Meeting Challenges: Unshaken by Life's Ups and Downs
By Ringu Tulku
()
About this ebook
The Heart Wisdom series aims to make the teachings of Ringu Tulku Rinpoche available to a wider audience, by bringing his oral teachings to the written page. This volume presents his commentary on a teaching by the Third Do Drupchen Rinpoche, Jigme Tenpe Nyima, called Bringing Happiness and Unhappiness onto the Path.
'If we can work wi
Ringu Tulku
Ringu Tulku Rinpoche is a Tibetan Buddhist Master of the Kagyu Order. He was trained in all schools of Tibetan Buddhism under many great masters including HH the 16th Gyalwang Karmapa and HH Dilgo Khyentse Rinpoche. He took his formal education at Namgyal Institute of Tibetology, Sikkim and Sampurnananda Sanskrit University, Varanasi, India. He served as Tibetan Textbook Writer and Professor of Tibetan Studies in Sikkim for 25 years.Since 1990, he has been travelling and teaching Buddhism and meditation in Europe, America, Canada, Australia and Asia. He participates in various interfaith and 'Science and Buddhism' dialogues and is the author of several books on Buddhist topics. These include Path to Buddhahood, Daring Steps, The Ri-me Philosophy of Jamgon Kongtrul the Great, Confusion Arises as Wisdom, the Lazy Lama series and the Heart Wisdom series, as well as several children's books, available in Tibetan and European languages.He founded the organisations: Bodhicharya - see www.bodhicharya.organd Rigul Trust - see www.rigultrust.org
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Meeting Challenges - Ringu Tulku
Meeting Challenges
Unshaken by life’s ups and downs
Ringu Tulku Rinpoche
Edited by David Cowey, Maeve O’Sullivan
and Mary Heneghan
First published in 2018 by
Bodhicharya Publications
Bodhicharya Publications is a Community Interest Company registered in the UK.
38 Moreland Avenue, Hereford, HR1 1BN, UK
www.bodhicharya.org Email: publications@bodhicharya.org
©Bodhicharya Publications 2018
Ringu Tulku asserts the moral right to be identified as the author of this work.
Please do not reproduce any part of this book without permission from the publisher.
ISBN 978-1-915725-02-8
Second edition: December 2022
Compiled and edited by David Cowey and Mary Heneghan, with help from Maeve O’Sullivan.
Teaching sources:
Main teaching source: ‘Transforming Suffering and Happiness’ by the Third Do Drupchen Rinpoche, Jigme Tenpa Nyima. Given by Ringu Tulku Rinpoche at Bodhicharya Berlin, Germany. August 2010.
Transcribed by Birgit Khoury, Tara Woolnough and David Cowey. First edit by David Cowey.
Subsidiary teaching source: ‘Carrying the Wind:’ Instructions on ‘Shidug Lamkhyer’ - How to Bring Joy & Sorrow onto the Path - written by the Third Do Drubchen. Given by Ringu Tulku Rinpoche at Karma Chang Chub Chö Phel Ling in Heidelberg, Germany. October 1998.
Transcribed and first edit by Gabriele Hollmann.
Further editing by Mary Heneghan, with editorial comments and input from Maeve O’Sullivan.
Root text translation: based on that of Adam Pearcey, 2006. www.lotsawahouse.org
Bodhicharya Publications team for this book: David Cowey ; Mary Heneghan; Rachel Moffitt; Paul O’Connor; Maeve O’Sullivan; David Tuffield; Mariette van Lieshout.
Typesetting & Design by Paul O’Connor at judodesign.com
Cover image: Annapurna Range, Nepal, by Skouatroulio.
The Heart Wisdom Series
By Ringu Tulku Rinpoche
The Ngöndro
Foundation Practices of Mahamudra
From Milk to Yoghurt
A Recipe for Living and Dying
Like Dreams and Clouds
Emptiness and Interdependence, Mahamudra and Dzogchen
Dealing with Emotions
Scattering the Clouds
Journey from Head to Heart
Along a Buddhist Path
Riding Stormy Waves
Victory over the Maras
Being Pure
The practice of Vajrasattva
Radiance of the Heart
Kindness, Compassion, Bodhicitta
Meeting Challenges
Unshaken by Life’s Ups and Downs
‘Happiness is like a lid.
Unhappiness is like cutting the edge of continuation.
Loneliness is like your companion.
Sickness is like your nurse.
Whatever state you are in,
Always cultivate this understanding.’
Traditional Kadampa saying
From Eastern Tibet
Editor’s Preface
This book is Ringu Tulku’s commentary on a text called Bringing happiness and unhappiness onto the path
or Transforming suffering and happiness.
The original text was written by the Third Do Drupchen Rinpoche, Jigme Tenpe Nyima, in the 19th Century.
Ringu Tulku has taught on this text many times over the years and the main body of this book was taken from a teaching he gave at Bodhicharya Berlin, in August 2010. We have added, in the creation of this book, a handful of short sections from a teaching Ringu Tulku gave in Heidelberg in 1998, on this same text.
The teaching describes how we can come to meet all our experience, both of suffering and of joy, equally; in such a way that we are not phased by either. We can bring all experience onto our path in this way, transforming it so that it does not cause ourselves, or others, problems. We don’t need to be constantly rocked up and down in life by whether things are going well or not. We can find a way to be stable and at peace, regardless. This is the essential core teaching found within this book.
The original text is divided into sections looking at how we can meet suffering, and how we can meet joy, as a practice, so we remain unshaken by either. Each is dealt with from a relative perspective – that of how things commonly appear to us - and also from a more ultimate perspective - that of how things really exist. So, there are approaches given that we can start using from this very moment, as well as an over-arching view that we can work with all our life.
Some years ago, in 2007, a group of Ringu Tulku’s students formed an online Bodhicharya Study Group, under the inspiration of Margaret Ford. This was one of the texts we studied. As we went through it, Margaret offered questions to keep us thinking, to contemplate and discuss. I mention a couple here, in case any readers are interested to also take this approach.
At one point, Ringu Tulku discusses at some length the topic of karma. Some of the questions we contemplated were, What was your understanding of karma before reading the text?
And, Did that change once you had read it, and how?
Ringu Tulku talks about karma being action ~ action and reaction, cause and effect ~ which also means the term points the way towards the possibility of change and transformation. So we went on to the question, Can you remember any times in your life where you changed your karma?
When Ringu Tulku gets to the section about taking joy onto the path, he talks about how we can relax with what is. He explains how, if we truly understand how things are, that itself makes us gradually courageous – because we have nothing to lose. One of our questions was, Can you think of a time in your life when you realised there was actually nothing to lose, and found courage and relaxation in that?
It is often the case that, while working on one of Rinpoche’s books such as this one, I find myself having to grapple intimately with its topic, one way or another, in my own life. I rarely escape this, and this book turned out to be no exception. While life threw up an unexpected challenge for me to meet, just as we were trying to publish this text, there was one phrase from this teaching that kept coming up in my mind:
dropping our unwillingness to suffer
It kept arising in my mind, as a kind of mantra, whenever I found myself caught up in the situation. I basically just wanted to rail against what was happening, to complain about it all and reject it. But then this line….dropping our unwillingness to suffer… And I would find there was a way to embrace the situation after all. It probably helped me tackle it much better than I might have otherwise. There is actually a way the challenges of life are just as okay as the rest of life. It was like:
‘Here I am, a person sitting on my cushion, my breath is moving, the candle is flickering, autumn leaves are blowing outside. And I have this difficult problem in my life, which I don’t know exactly how to approach yet; I don’t know how, or if, it will work out yet. (In truth, it was a really upsetting problem to me.) But there can still be peace. And, amazingly, joy. Because I have, for a moment, dropped my unwillingness to suffer.’
This is something within the reach of us all (if I can manage it, even for a moment, any one of us can too). It is one thing to be peaceful in an environment where everything is taken care of for us, a protected retreat environment for example. We need those places to train ourselves, but the real practice comes amid the ups and downs of life. If we can take the next step with our practice and find a way to be peaceful even then, to meet our challenges unshaken, then we are really doing something profound and transformative for our lives. This is what Rinpoche is teaching us in this book; it is the real practice.
At the end of Rinpoche’s teaching in Heidelberg, one of the organisers, while thanking him for the teachings, also turned to the audience and thanked everyone present for being interested in the teachings of the Dharma. In the words they used then, we would like to echo their appreciation and their aspiration: We hope you will be inspired by these teachings and receive many beneficial insights from Ringu Tulku’s words here, to carry with you through your life.
We offer this book with the heart wish that it may contribute to bringing ever-increasing meaning to life. May you, the reader, become unshaken by life’s ups and downs. May you be unwavering on your path. Ultimately, may all beings find inner freedom, happiness and peace; through learning to dwell in equanimity, beyond all fleeting joy and sorrow.
Mary Dechen Jinpa
For Bodhicharya Publications
Holy Isle, Scotland, June 2015 & Oxford, UK, November 2018
Author of the Root Text
The teaching we are going to look at is called Shidug Lamkhyer in Tibetan, which literally means ‘Bringing Happiness and Unhappiness onto the Path.’ The author of this teaching was the Third Do Drupchen Rinpoche, Jigme Tenpe Nyima, who was a great master of the 19th Century. He had a curious name because Do means ‘stone’ and Drubchen means ‘siddhi’ [power, attainment or accomplishment], so the name literally means ‘highly attained stone.’ But actually the reason he had this name was because he came from a place called Doyül - and not because he was a stone!
The First Do Drubchen lived in the later part of the 18th Century. He was one of three important students of Jigme Lingpa, who founded the Longchen Nyingthik, the main Nyingma teachings on Dzogchen. Another of these three students was Jigme Gyalwa Nyugu, who was the main teacher of Patrul Rinpoche (as well as Patrul Rinpoche also being a direct student of Do Drupchen Rinpoche). The Second Do Drubchen lived in the early part of the 19th Century. This text was written by the Third Do Drubchen. And now we have the Fourth Do Drubchen Rinpoche, who is also a great master, and is currently living in Sikkim, at the age of about 84 years [in 2010].
Even among great masters, the Third Do Drupchen, Jigme Tenpe Nyima, is very highly regarded. The present Dalai Lama, for example, often quotes him and remarks that, of all the Tibetan masters, he finds the writings of Do Drubchen most logical: he says that the deepest teachings and most profound philosophies are put forward particularly clearly and comprehensibly in his texts. Do Drubchen is known for that, especially regarding the most profound tantras.
So, we will go through a translation I have here of the original text, which was compiled by Adam Pearcey, [presented in grey italics in this volume] and discuss it as we go.
Introduction & Homage
Homage,
I pay homage to you, Noble Avalokiteshvara, recalling your qualities:
Forever joyful at the happiness of others,
And plunged into sorrow whenever they suffer.
You have fully realised Great Compassion with all its qualities,
And abide without a care for your own happiness or suffering.
Avalokiteshvara, or Chenrezig, is regarded as the Bodhisattva of compassion: the embodiment or essence of compassion. Any teaching that is concerned with Bodhisattva activity, or compassion or things like that, generally commences with a homage to Avalokiteshvara. As the homage says, he is very joyful about the happiness of others, but whenever he sees the suffering of others, he himself suffers and feels sorrow. However, because he does not care about his own happiness or suffering, in that way he is always happy. So, it is Avalokiteshvara to whom homage is paid at the start of this text. He represents the ideal of how to transform suffering and happiness.
This is an instruction indicating how to use both happiness and suffering as the path to enlightenment. This is indispensable for leading a spiritual life, a most needed tool of the Noble Ones, and quite the most priceless teaching in the world.
The teaching in this text consists of two parts: How to take unhappiness onto the path and how to take happiness onto the path. I don’t know whether we should really define