Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Do Tulku Rinpoche 09/14/2023
Episode Date: September 22, 2023Theme: Realization Artwork: Mahasiddha Jalandhara; Tibet; ca. 16th century; Copper alloy; Rubin Museum of Art;http://therubin.org/37a Teacher: Do Tulku Rinpoche The Rubin Museum of Art pre...sents a weekly meditation session led by a prominent meditation teacher from the New York area, with each session focusing on a specific work of art. This podcast is recorded in front of a live audience, and includes an opening talk, a 20-minute sitting session, and a closing discussion.The guided meditation begins at 7:22. This meditation is presented in partnership with Sharon Salzberg, teachers from the NY Insight Meditation Center, the Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine. If you would like to attend Mindfulness Meditation sessions in person or learn more, please visit our website at RubinMuseum.org/meditation.If you would like to support the Rubin Museum and this meditation series, we invite you to become a member and always attend for free. Have a mindful day!
Transcript
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Welcome to the Mindfulness Meditation Podcast presented by the Rubin Museum of Art.
We are a museum in Chelsea, New York City that connects visitors to the art and ideas of the Himalayas
and serves as a space for reflection and personal transformation.
I'm your host, Tashi Chodron.
Every Thursday, we present a meditation session inspired by a different artwork from the Rubin
Museum's collection and led by a prominent meditation teacher from the New York area.
This podcast is a recording of our weekly in-person practice. In the description for each episode,
you will find information about the theme for that week's session, including an image of the
related artwork. Our mindfulness meditation podcast is presented
in partnership with Sharon Salzberg
and teachers from the New York Inside Meditation Center,
The Interdependence Project, and Parabola Magazine,
and supported by the Frederic P. Lenz Foundation
for American Buddhism.
And now, please enjoy your practice.
Hello, everybody.
Tashi delek and good afternoon. Please enjoy your practice. Hello, everybody.
Tashi Delek and good afternoon.
Welcome.
Welcome to the Mindfulness Meditation at the Rubin Museum of Art.
I am Tashi Chodron, Himalayan Programs and Communities Ambassador, and I'm delighted to be your host today.
We are a global hub for Himalayan art and ideas in Chelsea, New York City, and we're so glad to have all of you join us for this weekly program where we combine art and meditation.
Inspired from our collection, we will first take a look at work of art from our collection.
We will then hear a brief talk from our teacher,
and I'm so thrilled that our teacher is Dho Tuku Rinpoche.
Very special afternoon.
that our teacher is Dho Tuku Rinpoche. Very special afternoon. And then we will have a short sit, 15 to 20 minutes for the meditation guided by Rinpoche. Now let's take a look at today's
theme and artwork. The art connection for today's session is this beautiful sculpture of Maha Siddha
Jalandhara, origin Tibet, 16th century, medium copper alloy. Size of this is 9 1⁄2 x 5 1⁄2 x 3 1⁄2.
The connection to the theme, Mahasiddhas exemplify Tantric Buddhist practices,
which offer many paths to realization.
And this beautiful sculpture is a Mahasiddha.
Maha means great, Siddha means realized one in Sanskrit word. Legendary men
and women called Maha Siddhas or great spiritually accomplished ones are considered to be among the
first teachers of Tantric Buddhist practices. Usually of ordinary occupations, such as a
wandering monk, weaver, or a farmer, they are often portrayed in various yogic positions,
flying or dancing, wearing little or no clothing. Through their unconventional behavior,
Mahasiddhas are celebrated as real people who embodied enlightenment through tantric practices.
The Indian Siddha depicted here is known as Jalandhara, meaning the net holder.
He is recognized for his many yogic feats. It is said that he could manifest his body in many
places at the same time and live in many bodily forms in widely disparate lands simultaneously.
Jalandhara was born and raised as a Brahmin. He renounced the material world and went
to meditate in a charnel ground. He entered a state of heightened consciousness and heard a voice of
a Dakini emanating from the sky. She appeared before him, initiating him in the practices of Hey Vajra Tantra and Perfection Stage Yoga.
Jalandhara then dedicated his life to working for the benefit of all beings
until he entered the pure realm of Khechari accompanied by 300 of his students.
Now let's bring on our teacher for today.
Our teacher is Dho Tukurumpuche.
Dho Tukurpoche is the resident
lama and spiritual guide of Aryatharas Net, an online community and center for Buddhist studies
and practice in Windeck, Germany. Rinpoche was recognized by His Holiness Sakya Trichin at the
age of 17 as the reincarnation of the fifth Raktrul Rinpoche. His incarnation line goes back
to the first Raktrul Rinpoche in 17th century, a master of the Dauteng Monastery in eastern Tibet.
After his recognition, Rinpoche received an 11-year training in Buddhist philosophy,
practice and debate at the Dzongsar Chense Chokhi Lodru Institute in India.
Since then, Rambhuche has been teaching and guiding retreats in India, Nepal, Europe,
and South America. He has received transmissions and initiations from some of the greatest masters
of our time. He lives in Germany where he teaches regularly. Rumpuche, thank you so much for being here.
Please help me in welcoming Do Chukur Rumpuche.
Tashi Dalek and welcome to this session.
So happy to be here and I'm so thankful to the Rubin Museum, such a prestigious institution
to let someone like me say something.
And the topic is so interesting. We are talking about Mahasiddhas' realizations
and these phenomenons that are beyond the grasp of our mundane conceptual mind.
Before we begin, I'm talking about Mahasiddha Jalandharipa.
I would like to bring our attention to the first Mahasiddha, Shakyamuni Buddha.
Try and sit to bring to your mind Shakyamuni Buddha, this runaway prince of India that left all comfort and everything he knew for the search of truth, for the benefit of others and to realize the true reality of existence that's that's what Masida is someone who is awakened a a yogi. Actually that's what it means. It doesn't mean
just stretching, you know. It has such deeper meaning. So here,
Please, look at this completely awakened being. Think of him in front of you and just breathe.
You can look at his face, his hands, whatever that you can think of. झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल
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झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल झाल Thank you.
Since for a Mahasiddha,
time has no relevance.
Birth and death are but mundane
conceptual games that they are free from.
So we believe that when you bring them to your mind,
you get closer and closer to the ultimate reality.
And that's what it is.
The teaching of the Buddha is called
Sutra.
Do.
What it means is
time when the mind of sentient
beings and the mind of a
Mahasiddha meet
across the road. Do.
Well,
to talk about Mahasiddhas, we have to talk about realization.
What is it? What makes someone a mahasiddha?
Basically, realization is awakening to the reality of things, to the ultimate truth.
It is the most sincere, unbiased, fearless, compassionate,
honest mind.
That's what it is, realization.
Of course, we're not talking about an idea or just a fleeting experience.
When we talk about realization, we're also talking about a change,
a transformation that happens in our mind from where there's no return.
That is realization.
So basically, the only difference between us and someone like him is that
they were able to accept reality completely.
No compromise.
No modification.
No fabrication.
We are not.
we are not everything that we do is
decided by our
feelings and habits
and education
and we know that
feelings and reality
rarely go hand in hand
so there is a lot of
that kind of aspect
Jalandharipa I was so happy in hand. So there's a lot of that kind of aspect.
Jalandharipa, I was so happy when I was given the choices of different
artifacts. And I saw this, so I immediately jumped to this, because I have long admired Jalanda river. Actually the place where he was from is very close to where I studied
in Himachal.
The place is still called Zalanda.
So either he got
the name from the place or the place got the name
from him. Either way
it's still there so to speak.
Still a pilgrimage site.
Realization. Realization. This is really so tricky to talk about realization, so tricky to talk about ultimate truth. No one wants to know the truth. We don't want to know the these great beings
they have tried all kinds of means and methods to
introduce
what is actually going on
what is the true sort of mechanism
our existence, the true fabric
of our mind.
Sometimes they succeed,
sometimes they are not so successful.
Sometimes they
try to introduce
the ultimate reality without
any reference.
He tried that. So one of his accounts, his life, is that after receiving
teachings from his teacher, he became a wandering yogi. And he came upon a beautiful garden. He was hungry. There were a lot of fruits
on the tree. So he was a Mahasiddha. I mean he was on his way to
become a great Mahasiddha. So he looked at the tree and all the fruits fell down. He picked some and ate them.
And he looked back, the remaining went back.
So you're going to hear a lot of these things if you want to know about Mahasiddhas.
And this is nothing miraculous about it, nothing at all.
It's just when you are completely in tune
with the nature of how things are,
you're free from our sort of conceptual bondage.
How can fruits fall by looking at all that is gone?
Well, now what was happening was that
someone was watching him
a queen no less
it was her gardener
she was watching him from her window
and she thought wow
this man really seemed to know
this man really seemed to have realization
and she's been trying to
convince her son,
the king, to receive
teachings.
They were Buddhists.
So she
really urged him. The son was not so
convinced, but because his mother,
the queen was urging, so he said, okay,
I'll do it.
And they made a
big celebration ceremony
and requested teaching from Jalandharipa.
He just bought an empty vase
and told the king to put his hands into it.
That's what he did.
And he said,
what is there?
What do you see? What do you feel? The king said, what is there?
What do you see?
What do you feel?
The king said,
it's nothing.
No substance.
And he said,
that's it.
The king felt humiliated.
Now,
at this point,
of course,
Zalantaripa was not saying nothingness or he was not being nihilistic,
but he was really getting to the heart core to the things
and that...
The king didn't get it.
And he was imprisoned for 12 years.
This guy.
But that was a real blessing for him
because then he could really practice without distraction.
So there are that kind of path.
Let's try that. Try to sit. Try to sit. And just...
Look at your mind.
Breathe.
Just watch.
Try not to follow whatever that pops into your mind.
Colors, shape, memory.
Just watch.
Go back to your mind, this present moment awareness.
It's always there.
Go back to your awareness.
This is difficult, so difficult.
So difficult.
It's difficult to talk, difficult to listen,
difficult to comprehend.
By the time it reaches you through your mind and it's being processed, what do you call it?
Chinese whisper?
That, that's what happens.
He says something to her, she says something to him.
By the time it reaches fifth, sixth, seventh person, the whole information is just...
And so again people like him, Shakyamuni, they try to reach us through symbols, through structures and colors and shapes, rituals.
I saw that another artifact, one of the artifacts that I was given to choose,
there was a very beautiful copy, I should say, of the Mahabodhi Stupa.
Mahabodhi Stupa, it's a temple in Bodhgaya,
the place where Buddha gained enlightenment.
Mahabodhi means great awakening.
The name of the temple itself brings us to realization,
brings us to the ultimate truth.
And so everything else Buddha did,
discipline, generosity, whatever he taught,
all to get us to this state, to become a Mahasiddha.
Suppose I should say.
And so, many people follow that.
And we call them followers of Sutra path,
Mahayana path.
Then there are those who are more daring,
who may not be ready for the direct,
like empty was hand teaching, but you know,
who also should not be wasted with just an image
of a temple or a statue.
So these people, we give rituals, implement,
the Vajrayana implements, I'm sure you see them a lot,
like a sword, katanga, and skull cups.
A skull cup, a cup made of skull in your hand.
It was not an art for them.
This was the path
how are you going to be distracted
when you have a skull cup in your hand
how are you going to be making a lot of plans
and being all disappointed
or having so many hopes and fears
when you have a skull cup in your hand
and this is always there or having so many hopes and fears when you have a skull cup in your hand.
And this is always there.
So there's this kind of way where you look at your body,
look at the structures, blood coursing through your veins,
beating of your heart, all of this,
you just watch.
You just sit and watch.
There's always something happening.
That's another way
of getting to realization.
Please ask me a question after the session. We should have some time but I
would request you again
to just be aware of your body. Just be aware. Your heart is always beating, is always in motion.
Every part of your body has a function, by being honest and sincere.
This time I'm going to do this. Please, just watch. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
Thank you so much for that, Rinpoche.
I often say every day we learn. Thank you. Thank you so much for that, Rinpoche.
I often say, every day we learn. And I've been to many pilgrimage sacred places,
including Buddha's Awakened Bodh Gaya.
But it's wonderful to know that Jalinder's sacred site exists,
and I hope to visit someday.
That concludes this week's practice.
To support the Rubin and this meditation series,
we invite you to become a member at rubinmuseum.org
slash membership.
If you are looking for more inspiring content,
please check out our other podcast, Awaken,
which uses art to explore the dynamic paths to enlightenment
and what it means to wake up.
Season 2, hosted by Raveena Arora, is out now
and explores the transformative power of emotions
using a mandala as a guide.
Available wherever you listen to podcasts.
And to stay up to date with the Rubin Museum's virtual and in-person offerings,
sign up for a monthly newsletter at rubinmuseum.org slash enews. I am Tashi Chodron.
Thank you so much for listening. Have a mindful day.