspection, however here we interpret it as mental closeness. To accept or consider something as positive just because it is mine is a symptom of closed-mindedness and is a selfish attitude. According to a Tibetan definition this attitude can be translated as "clinging to oneself". The symbolic phrase to define this mentally wrong attitude says: "This is good because it belongs to me". In the schools of philosophy for the definition of this concept enormous volumes are studied to describe in depth what we are saying. So ignorance can be defined as a narrow mind and as clinging to oneself, thus clarifying the relationship between ignorance and clinging to oneself. One of the objectives is to destroy these wrong mental attitudes because they are perceived as the source and origin of all our miseries. It is also true that many Buddhist practitioners have great ignorance. Sometimes there are people who are considered great practitioners, with a scholarly knowledge of Buddhism, who also possess great ignorance because they have a narrow mind. Sometimes having an exclusive knowledge of Buddhism, without knowing other things, can be a reason for closed-mindedness. Although this opinion of mine may be wrong. Living and dying should both be part of our existence to be experienced with awareness. Living in awareness and dying in awareness is the advice given in the Theravada tradition which, in my opinion, is the tradition that brings us most directly back to the essence of the Dharma message.

Question: In the course of an accidental death what happens to a person?

Answer: It is a more complicated death. If one comes to a coma because of illness and comes to it gradually, this process of dissolution may last longer. Those who die from particular illnesses that lead gradually to the moment of death are in some ways more fortunate because this gradualness allows more time to bring to mind all their experiences and make the most of this opportunity. It is a good opportunity to reflect in a slow and gradual way. If you are a good practitioner, whether you die from an accident or a violent event of any kind, there is the possibility of bringing all the experience back to mind at that particular moment. But there has to be an extraordinary awareness. Gandhi at the moment of death, after he had been shot, was able to invoke the name 'Ram', the equivalent of God. The fatal attack was not an event that disturbed him to the extent of upsetting his calmness of mind, he managed to keep it intact... great awareness.

Question: Does the way we die affect rebirth?

Answer: The nature of rebirth will be decided by the imprint one gives to the innate mind at that particular moment. Death is a unique opportunity and in a sense we practice for a lifetime to prepare for that particular moment. If we imprint at that moment with feelings of anger, this can cause reincarnations in what we call the Lower Realms. It's like an email, you can write pages and pages of messages on your computer, but if we get the recipient's address wrong we lose all our work ... our life's work. It's one of the secrets of Buddhism.

 




Tuesday 25 May 2021

Vesak 2021 on 26, May

To commemorate the anniversary of Shakyamuni Buddha's birth, enlightenment and mahaparinirvana on this auspicious occasion of Saka Dawa Duchen and Vesak Day, May 26, 2021, this short vision is dedicated to the prosperity of the Dharma and world peace, the well-being of all sentient beings, the pacification of malevolent forces, the disappearance of diseases and obstacles, the fulfillment of all virtuous desires, and especially the speedy elimination of the Covid-19 pandemic. And prayers for the millions of victims of the Covid-19 pandemic. 

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F2e-ZBvc0AA&feature=share

Per commemorare l'anniversario della nascita, dell'illuminazione e del mahaparinirvana di Shakyamuni Buddha in questa favorevole occasione del Saka Dawa Duchen e del Vesak Day, il 26 maggio 2021, questa breve visione è dedicata alla prosperità del Dharma e alla pace nel mondo, al benessere di tutti gli esseri senzienti, alla pacificazione delle forze malevole, alla scomparsa delle malattie e degli ostacoli, alla realizzazione di tutti i desideri virtuosi, e specialmente alla rapida eliminazione della pandemia del Covid-19. E preghiere per i milioni di vittime della pandemia Covid-19. 

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F2e-ZBvc0AA&feature=share

སྟོན་པ་ཤཱཀྱ་ཐུབ་པ་འཁྲུངས་པ་དང་མངོན་པར་རྫོགས་པར་སངས་རྒྱས་པ། སྐུ་མྱ་ངན་ལས་འདས་པ་བཅས་ཀྱི་དུས་ཆེན་གསུམ་འཛོམས་ཀྱི་ཉིན་མོ་ས་ཟླའི་དུས་ཆེན་ཁྱད་པར་ཅན་འདིར་བསྟན་པ་རྒྱས་པ་དང་འགྲོ་བ་བདེ་བ། ནད་མུག་འཁྲུག་རྩོད་སོགས་ཀྱི་རྒུད་ཚོགས་མེད་པར་འཛམ་གླིང་ཞི་བདེ་དང་། ལྷག་པར་ཏོག་དབྱིབས་༡༩༽ནད་ཡམས་འདི་བཞིན་མྱུར་དུ་འཇོམས་པའི་ཆེད་རྣམ་དཀར་དགེ་ཚོགས་ཀྱི་མཆོད་སྤྲིན་རྒྱ་ཆེར་བརྩོན་ཅིང་། འཛམ་གླིང་གང་སར་ཏོག་དབྱིབས་༡༩༽ནད་ཡམས་ཀྱིས་རྐྱེན་འདས་སོང་བའི་སྐྱེ་འགྲོ་ས་ཡ་མང་པོའི་དགེ་རྩར་ཡང་སྨན་པའི་བསྔོ་སྨོན་ཞུ།།https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=F2e-ZBvc0AA&feature=share


Thursday 1 April 2021

The sixteen pure human laws of Songtsen Gampo

The sixteen pure human laws (མི་ཆོས་གཙང་མ་བཅུ་དྲུག་, Wyl. mi chos gtsang ma bcu drug), were established by decree during the reign of the first emperor of Tibet, the Dharma King Songtsen Gampo.


Developing devotion for the Three Jewels (ལྷ་དཀོན་མཆོག་གསུམ་ལ་མོས་གུས་བསྐྱེད་པ་, lha dkon mchog gsum la mos gus bskyed pa)

• Seeking out and practising the sacred Dharma (དམ་པའི་ཆོས་བཙལ་ཞིང་བསྒྲུབ་པ་, dam pa'i chos btsal zhing bsgrub pa)

• Repaying the kindness of one's parents (ཕ་མ་ལ་དྲིན་ལན་འཇལ་བ་, pha ma la drin lan 'jal ba)

• Showing respect to the learned (ཡོན་ཏན་ཅན་ལ་ཞེ་མཐོང་ཡོད་པ་, yon tan can la zhe mthong yod pa)

• Being respectful to those of high status and one's elders (རིགས་མཐོ་བ་དང་རྒན་པར་བཀུར་སྟི་ཆེ་བ་, rigs mtho ba dang rgan par bkur sti che ba)

• Being benevolent to your neighbours (ཡུལ་མི་ཁྱིམ་མཚེས་ལ་ཕན་གདགས་པ་, yul mi khyim mtshes la phan gdags pa)

• Being honest (བཀའ་དྲང་ཞིང་སེམས་ཆུང་བ་, bka' drang zhing sems chung ba)

• Being loyal to close friends (ཉེ་དུ་མཛའ་བཤེས་ལ་གཞུང་རིང་བ་, nye du mdza' bshes la gzhung ring ba)

• Emulating those who are polite and decent (ཡ་རབས་ཀྱི་རྗེས་བསྙེག་ཅིང་ཕྱི་ཐག་རིང་བ་, ya rabs kyi rjes bsnyeg cing phyi thag ring ba)

• Having moderate food and wealth (ཟས་ནོར་ལ་ཚོད་འཛིན་པ་, zas nor la tshod 'dzin pa)

• Repaying those who have previously shown kindness (སྔར་དྲིན་ཅན་གྱི་མི་རྩད་གཅད་པ་, sngar drin can gyi mi rtsad gcad pa)

• Being honest with regard to weights and measures (བུ་ལོན་དུས་སུ་འཇལ་ཞིང་པྲེ་སྲང་ལ་གཡོ་མེད་པ་, bu lon dus su 'jal zhing pre srang la g.yo med pa)

• Having little jealousy (ཀུན་ལ་ཕྲག་དོག་ཆུང་བ་, kun la phrag dog chung ba)

• Not being influenced by evil companions (ངན་པའི་གྲོས་ལ་མི་ཉན་ཞིང་རང་ཚུགས་འཛིན་པ་, ngan pa'i gros la mi nyan zhing rang tshugs 'dzin pa)

• Speaking moderately and in a gentle way (ངག་འཇམ་ཞིང་སྨྲ་བ་ཉུང་བ་, ngag 'jam zhing smra ba nyung ba)

• Being patient and farsighted and enduring hardship (ཐེག་པ་ཆེ་ཞིང་བློ་ཁོག་ཡངས་པ་, theg pa che zhing blo khog yangs pa)

Tuesday 23 February 2021

64th. Anniversary of March 10, 1959 - 2023

We live in an increasingly uncertain world. In recent years we have faced conflicts, a pandemic, environmental disasters, economic challenges and a host of other social problems. We all have a personal responsibility to cultivate goodness and virtue in ourselves and in society.

My article is only a brief account of Tibet and Tibetans to give some essential information about the Tibetan cause. There are many people who are interested in the Tibetan cause but do not know the real issues. We must also recognise that the problem of Tibet is one of the many problems we are facing on our planet today.

☸☸☸

64th. Anniversary of March 10, 1959-2023

We are approaching March 10, the anniversary of the Tibetan uprising in​ ​Lhasa in 1959 against the Chinese invasion, and the Tibetans in exile commemorate this event every year so that no one may​ ​forget the tragedy of Chinese domination in their land.

To describe some facts about Tibet and what Tibetans have to endure​ ​the following article was published in 2008, but since then the Tibetan issue continues to remain unchanged and unfortunately very often the Tibetan​ ​cause has been exploited producing more harm than good!

Just to mention a few examples, it is important to think about​ ​on the condition of Tibetans by dividing two different aspects:
1) The welfare of Tibetans within Tibet must be dealt with and​ ​understood as an integrated part of the evolution that they are facing
by themselves with their potentialities and capacities and I have strong confidence in their courage, determination and intelligence, in fact they have already made great progress in all aspects in these very difficult 64 years.

2) A second aspect that is serious and worrisome is concerning the​ ​welfare of about one hundred thousand stateless Tibetans who live in the precarious condition of political refugees in India and Nepal. Despite the fact that​ ​64 years have passed and nothing has changed and three or four generations of families​ ​continue to live without any real civil rights in this stateless condition​ ​in their host countries. A very long wait for an answer to these unresolved​ ​issues creates further tensions in Tibetan society. 

Those who​ ​have the power to make decisions on these matters have a​ ​great responsibility to find a clear and speedy solution for these​ ​Tibetans without a homeland, without a national identity, stateless people destined to wander in limbo and always dependent on the will of others that may be benevolent today, but tomorrow could also turn into hostility.

Will the stateless Tibetans in India and Nepal be destined to live in this not very human condition forever?

____________________________________________________________
VOCI DI PACE/VOICES OF PEACE
1st June 2008
The Fifty Years of Tibet under China 1959 – 2008
by Geshe Gedun Tharchin

     Tibetans, by ancient tradition, would never think they were Chinese, nor could they ever imagine that Tibet was part of China
     In 2008 China hosted the Olympic Games, with the promise of greater protection of human rights within the country. Tibet has become the main international problem, as this nation has been fully occupied by China since 1959. Due to the massive and rapid flow of Chinese immigration into the Tibetan area, the Tibetans themselves have become an ethnic minority in Tibet itself, and there is now a risk of the loss of their culture and national identity. The only chance of salvation for Tibet is that the 2008 Olympics may influence the Chinese government to ensure greater respect for Tibetan culture and people.
     Thus, the whole world is watching the Chinese authorities regarding the promise made by the Chinese government in exchange for the possibility of hosting the 2008 Olympic Games in Beijing. But as the time for these to take place draws near, the repression in Tibet is still intensifying, and therefore many people around the world have sought to intervene in the still unresolved situation between Tibet and China. In the end, Tibetans both inside and outside the homeland lost their patience and expressed their exasperation on 14 March 2008.
     The truth is that Tibet and China have been neighbours for centuries. During the 7th and 8th centuries, Tibetan dynasties inflicted a crushing defeat on China. Princess Wen Chen married the Tibetan ruler Song Tsen Gam Po and the Ra Mo Che temple was built in Lhasa at her behest. There is another temple in Lhasa built at the behest of a Nepalese princess who also married the same king. At that time, both the dynasties of China and Nepal were proud that their princesses had married the king of Tibet, also because this ensured security for their states.
     Later, another Chinese princess married a king of Tibet. In these times, the relations between the two countries were based on mutual respect and the evaluation of their respective military powers. As a testimony to their common agreement, three stone pillars were erected in three different places: at the capital of Tibet, at the capital of China and along the border between the two states. The pillars were inscribed with epigraphs concerning the feelings of mutual solidarity between the two countries. A very famous verse on the pillars reads: "rGYA rGYA YUL NA sKYID, BOD BOD YUL NA sKYID", which means "Chinese are happy in China and Tibetans are happy in Tibet". On the basis of this historical event, Tibetans have always maintained that they are not Chinese and have their own national identity, different from the Chinese one.
     The first invasion of Tibet was carried out by Genghis Khan in 1209 and later the Mongol Khan took over the Chinese Empire and the Mongols inherited the lineage of the Chinese dynasty. Later, when the Chinese liberated their empire from the Mongols, regaining control of it, China began to claim all the territories that had been under Mongol rule, claiming them as its own! This is the only reason why China still claims that Tibet belongs to it.
     Tibetans, by ancient tradition, would never think that they are Chinese, nor could they ever imagine that Tibet is part of China. So I think that the struggle for the liberation of Tibet is a natural tendency of the Tibetan people.
     History has proved that Tibetans cannot be happy under Chinese authorities, nor can the Chinese be happy under a Tibetan government. The conflict has been going on for centuries and is part of the history of both nations. This battle must go all the way, leading to absolute victory or absolute defeat: in other words, this battle will last as long as there are Tibetans. It is an issue that will be carried on from generation to generation, as part of human history.
     Can dialogue be the solution? There is a great traditional obstacle to China and Tibet having a constructive dialogue. There is a Tibetan saying: "China fails in its aims because of too much suspicion and Tibet because of too much expectation". The current Sino-Tibetan dialogue began with the meeting between Mao Zedong and the Dalai Lama in Beijing in 1954 and continued until 2007 without achieving either side's objectives. So it is clear that the saying was true. It therefore seems futile to try to resolve the Sino-Tibetan conflict through dialogue.
     Perhaps one possibility might be that economic-political development can bring about a radical change in the social status of Tibetan people in the future, but it cannot change Tibet's past history.
     Another important question remains, concerning the Tibetan refugee families who have been living in India or Nepal for the last 50 years under the Central Tibetan Administration in Dharamsala: what will be their future? Should they continue to wait for Tibet to become free and give up their rights as local citizens, or should they integrate with local citizens?




Thursday 4 February 2021

Quest Smart Dharma


An online quest for SMART DHARMA

 

Question. Will you do online teaching? 

    You should try that. 

Answer. Not yet. I think online dharma teaching is the last choice.
    Maybe in the future. Who knows? Till now I refused. It seems very boring.

Q. Really? We all do use online teaching now and it is very safe, no contact.

A. I know that it is kind of Smart Working, but Smart Dharma Teaching seems too smart!

Q. But you are smart and you should try something new.....very trendy now.

A. I think that sometimes Silence is the best teaching, especially during such moments of emergency. 

Q. You are absolutely right.

A. I do it via Facebook and Messenger post. I will wait for the right moment, when everything becomes normal, otherwise it becomes Emergency Dharma Teaching!

Q. Emergency Dharma Teaching...I like this term.

A. Dharma has never been an emergency or nor an Emergency rescuer. Dharma is life itself. 

Q. Yes, but this time of Covid-19 our life is in emergency.

A. We made it an emergency only now. Life is in emergency (From Dharmic point of view life is very fragile as its nature, impermanent reality.) from the very beginning of it, maybe we didn't realised. Dharma is an all time life rescuer. 

Note:
During the period of the spread of Covid-19 in our world, a very high degree of virtual connection between human beings developed rapidly. Therefore, today virtual courses, lectures and telematic teachings are growing enormously so that they have become the prevailing mode of communication.
    Of course the virtual connection between human beings has less potential and can never fully replace the irreplaceable direct human relationships, although in this circumstance the use of technology is desirable and necessary in order to be able to communicate exchanges of ideas, thoughts, concepts, reflections, questions and wisdom through websites, Skype, Youtube, Facebook, Zoom, etc..
     However, caution is necessary because the teachings of virtual Dharma, initiations, spiritual transmissions and blessings increase too quickly and risk remaining only at a superficial level.
For this reason, for the time being, I personally do not feel like giving any further virtual teachings and instead make available the teachings, books and contents of this humble Dharma Archive site of mine, which offers a platform for the exchange of ideas and thoughts. Just click on the title of the topic and the chosen document will automatically open.
     I am happy to offer consultations, to answer any questions or clarifications for the navigation of the site itself and especially for everything related to Buddhism and Dharma. You can consult me by e-mail or through my messenger on Facebook.
                                                                                                                     Geshe Gedun Tharchin

Karma and Covid-19



An online Interview on Karma and Covid-19 relation

18 May 2020 


Question: The word KARMA is a popular one, world wide use. Can you please explain the meaning of karma from a buddhist point of view?

Answer: It is a very complex subject! Practically Karma means simply Action, principally mental action, our intention and motivation. "Good and bad karma are functions of your intention; When your intention is good, everything becomes good; When your intention is bad, everything becomes bad; So everything depends on your intention." Those lines are practical advice of Je Tsongkhapa. 

Q: What makes karma ripening?

A: An uncontrolled Ignorance, Attachment and Anger makes our negative karma to bring bad fruits and constant practice of Sila, Samadhi, Prajna makes our positive Karma to bring good fruits. 

Q: What is collective karma?

A: Collective Karma is either positive, negative or neutral intention that is based on common interest, such as working in a war, praying or meditating in Sangha, volunteering in a hospital teamwork so on, anything that you do with a common intention of a community. 

Q: This Corona Virus can we say that is the result of our previous karma? and the fact that some countries suffered a lot and some much less can we say that is due to collective karma?

A: Covid-19 is a karmic fruit, it is part of our samsara or life. But we cannot verify exactly which karma created it and how many and what kind of karmas involved in it's cause.  Certainly so many karmas, negatives, positives and neutrals, collectives and individuals, pasts and presents, together created this pandemia. Of course very sadly this pandemic caused lots of suffering to so many humans. And at the same time it gave us lots of new knowledge for our future humanity. Suffering is not always necessarily judged as negative and a result of negative karma. Sometimes positive karma can bring temporary suffering for the interest of long run goodness in future. Sometimes negative karma can bring temporary happiness as well. So, it is impossible to know the mystery of the karma game! In a way we humans are the main actor of karma. So, each of us should investigate our intention and motivation for every single action and being aware of and witnessing yourself is the main practice of Dharma or Meditation.

Sunday 3 January 2021

2021 Happy New Year - ཕྱི་ལོ་ ༢༠༢༡ གསར་ཚེས་ལ་བཀྲིས་སྨོན་འདུན་ཞུ། - Buon Anno

2021 
 HAPPY NEW YEAR
In 2020, the unexpected spread of covid-19 around the world created an atmosphere almost as if we were living under a chemical weapons attack, causing the loss of so many lives and a huge loss of growth in the global economy. 
 
The presence of the infinite capacity of the human mind in this limitless Universe allows one to overcome any problem with trust in one's own intelligence and will strength towards the realisation of humanity's aspirations of justice, peace, sharing and true fulfilment.
 
I believe that this pandemic will soon fade away and this New Year will bring us a healthy world with peace and prosperity.
By these merits, having obtained the state of omniscience.
And thus subduing the obstacle cause of afflictions,
May I liberate beings from the ocean of existence,
agitated by the waves of old age, sickness and death.
 
 

ཕྱི་ལོ་ ༢༠༢༡ གསར་ཚེས་ལ་བཀྲིས་སྨོན་འདུན་ཞུ།

ཕྱི་ལོ་ ༢༠༢༠ ལོར་གློ་བུར་ནད་ཡམས་ཁྱབ་འཕེལ་གྱིས་རྐྱེན་པས་འཛམ་གླིང་ཁྱོན་ཡོངས་ལ་ཛས་མཚོན་གྱི་འཇིགས་བསྐུལ་འོག་གནས་པ་འདྲ་བའི་ཁོར་ཡུག་གི་ཚོར་བ་དང་། མིའི་ཚེ་སྲོག་མང་པོ་བཤོར་བ་དང་འཛམ་གླིང་གི་དཔལ་འབྱོར་འཕེལ་རྒྱས་ལ་གྱོང་གུན་ཆེན་པོ་བཟོས། 

མཐའ་མེད་འཇིག་རྟེན་གྱི་ཁམས་སུ་གྲུབ་པའི་འགྲོ་བ་མི་ཡི་སེམས་ཀྱི་ནུས་པ་ནི་བླ་ན་མེད་པ་ཡིན། དེས་ན་རང་རང་གི་རྣམ་དཔྱོད་ལ་ཡིད་ཆེས་དང་། དྲང་བདེན་དང་ཞི་བདེ། འདྲ་མཉམ་དང་འགྲོ་མི་ཡི་དོན་དམ་གྱི་དམིགས་ཡུལ་བསྐྲུན་པའི་སེམས་ཤུགས་ཀྱི་འདུན་པ་དང་ལྡན་པ་ཞིག་གིས་འགྲོ་བ་མི་ཡི་རིགས་ཀྱི་དཀའ་ངལ་གང་ཡང་སེལ་ཐུབ།

མི་རིང་བར་ནད་ཡམས་འདིའི་མཐའ་རྫོགས་ཏེ་འཛམ་གླིང་འདི་སྔར་རྒྱུན་ལྟར་ཡོང་རྒྱུ་དང་ཞི་བདེ་དང་ཡར་རྒྱས་ངང་གནས་པའི་ཡིད་ཆེས་དང་རེ་བ་ཡོད།   

བསོད་ནམས་འདི་ཡིས་ཐམས་ཅད་གཟིགས་པ་ཡི། །

གོ་འཕང་ཐོབ་ནས་སྐྱོན་གྱི་དགྲ་བཏུལ་ཏེ། །

རྒ་དང་ན་དང་འཆི་བའི་རླབས་འཁྲུག་པའི། །

སྲིད་པའི་མཚོ་ལས་འགྲོ་བ་སྒྲོལ་བར་ཤོག །

 
2021 
 BUON ANNO
Nel 2020, l'inaspettata diffusione del covid-19 nel mondo ha creato un'atmosfera quasi come se vivessimo sotto un attacco di armi chimiche, causando la perdita di così tante vite umane e un'enorme perdita di crescita nell'economia globale.

La presenza dell'infinita capacità della mente umana in questo Universo senza limiti permette di superare qualsiasi problema con la fiducia nella propria intelligenza e la forza di volontà verso la realizzazione delle aspirazioni dell'umanità di giustizia, pace, condivisione e vera realizzazione.

Credo che questa pandemia svanirà presto e che questo nuovo anno ci porterà un mondo sano con pace e prosperità.
Grazie a questi meriti, avendo ottenuto lo stato dell’onniscienza,
E così sottomettendo il ostacolo causa delle afflizioni,
Possa io liberare gli esseri dall’oceano dell’esistenza,
Agitati dalle onde della vecchiaia, della malattia e della morte.
 
 Geshe G. Tharchin