buddhist hell and salvation: reflections on anger

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    Rev. Hyonjin BUDDHIST HELL AND SALVATION Final Paper

    Ozmo Piedmont CBS 560: 4 Marks, 5 Skandhas, and 6 Realms

    Buddhist Hell and Salvation: Reflections on Anger

    Rev. Hyonjin Ozmo Piedmont

    Prajna Institute for Buddhist Studies

    Course: Four Marks, Five Skandhas, and Six Realms

    CBS 560

    Instructor: Rev. Laura Bonyon Neal

    November 24, 2012

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    Table of Contents

    I. Hell4

    a. Psychological modelb. Literal model

    II. Salvation through Kshtigarbha..9

    a. Vow stay in hell to save allb. Protector of weak and lost

    c. Zen identification with compassionate essence

    III. Understanding Anger.11a. Four Forms of Anger

    b. Self-Indulgence

    IV. Self Indulgence..14V. Mindfulness...15

    VI. Triple AAA of Practice.17a. Abstain

    b. Attendc. Analyze

    VII. Forgiveness18

    a. Buddha Teaches lesson on forgivenessb. Letting go of Anger

    VIII. Transformation...............................................................................................23

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    Buddhist Hell and Salvation:

    Reflections on AngerRev. Hyonjin Ozmo Piedmont

    HELL

    The Tibetan Wheel of Life

    demonstrates very graghically

    the interrelation between our

    consciousness, the fifth

    skandha, and our experience of

    the world. At its hub are three

    animals, the cock, the snake,

    and the pig. These represent

    the kleshas, or mental habits

    inherited from past

    conditioning, or karma, in this

    and past lives, manifesting as

    greed, anger and delusion. Being attached to these three tendencies in our minds, we

    create our experience both literally and psychologicall of our world. This is

    represented in the Wheel of Life by six realms: human, Titan, animal, hungry ghost,

    heaven and hell. These worlds are created by our consciousness manifesting as literal

    worlds we can become reborn in after this life, or as moment to moment psychological

    experiences that are constantly changing between one realm and another based on

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    external conditions and internal states of mind. The hell realm in particular manifests

    great pain and suffering due to the klesha of aversion manifesting as extreme anger,

    which can be subdivided into hatred, anxiety, fear, desperation, and worry. But these

    emotions and their consecuent experiences of hell are not permanent, but are rather

    temporary manifestations of the mind that when are released and purified, can be

    transformed into higher states of consciousness and ultimately the vehicles to our

    Enlightenment and complete liberation. The point is that these realms are all caused by

    our desires and attachements, they are all imperfect and illusory, causing us great

    suffering, but yet teaching about our true nature and how to be free and at peace. How

    to understand hell, becoming aware of its causes and consecuences, and in turn, how to

    transform it into liberation, is the

    focus of this paper.

    The hell realm is the most

    terrible of the Six Realms. One

    sees beings there that have a very

    short fuse, everything makes them

    angry and they respond with

    aggression, attacking all around them. In so doing, they drive away anyone that shows

    them kindness and love, tending to seek out others that are also in the hell realm. This

    anger and aggression becomes reinforced and strengthened continually due to

    attachment, resulting in one recreating the experience of hell again and again (OBrien,

    2012). Besides anger, the hell realm is also marked by terror and claustrophobia. It is

    a place partly of fire, related to torture, torment and pain, and partly of ice, where one

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    is frozen. This is a place of much aggression,

    anger and abuse. The icy beings shove others away

    with their unfeeling coldness. In their tormented

    isolation, they then turn their aggression inward to

    become self-destructive (OBrien, The Wheel,

    2012)

    In the literal model, one is born in these realms as actual places or worlds as a

    result of ones karma. They are as real as this world is real, yet one understands that

    all is created by the mind, so all including this world is a dream. It is as if one is

    dreaming, and while one is dreaming, the experience seems absolutely real. From

    outside the dream, others can see you are dreaming, and when you awake, you know

    you were dreaming, by while asleep, it is real. The hell realm is a kind of

    hallucination, a projection of the mind filled with self-deception and egocentrism. Hell

    can be the result of murder of family, saints, or even buddhas, killing for pleasure or

    desire, or in the carrying out of some other crime. It can be the result of unwholesome

    actions, the lack of virtue, or the holding of wrong views. Interestingly enough, it may

    just be that one is so quarrelsome and annoying to others, that one merits a hell

    experience (The Thirty One Planes, 2012). Great black birds chase the wrongdoers

    and pluck our their eyes; demons pull out their tongue and entrails, and they are forced

    to drink molten copper and suffer stabbings. Improper sexual attitudes can lead to fire

    in the organs. There is a screaming hell for those that misuse intoxicants or sell drugs.

    Those who harbor false views or corrupt religion can also fall into hell. The hells may

    be divided into 8, 10, or even 136 kinds, depending on the tradition. The Tibetans

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    limit themselves to just the hot hell, due to anger, and the cold hell, related to cold-

    heartedness. It is thought that to know about these lower realms scares us out of

    complacency as motivation to practice without wasting any more time (Khandro.Net,

    2012).

    For Buddhists, since there is no permanent separate self, it is understood that it

    is literally our bad habits taking rebirth in different realms. Consciousness, which in

    itself is eternal, not dependent on anything, is never born nor dies, yet is colored by the

    habitual patterns of the 5 skandhas, that which we take ourselves to be: form,

    sensation, thought, mental impulses and consciousness identified with the other four

    skandhas. One continues to experience things based on ones habits of action. Due to

    ones karma, seeds are created, or tendencies, that relate to the causes and conditions of

    everything we experience. Our habits of acting and reacting are what create the seeds

    of conditions we experience in the future. In the experience of rebirth into these

    different realms, the very same phenomenon is experienced differently by the lens of

    the perceived realm one is in. In the hell realm, a lake is experienced as molten lava,

    so that when you drink it, it burns you inside. The hell realm is experienced as the

    most physically painful, due to hatred and anger turning back on oneself, building a

    wall between oneself and others. Everything is irritating and makes one angry.

    However, the heat of this anger gets reflected back on us as we project the anger onto

    others and perceive the others as our enemy, which makes us fearful and anxious to

    escape our torcherers, causing us to fight harder with them, making us even angrier.

    We are so busy fighting, we dont know who we are fighting with, whether it is others

    or ourselves, and we are so busy fighting we feel we have no alternative but fight. The

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    possibility of an alternative to fighting never even occurs to us (Class lecture 3 CBS

    560).

    In the hell

    realm, beings are

    being tortured by

    demons. However,

    the fact that the

    God of the dead,

    Yama, is watching

    over this realm

    while holding up a

    mirror,

    indicates that these beings are being tortured by themselves. The hatred of this realm

    becomes a self-hatred inspired by ones own regrets of past wrong deeds and the

    knowledge of ones mistakes. In general, Buddhism emphasizes that whatever

    emotion we feel toward others is what we are feeling towards ourselves. Nevertheless,

    even in this hell realm, enlightenment is possible, with Buddhas and Bodhisattvas

    appearing to guide one our of hell if one so wishes, as well as the concept that negative

    emotions can be transmuted into positive ones through practice.

    (Anderson, 166-167).

    SALVATION THROUGH

    KSHTIGARBHA

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    Kshtigarbha is the Earth Store bodhisattva who has dedicated himself to helping those

    beings that have fallen into hell, showing them the means of escape, and comforting them

    while they are there. Kshtigarbha is the protector of women, children, childbirth, small

    animals, insects, travelers, and lost causes. His name Ksti in Sanskrit means earth, and

    the other part of the name, garbha, means womb. So it seems that in calling upon this

    bodhisattva, one is returning to the womb of creation, or in other words, the essence, or

    Buddha Nature. His name also implies that those negative thoughts that are hidden or

    stored in the recesses of our minds can be uncovered and released. His name also implies

    the earth-treasure, in that there is unlimited potential and treasure in this earth that is

    waiting to reveal itself. This very same earth also has the medicines to heal the ailing

    creatures it supports. Kshtigarbha physically appears as a clean shaven monk who has

    left his home to pursue a religious life. He is the only Bodhisattva represented in

    religious garb, so as to be identifiable by others in his role of guidance and comfort. In his

    right hand he holds a staff with six rings on it. This he shakes to warn small animals to

    get out of the way so as not to be trodden when he walks. It is also used to awaken us

    from our trance of hell. He holds a wish-fulfilling gem, the Chintamani, also seen as a

    pearl, which signifies the treasures he can bestow, or the pearl of great price, our Buddha

    essence, that he reveals within each one of us. With his staff, he is always ready to force

    open the gates of hell and to show us the door to our liberation. In fact, he informs us

    that no one is actually holding us nor forcing us to stay in hell. That we are there by our

    own choosing, and we are both the gate keeper and the liberator. We can walk out

    whenever we please, though we have been trapped there for so very long out of our

    ignorance, our regret, and our pain. He is represented as a being of great compassion and

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    protection. He can appear in any form, male or female, to help others. He represents

    great fearlessness, great love, and great optimism. His story began when the Buddha

    worried that beings would in the future fall away from the Dharma and would be caught

    in the hell realms due to their ignorance. Kshtigarbha vowed that as long as one being

    was left in Hell, he would not attain Buddhahood. Instead, he would stay in hell working

    for their salvation, until it was emptied of all beings. The Buddha praised Kshtigarbha

    for this great vow, which represents the Mahayana ideal of duty and responsibility for all

    beings, all deserving respect, kindness, and consideration, and out of compassion, we

    serve to help all beings escape the suffering of Samsara and to attain Nirvana and

    Enlightenment. Kshtigarbha vows to save all beings from suffering and disasters, lending

    power to those that are weak or in danger. When one wants to call on Him, one recites his

    mantra Om-Ha-Ha-Ha Vismaye Svaha meaning Om, Oh Wondrous One,

    Emancipation! The seed syllable, Ha, is identified with His essence, and in repeating it,

    we identify ourselves with Him. Besides the bodhisattva vow as ideal to every Mahayana

    Buddhist practitioner, he also represents the Zen ideal of learning to sit in whatever realm

    one finds oneself in, engaged in training and practicing which leads to finding the way

    out of our suffering and delusions of hell. If we are at hells gate, just remembering His

    name we are saved, meaning that if we remember who we really are, our Buddha

    Essence, then we are saved from our own attachments and desires that lead us into Hell.

    All those who train are being led by the deepest sense of compassion for oneself and the

    world. To be led out of suffering, we must see our suffering as a consequence of our own

    karma. To get out of hell, you have to want to let go of your own suffering, and to trust

    that there is a way out. We allow whatever there is to just arise, without turning away,

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    turning back to the present, and not letting the clouds of emotions which cover our true

    nature to pull us off track. And when we are lost as weary travelers on the path of life, we

    can trust that there is always support and guidance to lead us back home again, our true

    union with the Divine. No matter how many mistakes we have made, we can always

    return to our true nature in the present. (Bays, 2002; Sutra Earth Store Bodhisattva, 2003)

    UNDERSTANDING ANGER

    One can also look at these realms as

    situations or states of consciousness that

    everyone passes through again and again

    each day. One can use the Wheel of Life

    and its representations of the six realms as

    a mindfulness practice in order to recognize recurrent life situations, and also as an

    opportunity to deal with them in new ways. It is helpful to reflect on the primary cause of

    the experience of the hell realm being the consequence of anger.

    What is anger and how does it cause us to suffer? More importantly, how can we

    free ourselves from anger, transforming it into love and compassion? Anger is one of the

    three poisons, along with greed and delusion that causes us great suffering, or

    dissatisfaction in our lives. In the teachings of Zen, hell is a projection of our mind, one

    specifically made for our anger, resulting in the experience of life as a living hell. It is not

    a punishment for evil deeds, but rather its a mental filter that becomes projected onto the

    outside world, based on selfishness, aggression and frustration. It is the time when we are

    lost in a paranoia discriminating between a non-existent self and others as our

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    enemies. We perceive the world as separate from us, creating prejudice against people as

    bad, ugly, or inferior. For this mental discrimination, we begin to think in a negative way,

    resulting in aggressive words or actions. It is the law of karma: what we think is what we

    create in the world, returning back to us the experiences we have created with our

    intentions manifested in our thoughts, speech and actions. Although the world is neither

    good nor bad, perfect as it is, the way we experience it is our own projection, an aspect of

    our mental habits, that is, the ego. However, the ego is not real, in the sense of a

    permanent thing, isolated, or unchanging. It's just a set of ideas forming habits of

    thinking. You can change these habits to experience life directly, without filters of

    discontent or dissatisfaction.

    What we do is what we get, the law of karma. When we are attached to thoughts of

    aggression, we project this aggression to the outside world. What we perceive is a hostile,

    aggressive, and threatening world is our hell. We suffered physically and emotionally

    because of this mental tendency. The more we experience the world like this, then the

    more our thoughts become negative, while in turn contributing to a world of

    negativity. There is no end to this inner circle of aggression manifesting in external

    aggression. Whatever it is, you can not remove the external threat through internal

    aggression. It only creates more aggression in general. Anger causes more anger

    everywhere. The more we try to kill the imaginary enemy, the more it grows. Thus, we

    create our own hell.

    We all experience difficult situations in our lives. The fact that a negative event

    comes out of nowhere, say an abusive childhood, is the result of negative intentions in

    another previous life, forming mental habits that carry from one life to another. When we

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    are born, we have the opportunity to rectify the negative karma based on our thinking,

    giving us the opportunity to rectify the karma we created earlier by our aggressive

    intentions. If we were abusive in a past life, we are born receiving the same treatment in

    this life, enabling us to purify our karma and live in peace. However, out of ignorance,

    we tend to perpetuate negative thoughts and ideas, creating new negative karma, creating

    a rebirth in a new life all over again, in order to face our same mental habits, which

    continue to cause suffering to ourselves and others. When we react with anger, greed, or

    confusion, the karmic cycle begins again and again, making a new life, a new body and a

    new personality. We are not bad for creating this chain of suffering. It is only because of

    ignorance. We feel insecure, thinking that we need more protection, forcing us to

    continuously strive to survive. What is needed to overcome this paranoia and selfishness

    is a radical intervention in our minds, which is located in Zen.

    According to Zen Master Seung Sahn (1999:69) there are four types of anger:

    attached, reflective, perceived, and loving anger. I have renamed them for clarity as

    instinctive anger, conscious anger, abstaining anger, and compassionate anger.

    Instinctive anger is a reaction attached to our habitual and automatic emotions, based on

    past karma, with negative consequences in the present or the future. This form of anger is

    the most difficult, causing us much pain and suffering, and can take hours or days before

    we return to a calm mental balance. The conscious anger arises when we are aware of our

    instinctive anger, which happens when we practice mindfulness. When we are aware and

    reflective about our anger, it doesnt last as long, and one can return to a calm and

    peaceful mind that can now help others. It is when we believe in ourselves one hundred

    percent, "Yes, I am willing! trying to follow our Zen practice, letting go of anger, and

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    returning to our inner peace. The third type of anger is abstaining anger. Although we are

    conscious of our anger inside, we do not show it externally, choosing instead to abstain

    from expressing it until calm returns to our inner mind. This is a difficult step of

    development requiring great effort and patience as a result of our ongoing spiritual

    practice. Finally, there is compassionate anger, anger that is expressed to help others, but

    we dont feel angry inside, only love and compassion. It is the anger a mother expresses

    to her son, who is about to run into a street full of traffic, yelling "STOP!" This anger

    manifests in situations where it is the most appropriate response at that moment in order

    to support, teach, or save others from suffering, the ideal of the bodhisattva, who

    promises to save all sentient beings in the universe until all reach

    enlightenment. (Sahn,1999)

    SELF -INDULGENCE

    Pema Chodron, a renowned Buddhist monk,

    says that anger can be seductive, almost

    addictive, in that there is something delicious

    about finding fault with others. We tend to

    protect our anger, feeding and justifying it. But

    anger is never justified. We should try to practice patience and metta, or loving kindness

    toward all beings. So when we get angry, we shouldnt act it out or hurt others, being

    careful not to hang on to it, thus making it grow. This is done by first acknowledging it,

    observing ourselves, then understanding what caused it. Then we practice patience,

    waiting to act or speak, observing the reaction internally, and sitting in meditation with

    the heat and tension of the anger inside. In so doing, one quiets the inner chatter and

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    blame. One embraces the anger with patience and compassion for others and oneself. It

    takes great courage to not act and to observe the tendencies of fear and selfishness that

    are at the roots of the anger. Then through insight and mindfulness, we let it go (OBrien,

    Anger and Buddhism, 2012).

    MINDFULNESS

    Right mindfulness,

    the seventh step of the

    Buddhas Eightfold

    Path, is where the

    mind is trained to remain in the present, being open, alive, and alert, contemplating the

    present event, suspending all judegements or interpretations as they occur or just barely

    registering them and them dropping them. The task is to know whatever comes up as it

    occurs, coming back to the present moment again and again, staying in the present

    without slipping away into distracting thoughts. Right awareness tries to perceive things

    directly, without the interference, judgements or criticisms, beyond liking or not liking

    based on any prior experience. The normal functioning of the mind pulls us into different

    directions distorting our experience of the object with mental constructs and projections,

    what the Buddha called elaborations. These elaborations block out the immediacy of

    the phenomena, distancing us from the object, instead of letting us know the object as it

    really is. Through mindfulness, we can clear up the cognitive field, bringing to life the

    pure experience in its immediacy, revealing the object as it is before it has been overlayed

    with interpretations, biases, and distortions. Mindfulness is less about doing something

    than it is about undoing, not thinking, not judgeing, not associating, not planning, not

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    situation, giving us a chance to observe these mental constructs going on, with all their

    embellishments, thus seeing the filters and judgements arising, in order to break through

    them or release our attachment to them. We start by considering the possibility that we

    may be distorting the actual experience or perception of the object or person due to our

    prior experiences and associations. This gives us a moment to see clearly by applying

    mindfulness to allow those embellishments and judgement to diminish or become

    eliminated, thereby giving us the possibility to act from the heart or our Buddha Nature,

    inspiring us to let go of the ego defilements of greed, anger, and delusion.

    When we are aware that defilements of the three poisons are arising, experienced

    as either greed, anger, or confusion, we first Abstain from acting on them, knowing that

    they will cause a problem if we do, since they are based on past mental egoic constructs

    that distort our perception of reality. Secondly, we Attend to what is arising, applying

    right mindfulness, watching the sensations of desire or aversion until they subside,

    applying the thought, I may be wrong, which gives us a moment to pause and

    reconsider what is arising as not necessarily true or accurate. When through mindfulness

    we are able to detach from the sensation of desire or aversion or delusion, we can then

    return to an awareness of calm, the direct experience of Buddha Nature. From there we

    open ourselves to a deeper guidance that directly perceives truth, the Buddha Mind,

    which we open ourselves to by asking the question, What is it good to do right now?,

    implying doing that which will cause the least amount of suffering for others and oneself.

    Finally, we Analyze what we did, by asking ourselves what we learned in this encounter,

    based on our understanding of the Buddha-Dharma, trying to see what worked well and

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    how we could improve our response the next time this particular kind of experience or

    pattern arises in the future.

    Application of this neumonic device has saved me innumerable times from

    committing negative karma that I would otherwise have had to pay with much suffering

    for myself and others in this and future lives

    had I reacted instinctively and unconsciously

    with aggression or anger.

    FORGIVENESS

    Another important way of liberating

    ourselves from Hell is through forgiveness.

    The Buddha once said, Holding on to anger

    is like holding on to a hot coal with the

    intention of throwing it at someone else. You are the one that gets burned. (Buddha

    Quotes, 2012). When we hold on to anger, we are in hell and we suffer. The Buddha

    advised that When a man controls his anger it is like chariot under control, which is

    what we call a chariot driver. All else is just holding the reins. (Curto, 2005, XVII, V.

    222). There is a folklore account of how the Buddha once reacted to anger:

    The Buddha was sitting under a tree talking to his disciples when a man came

    and spit on his face. He wiped it off, and he asked the man, What next?What do you want to say next? The man was a little puzzled because he

    himself never expected that when you spit on somebodys face, he will ask,What next? He had no such experience in his past. He had insulted peopleand they had become angry and they had reacted. Or if they were cowards

    and weaklings, they had smiled, trying to bribe the man. But Buddha was like

    neither, he was not angry nor in any way offended, nor in any way cowardly.But just matter-of-factly he said, What next? There was no reaction on his

    part.

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    Buddhas disciples became angry, they reacted. His closest disciple, Ananda,

    said, This is too much, and we cannot tolerate it. He has to be punished forit. Otherwise everybody will start doing things like this.

    Buddha said, You keep silent. He has not offended me, but you are

    offending me. He is new, a stranger. He must have heard from peoplesomething about me, that this man is an atheist, a dangerous man who isthrowing people off their track, a revolutionary, a corrupter. And he may have

    formed some idea, a notion of me. He has not spit on me; he has spit on his

    notion. He has spit on his idea of me because he does not know me at all, sohow can he spit on me?

    If you think on it deeply, Buddha said, he has spit on his own mind. I am

    not part of it, and I can see that this poor man must have something else to

    say because this is a way of saying something. Spitting is a way of sayingsomething. There are moments when you feel that language is impotent: in

    deep love, in intense anger, in hate, in prayer. There are intense momentswhen language is impotent. Then you have to do something. When you areangry, intensely angry, you hit the person, you spit on him, you are saying

    something. I can understand him. He must have something more to say, thats

    why Im asking, What next?

    The man was even more puzzled! And Buddha said to his disciples, I ammore offended by you because you know me, and you have lived for years

    with me, and still you react.

    Puzzled, confused, the man returned home. He could not sleep the whole

    night. When you see a Buddha, it is difficult, impossible to sleep again theway you used to sleep before. Again and again he was haunted by the

    experience. He could not explain it to himself, what had happened. He was

    trembling all over and perspiring. He had never come across such a man; heshattered his whole mind and his whole pattern, his whole past.

    The next morning he was back there. He threw himself at Buddhas feet.

    Buddha asked him again, What next? This, too, is a way of saying

    something that cannot be said in language. When you come and touch myfeet, you are saying something that cannot be said ordinarily, for which all

    words are a little narrow; it cannot be contained in them. Buddha said,

    Look, Ananda, this man is again here, he is saying something. This man is aman of deep emotions.

    The man looked at Buddha and said, Forgive me for what I did yesterday.

    Buddha said, Forgive? But I am not the same man to whom you did it. The

    Ganges goes on flowing; it is never the same Ganges again. Every man is a

    river. The man you spit upon is no longer here. I look just like him, but I am

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    not the same, much has happened in these twenty-four hours! The river has

    flowed so much. So I cannot forgive you because I have no grudge againstyou.

    And you also are new. I can see you are not the same man who came

    yesterday because that man was angry and he spit, whereas you are bowing atmy feet, touching my feet. How can you be the same man? You are not thesame man, so let us forget about it. Those two people, the man who spit and

    the man on whom he spit, both are no more. Come closer. Let us talk of

    something else. (You Are Truly Loved, 2012)

    Anger is an aspect of aversion, one of the three poisons of the mind. When life

    presents us with situations that provoke aversion, it is an opportunity to practice

    spiritually. These sensations in themselves are not the problem, but rather, it is our

    attachment to them, which strengthens old unconscious habit patterns based on egotism

    and ignorance. When that happens, we are out of control and our actions can cause pain

    and suffering. In other words, we have lost the reins of our carriage of the mind. Instead

    of training the body and the mind in how to guide the carriage in order to resolve a

    problem with insight, wisdom, and compassion, in fact, we are prisoners of our negative

    tendencies, which become repeated a million times due to our negative karma.

    On the other hand, when we can practice mindfulness, like a good carriage driver, we are

    in control of our reactions, abstaining from tendencies that take us off course, giving us

    the opportunity to guide the carriage back into the correct direction. We should go

    neither in the direction of inactivity or denial, nor in the direction of uncontrolled

    emotions. Upon noting the obstacle in the road, the situation demands that we act; our

    sensations attract our attention telling us that we should attend to something.

    From the perspective of Buddhism, forgiveness gives us the ability to let go of

    anger and resentment, without holding on to old wounds, allowing us to live in the

    present without holding on to memories of the past or projecting into the future. If we

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    hold on to anger, the first one we hurt is ourselves, thereby creating suffering toward

    others through violence and aggression. The Dalai Lama of Tibet reminds us that

    violence only generates more violence, damaging our health and our bodies.

    With forgiveness, there are two levels here. On one level: forgiveness

    means that one should not develop feelings of revenge. Since revenge

    hurts the other person, it is a form of violence. With violence, there isnormally counter violence. This then generates even more violence the

    problem never ends. This is one level. On another level: forgiveness

    means that one should not create feelings of anger toward ones enemy.Anger never solves anything. Anger only brings feelings of discomfort to

    oneself. Anger destroys ones mental peace. You cant feel happiiness

    while you are angry. I think that for this reason that we should forgive.With a tranquil mind, there is more mental peace, better health for the

    body. An agitated mind destroys our health; it is very bad for the body.This is what I believe. (Lama, 2004, p. 234-235)

    So, instead of creating more and more negativity, hurting ourselves and others, we should

    forgive, including our enemies, because even our thoughts create bad karma. In fact, our

    enemies can teach us the most important lessons on how to love and forgive. The

    personal physician to the Dalai Lama, Dr. Choedrak, was imprisoned in 1959 by the

    Chinese for twenty years. He survived torture and abuse in a very healthy way by

    practicing four points of understanding: 1. Although he had to face great suffering and

    injustice, he could respond with love. 2. His captors were suffering in conditions equal to

    his, and due to the law of karma, they were going to suffer much more in the future,

    deserving his compassion for them due to their ignorance and confusion. 3. He had to

    learn to let go of his feelings of pride and self importance, since all beings have done the

    same in the past based on their ignorance. If his captors had known better, they would

    have acted differently. 4. Hate and anger never end if we react with the same emotions.

    They only end when we are free of them, through love. (Goldstein, pp. 125-126) As the

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    Buddha said in the Dhammapada (Cap. 1, V. 5): Hate is most certainly never ended

    through hate. It is ended though freedom from hate. That is the eternal law. (Curto, p.

    26).

    The most important thing is to commit ourselves to forgive in order to let go of

    poisonous emotions and to free ourselves from suffering. One can use the recitation of a

    positive phrase to help in this respect, asking for forgiveness and forgiving others for the

    pain and hurt we have caused. Joseph Goldstein (2002) recommends reciting this phrase

    aloud or in silence either before or after meditation as a continuous purification of the

    anger and resentment we hold inside, repeating: If I have hurt or harmed anyone by my

    thoughts, words, or actions, I ask forgiveness. And I freely forgive anyone who may

    have hurt or harmed me (p. 110-111).

    TRANSFORMATION

    Zen gives us the tools to calm the mind and

    transform anger into compassion.This compassion is

    not found in the ego, thought, reason, or mental

    intelligence.It is found before the duality of thought,

    before discriminating thoughts divide the world into

    good and evil, likes and dislikes.Before this division,

    our nature has neither beginning nor end, is neither

    born nor dies, is unchanging while it continually

    manifests an infinity of changing forms and

    phenomena. This essence is the life force of all, what

    makes plants grow, the planets rotate, and our hearts to continually beat. It is both our

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    divine nature and our everyday experience. It is the Buddha Mind. Zen practice is based

    on letting go of our attachments to dualistic thoughts. Ironically, we dont practice Zen to

    achieve something, like happiness, peace or a vacation from anger.Instead, we practice

    Zen for the practice itself, a sense of non-duality. We invariable start our practice

    imagining that we are the ones practicing; creating duality between our self doing

    something and the goal we seek to achieve.But eventually the mind begins to see its own

    mental states, its habits and hidden aspects of the personality.We can see the thoughts as

    they flow, without identifying with them.Without attempting to remove anything, we just

    observe our thoughts with calm awareness, seeing them arising from emptiness and then

    returning to emptiness (Sahn, 1997). In fact, everything is empty.This emptiness is our

    Buddha Mind, an unlimited potential in everything, while all forms emerge from within

    this emptiness. As it says in The Scripture of Great Wisdom: "Form is only emptiness,

    emptiness is all forms, there is, then, nothing more than this, for what is form is

    emptiness, and what is emptiness is form, the same is also true for all sensation, thought,

    activity, and consciousness. These feelings, perceptions, mental impulses and

    consciousness make up what is known as ego, a set of mental habits connected to the

    form of this body.But in themselves, they are all empty.When we directly discover for

    ourselves the Truth through Zen, then enlightenment reveals itself with unlimited

    consequences, because enlightenment awakens our inner bodhisattva. As we purify our

    own mind, we purify all minds. Practicing Zen, compassion arises naturally. Practice is

    not just for ourselves, it is for everyone. Thus, freeing ourselves from the anger, greed,

    and delusion, we free the whole universe from suffering.

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