Buddhism in the West
A
View from the Thunderbolt Bridge
by Ngakpa Rig'dzin Dorje
"What
is the difference between Tibetans and Americans? Tibetans have flat nose, Americans
have Rocky Mountain nose. That is all." -H.H. Dungsey Thrinley Norbu Rinpoche.
Buddhism
in the west is a topic which seems to have very much scope for confusion. Although
the subject invites speculation, it raises many questions which are not at all
straightforward. For instance, whereabouts exactly is the west? When the globe
is spinning without interruption, where then are east and west? Spin the globe,
or open an atlas at random, and jab your finger down. Is that east or west? Or
north, for that matter, or south? In these relative terms, how would we define
the location of Ögyen, the land from which the Tantric Buddha Padmasambhava
appeared? It was somewhere in the wild remoteness of the Karakorams, apparently,
where India, Pakistan, Afghanistan, Russia and Tibet all meet. But the end of
everywhere and the middle of nowhere can only be somewhere if it's compared with
elsewhere. It's only when we take compass-bearings, from reference-points which
we call east, that we locate ourselves in a place called the west. Ögyen
is an image of our own beginningless Wisdom-Mind, existing behind the manifestation
of our physical senses. The world of our perceptions-and-responses, the world
that we can actually inhabit, the cultural forms that we perceive and generate,
our prefered style of Buddhist practice, all ultimately depend on the quality
of our connection with Wisdom-Mind.
Wherever the finger lands will certainly
be a spot where beings of some kind are living. Where there are beings there is
ordinary mind, which is our idiosyncratic expression of the Spacious Ocean of
the Nature of Mind, beginningless realisation itself. My own lineage comes in
Vision from the enlightened consort of Padmasambhava, Yeshé Tsogyel. Her
name means "Queen of the Ocean of Divisionless Primordial Wisdom", not
queen of the mundane 'this or that'. Spaciousness emanates and qualifies all the
elements: the mantra of Yeshé Tsogyel includes the seed syllables of all
the elements. Space is the meeting-and-departure point that underlies all the
directions. It is the ultimate, referenceless, reference-point. To plot the non-dual
path, the Middle Way, the karmic view of man-made satellite navigation can never
be an adequate method. Strange, then, that we, the holders of Wisdom-Mind, should
so readily choose to locate ourselves with reference to the Earth-globe spinning
in space, rather than ultimate Space itself.
There exists such a great diversity
of styles of Buddhism that I wonder if it is even correct to embrace them crudely
in an expression like "Buddhism is a world religion". Occasionally I
have the happy experience of meeting at conference tables with many other representatives
of different existing Buddhisms. What I have observed there is that Buddhism itself
always guarantees to be more -or less- than the sum of its parts. An accumulation
of forms, like a conference, can never define what is "neither form nor emptiness,
nor both, nor neither". Hence, if such a conference tried to list and define
the basics of Buddhism, it could only do so while simultaneously undefining itself
as a perfect arbiter of Buddhism. The Thunderbolt Bridge, Dorje Zampa, is the
non-dual relationship of form and emptiness: it is a way of refering to the realisation
of the Path of Buddhist Tantra. When that comes to be expressed in the language
of dualism, the result is always a paradox.
Hence, Buddhism has always defined
itself negatively, as a rejection of the four extremes, or heresies: monism, dualism,
nihilism and eternalism. It follows that Buddhism must be essentially pluralistic:
because the non-dual View could give rise to infinite different Paths of practice.
An often-quoted expression of this is Chögyal Namkhai Norbu Rinpoche's remark
about Dzogchen, the ultimate vehicle of Tibetan Buddhism:
"There is a
tantra of Dzogchen... that says that the Dzogchen teachings can be found in thirteen
solar systems other than our own, so we can't truly say that the Dzogchen teaching
belongs to this planet Earth, much less to any national culture. Although it is
true that the tradition of Dzogchen...has been transmitted through the culture
of Tibet that has harboured it ever since the beginning of recorded history in
Tibet, we nevertheless cannot finally say that Dzogchen is Tibetan, because the
primordial state itself has no nationality, and is omnipresent, everywhere."
All the Buddhist schools that have ever existed, or may ever come to exist,
can only be thought of as 'special cases'. They are cultural or trans-cultural
forms which emanate from the vision of enlightened teachers. This is the way that
the compassionate activity of these Buddhas supports the realisation, by particular
audiences, of non-dual, non-theistical View. Compassion is distinguished by its
appropriateness, which means that the colourful details of its activity are bound
to vary dramatically, even from country to country within 'the west'. There was
a prophecy which accompanied the revelation in my lineage of the treasure-teachings
of Yeshé Tsogyel, to the Mahasiddha Aro Yeshé, the previous rebirth
of my Root Teacher Ven. Ngak'chang Rinpoche. It said that these teachings were
primarily for the future benefit of people in a far-distant part of the world.
So, now that this has become a reality, does this mean that these are essentially
Tibetan teachings or essentially western teachings?
I think we miss the point
if we base our conceptions of the future of Buddhism solely on speculations about
form. What is form? Essentially empty. Form is only one foot of the Thunderbolt
Bridge. Taking the example of a Tantric lineage, its emptiness aspect is the experience
of inspiration or realisation that we receive from transmission. Over centuries,
new schools of Tibetan Buddhism arose, and distinguished themselves from those
that currently existed. But the realisation of their founders, which made these
developments possible, depended on the experience of transmission coming through
the existing forms. Manipulating the existing forms of Buddhism, without the vibrant
experience of transmission, is not enough to generate the living Buddhisms of
the future. H.H. Dungsey Thinley Norbu Rinpoche has written:
"As it is
said, 'However much sand is pressed, oil will never come.' For example, even though
a prince is the son of a king, if he never ascends the throne, he will have no
power to work for his own benefit or for the benefit of his subjects. Without
empowerment, one has no lineage, and it is not possible to practice for one's
own benefit or to teach for the benefit of others. If we receive an empowerment,
we have the blessing and power to practice, and can then teach others."
The
alternative would resemble the materialist 'new age' rebirthing drama of Frankenstein's
monster. This is the fantasy that the painstakingly collected remnants of corpses
could mysteriously be reanimated by exposure to the powers of 'nature', to arise
again as a living being possessing the qualities of wisdom and compassion. Not
for nothing did this fantasy emerge at the height of the industrial revolution's
humanistic optimism; but it is not for the likes of Buddhists. Buddhists have
to be prepared to dance on the tightrope of uncertainty rather than schlumpen
in the hammock of superstition.
Whenever our thoughts turn to analysing the
relative kinds of Buddhism, we can only locate them in terms of their emptiness
qualities. Our optimism can only be sound if it is based on the possibility of
renunciation, in Sutric terms, or transformation, in Tantric terms, or self-liberation,
in Dzogchen terms; in other words, on an experiential reality that can only function
on account of emptiness. Thus the unavoidable paradox of form and emptiness arises
again. To plan for the future means embracing uncertainty, and that includes the
uncertainty of indications given by the past. To establish a Sangha for the benefit
of future generations means acknowledging the instability of existing forms. When
we visualise our lineage-tree, in Tantric practice, it lacks solidity in the same
way as a tree that stands by the roadside. The lineage from which we receive the
ultimate, infinite and unrepayable benefit is itself a play of form and emptiness
qualities: its form being the many student-teachers who gave and received transmission,
of which the empty aspect is the realisation that was transmitted. If our lineages
are to pass through us, then to that extent they will depend on the possibilities
inherent in our time, culture and language; but what is it that actually passes?
I
once attended one of many Tantric initiations that I have been fortunate to receive
from H.H. Kyabjé Chhi'med Rig'dzin Rinpoche, who is the Mind-Incarnation
of Padmasambhava. At a certain point he asked the audience why they had come.
There was silence. His translator insisted that Rinpoche was waiting for a response.
As I was highly conscious of my own reasons for being there, I decided I ought
to speak up myself, and put other people out of their embarassment, so I said
"To receive some experience of transmission from you, Rinpoche." He
gave a very characteristic wolfish grin, which seemed to indicate approval, but
also the possibility of further inquisition. I was right: he continued "Transmit
what? Transport where?", meaning, What is it that moves? Where does it come
from? Where does it go to? I said "Simply, in Mind", and he gave me
another grin. For the time being, the audience was off the hook. In Tantric terms,
on a micro-scale, transmission means sharing the experience of the nature of the
teacher's mind: nothing actually moves. The macro-scale, the form quality of the
movement of Buddhism through the world and through history, is inseparable from
this.
Non-dual experience can be characterised in various ways, such as 'the
union of great bliss and emptiness'. Finding through this experience the equal
taste of emptiness and form, its practitioners will honour the manifestation of
form and emptiness qualities in women and men equally. If it is authentic, it
can be expressed in ordinary personal unpoetic contemporary language: that would
be its natural compassionate activity. As a result, ordinary working family people
will be able to understand that something real is being indicated, inviting them
to have access to the teachings. When the emperor of China asked Bodhidharma what
enlightenment was like, he said "Lots of space, nothing holy." Realisation
is called in Dzogchen 'the natural state'; so its practitioners will be beyond
the artifice of 'spiritual' personalities and the neurosis of competitive achievement.
They will be able to inspire future generations by transforming anger and jealousy
into clear simplicity; grasping and dependency into joyfulness; and neurotic confusion
into free spontaneous ecstatic laughter. That would be my vision of a Buddhist
sangha, in any time or place.