ANOTHER VIEW ON WHETHER TIBETAN BUDDHISM IS WORKING IN THE WEST
Human reality consists of many evolutionary Levels of Organisation, from the highest, to the lowest.
This is the story of how one woman was expelled from an organisation she was attached to.
Attachment leads to Pain, - Buddha Gautama
96% of people are at the level of the football fan, - my Organisation, right or wrong! - Energy Enhancement Satchidanand
We graduate with honour from Organisations once our evolutionary level exceeds that of the Organisation - Energy Enhancement Satchidanand
I wouldn't want to be a member of any Organisation which would have me for a member. - Groucho Marx
Each organisation is composed of leaders and people of different levels of Evolution. Personally I went to a Dharma Talk with Lama Zopa who is recognised within Tibetan Buddhism as being spiritually higher than the Dalai Lama. As he went by, I and many friends spontaneously went into imagery of our past Tibetan Lifetimes. He said, "The aim of the Bodhisattva is to help all beings to Enlightenment. If you try to help people they will say bad things about you. If you continue to try they will come at you with sticks and stones. If you continue, they will use knives and guns. But, after all, What can they do? They can only kill you!! Ho Ho Ho!!!" Always, it is the quality, the evolution, of the person, the Bodhisattva, which truly counts - Energy Enhancement Satchidanand
As within, so without. The Student chooses the level of his teacher. - Energy Enhancement Satchidanand
ANOTHER
VIEW ON WHETHER TIBETAN BUDDHISM IS WORKING IN THE WEST
by Tara Carreon
A former American convert to Tibetan Buddhism for over 20 years speaks her mind.
Her viewpoint is that, although American Tibetan Buddhists have made the
understandable decision to adopt traditional Tibetan Buddhist beliefs because
they seem authoritative and reliable, this decision has been a mistake. First,
she finds that Tibetans themselves suffer from ethnocentrism and cultural
arrogance that blinds them to the virtues of Western culture and predisposes
them to favor all things Tibetan. Second, she finds American students far too
willing to abandon the advantages of our intellectual training and democratic
culture of equality in favor of medieval concepts still espoused by Tibetans due
to their cultural backwardness. The solution, this student says, is to abandon
Tibetan cultural belief systems, stripping Buddhism to its core values of
straightforward inquiry and insight into emptiness, supplementing these values
with Western virtues of optimism, creativity, and the scientific method. Such a
change in spiritual approach can lead to real cause for optimism and freedom
from outmoded notions that merely lead to psychological subjugation.
MY EXPERIENCE
I'm writing this article from the viewpoint of having spent the last 26 years
immersed in Buddhism, 22 of those in Tibetan Buddhism. For virtually all of that
time, I was extremely devout, did my practice compulsively, and usually held
monthly pujas in my home, to which other students were publicly invited. I
hosted scores of lama events, helped raise many thousands of dollars, sewed
clothes and cooked meals for my teacher, typed transcripts of tapes, and even
edited an entire book of teachings. I traveled to India and Nepal. I helped
build a traditional four-story Tibetan temple in Ashland, Oregon, one of the
biggest and most authentic temples in the West. I received the entire
transmission of Nyingma teachings from beginning to end, including the Dzogchen
Trekchod and Togyal teachings, and at the end, my teacher declared that I needed
no further teachings, and should simply practice what he had taught me.
My immersion in Tibetan Buddhism ultimately led to a psychological stalemate
between my impulse to be a perfect Buddhist and my inability to see any truly
"enlightened" developments in my psyche after these many years of effort. Three
years ago I began a radical reevaluation of my relationship with the dharma, and
those two other far more troublesome "jewels," the lama and the sangha. At some
point, I began to feel that I had been duped, and began to unpack my
psychological baggage. I discovered that I was seething with resentment over the
years of self-abasement, and humiliated by the fact that I had aided my captors.
While this language, and some of the language that I use in my essay below, may
seem harsh or accusatory, I believe that I feel about these things just as any
other ordinary person would feel after the years of effort turn out to have been
invested for no good reason. Additionally, the inner compulsion to perform
ritualistic practices in which I had lost faith, and the need to overcome the
fear that abandoning these practices would cause me to suffer terrible
consequences, has made for many painful days and nights. The process of
self-deprogramming has taken me to the edge of despair, and beyond. The truth is
that one who delivers their belief into the hands of others risks having to
fight to get it back. Having fought that fight, it is my desire to save other
people from wasting their time, energy and happiness in what I now view as a bad
investment in the realm of faith. I would suggest that sincere spiritual seekers
return to themselves and appreciate the good aspects of our own Western culture
in order to achieve spiritual satisfaction.
MY RESPONSE TO ALAN WALLACE'S RECENT ARTICLE IN TRICYCLE MAGAZINE
I was inspired to write this article after I read an interview in Tricycle
Magazine the other day with Alan Wallace, entitled "Tibetan Buddhism in the
West: Is it Working?" The title excited me. Finally, I thought, someone is going
to reveal the trouble behind the scenes, and we can start to get these things
out into the open. Since I know and like Alan Wallace, and admire him greatly as
a translator, I was very interested to hear his views.
Alan left too much unspoken, to say the least. For Alan, it's apparently too
delicate to discuss. I can understand why Alan plays it safe, being a professor
of Tibetan studies and a recognized spokesperson for Tibetan Buddhism. He has a
reputation to cultivate. An academic and a translator, he receives a share of
the veneration that is paid to the lamas. On the downside, no one wants to be an
accused heretic, like Stephen Batchelor. Like Alan, many Tibetan Buddhists are
very careful about what they say. Among those who know, the threat of "samaya
injury" from saying the wrong thing has a very chilling effect on speech. More
generally, it is no surprise that those on the path of "secret mantra" enjoy
playing at having secret information that they are forbidden to disclose.
Therefore, Tibetan Buddhists are unable to get their problems into the open
where they can examine them in the clear light of day. As always, silence and
secrecy breed ignorance and denial.
Alan blames Western students for what I see as the Tibetan failure to adequately
communicate the teachings. Granted, Alan is simply repeating what he's been
told, and I do not believe he is distorting the message. Real insiders often
hear from Tibetan lamas how little they respect Westerners. Sometimes, it seems
that beating up on Westerners is one of the Tibetans' favorite pastimes.
However, the lamas rarely open themselves to criticism about their own ways.
They can even get testy if pressed. Most students don't speak up unless they
want to be called heretics, and shunned from their communities forever. Only
people who don't have a reputation or position to protect can speak the truth.
That virtually precludes people with vested interests in the existing system
from saying anything meaningful at all -- at least if it's critical thinkng we
value. The "authorities" have, and will continue, to report only the "official
story."
The Dalai Lama, the most progressive of all Tibetans, for whom I have tremendous
admiration, says we should have open dialogue, and hash out our differences. In
response to the question: "In your recent book 'Ethics for the New Millennium,'
you called for a 'spiritual' and then an 'ethical revolution. Are you willing to
emerge as a prophet?," the Dalai Lama replies:
"[T]oday, this is not the business of any one individual. Everywhere there are
all sorts of organizations that are concerned with these things. Everyone has
the same responsibility now -- I think it's the democratic way. With increased
awareness, with a stronger sense of concern, every person must come forward and
join together as one body, each one cooperating with every other. There are some
individuals -- some intellectuals, some religious persons and quite a few
scientists -- who all have real awareness of the critical situation in the
world. But one problem is that they each just express their own view and then
let a few organizations carry the burden as best they can. Now, if we could more
often come together, discuss the problems in depth, make some appeals for
positive action or even offer stronger criticism of wrong actions, and even tell
the U.N. or some important governments -- then that's the way to have some
positive effect."
Robert Thurman, Rolling Stone, May 24, 2001.
This is how we refine our viewpoint
through free speech and debate. But while free speech is the soul of democracy,
it is very much against the usual Tibetan party line of "shut up and put up."
The Tibetans have never known and fundamentally distrust democracy. At the
Tibetan temple where I invested 22 years, there were no "members." We weren't
allowed to vote on anything, or to elect our "leaders". Theocratic by tradition,
Tibetan lamas rule by fiat. Even the Dalai Lama's speech is cautious and
diplomatic. (Does anyone else feel that he wants to break out and be himself,
and say things that he's not allowed to by tradition and his students?)
At the start of the interview, Alan tells us what Tibetan lamas think about
Westerners. The lamas' complaint is so familiar it invokes a yawn: Westerners in
"a consumer society, a business-oriented society" become "dilettantes ...
dabbling in one flavor after another, without gaining proficiency in anything."
We're "impatient, superficial, and fickle" and "in Tibetan society, fickleness
is considered to be one of the worst of vices." This description is more
ethnocentric, and less compassionate, than most students would expect of the
Dalai Lama's fellow-clerics. However, if you spend enough time with Tibetans,
you'll learn they feel quite superior. Tibetan lamas are comfortable sitting on
thrones, eating good food, and having people serve them. And it seems that many
Western Tibetan Buddhists are more than willing to intern as domestic servants
and handymen. Having come from a prosperous Western tradition that is in stark
contrast to the Tibetan lifestyle, Western students are willing to disavow it
all to become members of the enlightenment club. Or perhaps they have been dying
for an opportunity to serve, to work off their "White Man's Burden" with a
little self-abasement.
Alan continues to faithfully communicate the sad fact that the "finest lamas"
are quite disgusted with us. "The finest lamas are now refusing even to come to
the West, because they figure they could be spending their time either teaching
Tibetans in Asia, or they could simply go into retreat and meditate." The lamas
believe that "devoting time to people with such fickleness and so little faith
is time not very well spent." This is rather snitty. Westerners are the only
eager consumers of mystical practice, and even minority Americans aren't
attracted. (When was the last time you saw a group of African-Americans at an
empowerment?) Young Tibetans want jobs and secular education, not trinkets and
blessings. Alan's comment presumes that the great lamas have "bigger fish to
fry." The fact is, that due to the financial support they have received from
Westerners (and the Taiwanese), they can afford to remain esconced in relative
splendor in Kathmandu and Bhutan. Now let us take each of Alan's comments in
turn.
First, to self-slander our culture as merely a consumer and business-oriented
society, ignores the fact that our country is the most religiously tolerant
nation in the world. In cities across the nation, people from every faith live
and worship down the street from each other, which would be impossible in their
respective countries of origin. The combination of government-protected freedom
of religion, plus tax incentives and an actual interest in Buddhism, makes our
country a place where Tibetans are quite eager to live. They recognize that in
addition to religious freedom, having a refrigerator, a warm place to sleep, and
clean water, have spiritual as well as worldly advantages. While lamas often
criticize the "material" Western lifestyle, waxing eloquent about how their own
people live happily on little, due to their religious faith, most are eager to
secure residence, land, cars and temples. There is every evidence that the lamas
seek in America exactly what they had in Tibet -- wealth and leisure --
remembering always that according to a helpful doctrine, seeking leisure to
pursue the spiritual path is an unimpeachable motivation.
The complaint that we shop for Dharma is rather disingenuous. The lamas
themselves turned the Dharma into a traveling show, selling tickets to
empowerments with vague promises of spiritual benefit, revealing only after the
fact in empowerments, students take on weighty "samaya" commitments that
obligate them to eternal fealty to their initiators. This "bait and switch"
method always evokes a certain number of grumbles in the crowd of newbies, but
the eager smiles of older students are usually sufficient to overcome most
objection. After all, who can resist getting conked on the head with religious
objects by a wise old lama on a throne, while young acolytes circulate holding
incense and other magical items? And you get a knotted red string to wear around
your neck as a token of your commitment! Increasingly, you pay hundreds of
dollars for the privilege of attending an empowerment, for which all are
presumptively qualified, who have the ability to pay. There is no question of
qualification or readiness, or spiritual sincerity. The students manning the
door want to see real dollars, not earnest entreaties. Possibly we should blame
Americans for this venality. Probably not. The teachers chose the teachings, the
place and the time. The students came, paid money, and listened. According to
Alan, however, they blundered. Somehow, the criticism seems unwarranted.
Tibetan lamas are equally vulnerable to criticism on grounds of "fickleness."
Tricycle has reported enough about "competing tulkus," "the Shugden schism" and
countless other instances of petty clerical infighting to establish that if
fickleness is a vice, Tibetan clerics are ridden with it. Gossip is a staple in
Tibetan Buddhist circles. In our center, we were always getting the word from
the top about "Who's hot, and who's not." The list of disgraced students and
rival lamas grew over time, until one day I found my own name added to the list.
I think "fickleness" usually occurs when two lamas vie for the attentions of a
single wealthy donor.
Alan suggests that if the supply of sincere students dries up, the lamas will go
away. I suspect that those lamas who would leave have already departed. And what
did they expect from us, anyway? Did the lamas really expect students to learn
Tibetan, memorize rituals, join the clergy en masse, and build large temples
everywhere? If they want that type of performance they need to stick with their
own people. Do Christian missionaries pack up and leave when their prospective
converts don't learn all the hymns? Put simply, this is a harsh, judgmental
response that does too little to honor the sincerity of students who often
surrender family and livelihood to the pursuit of Tibetan Buddhism. Does it seem
compassionate to write off an entire culture as fickle, and return to the
mountain fastness to engage in "more productive" contemplation? But Alan
delivers this harsh declaration without blinking. You can see that, by
controlling entry and status into the lofty world of lamas and their
"entourages," Tibetans can induce Westerners like Alan to tacitly adopt their
own prejudice. You might start to think that one can get approval from Tibetans
by criticizing Westerners.
Make no mistake about it, the lamas are sure they know best, and will likely not
be impressed with your own speculations or reflections about spirituality. In
this regard, Alan warns us that in seeking to ascertain spiritual truth, "one
extreme is ... individualism."
Let's play that back again. Would it sound different if I told you I was quoting
Mao, or an Orwellian Big Brother? Can an American be saying this? Individualism
is the basis of our Constitution, of all our civil rights and humanitarian
values. Each person's individual buddha nature is the basis of dharma. Is
individuality not the beauty of our unique existence in this universe?
Why this paranoia about independent thought? Is it really not possible for an
individual to realize the truth without a prescription? Buddha, presumably, was
an individual, who through the exercise of his own mind, found freedom. Yet
Thinley Norbu criticizes Americans for having "freedom habit." Must we choose
between Buddhism or freedom? Perhaps in some brand of Buddhism, appropriate to a
feudal system, peasants do not ask these questions. Americans, however, would
probably choose freedom, thereby choosing, I believe, true dharma as well.
Alan denigrates our ability to think for ourselves, saying that with respect to
making spiritual decisions, we will always be like "a kid going into a
restaurant and saying, I'll just take what tastes good." This metaphor implies
that students are children who just want to eat candy. But this assertion is
illogical. We must trust ourselves to make spiritual choices, else we could not
even make the first decision to rely upon the doctrine. Alan's view is that
although we were smart enough to select the Tibetans to be our teachers, now
that we've found our true "parents," the lamas, we will always and forever be
children. Thus we can never grow up, and must rely totally on the lamas. Says
Alan: "That's the core issue in Buddhism." I strongly disagree. The core issue
in Buddhism is not our ignorance, but rather our intelligent, enlightened
nature.
While on the subject of being treated like a child, I've often heard the lamas
say, "it's time to grow up." This is where they get you coming and going. If you
become a high-maintenance disciple, showing lots of devotion, or having many
questions, you're called a baby. If you think for yourself, you're a deluded
individualist. As in all double-bind situations, the issue isn't whether we are
children, but rather, whether the lamas shall tell us who we are. Western
students deserve dignity and respect, and they do not receive it from the bulk
of lamas. On the other hand, they clearly have not demanded it.
The rest of Alan's interview is full of nice questions about whether Buddhism is
working in the West, and how we must make Buddhism work for Westerners, but he
gives no answers. So the whole interview basically boils down to "No, Tibetan
Buddhism isn't working, because Americans aren't doing it very well." Well, that
clearly is the official story.
WHY TIBETAN BUDDHISM ISN'T WORKING
Am I alone in saying there is a humongous culture clash between Tibetans and
Westerners? That's not so embarrassing, is it? So let me ask you another
question: Do we live in Tibet or in the West? And if we live in the West, isn't
it fair to ask Tibetans to understand our culture somewhat before they criticize
us extensively?
At the sound of these words, I can see the true believers heading for the
aisles, thinking, "This is effrontery, this is sacrilege; I want nothing to do
with it." Which is not a good sign. Cultural isolation crystallized Tibet into a
theocratic state of lettered tulkus ruling over a vast illiterate peasantry,
creating a culture so unified with its religion that it lacks virtually all
secular cultural expression. This "union of Church and State" creates
innumerable problems. Western students, who are not serfs or shepherds, should
not be dealt with in the same way. Still, in your average Dharma center, the
lama's word (or his wife's word) is law. Questioning is disobedience, and
disagreement is heresy. If you think I'm exaggerating, I'll give you a list of
centers to visit.
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Few of us took vows of refuge with various lamas because we longed to chant in a
foreign language and bow before enthroned teachers. Those who did should have no
complaints. But most people were trying to find some inner peace and
self-understanding. If we're not getting that from involvement with the lamas,
it isn't sacrilege to say so, and return to our original spiritual concerns. We
are entitled to ask, "WHAT IS BUDDHISM?" After 22 years of being a "Tibetan"
Buddhist, I'm finding it hard to answer that question. Actually, it would be
hard for any Tibetan Buddhist to answer this question. Tibetans have little need
for the Buddha, who has been eclipsed by Padmasambhava, the Karmapa, or whatever
tulku-dynasty is revered by the sect. So Tibetan Buddhists know about as much
about the Buddha as Mormons know about Jesus Christ (not much).
If you learn Tibetan Buddhism, you learn more about Tibet than about Buddha. As
long as we believe that the colorful and exciting Tibetan culture is Buddhism,
we will be unable to find true Buddhism. Tibetan Buddhism is not working for us
because we are unable to find its essence in the complex and colorful Tibetan
way of life. Tibetan symbols do not speak to us, nor do we learn from reciting a
sadhana in a foreign language. (It took the Catholics until the 1960's to stop
saying the Mass in Latin, though, so this folly is equally the result of our own
cultural absurdity).
There's no question but that, if you become a Tibetan Buddhist, you get a lot of
stuff. You get a red string tied around your neck right off the bat. You get
sacred practices, protector deities, mantras and visualizations. But what are we
surrendering? I would suggest we are surrendering something very valuable -- our
belief in objective, empirical reality, as revealed through scientific
knowledge. We take this belief for granted of course, because it is second
nature. But if you become a Tibetan Buddhist, this sense of reality can begin to
slip away, little by little, replaced by a patchwork of myth, fantasy, and what
passes for meditation.
From the viewpoint of an educated American, Tibetan culture is anachronistic:
young Tibetans are dazzled and overwhelmed by our modern world. The older lamas
are bemused by our culture, and turn away from it too quickly to learn much
about us. They live, psychologically, on a flat earth, without the benefit of
scientific knowledge. Often their lectures are rather quaint, as they present
fallacious arguments to support the doctrine. Many are sweet, sincere, and so
hopelessly out of touch that Steven Segal managed to pass himself off as a tulku.
Can we seriously rely on teachings from that culture?
The Tibetans themselves suffered greatly due to their blind faith in a
theocratic system that failed utterly to provide two essentials of governance:
(1) good foreign relations, and (2) a reliable military. As a result, two
million Tibetans have died due to Chinese aggression that has gone basically
unredressed by the international community. Tibet was unable to meet the
challenge of the twentieth century. It had no independent-thinking intelligencia.
But for the efforts of Heinrich Harrer to give the young Dalai Lama an education
about the world beyond the walls of the Potala, it is questionable whether Tibet
could have fielded even one political leader to explain its situation to the
world. None of this is to justify the murderous outrages of the Chinese, whose
conduct is so vile as to defy expression. However, Tibet's political leaders
owed their constituents a modicum of protection from foreign aggression, at
least through diplomatic avenues. Unfortunately, the ingrown monastics of Tibet
were unsuited to international political life, and practiced the defense tactics
of an ostrich.
Due to what can only be seen as misguided confidence, Tibet's inept leaders
wielded political authority nonetheless, leading to a cultural disaster. As the
Dalai Lama explained in a recent interview with Robert Thurman, the routine
integration of the clergy in the secular economic fabric damages society:
"Some Tibetans also say that in the past, the way of life was that the dharma
almost served as a livelihood or a routine profession. The Buddhist was not
thinking of nirvana, not caring for liberation, just how to make a living.
Officials used it for their lives, monks, nuns and lamas for their lives.
Inside, in their inner world, they were like ordinary people, lusting and
hating. So the dharma became a poison in this way.
When there is too much focus on the Buddhist institution, and the country goes
to waste, that's what it means when people say Buddhism ruined the country."
(Rolling Stone, May 24, 2001)
Now, in this country, Tibetans are making a similar mistake. In Tibetan Buddhist
dharma centers all over America, lamas give orders to a tight hierarchy of
appointed followers, who are often chosen for their willingness to donate time,
money, real estate and property. Students are encouraged to adopt a medieval
mind-set, and to abandon belief in their ability to make their own decisions.
Lamas advise on who to marry, when to divorce, what jobs to take or quit. Many
students request "divinations" of future events, and even pay money to have
monks recite volleys of prayers to "eliminate obstacles."
What is difficult to understand for those who haven't been immersed in Tibetan
Buddhism for a long time, is that this religion is obsessed with controlling
outcomes by the use of magical invocations. This religious model is most like
the Christian feudal religion of medieval Europe, linked to a large agrarian
serfdom. This religious model also carries with it a powerful anti-logical seed:
the belief that favorable outcomes of desired events are controlled by the
intercession of supernatural powers.
The red robes, the chants, the tormas, the deities, the colorful temples, the
instruments, the sadhanas, the codes of conduct, the lamas, the teacher-disciple
relationship are products of Tibetan culture. These symbols were created by
Tibetans and likely can only be understood by Tibetans. We Westerners will never
be able to understand these things, or translate them into our culture. Fire
pujas, exorcisms, prayers to oath-bound protectors. These practices are
beautiful, but non-translatable. Period. We do not need to obtain supernatural
aid to make the crops grow and the lambs fat. Reciting long lists of protector
deities and invoking their aid does not rank high on my list of contemplative
activities. These practices are not only unhelpful for most students; there is
substantial evidence that people can develop bizarre habits from long repetition
of activities that they do not understand, and are pursuing solely due to
"faith" that the practice will produce some magical benefit. The Dalai Lama
responded with unusual candor recently when asked, "What prevents people from
understanding [the essence of Buddhism]?":
"When people think it's all about doing tantric visualizations and rituals. When
I talk about the Buddhist dharma, I'm not talking about just chanting and
rituals. If it's thought to be a philosophy, it's not that, either. The dharma,
it's just the mind. I'm afraid that among the Tibetans, the Chinese and also
some Westerners -- the new Buddhists -- in many cases they consider the practice
of Buddhism is simply to recite something and perform some ritual, putting false
expectations on the esoteric magic of tantra: 'Oh, if I do this, I may get
something amazing!' So they neglect the basic instruments that actually
transform our mind. These instruments are the altruistic spirit of enlightenment
[bodhicitta], the transcendent attitude, renunciation, the realization of
impermanence, the wisdom of selflessness. People who think they have a magic
gimmick neglect these things. So their inner world, their inner reality, remains
very raw. Sadly, use of ritual can feed that neglect. Knowledge of philosophy
can also feed that. It's a great tragedy."
SEPARATING THE WHEAT FROM THE CHAFF
Most of us came to Tibetan Buddhism because it seemed to be a reliable
repository of ancient Buddhist wisdom. Along the way we discovered it is
actually a vast cultural tapestry with more of the medieval than we originally
expected. Assuming there is more here than culture and folklore, can we separate
the wheat from the chaff? Can we find the core Buddhism in the midst of the
Tibetan glare?
Core Buddhism can only be that which is indestructible and not based on form,
i.e., that which the Buddha taught that relates to the mind, because only that
is universal and (hopefully) can translate from culture to culture. As the Dalai
Lama said, "The dharma, it's just the mind."
What did the Buddha teach about the mind? I remember one thing from my studies,
and that was first and most importantly, that the Buddha abandoned established
religious practices, and looked at mind for himself. This seems like the
quintessential "individual" act. The Buddha apprehended the truth of voidness
and taught the Prajnaparamita mind teachings which state that there are no
inherently existing self, or objects, that form is emptiness and emptiness is
form. The story of the Buddha's life is a story about Indian society, including
injunctions to refrain from teaching to "blonde-haired people," and the detailed
rules of monastic conduct. These cultural trappings are not worthy of special
reverence. Buddha's acts of cultural defiance are far more inspiring: his
abandonment of kingship, his rejection of existing doctrine, his transcendence
of gurus and asceticism. His self-reliance, in a word.
Like the Buddha, who called everything into doubt, we too should question for
our whole life. But the lamas tell you not to follow the Buddha's example,
telling you you're arrogant to think that you are like him. They urge you to
question for about one minute, then insist that you make up your mind to rely on
the lama's authority and abandon questioning for the rest of your life. As a
practical matter, such questioning is as bad as none at all.
As history unveils the future of Tibetan Buddhism in this country, we are not
going to see a careful translation from Tibet to the West. Tibetan Buddhism is
finished for Westerners. Along with Japanese Buddhism, Thai Buddhism, Indian
Buddhism, and the rest.
We don't need lamas. We don't need any authority figures. We don't need temples.
We don't need a lot of books. We don't need to give anyone money. We don't need
someone holding our hand. We have everything we need to realize our true nature
already inside us, because we have our minds and individuality. We need to love
ourselves, and trust ourselves.
OUR OWN SPIRITUAL INHERITANCE
We Westerners and especially we Americans have a hidden dharma tradition to
inspire us right here in our own culture. Our aspirations -- to save the planet,
feed people, release wrongly imprisoned people, give women the right to vote --
are wholesome. Our belief in principles of equality, fairness, justice, and
freedom of speech and belief are all "Buddhist" principles without having that
name. As a guide for social governance, the U.S. Constitution is far superior to
King Trisong Detsun's code, which provided harsh punishment, even death, for
those who violated Buddhist rules. We have a very good understanding of what it
means to be a "bodhisattva," but we don't call it that. We call it being a
"humanitarian" or a "social activist." If we supplement the core Buddhist
teachings with these noble traditions, and unite knowledge of the union of
appearance and emptiness with the clear-eyed view of the scientific method, we
have a very adequate philosophy of positive development. Once we agree that
science provides a better explanation for phenomena than superstitions involving
supernatural forces, there is plenty to agree on in this universe. Rather than
cleaving to old ways, retaining magical notions as doctrinal elements, a viable
religious philosophy joins with the current knowledge of the day to open a way
to live creatively and optimistically, thus providing concrete benefit to all.
Some of us might even find that our view of "enlightenment" must embrace more
than the Buddha is said to have taught, to encompass all of the fruits of human
knowledge, from astrophysics to nanotech, from the genetic origins of life to
the ecology of the planet. Medievalism, even of the Buddhist sort, will not
serve this quest for integration. Perhaps "enlightenment" itself is evolving.
Then again, maybe there's something inherently wise about our "natural" and
"ordinary" mind. Someday, if we explore directly for ourselves, we might even be
able to take these "mind" teachings out of the realm of philosophy, conjecture
and fantasy, into the realm of reality. To do that, we're going to have to work
with our culture and knowledge, and test these old ideas against scientific
observations of mind. Contrary to what the Tibetans think, that their doctrine
has codified absolute and immutable principles, I think rather that they can be
improved and developed. Maybe the Tibetans had a much lower expectation about
everything than do we Westerners, not only culturally speaking, but also
spiritually speaking, and we can do them one better.
We can be optimistic about our ability to learn new things based upon new
investigations. The Dalai Lama has repeatedly observed that Western science may
be able to help fill in gaps in Tibetan Buddhist knowledge of the mind's nature,
which however accurate, is fundamentally intuitive, subjective, and unconfirmed
by outer observations. Everything from Tibetan descriptions of the states before
and after death to the phases of meditative insights, are fundamentally a
compendium of traditional lore. Western science has just begun to observe the
physically confirmable evidences of mental activity Biofeedback studies of Zen
students actually provided fascinating confirmation of the observable effects on
brainwave function associated with Zen meditation. In this way, empirical and
intuitive knowledge can support each other to establish a solid foundation for
human self-improvement, one that does not require vast investments of "faith."
TRADITIONAL TIBETAN FAITH-BUILDING EXERCISES MAY INHIBIT MEDITATIVE EFFORTS
While faith in doctrinal pronouncements is certainly the order of the day in
semi-literate feudal cultures, it carries little convincing force for people
raised in a rational scientific culture. We are far more likely to feel
comfortable in a 747 than flying on a magic carpet, even in the company of a
Tibetan lama.
There is a fundamental need to rest easy in your beliefs, especially if you are
trying to meditate. Dropping conceptual thought is much more difficult if you
are uncomfortable with your assumptions about reality. Thus, making a lot of
medieval assumptions about reality, cause and effect, and the need to propitiate
the protector deities is not necessarily good preparation for non-conceptual
meditation of the sort universally practiced by virtually all Buddhists. In this
way, the Tibetan Buddhist emphasis on arcane rituals can definitely set an
aspiring meditator off their stride, making meditative accomplishments seem all
the more difficult. It's like putting on a large weight pack before starting to
climb a mountain. Why do it? We will climb higher, and enjoy it more, without
this baggage.
Compounding the problem for Westerners trying to develop faith in the Tibetan
Buddhist philosophy is the fact that the traditional faith-building exercises do
not work for Westerners. The standard prescription for developing faith is to
contemplate the virtues of the "lineage gurus" and to develop devotion to one's
own guru as the living embodiment of a lineage of wisdom masters going back to
Vajradhara, Padmasambhava, or Shakyamuni. The usual practice, of reciting
lineage prayers in Tibetan, is about as faith-building as reading the "begats"
from Deuteronomy in the original Aramaic. Of course, if I had listened to tales
of Guru Rinpoche from the days of childhood while eating tsampa around a
yak-dung fire, the effect would likely be otherwise.
Logically, it makes no sense to attempt to invoke strong emotional feelings
based on childhood conditioning that does not exist. The heroes of my childhood
were Abraham Lincoln, Martin Luther King, and other Western culture heroes. No
injection of doctrine and myth is going to transfer that type of deep admiration
to a Tibetan historical figure, and the attempt to stimulate such emotions is
misguided. I can tell you from 22 years of personal experience that, no matter
how much Tibetan history you imbibe, and how earnestly you attempt to give rise
to the appropriate feelings of reverence and awe, the results will be
unsatisfying. You may refine your yearning and obsession to an impressive
degree, but nagging doubts will grow in tandem with your efforts to suppress
them. Ultimately, the purported "prerequisites" for meditation will eclipse the
view of non-duality altogether.
WHAT NEXT FOR THE TIBETAN CLERICS?
The Tibetans may need to humble themselves. They've entered a new world about
which they know nothing. While it's fashionable to attend the chanting
exhibitions of the Gyuto "Tantric choir," and there is no doubt the cultural
display of old Tibet is charming and beautiful, that culture is of the past.
Besides nostalgic yearning, Americans have no need to provide a cultural
hothouse in which to preserve a displaced theocratic culture. It will be
humiliating for Tibetans to continue to sell their traditions on stage for small
change. Better to move on. Old things are lost forever. And often times, this is
not a bad thing. Things die so that new things can be born. The Tibetans can let
new ideas be born in themselves. Why hold on to old ways that aren't useful or
relevant any longer? Indeed, young Tibetans are like young people everywhere.
They have no desire to follow the ways of a culture that has left its roots in
the distant soil of the Tibetan heartland, particularly if they can actually
move to the West. If their religion works for them, great. If they can find
adherents who also find value in Tibetan Buddhism, their religion business may
also prosper in the marketplace of ideas. I think it likely, however, that
Tibetan Buddhism will survive only in stripped-down forms, once the cultish
fascination with arcane rituals has dissipated. The Tibetan clerics should
prepare for this development. While possibly not as devastating as the failure
of the dot.coms and the electricity crisis is for California, the effects will
be felt as the West burns through yet another religious fad.
DHARMA FOR THE WEST
Now that I am no longer a "Tibetan" Buddhist, and have learned to think for
myself, and am not hammered down by negative views of myself and the universe,
like sin and samsara, etc., the World seems very exciting to me in a way I never
knew before. Human beings are marvelous creations, so very intelligent and
creative. I think there is tremendous hope all around us and ahead of us.
Besides the fact that the world and our minds spontaneously exist without our
having labored to create them, which should be enough of a miracle for anyone,
there are reasons for optimism about the prospects for a good life for humanity
on earth. Slowly, we are all speaking the same language. Since war often is the
result of miscommunication, with fuller communication among the nations, war
could become obsolete. As war decreases, resources are going to be freed up,
which will enable us to improve the lot of people and the planet. As we
communicate with each other about our similar needs, and global resource
competition meets with a world pool of intellectual capital, standards of living
may equalize. Science is allowing us to see the wonder of the universe and of
our selves in a way that has never happened before. Our visions are expanding.
Someday we'll be able to travel through the universe. And who knows, maybe
someday we'll even agree on what it means to meditate, and who we are.
We can open ourselves to a world that will truly inspire us. We should be
careful about adopting a world view that equates the outer world with ugliness
and evil (samsara), and which urges "retreat" into "meditation" as the only
refuge from a doomed existence. Quite simply, we shouldn't use Buddhism to
become depressed about the state of the world. We should believe we can make
things better for everyone and everything. If everyone can be a bit of an
activist, and do their part, I feel sure we can change the world to be a better
place for everyone. For me, that's Dharma.
I want to thank my husband, Charles Carreon, who has traveled the Buddhist path
with me for almost as long as we have been married, which is 27 years, for his
enormous contribution to this article.
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