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We
would like to invite you to participate in this tribute
to H.E. Chagdud Tulku Rinpoche.
If you would like to include your own written tribute,
special story, or photo of Rinpoche,
please email us at webmaster@odsalling.org
Lama Tsering Tribute
The Buddhist teachings explain that being born means
that certainly we will die. We can be sure of this.
There are no exceptions; whether young or old, rich
or poor, powerful or powerless, death is the great equalizer.
Until the death of my precious teacher, Chagdud Tulku
Rinpoche, I had never experienced losing a loved one.
Last November, however, the teachings of impermanence
were demonstrated in the most profound way by Rinpoche's
passing.
Rinpoche
always said, “The most important moment of your life
is the moment of death”. For those of us on this side
of death, we might tend to disagree. Life is so important
that we prefer to think of death as far away. Sadly,
life's everyday concerns consume us and we fail to adequately
prepare for death. Rinpoche also said, “You can tell
the level of a person's realization by how they die.”
The moment of death is the ultimate opportunity for
enlightenment, but when we become overwhelmed by fear
and confusion, the opportunity is lost. Throughout history,
people have turned to the great masters to learn how
to manage death's transition with the necessary wisdom
and skill. Rinpoche's passage was a perfect display
of this skillful mastery at the time of death.
Sometimes,
Rinpoche was asked, “What is the purpose of life?” Rinpoche
would always answer the same way, “The purpose of life
is to prepare to die.” True to this understanding, Rinpoche
taught very carefully about impermanence and the illusory
nature of life. Once, while doing retreat high in the
mountains overlooking the California coast, I was following
Rinpoche's instructions on illusion recognition. “This
is all impermanent. This is all an illusion. And so
is this. And this.” My eyes moved over everything, extracting
ordinary truth and my attachment to it. Then my eyes
fell on Rinpoche…and I cried. I couldn't bear the thought
of his impermanence. He saw the tears and asked, “Silly
girl, you what doing?” I told him, “I'm meditating on
the impermanent illusory nature of life and was doing
just fine until I looked at you.” I then asked, “You're
not impermanent, are you?” He laughed, a laugh as vast
and open as the universe, and said, “Oh, yes, I am impermanent.”
Rinpoche
could laugh, but I could only cry.
Rinpoche held mastery.
That's why he was the teacher and I the student.
Obviously,
I had great attachment for Rinpoche. After his death,
I was able to sit with his body for many days. There,
seated in posture, his mind was not confined to his
body, nor separate from it. Rinpoche was still teaching
me. Awareness doesn't die. Awareness isn't born. Awareness
isn't blown by the winds of karma. All the rest dies.
In his state of samadhi he proved his realization of
the teachings. Just as Rinpoche said, “The proof is
at death…… at death you will know.”
In
every minute, in every moment, whenever my mind turns
to Rinpoche, he's not gone. The presence of awareness
that is his mind is all mind. It is not gone. Within
the recognition of that presence of essence, I don't
miss Rinpoche. But when I am distracted from essence,
I miss him. I miss calling him and joking with him.
I miss being able to ask him a silly question or tell
him a funny story. Those kinds of things, where my attachment
to the impermanent and illusory fooled me before, sometimes
fools me now.
Occasionally,
when I teach, I hear Rinpoche's words in what I say.
His tireless generosity made an imprint on me. He wanted
beings to benefit. He wanted me to benefit. He wanted
me to bring benefit to others. All the people touched
by Rinpoche received the inoculation of his heart's
compassion, bringing profound benefit to all of them.
Great
masters like Rinpoche come into our world in a different
way than we do. We come pushed rather helplessly by
our karma. They come due to their compassionate purpose.
When they leave, they leave that way too. Many years
ago, Rinpoche said to me, “Tsering La, please don't
pray for my long life, instead pray for what's best.”
So, little by little, over all the years, Rinpoche prepared
me for his death with constant teachings and limitless
love and tireless compassion. The length of his life
was not his most important concern. A week or so before
Rinpoche died, he said, “Now it's time for a baby body.”
I
believe that we will all have the marvelous moment of
understanding the great teachings of limitless compassion
that show in the form of what we call ‘tulkus'. When
we meet the intentional rebirth of our beloved Rinpoche
we will more deeply understand that death too is impermanent
and that the love and compassion of enlightenment will
always manifest in whatever way benefits beings.
Lama Norbu Tribute
"From
the very heart of compassion
You came to the border lands,
To tear asunder hope and fear.
From the vault of your vast sky mind
The blessings of pure dharma
Came, like a sweet rain,
Long awaited.
Due to your great kindness,
The lost sangha was assembled
And the holy places arose.
The pinnacle teachings rested firmly
On the foundation of pure motivation,
And you never let us forget impermanence.
Now,
without your physical body to comfort us,
We grieve without tears.
Immersed in the blessing
Of mind beyond all extremes.
Later we reunited among snow peaks,
In homage to the mahaguru,
Amidst a great fire puja,
Led by lineage lamas in the four directions.
Clouds
of white blessing smoke
Liberating by sight and smell,
Filled the lungs.
There was no separation.
After
the ceremony
Few remained,
To witness the sudden appearance
Of the clear flame, a great butterlamp offering.
One
second a flaming heruka
One second a fiery snow lion
One second a fire horse
The flames leapt into space.
The
eyes of Rinpoche's vast vision,
The tongue of Rinpoche's continuous dharma teachings,
And the heart of Rinpoche's boundless compassion,
Remain with us."
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