Thursday, February 09, 2006

A Path Strewn with Flowers and Bones

This picture of the construction of Chokyi Nyima's monastery, Ka-Nying Shedrub Ling, was taken by Lama Sherab in 1981. Lama Sherab also kindly provided the following story about his meeting Tulku Urgyen.

* * *

Kathmandu was still a city of quiet dirt roads, candle power, and open spaces in those days. The "modern" world had only started to intrude. One had to travel down to the central telegraph office to send a telegram, to the central post office or the American Express office to send or receive mail. Tulku Urgyen's new monastery, Ka Nying She Drub Ling, stood virtually alone outside the circle of buildings surrounding the Boudhanath stupa itself. [photo] A mimeographed sheet posted in the Bir Restaurant announced the first-ever seminar for foreigners to be offered in the monastery by Tulku Urgyen's eldest son, the abbott, Chokyi Nyima Rinpoche. I decided to attend.

The first day, Rinpoche spent several hours devilishly challenging the trekker, hippy and expatriate attendees to prove whether or not the table in front of him really existed. I was enthralled by his wakeful, playful manner and humor, and his impeccable logic. It was deconstruction on the fly, before I had ever heard that term or it became in vogue. I went back every day I could, and again on Saturdays.

** ** **

While I grew more and more keenly interested in Buddhist philosophy, and was touched by the devout spirit of the many Tibetans around me, I held firm to the notion that I was a free agent, an independent operator. I didn't want to join any guild or identify with any group. I scoffed when Chad Leech asked me whether I planned to take refuge. Why become a Buddhist? What were the perks and benefits? I could meditate without a membership card.

At the conclusion of Chokyi Nyima's seminar, the student group was to travel up to Nagi Gompa, a small speck visible far up the northernmost slope of the Kathmandu Valley, for a special instruction from Tulku Urgyen himself, whom CN referred to variously as "the boss" and "head office." CN also offered the opportunity and arranged for me to stay on for a while at Nagi after the teaching, for a private meditation retreat.

It was a rough hike indeed up to Nagi in those days, the last part a traverse up steep dirt trails. I watched Chokling Rinpoche, CN's younger brother, and a little portly, huff and puff his way up, with some generous support from below on his backside. The gompa (monastery) itself was just a small chapel in the middle of a clearing, without much light. After we had been sitting a while, Tulku Urgyen entered the shrine hall in response to the soulful, lilting chants of the resident nuns. He taught us to understand and perceive the nature of our minds, basing his remarks on the famous verse from the Buddhist canon:

Thus taught the Buddha:

Abstain from all harmful actions,

Practice magnificent virtue, and

Thoroughly train your own mind.

After the teaching, an endless stream of local pilgrims appeared from over the lip of the clearing to line up for a blessing from Tulku Urgyen, dressed in their finest holiday dresses and slacks. Before anyone in Kathmandu had telephones, everyone still knew where to be, and when.

Eventually, locals and foreigners alike began the trek home, back down into the valley, and I rolled my sleeping bag out onto the low bench in the back of the shrine hall on which the junior-most nuns sat during communal prayers, lit a candle, sat down, and began to practice as I had learned in my Insight meditation retreats.

After some days of "walking, walking," "breathing, breathing," and "thinking, thinking," and many hours gazing out from my perch on the flat ledge of a big cement ring girding the lone tree on the edge of the clearing, watching clouds unfurl over the valley, watching the simple herder cluck and chase after the few milk buffalo that served the gompa, the green shafts of barley wave in the breeze, I received, courtesy of a peculiar old Dutch woman who manifested in the shrine hall one day, a summons: "Tulku Urgyen says he will see you now."

"Please thank Tulku Urgyen for the offer, but I see no need to bother him. I have nothing to ask him, and am content to continue with my practice and retreat." Surprised by my answer, she beat a hasty retreat. The next day she appeared again, this time with more resolve. "You are to come see Tulku Urgyen now, you don't know what an unusual privilege it is to receive such an invitation." I demurred again, just barely.

The next day was the last of my scheduled stay. This time, there was no avoiding the call. Besides, what harm could there be in thanking Tulku Urgyen in person for allowing me to squat for ten days in the shrine, and take meals from his pair of young nun-chefs in a tiny back room, where they sniffed and wiped away tears as smoke billowed from the clay hearth stuffed with burning odds and ends of wood and yak dung?

I walked up the rickety, narrow staircase. The door opened before me. There across the room sat Tulku Urgyen in his meditation box next to a large picture window, waist wrapped in a simple blanket, more composed than I had ever thought it possible for anyone to be. He looked at me through his large glasses. I entered. I hardly noticed his student and translator, Erik Schmidt, sitting quietly by his side. "Do you have something to ask me?" Our eyes met, then I watched myself bow helplessly with uncontrived respect, struck to my very marrow by his presence, his calm, his mind enveloping the entire space and dissolving every last concept of self-importance I had carried into the room but a moment before.

With tears welling in my eyes and a slight tremor in my voice, I responded, "Yes, I wish to ask you to grant me the vows of refuge." We went through the ceremony together; Erik had to ask thrice whether the name was correct, verb and all -- Protected by the Three Jewels. Tulku Urgyen gave me ten rupees with a command to spend it all on my walk down the mountain, before I reached Boudhanath.

It was November 1981. My life had just completely changed. That old man in a blanket was the most genuine person I had ever met, by several orders of magnitude. I knew this the way I knew, one day earlier that spring as we returned from a Baha'i prayer meeting we had attended for our anthropology class, that I had fallen in love with Andrea Kozol -- only more so. Traipsing down the slopes with that ten rupee note burning a hole in my pocket, I was light as air, immensely glad to have made such a connection with Tulku Urgyen. I wanted to know what it was like to be him, wanted to be inside his mind, to learn everything he could possibly teach me. I cried thinking about what had just transpired, and vowed to follow every last word of advice he offered me.

(Excerpted from "A Path Strewn with Flowers and Bones," forthcoming. © 2006 Blazing Wisdom Institute, Inc. All rights reserved.)


12 comments:

Anonymous said...

that story reminds me meilarepa.

Anonymous said...

is this a new book being published? its sounds very inspiring.

Anonymous said...

Thanks for sharing. It feels good to read these lines. I know (please don't react!) Buddhism is not about "feeling good", still, it feels good to know these magical moments exist when something called karma matures...

When things go bad or when you invoke buddhas a thousand times and are still stuck in your situation, there's wisdom that raps on the door and tells you, "Ok don't worry, your prayers are not lost. just be patient. remember Asanga and Buddha Maïtreya?"

Asanga must have felt that he was a hopeless case thousands of times... but the most beautiful moment is when he meets Buddha Maïtreya who tells him, "I've always been around, it's just that you couldn't see me yet." So, when moments of incredible union with the masters happen, we kind of forget the thousands of hours of feeling bad, lost, awfully guilty about our tons of bad karma etc etc..

It feels good, all the universe feels good, everything feels good, happy, new and enchanting, everything is right in its place, we're not lost, not bad, not hopeless. We are free to feel good and the happiness is shared...

So, I am happy Lama Sherab wrote these lines and (yell if it suits you), it makes me 'feel very good' down inside.

MV

guille patron said...

Great story! In the introduction the author of the story is refered to as "Lama Sherab"... after his meeting with Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche he went on to become a monk? or whats the story? do I have to wait for the upcoming book?

pensum said...

I'm not sure what Lama Sherab Posel's full story is. Let's see if i can get him to clarify all your questions personally.

Anonymous said...

Thanks everyone for these kind comments. I don't believe Buddhism teaches that it must be wrong to feel good. As MV points out, such peak moments can nurture our growth for a lifetime ... and beyond.

Michael has kindly included a link to our website at the bottom of the story. Yes, it is my intention to publish this book in the near future.

Many thanks again.

Lama Sherab Dorje

Anonymous said...

Yes this seems very foward very progressive thi comment about maitreya gives such confidence, A fearless stride where the path is always mutable, always seeking out the latest and most applicable ideas to our ignorance always with ease,with understanding.

Anonymous said...

Is Lama Sherab Dorje the same Lama Sherab Posel who commented on Thinley Norbu Rinpoche's new book, Cascading Waterfall, at Amazon.com?

Anonymous said...

Tom Reach says: What a wonderful commentary... can't wait for the book. I wonder exactly what Chad Leech was suggesting he take "refuge" FROM?? And is this the same Chad, friends of Mike P and Steve I from Monclova, Ohio?

Love and Light, my brother.

Anonymous said...

Hi. This is LiLi. do you know where I can find Norman Posel or Chad Leech? they are old friends from Nepal, 1981. We were students together.

Anonymous said...

Hi Lili, you can reach me at Lsdorje@blazingwisdom.org. Hope to hear from you soon.

Lama Sherab Dorje

Val Miller said...

Sounds like a humble brag to me. Norman always thought he was a tulku. Not super-interested.