If we could be certain that this life will last for a long time we could afford to be carefree and unconcerned, but every day we hear of people dying unexpectedly of heart attacks or strokes, in car crashes, and so forth. Human life is very uncertain.
Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, Universal Compassion
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All
living beings have the same basic wish to be happy and avoid
suffering, but very few people understand the real causes
of happiness and suffering. We generally believe that external
conditions such as food, friends, cars, and money are the
real causes of happiness, and as a result we devote nearly
all our time and energy to acquiring these. Superficially
it seems that these things can make us happy, but if we look
more deeply we will see that they also bring us a lot of suffering
and problems.
Happiness and suffering are states of mind, and so their main causes cannot be found outside the mind. The real source of happiness is inner peace. If our mind is peaceful, we shall be happy all the time, regardless of external conditions, but if it is disturbed or troubled in any way, we shall never be happy, no matter how good our external con- ditions may be. External conditions can only make us happy if our mind is peaceful. We can understand this through our own experience. For instance, even if we are in the most beautiful surroundings and have everything we need, the moment we get angry any happiness we may have disappears. This is because anger has destroyed our inner peace.
Buddha taught many profound methods
of spiritual training, all of which are practical ways to
purify and control our mind. If we put these methods into
practice we shall definitely gain a special experience of
mental peace. By continuing to improve this experience, deluded
states of mind will gradually diminish and our inner peace
will grow. Eventually, by abandoning delusions altogether
we shall attain the permanent inner peace of nirvana. Having
overcome our own delusions, such as anger, attachment, and
ignorance, and developed profound spiritual realizations of
universal love, compassion, concentration, and wisdom, our
ability to help others will be far greater. In this way we
can help others solve their problems not just for a few days
or a few years, but forever. We can help them find an inner
peace and joy that nothing, not even death, can destroy. How
wonderful!
© Geshe Kelsang Gyatso, New Kadampa Tradition 2004