Mindfulness Meditation Podcast - Mindfulness Meditation with Gegye Yongyal Tulku Rinpoche 10/10/2024
Episode Date: October 18, 2024The Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art presents a weekly meditation for beginners and skilled meditators alike. Each episode is inspired by a different work of art from the Museum’s collection a...nd is led by a prominent meditation teacher.The episode begins with an opening talk followed by a 20-minute meditation. In this episode, the guided meditation begins at 25:16. Teacher: Gegye Yongyal Tulku RinpocheTheme: OpennessArtwork Buddha Shakyamuni; Tibet; 15th century; gilt copper alloy; Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art; gift of Shelley and Donald Rubin; C2006.66.656 (HAR 700092)Learn more about the Rubin’s work around the world at rubinmuseum.org.
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Welcome to the Mindfulness Meditation Podcast presented by the Rubin Museum of Himalayan Art,
a global museum dedicated to bringing greater awareness and understanding of Himalayan art to people around the world.
I'm your host, Tashi Chodron. Every Thursday, we offer a meditation session at New York Inside Meditation Center that draws
inspiration from an artwork from the Rubens Collection and is led by a prominent meditation
teacher. This podcast is a recording of our weekly in-person practice. The description of each episode
includes information about the theme for that week's session and 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 Frederick P. Lenz Foundation for American Buddhism.
And now, please enjoy your practice.
Good afternoon, everyone. Tashi Delek.
Welcome. Welcome to the Rubin Museum's Mindfulness Meditation Program
at the New York Insight Meditation Center.
This is our first session.
I am delighted to be your host and my name is Tashi Chodron, Himalayan Programs and Communities Ambassador and it's so wonderful to see so many familiar faces and many new faces. The Rubin is a
global hub for Himalayan art and we are so glad to have all of you join us
for our weekly program where we combine art and meditation and the New York
Insight saying is we combine and awaken the minds. That's so beautiful isn't it?
So inspired by a collection we will first take a look at work of art we will then hear a brief talk
from our teacher
Yongel Tuku Rinpoche
so wonderful to have Rinpoche back
to honor this first session
here and to bless us
then we will have a short sit
about 15 to 20 minutes for the meditation
guided by him
the theme this month is openness
and the art connection for today's
session is this beautiful sculpture of Buddha Shakyamuni. The Buddha Shakyamuni's emphasis on
impermanence encourages practitioners to cultivate a sense of openness to change, essence of the teaching on impermanence
that many of us experienced just last week
from the closing of our 20 years of the physical space,
then the change coming into something new
and coming into a new place.
So knowing that nothing lasts forever, knowing the impermanence,
then, you know, there is that ease of anything that becomes of. And so this beautiful sculpture
depicting the Shakyamuni Buddha, the historical Buddha, who lived almost now 2,600 years ago. And there are
many major and minor characteristics of how to identify that this is the
historical Buddha. I can just share the major characteristics where Buddha
sits on the lotus throne in a full lotus position,
the legs fully crossed,
and then the hand mudra, the gesture of earth touching,
left hand open meditation gesture,
and the right hand, palm facing the knees, fingers touching the earth.
So this particular gesture is known as the earth-touching gesture
when Buddha sat under the Bodhi tree in Bodh Gaya, India, and when he reached the awakening
or enlightenment, and this is the gesture. And we can have the next slide showing some of the other major characteristics are elongated earlobes, the ushnisha, the wisdom bump, and then the third eye.
So some of these are some of the major characteristics of how to identify the historical Buddha.
And then there is another beautiful slide of the full, so this is how a beautiful sculpture
origin from Tibet. So let's bring on our teacher for today. Our teacher is Gege Yongel Tukur Rinpoche.
His eminence Rinpoche is an ordained Buddhist teacher and a prominent leader in the Khajur Nyingma tradition of Tibetan Buddhism.
He holds a master's degree in Buddhist philosophy and has completed extensive meditation training.
As the third seat reincarnate Tuku of Gegye Tashi Choling Monastery in Ngari near Mount Kalash,
he was enthroned as the Tuku of the second Gege Yongel Tuku Rinpoche
at Gege Tashi Choling Monastery.
His Holiness the 17th Dhyalwa Karmapa
conducted his hair cutting and name giving ceremony in India.
Rinpoche has mastered key areas of Buddhist philosophy,
including Pramana Sutra, Prajnaparamita Sutra,
Madhyamika Sutra, Abhidharma Sutra.
He currently serves as the president of the Amala Center in Nepal
and the Himalayan Buddhist Center, Australia.
Since 2020, Rinpoche has been actively teaching Buddhist Dharma
and contributing to society.
He is a revered Lama in Tibet and China,
focusing on the practical application of Sutrayana Buddhism,
Vajrayana Buddhism, and modern Buddhist ethics.
His teachings aim to cultivate loving-kindness and compassion,
fostering personal transformation,
and bringing individuals closer to the Buddha nature.
Rinpoche, thank you so much for being here and please help me in welcoming
Gegye Tukuyongye Rinpoche. नियन्तो जिवासोनोको छि नियके निर्सि, टिसे घाईला डोला पिन पर छिनाम लोछि नियके छितिन्दिन लोट पेबोका, घाँटा यन्ता दिवै, कुछ नोनो पन्ना फ्रुखो तैन तिस्लों पर
..
Tashi delek, everyone.
And thank you to the entire team of Rubin Museum for the second invitation
to lead a mindfulness meditation session.
I also want to express my gratitude
to the New York Inside Meditation Center
for inviting me here.
And a special thanks to Ms. Shishunla for the kind introduction.
It's a wonderful opportunity for all of us to come together and collect some good karma. So
thank you everyone. And on the new partnership of Rubin Museum Mindfulness Meditation
and New York Inside Meditation Center,
I would like to express my congratulations by reciting a Tashid Sikpa prayer
for the long-term partnership and prosperity of these two centers.
I learned about the programs and events carried out by the New York Inside Meditation Center
and I would like to say it is very impressive and nice.
Because in the modern times like this where there is like a lot of stress, anxiety and
different mental problems that people have been suffering.
I believe centers like Rubin Museum, Mindfulness, Meditation,
and New York Inside Meditation Center is acting like a mental health hospital for people to come and heal themselves through meditation
guided by experienced masters and teachers.
So thank you all for this opportunity and I will recite the Trashitsipa prayer... Okay. So to begin our session today, first let's start with a two-minute silent meditation.
Because during this time, I encourage everyone to meditate on this silence.
I want all of you to let go of any burdens that you're carrying in your mind,
like the tasks that are pending or the works that you need to be complete.
So we will empty our mind for like two minutes until the end of the session.
Okay, let's start...
. Thank you. Now, as you meditate, you may find your mind wondering.
If this happens, simply recognize that your mind has wondered
and release the thought and return to this empty state of mind.
Just try to be fully present here. ایسی طرح Okay, I hope we have all emptied our minds and we are all fully present here.
So the title of my talk today is Buddha Shakyamuni.
However, due to this limited time, I won't delve into Buddha's biography
since I believe everyone is very familiar with it.
biography since I believe everyone is very familiar with it. So today I will speak about the nine stages of developing Samatha meditation and we
will practice Samatha meditation using an outer object such as Buddha statue.
But first I would like to offer a verse of praise to Lord Buddha, Shakyamuni, the great sage who has abandoned all defilements
and fault, the noble one who possesses all the knowledge of enlightenment and beyond.
Dear compassionate one, I offer my homage to you with my body, speech and mind.
I offer my homage to you with my body, speech and mind.
So Buddha, Lord Buddha, born as Prince Siddhartha Gautama,
was a spiritual teacher who attained enlightenment for the benefit of all sentient beings.
His teachings promote peace, love, compassion and mindfulness. So to remember his teachings
and contribution of peace, love and equality,
most Buddhist people keep a statue of Buddha in their homes
with offerings of water bowls, incense, flowers, lights and many more.
So having a Buddha statue at home symbolizes like wisdom, inner peace and mindfulness.
It creates a peaceful atmosphere and serves as a reminder to live your life with compassion
and kindness.
For those who meditate, I believe having a Buddha statue is especially important.
According to the sutras, all the teachings of Buddha can be classified into two ways.
One is through Buddhist scripture and the second one is through meditation practice and the way of practicing these two is like by listening reflecting and
meditating on these teachings so even in the 37 practices of bodhisattva it is in the first verse
it is stated that having this precious human life one should engage himself in the listening, reflecting and meditating
on the excellent teachings. Because this human life we have is not just simply gifted, it
is hard earned by the merits we accumulated in the past life and there is no guarantee
that we will obtain this precious human life again. So to make the best use of it is by اور اس عزیز انسان زندگی کو پہلے پہلے محاصرہ نہیں کریں گے۔
اس کے بہترین استعمال کو کرنا ہے کہ اسے بھدی کے اچھے تعلیموں میں انداز کرنے کے لئے،
دنیا اور اپنے نفس کے لئے دنیا اور دنیا کے لئے سننے کے لئے سننے کے لئے، بہترین تعلیموں میں انداز کرنے کے لئے۔
ابھی بہت سے لوگ دنیا میں دوسروں مددوں سے تعلیمات پڑھتے ہیں۔ People these days attend teachings from different masters. They buy books of wisdom and collect very sacred texts for their altars.
However owning these profound written teachings is not enough.
Because wisdom, it only comes through practice.
If you only read and reflect, then we will gain a surface level understanding of the teaching
but the real antidote is only revealed through meditation but first we need to know the ground
which is our mind so our mind is like an ocean and the thoughts are like the waves of the ocean. We have unlimited thoughts arising
and disappearing in our minds and holding on to that thought for a longer time is like holding
an empty glass for a longer period of time. For example if you just hold an empty glass for like
few seconds then the empty glass doesn't have any weight but if we hold on to that empty
glass for like few hours or if a few days then the pain and the suffering is unimaginable so
it's similar with our mind if we hold on to a thought for a very long period of time, then our mind gets exhausted and mental problems like anxiety, panic and
depression will be caused.
So because of this condition, most of the time we are controlled by our mind.
It's like when our mind is happy we react kindly with people when our mind is sad we react poorly
and when we are angry we even react harmfully so that's why one has to tame his mind through
meditation so what is meditation now simply put meditation is the practice of your mind and body
helping gain a deeper understanding of themselves and reality.
So meditation can be divided into two categories.
One is the shamatha meditation and the other one is vipassana meditation.
The shamatha meditation means calming your mind,
whereas vipassana means having a clear view, clarity.
For example, if you are trying to catch a monkey who is always moving around, then it is very difficult to catch it. But if we focus on the movement of the monkey and use the rope of concentration
and mindfulness, you can catch the monkey and observe it. So here, the monkey moving
here and there is, it symbolizes your restless mind, while the rope, it symbolizes mindfulness.
So this is shamatha meditation.
And when you calm your mind, you can observe it clearly.
That is vipassana.
So practicing shamatha meditation has many benefits and advantages.
Like once we master shamatha meditation, we can direct the mind as we wish.
If we feel anger, we can transform it into love and compassion.
If we feel attachment, we can turn it into detachment.
If we experience ignorance, we can gain wisdom through meditation.
So meditation is a form of mental therapy and the sign of doing proper meditation is like gaining more peace and love
inside if one is meditating and he is more disturbed then there is some problem with the
way that person is meditating so now i will introduce the nine stages of developing shamatha
meditation so and after introducing the nine stages we will do the mindfulness meditation using the object
buddha statue so the nine stages are first is like resting your mind so when you receive the
instruction from your master your teacher to like meditate upon the object,
you first put your focus on the object.
So that is the first stage.
The first stage is like you're putting your focus on the object.
As you put your focus on the object for a longer time,
by the power of reflection, by the power of contemplating, like thinking,
then we reach to the second stage
where we are focusing on the object for a longer period of time
so the first step is focusing on the object the second stage is focusing on the object for longer
period of for longer the third stage is resettling the mind. Now as we focus on the object what happens
is like because of our habit of always being comfortable and carried away by the thoughts,
any thoughts of past, like memories of past or any concerns of future will just take you away.
We will just be carried away by the thought.
But once you realize that your mind has been carried away, that you are being distracted,
divert your mind, turn your mind to the object and put more energy. So in developing the Samatha meditation, at first, a lot of energy and a lot of motivation is needed.
So this is the third stage, resettling the mind.
So the fourth stage is fully settling the mind.
So once you're very aware of the distractions
and the dullness may arise,
because of that awareness, what happens is like we can fully settle the mind.
Fully settling the mind doesn't mean we have accomplished or reached that meditation level.
It means that now our mind will not be so dull as before.
The dullness will be eradicated.
But still, because of our habits from past lives, from many lives, we have the past obscurations
that we are not, even though if we want to, we will feel like demotivated, discouraged,
and we might feel like there are more some other things that I should think of,
like the work that I need to complete and all so at that time you need to remind yourself the benefits of this mindfulness meditation
that this this mindfulness meditation is like taking a medicine like taking a vitamin so once if our mind is like healthy then we can think properly so even at work
if a mind is very disturbed he will not be able to do his work properly similar to how a physical
body if a physical body is very tired we do we cannot expect that physical form to function properly.
So this is the fifth stage which is taming the mind.
And here the most big obstacle is like demotivation and discouragement.
Now the sixth stage is pacifying the mind.
Here what happens is like we eradicate the distractions the surface level
distractions and as we continue we completely pacify all the distractions
which is the seventh stage and then finally we reach to the eighth stage
where we can single pointedly like put your focus on the object and finally the
ninth stage is like being able to naturally meditate upon the object
without difficulty so these are the nine stages of nine stages or nine steps to develop a shamatha
meditation so the first is resting the mind second is resting the mind. Second is resting the mind longer.
Then we resettle the mind.
After that is fully settling the mind.
Once the mind is settled, it is like comfortable.
Then another obstacle that may occur is demotivation and discouragement.
For that, we need to tame our mind, which is the fifth stage.
Then after taming our mind, what happens is like we pacify the distraction distractions we just the distractions will not be able to be an obstacle
that is the sixth stage and when we completely pacify all the distraction dullness agitation
we reach to the seventh stage and at the eighth stage we can see we can single pointedly like meditate and
the reaching the ninth stage is a very beautiful stage where we can just
meditate on the object without any difficulty just naturally so now we will
start the meditation session first I would like everyone to prepare yourself in the eight postures of meditation.
Since we are all seated, I think legs not too tight or too loose.
But the best posture for the leg is the Vajra posture.
Your back straight
your neck should not be too straight or too down just normally straight then your shoulders it should not be too drawn in or drawn out just even your
breathing should also be even the inhalation and exhalation, and your lips
and tongue should be kept normal. So as I ring the bell, meditate single-pointedly on the statue of Buddha
using the nine steps of mindfulness meditation. Thank you. Thank you. Now as you meditate, be mindful and focus on the statue of Buddha and do not be carried
away by your other thoughts. Thank you. Thank you. If you have been carried away by your thoughts of past and your concerns of future, bring
your mind back to the object.
Concentrate and be mindful towards the statue of Buddha. Try to see it clearly as if it's right in front of you. Thank you. Now as your dullness is gone,
you might be discouraged, demotivated.
But again give yourself the wisdom of benefits of this
meditation and mindfulness
and revive your motivation and courage
to put your focus on the object. Thank you. Now as you see the statue of Buddha without distraction and dullness, focus single pointedly
on the statue of Buddha and try to feel the joy of meditating.
You can also meditate upon that feeling of joy.
Now we only have two to three minutes left. Thank you. So, thank you everyone.
Although we have learned and practiced the nine stages,
to truly accomplish or develop this state of Samatha meditation,
one must practice these nine stages again and again.
It's not like
that we have gone through this stage now we have accomplished uh shamatha meditation the
signs of accomplishing shamatha meditation is like you will not have any like physical or
they'll be like suppleness of physical and mental mentally like there will be no difficulty for you to naturally meditate upon that object no matter the
conditions or situations and once we develop such state any disturbing
situations that we might face or any conditions that we are we can handle
ourselves very well calmly so finally I would like to end this session by offering a white scarf
okay then finally i would like to dedicate the merit
earned from this for the long life of his holiness the 14th dalai lama
his holiness the 17th gyao kam Pa and all the eminent teachers and masters
from all the other traditions
thank you and Tashdilik
thank you so much for that
Rinpoche
really wonderful
that concludes this week's Really wonderful.
That concludes this week's practice.
To support the Rubin and this meditation series,
we invite you to become a friend of the Rubin at rubinmuseum.org slash friends.
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 4, hosted by
Isabella Rossellini, delves into the Buddhist concept of attachment and explores how the
practice of letting go can transform our experience of the world.
Available on November 12th, wherever you listen to podcasts.
And to learn more about the Rubin Museum's work around the world, visit rubinmuseum.org.
Thank you for listening. Have a mindful day.