By Dr. Akong Tulku Rinpoche
The mind is the root of all
our experience, both of ourselves and of others. If we perceive the
world in an unclear way, confusion and suffering will surely arise. It
is like someone with defective vision seeing the world as being upside
down, or a fearful person finding everything frightening. We may be
largely unaware of our ignorance and wrong views, yet at present the
mind can be compared to a wild tiger, rampaging through our daily
lives. Motivated by desire, hatred and bewilderment this untamed mind
blindly pursues what it wants and lashes out at all that stands in its
way, with little or no understanding of the way things really are.
The
wildness we have to deal with is not simply that of anger and rage; it
is much more fundamental than that. The tendency to be driven by
ignorance, hatred and delusion enslaves us, allowing confusion and
negative emotions to predominate. Thus the mind becomes wild and
uncontrollable and our freedom is effectively destroyed. Normally we
are so blind that we are unaware of how wild our minds really are. When
things go wrong we tend to blame other people and circumstances, rather
than look inside ourselves for the causes of the suffering. But if we
are ever to find true peace or happiness it is that wildness within
which must be faced and dealt with. Only then can we learn to use our
energy in a more positive and balanced way, so that we stop causing
harm to ourselves and to others.
Before we can tame the tiger we
must first track it down. Neither goal is at all easy to achieve, but
the difficulties and dangers simply have to be faced. If a child is
weak and underdeveloped it isn't helpful just to let that child have
its own way. It is the parents' responsibility to encourage the child
to walk, so that its body may grow properly and become strong. Thus
firmness on the part of the parents can be seen to be a manifestation
of true compassion. Similarly, although training the mind might be
difficult, even painful at first, we still have to go ahead and do it.
The
teachings in Taming the Tiger are applicable to anyone who is
suffering, not only to oriental people or to Buddhists. Eastern people
may differ from Westerners in their facial features, manner of dress,
customs and ways of talking, but human nature is universal and runs
deeper than mere racial characteristics or skin colouring. Kindness,
wherever it is shown, generally evokes a favourable response; while
its opposite causes anger, sorrow or pain. When we consider the joy and
suffering in a direct and practical way, it becomes clear that the
mind, which is behind everything we do or say, is essentially the same.
East or West. Yet where is this mind? We have only to look at everyday
situations and examine our behaviour, our desires and our suffering in
our every-day situations in order to detect its presence.
As
human beings there is a great deal of desire and attachment in our
lives. This can cause much suffering, both to ourselves and to others.
If the desire is unfulfilled we become unhappy. Even when we get what
we want the happiness is only temporary, because invariably a new
desire arises to take its place. Time after time all we are doing is
trying to satisfy desires which are limitless, shapeless and as vast as
the sky. The process is repeated throughout our lives. As children we
want lots of toys - one is not enough - and we soon tire of each, in
turn. Later on we may have educational ambitions, or wish to have lots
of friends. Desire makes us strive to collect material possessions; own
a whole range of different clothes; to buy special kinds of food; to
collect property, cars, radios and televisions. Less obviously, we may
wish to be beautiful or to avoid sickness for as long as we live. We
might even fall ill in order to attract attention, sympathy, kindness.
Yet as soon as we succeed in becoming ill we want to be well again.
Similarly,
our attitude to eating may be affected: when our stomachs are full, we
want them to be empty; when empty, we wish they were full. In all these
many ways we constantly search for and dream about what we haven't got,
without ever finding true satisfaction. Despite all our effort,
hardship and expense, we constantly fail to fulfil our wishes.
The
mistake is that we expect to find happiness outside ourselves, failing
to realise that it can only come from within. If we admire a particular
flower and pick it, within days its beauty has gone. But as it withers
and dies the desire remains and we want another flower. Clearly our
desire cannot be eternally satisfied by any one flower; rather it
requires an endless supply of them. So what is required is a change in
the way that we perceive the world. We have to learn to accept our
desire and yet not be driven by it, only then will we be content with
what we already have instead of constantly wanting more. Desire is
limitless. It is said that since the mind has no form and no finite end
then likewise desire has no form, no finite end it is shapeless, it
just goes on and on. Only by taming the mind, therefore, can the
endless search for gratification be pacified and our understanding be
developed. At that stage we become a little more mature, a little more
grown up.
Of course, to some extent, our minds are trained
already. When we are babies, we simply act, move and make noises on
impulse. Later on as we grow older we do learn some control and
independence. Enduring hardships and relating with others grants us a
measure of understanding, and some maturity does develop naturally. So,
it could be said that we have tamed the tiger a little, in living and growing from day to day. Yet this is still not riding the tiger.
Gurdjieff
expresses mind-training in terms of a wild horse and its trainer. Wild
horses are neither trained by being completely left alone, nor by
continual beating. Such extreme measures will inevitably fail. We have
to find a middle way. On the one hand, no benefit comes from the
negative attitude that it isn't worthwhile to try and train the wild
horse at all. On the other hand, we have to accept that the horse is
wild and have a compassionate approach towards training it. Perhaps
most important of all, the horse must also accept us as its trainer.
Maturity
is only possible once we accept who we are. It isn't helpful to justify
our own wildness by blaming society, our family, or our enemies. We
have to reach some kind of agreement with ourselves as we really are
and accept our thinking, whether it be good or bad. So whatever
thoughts which may arise are allowed to flow through us, without our
acting them out impulsively, or trying to suppress them, to make them
our prisoners.
For example, if we separate out the bad thoughts
and instead of accepting them try to hide them in a rubbish bag, then
at some stage the bag will become so full that it will burst. This
could lead to mental illness and, just like an untamed tiger, we
could do a lot of damage, cause a lot of harm. Instead we can work with
and transform what is negative; the power of the tiger can be put to
good use.
The correct approach is to train the tiger in a
dignified way, in a very accepting way. We accept the tiger even if we
can't directly see it. The important thing is to face the situation as
it is. Irrespective of whether or not we are religious, men or women,
young or old, all our sufferings are quite similar; only the causes of
those sufferings differ substantially. If we are elderly, for example,
we experience the suffering that accompanies old age; if middle-aged,
the suffering of jobs and relationships; and if we are young, we have
the suffering of education, of growing up. Throughout our lives we are
faced with a continual series of sufferings, according to the
development and changes of our bodies.
Although the varieties of
suffering may be many, and its intensity and degree may change, there
is only one effective way of freeing ourselves from the pain of our
existence, and that is to accept it. We still deal with our daily life
situations but we stop trying to make the whole world conform to our
desires and projections. If we are old, we come to accept being old; if
we are young, we accept that too whatever the situation, we simply
accept it. Once this acceptance occurs, then to a large extent we are
freed from the suffering. Once we are able to let it go, it just falls
away from us.
This is not to imply that the solution is to
develop total inactivity and passivity in relation to the world. Nor
should we maintain an endless struggle to make our lives perfect.
Instead we follow a middle way, between the two extremes. Having
accepted the limitations of being human, we are content to do our best
in any situation and to behave in a flexible way according to the level
of our understanding, aware both of our own development and the
situation as we find it. Our aim throughout is to be completely free
from the causes of suffering and to stop creating new suffering for
ourselves and others.
First of all we seek to remedy our own
suffering. The way of accomplishing this is very much the same wherever
one is. Once we accept that the causes of suffering lie mainly in the
mind's inability to fulfil its desires, we can see that these causes
are internal and are not simply products of our external environment.
Whatever society we come from, whether we are spiritual people or not,
the understanding that desire arises within our own mind allows us to
begin to go forward. We will become aware that others suffer just as we
do, and compassion will arise spontaneously. Further, it becomes clear
that they, just like us, want only to be happy.
Compassion means
the wish to benefit all beings and free them from the causes of
suffering. However, when we 'blame' ourselves for the difficulties
arising in our own minds it may appear that we lack compassion towards
ourselves. And if we have no compassion for ourselves, how then can we
cultivate it towards others? In fact it isn't a question of 'blame' at
all, nor are we trying to torture or punish ourselves. We are simply
acknowledging that desire arises inside our own minds and nowhere else.
Such acceptance awakens confidence and wisdom within us and we begin to
realise that desire arises in the minds of others just as it does in
our own. At that point we are able to co-ordinate ourselves with others
and compassion for them grows. Then there will come a time of true
friendship.
Understanding how to tame the mind is beneficial for
everyone, not just for beginners. We may think that we know a great
deal and have a wide knowledge of life, but for all of us the important
thing, the essential and first thing is to tame the mind. This way we
can develop compassion and feel friendship for ourselves and others,
rather than enmity. There is a Tibetan saying that it's very easy to
make enemies, but to develop friendship takes a long, long time. The
way beyond suffering lies in the development of friendship within our
families, our society and between nations everywhere. We try to be kind
to one another, always.
Reference: from the book 'Taming the Tiger' by Akong Tulku Rinpoche