What is Compassion
Having
gained some experience of cherishing all living beings, we can now extend and
deepen our compassion, and the method for doing so is revealed in this chapter.
In general everyone already has some compassion. We all feel compassion when we
see our family or friends in distress, and even animals feel compassion when they
see their offspring in pain. Our compassion is our Buddha seed or Buddha nature,
our potential to become a Buddha. It is because all living beings possess this
seed that they will all eventually become Buddhas.
When a dog sees her puppies
in pain she develops the wish to protect them and free them from pain, and this
compassionate wish is her Buddha seed. Unfortunately, however, animals have no
ability to train in compassion, and so their Buddha seed cannot ripen. Human beings,
though, have a great opportunity to develop their Buddha nature. Through meditation
we can extend and deepen our compassion until it transforms into the mind of great
compassion - the wish to protect all living beings without exception from their
suffering. Through improving this mind of great, or universal, compassion it will
eventually transform into the compassion of a Buddha, which actually has the power
to protect all living beings. Therefore the way to become a Buddha is to awaken
our compassionate Buddha nature and complete the training in universal compassion.
Only human beings can do this.
Compassion is the very essence of a spiritual
life, and the main practice of those who have devoted their lives to attaining
enlightenment. It is the root of the Three Jewels - Buddha, Dharma, and Sangha.
It is the root of Buddha because all Buddhas are born from compassion. It is the
root of Dharma because Buddhas give Dharma teachings motivated solely by compassion
for others. It is the root of Sangha, because it is by listening to and practising
Dharma teachings given out of compassion that we become Sangha, or Superior beings.
What
is Compassion?
What exactly is compassion? Compassion is a mind that is motivated
by cherishing other living beings and wishes to release them from their suffering.
Sometimes out of selfish intention we can wish for another person to be free from
their suffering; this is quite common in relationships that are based principally
on attachment. If our friend is ill or depressed, for example, we may wish him
to recover quickly so that we can enjoy his company again; but this wish is basically
self-cen- tred and is not true compassion. True compassion is necessarily based
on cherishing others.
Although we already have some degree of compassion, at
present it is very biased and limited. When our family and friends are suffering
we easily develop compassion for them, but we find it far more difficult to feel
sympathy for people we find unpleasant or for strangers. Furthermore, we feel
compassion for those who are experiencing manifest pain, but not for those who
are enjoying good conditions, and especially not for those who are engaging in
harmful actions. If we genuinely want to realize our potential by attaining full
enlightenment we need to increase the scope of our compassion until it embraces
all living beings without exception, just as a loving mother feels compassion
for all her children irrespective of whether they are behaving well or badly.
This universal compassion is the heart of Mahayana Buddhism. Unlike our present,
limited compassion, which already arises naturally from time to time, universal
compassion must first be cultivated through training over a long period of time.