Introductory Lecture On Karma: The Four Noble Truths in Everyday Language
Introductory Lecture On Karma: The Four Noble Truths in Everyday Language
Introductory Lecture On Karma: The Four Noble Truths in Everyday Language
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Introductory Lecture on Karma
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intention. What do we intend to do with this person? We could intend to hug them or we could intend
to punch them in the face. There are many other factors that are involved, but karma is simply this
mental force urge that is drawing us into that action of hugging or punching as we’re seeing them and
as we’re going toward them. Also, remember that mental urges are not just for physical actions such as
hugging or punching. There could also be a driving mental urge with which we think about something;
it’s not only in terms of saying something or doing something physically. Whether we are thinking
something, whether we are saying something, whether we are doing something physically – all of these
things involve some sort of mental urge.
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We have to really examine this quite closely: Is Buddhism saying the same thing, or is it different?
That’s not a very easy topic, it is very complicated topic, because to really understand karmic cause and
effect, we need to understand rebirth – the Buddhist concept of rebirth, not some non-Buddhist concept
of rebirth. Who is it that commits a karmic cause and who is it that experiences its result? Is there a
“me” that can be rewarded or punished.
But, leaving the issue of rebirth and who experiences it aside, as I mentioned in the beginning,
Buddhism is not speaking about a system of reward and punishment based on obedience of laws.
Buddhism is not saying that this life is some sort of test, and we will get the results of the test in our
next life. It’s simply saying that things take a long time to produce their effect. We can see that in terms
of the environment. We act in a certain way and it produces some effects in our lifetime, but it is going
to produce an awful lot more effects in the lifetimes of future generations. It is something similar to
that.
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an extraordinarily profound insight in Buddhism. What is the crucial factor? Self-esteem, self-dignity
and a sense of esteem of our community.
That gives us a big insight into some of the factors that need to be taken into consideration in terms of
dealing with terrorism. If you deprive a person and their community of all sense of self-dignity, making
their lives really horrible and thinking terrible things about them, they feel that it doesn’t matter what
they try to do. If they have no sense of self-worth or worth of their community, then why not go out and
be destructive? They feel they have nothing to lose. This is, I think, a helpful thing to remember in
terms of how we deal with others, particularly in problematic situations in the world. It is important
never to deprive someone of a sense of self-dignity or a feeling of worth of their community.
These are some of the mental factors that are involved here with what makes an action destructive or
what makes an action constructive. It is also things like taking seriously the fact that the way we act
and behave toward others is going to affect them. This refers to having a sense of consideration or care
– I call it the “caring attitude.” But sometimes we are very naive, we think that I can say anything to
you and it doesn’t matter. I don’t really take your feelings seriously. Then we lack a caring attitude.
If we act with these types of mental factors – greed, anger, no sense of self-worth, no consideration
for how what we do reflects on others, not caring, not taking seriously that what we do is going to have
an effect on others and also an effect on ourselves – what is the result of that? Unhappiness. This
unhappiness, though, is not a punishment.
We need to think really quite deeply about this. Could that state of mind with all these negative
factors really be a happy state of mind, and could it really produce an experience of happiness in us? Or
could it only produce unhappiness? If we think about it more and more, it actually does make sense that
that state of mind, that negative state of mind, would result in experiencing unhappiness, and if we
have the opposite state of mind, without greed and anger and all these other things, that would produce
happiness. Therefore, we have these general categories of behavior – constructive and destructive – and
they’re going to result in our experiencing happiness and unhappiness.
Then, in addition, we have specific types of actions that we do: yelling at somebody, or being kind to
somebody, and so on, and these also have their effects in terms of tendencies to repeat that behavior
and tendencies to get into situations in which others act that way toward us.
Another result of our karmic behavior – but there’s no need to go into great detail here – concerns
what type of rebirth we have: are we going to be reborn with the basic body and mind of a dog, of a
cockroach, of a human being. What kind of body and mind will we have as the context for experiencing
certain things happening to us and our acting in a certain way. There are many other details here, but I
want to just cover, in this introductory lecture, the most general principles.
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we decide beforehand, “Today, I will experience happiness and I will experience everybody being nice
to me.” Then we put our money in the machine of life and out pops what we’ve chosen. That’s free
will, isn’t it? It’s free will to decide what is going to happen to us and what we are going to do. But
what happens to us is far more subtle and sophisticated than these two extremes of determinism or total
free will.
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details of what that means, just get the general idea – if we replace confusion with correct
understanding, then there is no basis for this solid “me” – no basis for “I’ve got to have this and not
have that.” There is no craving, so there is nothing to activate these tendencies and habits. And if
there’s nothing to activate these tendencies and habits, you can’t say that you still have tendencies and
habits.
I’ll try to give an example. If there is a tendency to see dinosaurs, then when dinosaurs become
extinct, there is no tendency anymore to see dinosaurs when you walk through the jungle, is there?
There used to be this tendency: when I walked through the jungle I always saw dinosaurs. Now there
are no more dinosaurs, so there’s no more tendency to see dinosaurs. Using that example, when there’s
nothing to cause a tendency to ripen – a dinosaur walking in front of you, causing a tendency to see a
dinosaur to ripen – if there is nothing to activate the tendency, you don’t have the tendency anymore.
And if the karmic tendencies are not ripening anymore because there are no more tendencies, then we
are not experiencing the up-and-down happiness and unhappiness anymore, and we are certainly not
experiencing any confusion with it either; that’s gone, too.
This is the way that we become liberated from this whole samsaric situation. We no longer experience
this unsatisfactory, insecure up-and-down of happiness and unhappiness, but we have instead a very
steady experience of a very different type of happiness, a very different quality – not a type of
happiness that is mixed with confusion, and not the type of happiness of “I’ve won the game and so
here’s my reward.” It’s a type of happiness that one experiences from being free of a difficult situation.
I think a simple example, although not an exact example, for approaching what this is talking about
would be the happiness that we feel when we take off our tight shoes at the end of the day – it’s a
joyous relief that we are free from this pain.
Also, what we experience with liberation is that our actions are no longer driven by these compulsive
urges of karma with which we act in a certain way, experience certain things. Rather, if we are working,
beyond just liberation, to become a Buddha, what drives our actions is compassion – the wish for
others to be free from their suffering and causes of that suffering.
Concluding Words
This is a basic introduction to some of the principles involved with karma. There’s much, much, much,
much more that can be said and explained. Some of it is explained with certain general principles, like
this type of action results in this type of effect, and if this factor is there the result will be stronger, and
if it’s not there – if you do something by accident as opposed to doing something on purpose – the
effect is going to be different, and so on. There’s a lot of detail there.
Also, in terms of what actually is going to ripen right now, that is very difficult to generalize with
principles, because that is affected by everything else that is happening all around us. What happens to
us now, we can’t just generalize that from general principles, because what happens now is affected by
everything else that’s happening. Just think about if you have an accident on the road, what brought
that about? It’s karma that brought everybody else on to that road from their sides, and the traffic
conditions, and the weather, and the condition of the road. So many things have brought about that
particular thing of having an accident that is ripening now.
If we are interested in this topic, there is a great deal of room to explore many different aspects of it.
The more we learn about karma, I think the more helpful that is in overcoming being under the control
of karma, so that we not only get liberated ourselves from samsaric suffering, but we’re in a better
position to be able to help everybody else as well.
[For a more detailed explanation, see:
The Mechanism of Karma: The Mahayana Explanation, Except for Gelug
Prasangika (http://www.BerzinArchives.com /web/en/archives/sutra/level4_deepening_understanding_path
/rebirth_karma/mechanism_karma_mahayana_presentati/mechanism_karma_01.html)
.]
What questions do you have?
Questions
Participant: In this context, guilt is out of the picture? It has nothing to do with guilt here, does it?
Alex: Correct. The Buddhist explanation of karma has nothing to do with guilt. Guilt is based on
thinking in terms of a very strong solid “me” as a separate entity and what I did as some other separate
entity, like two ping-pong balls, or something like that. And then we believe that entity “me” is so bad
and that entity “what I did” was so bad. So there’s also a judgment of these two seemingly solid entities
and then not letting go – that’s guilt. It’s like never throwing away the garbage from your house, but
just keeping it inside and saying how terrible it is, how bad it smells, how dirty, and never letting go.
Participant: It sounds very clear and very logical, and I can understand the whole system, and how to
get rid of the confusion, and the urge, tendencies and everything. But I think that understanding it is not
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enough to get rid right now of the experience or the impulse of acting compulsively.
Alex: Correct. Yes, that’s why first we need to exercise ethical self-control. Remember, we mentioned
that there is a slight interval between when I feel like saying, “What an ugly dress you’re wearing
today,” and when I actually would say it. If we can catch that space, then we have the ability to decide
what the effect is going to be if I tell this person that she is wearing an ugly dress. And if we see that
that would not be a productive thing to say, we don’t say it. That’s where we start – with ethical
discipline and self-control.
Also, we can examine what emotion am I feeling when I want to do something? Is my wish to do
something based on a disturbing emotion, such as greed? Is it based on anger; is it based on naivety?
Do I think that saying that your dress is ugly is not going to have any effect on you? Or is my wish to
do something based on kindness, and these more positive things? This is why the definition of a
disturbing emotion or attitude is very helpful: it is a state of mind, which, when it arises, causes us to
lose peace of mind and lose self-control.
You can tell when you’ve lost peace of mind: our heart beats a little bit faster; we feel a little bit
uneasy. So we try to notice, for instance, subtle things, like am I saying something out of pride? For
example, somebody says, “I didn’t understand that,” and you say, “Oh, but I did!” You’ll notice a little
bit of uneasiness, there’s some pride behind this, some arrogance, and so this is what you look out for.
But to understand reality, which means gaining the understanding of voidness and so on, is very, very
difficult, and even when we get it, we have to accustom ourselves to it, so that we have it all the time.
That’s why we start with ethical self-discipline, to stop ourselves from acting destructively.
Participant: I got a little lost. I think you mentioned that there are two emotions that perpetuate this
happiness and unhappiness, these fluctuations. Were you saying that one of these is craving, and
another one was what?
Alex: What I was explaining were the two factors that activate karmic tendencies – this comes from
the teachings on the twelve links of dependent arising. One is craving, the other – I was simplifying –
the other is actually called an “obtainer attitude or emotion,” and it is a list of about five different
possibilities. This is what will obtain the result, and so the most prominent one is identifying a solid
“me” with what we’re experiencing, with what’s going on.
Participant: Is this identifying a solid “me” in relationship to something? It’s clear that there’s
confusion here, and that we have to take care of that and get rid of the confusion. But what exactly are
we confusing and what are we confusing it with?
Alex: That’s not an easy question to answer in a simple way. We are confusing the “me” that does
exist, the conventional “me,” with the false “me” that doesn’t exist. What we’re doing is imagining that
the actual “me” that does exist exists in some impossible way, it’s an exaggeration. It’s adding
something that’s not there. For instance: I am happy or I am unhappy. It’s not that you are unhappy; I
am unhappy. When there is an experience of happiness or unhappiness, we refer to that in terms of I’m
happy. It’s not that you’re happy or somebody else is happy – I’m happy. That “I” or “me” is the
conventional “me,” which does exist.
Let me use an example for this conventional “me.” Suppose we watch a movie and let’s say the movie
is “Gone with the Wind.” In it, there is a happy scene, then an unhappy scene, and then another happy
scene. Well, what’s going on here? This happy scene is a scene from “Gone with the Wind” and that
unhappy one is another scene from “Gone with the Wind.” “Gone with the Wind” is how we would
conventionally label the whole thing, all the scenes, both the happy and the unhappy ones. “Gone with
the Wind,” however, is just a title, just a name. But when we talk about “Gone with the Wind,” we’re
not just talking about the title. We’re talking about the actual movie – what the title refers to. That’s the
conventionally existent movie: it exists. The movie is not something separate from each of those scenes
– a movie separate and independent from those scenes would be a false movie. It doesn’t exist. The
conventionally existent movie is merely what can be labeled or imputed, we say, on the basis of the
scenes.
Similarly, we have happy moments in life, we have unhappy moments in life and so on, and how do
we refer to all of that? We refer to it as “me” – the conventional “me,” which does exist: it’s not you,
it’s “me.” Similarly, that movie is “Gone with the Wind,” it’s not “Star Wars.” But there’s no “me”
that’s separate from the moments of experiencing happiness and unhappiness and which is
experiencing those moments. That would be a false “me,” a “me” that does not exist. And “me” is just
a word; so “me” is merely what that word is referring to on the basis of all the moments of experience
of a life.
The confusion, then, would be to think that there is some separate “me” that is inside this body,
inhabiting it, connected to it somehow, pushing the buttons, and now that “me” is experiencing a pain
in my foot, and I’m very unhappy and I don’t like that. It is as if there were a separate “me” from that
whole experience inside that alien thing called the body. Then, on the basis of confusing this separate
“me” – this false “me” – with the conventional “me” and identifying with that false “me,” we feel, with
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craving, “I’ve got to get parted from this unhappiness, from this pain, from the unhappiness that I
experience with the physical pain.” Of course when we don’t have that misconception of a solid “me,”
that doesn’t mean that we just sit there and continue to have the pain. If our foot is on fire, of course we
take our foot out of the fire, but the concept of the “me” that’s behind it is quite different. There’s no
panic.
But this concept of a false “me” versus a conventional “me” is very complex and advanced. So, let’s
leave it for now. Let’s end here, instead, for this evening with a dedication. We think: whatever
understanding, whatever positive force has come from this, may it go deeper and deeper, grow stronger
and stronger, and act as a cause for reaching enlightenment for the benefit of all.
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