REJOICE! The Second Round of 108 Nyung Näs at Institut Vajra Yogini

Participants in the 108 nyung näs at Institut Vajra Yogini, 2012

Participants in the 108 nyung näs at Institut Vajra Yogini, 2012

“Following up on the success of last year’s round of 108 nyung näs at Institut Vajra Yogini (IVY), the French center has begun a second round,” reports center director François Lecointre. “Six people intend to do the full 108 nyung näs that started at IVY on November 18, 2012. Rinpoche’s offer to sponsor up to 10 people willing to do 100 nyung näs has made it possible for them to commit for the whole seven months of intense practice.” 

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From Mandala January-March 2013

REJOICE! for Enrique Flames De Tienda!

In the April-June 2011 issue of Mandala, Enrique Flames De Tienda, a Spanish FPMT student, reflected on what he had gained and given up following ten days of introspection in “No More Games!” This short account of personal transformation is well worth reading and sharing with others – and is certainly another achievement worthy of REJOICING!

We are always on the lookout for the amazing stories of FPMT students around the world who quietly complete retreat, commitments and progress further along the path than seems possible. If you have a story to share, or know someone whose practice achievements are worth celebrating, please contact michael@fpmt.org directly.

REJOICE! for Erdenechimeg Lhasuren!

This amazing story demonstrates how something as simple as offering water bowls can dramatically change a student’s life.

By Daria Davaa

Erdenechimeg Lhasuren commenced offering water bowls at Shedrup Ling, FPMT Mongolias’s centre in Ulaanbaatar, in 1999. During that time, her life was not going well and she did not earn enough money to feed her children and as a result, her relatives were taking care of them. She has a son and a daughter.

When she started her water bowl offerings, she had to walk to Shedrup Ling everyday because she did not have enough money to take a bus. For the past 11 years she has been offering water bowls in Shedrup Ling’s offering room and for the last eight has extended this service to offer water bowls regularly in Lama Zopa Rinpoche’s room on the top floor.

When this activity commenced in 1999, Erdenechimeg, together with her Dharma sisters, participated on a roster basis to offer 2,000 waters bowls at Shedrup Ling every day.

These days, Erdenechimeg’s life has taken a turn for the better and she is experiencing success in her business and has a much healthier financial situation. She is living happily with and taking care of her own two children and extended family, inclusive of seven children and 10 adults!

Erdenechimeg shares with us that her life success is a result of the accumulation of great merit from the action of the water bowl offering practice. This merit has also enabled her to become one of the most generous benefactors of the Shedrup Ling Centre and Dolma Ling Nunnery.

Daria Davaa works for FPMT Mongolia as an assistant and translator.

Nalanda Monastery Recites Golden Light Sutra 130 Times

From FPMT International Office e-News, October 2010:

In order to repay the kindness of the IMI, and the sponsors of the IMI and Nalanda, the 27 Nalanda monks (and one of the nuns) recited the Golden Light Sutra for four days (August 31 – September 3). The goal was to recite the sutra at least 108 times, but with the help of the lay students, they completed about 130 recitations, which they dedicated to the IMI, the sponsors and the long life of our teachers, especially His Holiness the Dalai Lama, Lama Zopa Rinpoche and Nalanda’s abbot, Geshe Jamphel.

I want to thank you a billion, zillion trillion times for your practice

REJOICE! is a new section in Mandala that gives us an opportunity to really rejoice in the amazing practice of FPMT students from around the world. Every year, students quietly complete retreats, commitments or progress further along the path than seems possible! This section allows us to REJOICE! in these incredible efforts. Stories featured here may also appear in the print version of Mandala, published quarterly.

We hope that you will feel inspired and ready to share your stories as inspiration for others.

REJOICE! for Margot van Greta!

Lama Zopa Rinpoche recently received an inspiring letter from Margot van Greta, a resident of Findhorn in the UK. This is his reply:

My most dear Margo,

Thank you very, very much for your kind letter. I want to thank you a billion, zillion trillion times for your practice, for what you did:

300,000 tsa-tsas – wow!

400,000 Dorje Khadro fire pujas – amazing!

500,000 prostrations while reciting the Thirty-five Buddhas’ names – wow, amazing!

200,000 Lama Tsongkhapa guru yogas – wow!

200,000 mandala offerings – amazing!

4 nyung-naes – amazing!

Vajrasattva, Yamantaka and Secret Chenrezig retreats—amazing!

That you are so obedient and have kept your mind in these practices is truly amazing. While the world has fallen into greater and greater turmoil, with more earthquakes, wars, problems and disease, you have managed to keep your mind in the Dharma, continued to practice, and been able to complete all these practices and accomplish these unbelievable numbers.

I wish everybody in the world could be like you. As you know, in the world, many beings have received a precious human body, which comes from a very pure cause – the practice of pure morality in the past – but still haven’t met the Dharma, haven’t met Buddhism. Therefore they are still living in complete ignorance – not simply the ignorance of holding the I and all other phenomena as truly existent, which they’re not, but the ignorance of not knowing Dharma, karma: what is to be practiced, which benefits oneself and others, and what is to be abandoned, which harms oneself and others.

Can you imagine this? Their actions create only negative karma because their motivation is ignorance, anger and attachment, mostly attachment to this life. Therefore their lives are totally wasted. Not only that, but they do not for a moment use their precious human body, which has the unbelievable potential to achieve any of the four levels of happiness, to create the cause of any happiness whatsoever.

And not only do they not use their most precious human body to bring about one of these levels of happiness but instead they use it to create the cause for rebirth in the hell, hungry ghost or animal realms. If you look at the world from your perspective it must seem as if everybody else is living like this and not purifying even one negative karma; that even the creation of one positive karma is extremely rare.

So you are the one luckiest, most fortunate people on earth. You have given yourself the great freedom of temporary happiness, liberation from samara and, best of all, full enlightenment, which will allow you to liberate numberless sentient beings from the oceans of samsaric suffering.

By doing each of these practices you have brought yourself closer to liberation and full enlightenment. Each practice, each session, each Vajrasattva mantra, each prostration with recitation of the Thirty-five Buddhas’ names, each tsa-tsa that you made and so forth is incredible. It’s the best way to repay the kindness of all sentient beings, including that of your parents.

With respect to what you can do now, you should study Geshe Sopa’s lam-rim commentaries and I would like to offer you the first three volumes, which I’m sending you in the mail. This is my offering to you; please study them well in order to gain realizations. Plan to gain realizations, especially bodhichitta, in this life, but before that to realize first, renunciation of this life, then renunciation of future lives, and finally renunciation from samsara.

Do one meditation on guru devotion every day, following the outline in Liberation in the Palm of your Hand. Continue with that for as many months or years as necessary until you see the one guru as all the buddhas and one buddha as all your gurus. You must realize this from the bottom of your heart and it has to last for not just a few days, but for weeks, months and years, however long it takes for you to gain a stable realization.

The other meditation to do each day is that on the perfect human rebirth. Try to achieve the various realizations within the perfect human rebirth one by one, no matter how long it takes, however many weeks, months or years it takes for you to gain a stable realization.

When you have realized the perfect human rebirth, you feel that this life is most precious, like a wish-granting jewel. If you have a wish-granting jewel you receive whatever material object you pray for; when you realize the perfect human rebirth you understand that it is much more precious than numberless wish-granting jewels, even more precious than the whole sky filled with numberless wish granting- jewels, and naturally feel like that all day and night.

This is the feeling you need to generate through analytical meditation; when it arises, focus on it single-pointedly with fixed meditation. Feeling deeply that this perfect human rebirth is incredibly precious, you hold that feeling; it’s wish-fulfilling, unbelievable – through it you can achieve any happiness: that of this and future lives, liberation from samsara and enlightenment. This perfect human rebirth can bring you any happiness whatsoever but a wish-granting jewel cannot even prevent rebirth in the lower realms let alone help you achieve the ultimate happinesses of liberation or enlightenment. So you should have the strong feeling of how unbelievably, unbelievably precious this life is and this feeling should arise naturally for not just a few days but for weeks, months and years.

The next meditation is on the great usefulness of the perfect human rebirth. When you realize this you can never engage in meaningless activities for even a minute or a second. Should any of your actions not become Dharma you have a feeling of incredible loss; you feel it’s an incredible loss to waste even a minute of this life. Keep meditating on this until you achieve a stable realization of this topic that lasts for weeks, months and years, no matter how long it takes.

Next meditate on how difficult it will be to find a perfect human rebirth again. When you realize this you can’t waste even an hour, a minute or a second of this life. If minutes or seconds of this life pass without your practicing Dharma you feel as if you’ve lost a big sack of gold, as if you’ve just thrown away millions of dollars. Meditate until this feeling arises naturally and remains stable for weeks, months and years.

The next main lam-rim topic is impermanence and death. Remember that you can die this week, even today. Every time you leave your house think that you might die before you get back. If you’re inside, think that you might die before you get the chance to leave. Death can arrive any minute, any hour. Practice this until the realization of the imminence of death arises naturally and remains stable for weeks, months and years, not just for a day or two. In this way try to realize impermanence and death. Along with this, try not to be attached to your family, possessions or even your body. These realizations should accompany each other.

Also do the full nine-round death meditation, thinking that death is certain, its time uncertain and that nothing but Dharma can help. Therefore, you have to practice Dharma right now and practice only Dharma. But practicing Dharma doesn’t mean only sitting in meditation. If it did you wouldn’t be able to practice Dharma when going out, working, eating or going to the toilet. You can practice Dharma no matter what you’re doing; it’s a big mistake to think otherwise.

The next topic is refuge. Recollect the qualities of Buddha, Dharma and Sangha and totally rely on them. In your mind, rely on nothing else. Take refuge only in Buddha, Dharma and Sangha. After reflecting on their qualities they should become the most important object of refuge in your life and always remain in your heart. That feeling should arise naturally and remain stable for weeks, months and years.

Then try to realize karma. Even small positive karmas should be created and small negative karmas avoided. Meditate on the four outlines of karma. Remember, you definitely have to experience the result of any karma you create – any karma created never gets lost and has to be experienced. Understanding this, you abandon even the smallest negative karmas and practice even the smallest positive ones. This is very important.

So this is just a very rough overview of the path of the lower capable being. The main thing you should do is meditate on every part of the lam-rim in order to gain stable realizations. When you reach the end, go through it again.

Still, the most important thing of all is for you to meditate on the lam-rim and try to experience the realizations. I also attach my advice for your daily practice – it contains some helpful resources and information on how to meditate on the lam-rim that you should find useful.

In the meantime, continue doing one hundred prostrations while reciting the names of the Thirty-five Buddhas every day – more if you can, but at least this many. Also do some mandala offerings every day.

So for the moment that’s all the news from my side, but if you have things to say, you are most welcome to write to me any time.

With much love and prayers,

Lama Zopa

Scribed by Holly Ansett; edited by Nicholas Ribush.

This was Margo’s original letter to Lama Zopa Rinpoche:

Dear Lama Zopa Rinpoche,

I hope this letter find you in good health.

Thanks so much for your guidance and inspiration over the years in so many ways.

I hope I may ask some questions about my practice.

I am delighted to let Rinpoche know that I have complete the list of practices, which Rinpoche kindly advised me to do in December 1998.

This included: tsa-tsa’s 300,000; Dojre Khadro fire puja 400,000; prostrations to the 35 Buddhas 500,000; Lama Tsongkhapa Guru Yoga 200,000; mandala offerings 200,000; nyung näs 4; Vajrasattva retreat; plus some deity retreats in Yamantaka and Secret Compassionate Buddha.

Now I continue with some of the practices, like prostrations, tsa-tsa’s (Green Tara) and mandala offerings.

My aspiration is to bring more concentration in the practice.

Is this correct, or is there another practice more beneficial?

With deep gratitude, Margo van Greta.