On the Importance of Relating to Unseen Beings
According to Tibetan Buddhism, the universe is populated by a vast array
of enlightened and unenlightened beings. Some of them we can see; most we
cannot. While Westerners, even practitioners, have tended to view them as
superstition or mere symbolism, Reginald A. Ray argues that communication
with unseen beings through ritual is at the very heart of tantric
Buddhist practice.
Truth makes little sense and has no real impact if it is merely a
collection of abstract ideas. Truth that is living experience, on the
other hand, is challenging, threatening, and transforming.
Tibetan Buddhism is a way of experiencing the world. In many ways,
it is quite different from the dominant trends not only in the West, but
in the “modern, technological culture” that is now rapidly encircling the
globe. There are many parts of the traditional, conservative, medieval
culture of Tibet that we will never be able to appreciate or understand.
But there are other parts, particularly its Buddhist heritage, that can
help us see with new eyes the limitations and possibilities of our own
contemporary situation.
Buddhism is a particularly interesting tradition because it has one
foot in the past and one in the present. On the one hand, it arose at a
time when India was undergoing transformation from a more primitive to a
“high” civilization. Buddhism has the same literacy, scholasticism,
professional elites, institutionalization, hierarchies, political
involvements, and monetary concerns as do the other “high religions” that
evolved after the invention of agriculture and that we now largely
identify as our own ways of being religious.
At the same time, the Buddha claimed, “I follow the ancient path,”
and by this he meant to show a “way back” to a more fundamental
experience of human life than the one evolving in his day. Tibetan
Buddhism, perhaps more than any other form of Buddhism, has retained the
raw and rugged experience of this “primordiality” as the basis of its
spirituality. In this sense, it is concerned not with truth that is fixed
and dead, but with truth that is alive and constantly emerging.
Traditional Tibetans lived in a world that is, in many respects,
quite different from the one assumed in modern Western culture. It is not
so much that the classical Tibetan worldview contradicts the findings of
modern science, but rather that it emphasizes different things and has a
different overall shape and configuration.
Most importantly, in the classical Buddhist view, the world is
defined not only by what we can perceive with our physical senses and
think about rationally. It is equally made up of what cannot be seen, but
is available through intuition, dreams, visions, divination, and the
like. The senses and rational mind provide access to the immediate
physical world, but it is only through the other ways of knowing that can
one gain access to the much larger context in which this physical realm
is set. Can modern people have experience of this traditional Tibetan
cosmology? Tibetans will tell you that their experience of the universe
is accessible to anyone who cares to know it. If you know where to look
and how to look, they say, you will see for yourself what we are talking
about.
The Tibetan cosmos is a vast one, beginningless and endless in terms of time, and limitless in extent. Worlds, each inhabited by sentient beings,
extend on and on throughout space, with no end. This context of infinite
space and time, with innumerable worlds, provides the arena for samsara,
cyclic existence. Samsara refers to the condition of beings who have not
yet attained liberation, whose existence is still governed by belief in a
“self” or “ego.” Those still within samsara are thus blindly driven,
through the root defilements of passion, aggression, and delusion, to
defend and aggrandize the “selves” that they think they possess. This
action produces results or karma, that become part of who they are. When
samsaric beings die, they are subsequently reborn in the same or another
realm, in accordance with their karma. Normally this process, and the
cycles of pain and pleasure that it entails, goes on without end. The
various samsaric worlds are known as “impure realms,” that is, places
where the condition of samsara prevails among the inhabitants.
The situation is not hopeless, however, for there are other realms
of being that stand outside of samsara. These are the “pure realms,”
characterized by enlightenment, the abode of the “realized ones,” those
who have attained liberation from samsara and who dwell in various pure
lands. These beings are: the celestial buddhas with their various
manifestations; the yidams (personal deities), male and female, also
called wisdom dakinis and herukas; the great bodhisattvas such as
Avalokiteshvara and Tara, who will come to the aid of beings; the
dharmapalas (dharma protectors), who watch over and guard the dharma
itself and those on the path; the enlightened men and women who have
passed beyond this world, and others. These various enlightened ones
represent a state of realization that is available to suffering sentient
beings. In fact, according to the type of Buddhism followed in
Tibet—mahayana Buddhism—the state that they embody is the ultimate and
final destiny of all humans and other sentient beings. All sentient
beings are on the path that will one day lead to the attainment of the
complete and perfect enlightenment of a fully realized buddha.
Although the “home” of the buddhas and high-level bodhisattvas is
outside of samsara, they appear in our world to help us enter the path of
liberation and follow it to its conclusion. The human Buddha Shakyamuni
thus appeared twenty-five hundred years ago, bringing the dharma to this
world for the first time and founding a lineage of the study and practice
of the teachings. Likewise, the celestial buddhas, bodhisattvas,
protectors, dakinis and departed teachers appear in our world in various
ways, bringing blessings, protection, and guidance on the path.
The Tibetan cosmology, then, is not meant to present a disembodied,
abstract “scientific” picture. It rather shows us the realms of potential
experience that make up this cosmos. It describes the various realms of
being—only one of which is human—that are possible and exist within the
totality of being. Some of these modes of being are defined by the
suffering of samsara, while others represent liberation from samsara.
Traditional Tibetan cosmology, then, contrasts with modern conceptions of
the universe that are essentially rationalistic, gained by ignoring all
experiential data except ones that conform to limited physical criteria
such as matter, extension and motion, and that can be proven to any
observer through logical demonstration. The Tibetan picture has been
gained through different means and includes different “data.”
There are now many Tibetan teachers who understand very well the
kind of universe that is described by modern science. Their response to
our ideas is, “Yes, but all of this is just the human world. There are
other realms, and these are outside of and beyond this human realm. You
cannot see them by using scientific instruments.”
Moreover, even this realm has more dimensions and subtleties than
modern people usually ascribe to their world. In the traditional Tibetan
view, the animate and inanimate phenomena of this world are charged with
being, life and spiritual vitality. These are conceived in terms of
various spirits, ancestors, demigods, demons, and so on. Every river and
mountain has its spirit embodiment or inhabitants. Each human habitation
has a spiritual presence as part of its own being. As this variety
suggests, spirits appear with various levels of development and
motivation. Some are malevolent; some are neutral, and others are
generally beneficent.
These traditional cosmological perspectives create a uniquely powerful
environment for the practice of Tibetan Buddhism. The boundless temporal
and spatial vistas reveal the fragility, brevity and ultimate futility of
human life, taken on its own terms. The view of the phenomena of this world as spiritually charged allows intimacy, relationship and mutuality
with the relative world. The understanding of samsara as the endless
repetition of life followed by death followed by life, all governed by
karma, suggests that lasting happiness in the ordinary sense is not
attainable. The introduction of buddhahood as standing outside of samsara
provides an alternative to this daunting and frightening prospect. The
fact that buddhahood is not only available but is the ultimate and final
destiny of all instills fundamental optimism and a sense of the value of
life. And the limitless time frame in which this can be achieved enables
people to relax and to take their spiritual journey at its own pace. In
this way, Tibetan Buddhism has achieved the seemingly contradictory goals
of revealing the radical inadequacy of samsara, leaving its adherents
little option but to look to a spiritual path, while at the same time
rousing them to a sense of confidence, joy and well-being at their human
condition and its literally infinite possibilities.
To what extent can the contemporary Western Tibetan Buddhist
practitioner dispense with some or all of these unseen, nonhuman beings?
From the Tibetan point of view, relationships with the unseen world are
essential to a full and successful human life. Ignoring one’s
relationships with the whole world of unseen spirits and spiritual beings
is, in fact, as senseless and counterproductive as ignoring the people
and conventions of one’s own immediate human society. It is simply not
possible to live in such a way.
Buddhism is normally thought of as a nontheistic tradition, and
this raises the question of how such spirits, gods, and deities are to be
understood within the Tibetan Buddhist framework. Certainly in Tibetan
life, whether it is a question of the malevolent mamos, the potentially
beneficent hearth god, the deities of the god realms, or the dharma
protectors or tantric yidams, the nonhuman beings are understood at least
on one level as more or less independent, objective entities. They are
beings with whom one must be in constant relation, even though they are
nonhuman and usually not visible.
At the same time, however, from the point of view of the
philosophical and meditative tradition, all such nonhuman beings are
ultimately seen as aspects of one’s own mind and not separate from it.
But what does this actually mean? Frequently, particularly in the West,
this standard Buddhist assertion is taken to indicate that such spirits
and deities, taken as external beings by ordinary Tibetans, are not
really external at all; that in fact they are mistaken projections of
psychological states. This, then, becomes a justification for treating
them as nonexistent and provides a rationale for jettisoning them from
Western adaptations of the tradition. The problem with this approach is
that it reflects a misunderstanding of what is meant by the statement
that such entities are aspects of mind and inseparable from mind.
The deities are more properly said to be aspects of one’s own
innate mind, or reflexes of one’s awareness. For example, the buddhas,
although apparently objectively existing beings, are fundamentally
nothing other than our own enlightened nature. The protectors are
representations of the wrathful and uncompromising energy of our own
awareness. And the gurus are objectifications of the teaching and guiding
principle as it exists within each of us. In a similar manner, the
various samsaric spirits and demons may be seen as embodiments of
peripheral states of one’s own mind. These apparently externally existent
beings, then, are false bifurcations of the primordial nondual awareness
that lies at the basis of all experience.
So far, so good; but here is the really critical point: it is not
only the beings of the unseen world that have this status, but all of the
phenomena of duality. In the Tibetan view, ourselves, other people,
trees, mountains and clouds—indeed all of the phenomena of the entire
so-called internal and external universe—are nothing other than false
objectifications and solidifications of nondual awareness.
To say this is not, however, to discount their external and
“objective” existence within the relative world of apparent duality. The
samsaric beings of the six realms, as well as the Buddhist deities
existing in the state of nirvana, initially make themselves known to us
ordinary, unenlightened people as external, objectively existing beings.
In fact, on this level, they can appear as significantly more real, vivid
and powerful than the ordinary physical universe that surrounds us. On
one level, then, such beings certainly do exist and are important
co-inhabitants of our cosmos. Thus to say that they are aspects of mind
is not to deny their existence on the relative level. Nor does it obviate
our responsibility to deal with them and relate to them on their own
level and as they present themselves to us.
What, then, does it mean to say that these unseen beings are all
aspects of mind? It means simply that the way we experience and conceive
of them has to do with our own psychology and level of awareness.
Ultimately, the apparent duality of subject and object is not given in
reality. It is a structure that we, out of fear and ignorance, impose on
the world. When we see the phenomenal world truly as it is, we realize a
level of being that precedes the subject-object split. This is the true
nature of “experience,” “awareness,” or “nondual mind,” understood at
this point as interchangeable categories. When Tibetans say that the
spirits, gods and deities are aspects of mind and nothing other than
mind, they mean it in this sense, that their fundamental nature—as indeed
the nature of all phenomena—is nondual awareness.
We humans, then, are just one part of a vast, interconnected web of
relationships with all other inhabitants of the cosmos, both those still
living within delusion and those who are awakened. An awareness of these
relationships is critical because, to a very large extent, who we are as
humans is defined by this network of relations. From the Tibetan
perspective, to live a genuinely human and fruitful life, we need to
discover our relation with all these various beings of samsara and
beyond, and to act in ways appropriate to our connection. The way we do
this is through ritual.
Ritual is action that expresses a relationship. It is the vehicle
of communication with another and is itself that communication. In
Tibetan Buddhism, ritual is used in relation both to the seen and the
unseen worlds, and the essence of Tibetan Buddhism is communication with
the awakened ones—departed masters, bodhisattvas, buddhas, and so on. We
call them to mind, open our hearts to them, and receive their blessings.
In revered teachers, a state of realization is embodied in human
form. In the celestial buddhas and high-level bodhisattvas, however, the
embodiment is more ethereal and not within the human realm. Nevertheless
it is not only possible but essential that, as we go along the path, we
also discover and deepen our sense of communication with these
nonmaterial, awakened ones. According to Tibetan tradition, in fact, as
we mature, the “sky draws closer to the earth,” so to speak, and the
celestial buddhas and bodhisattvas seem more and more our ever-present protectors, mentors, and guides.
One of the most common ritual means for communicating with the
realized ones is the sevenfold offering of mahayana Buddhism: one
visualizes the being or beings in question, then [1] offers salutation,
[2] makes real and imagined good offerings, [3] confesses one’s
shortcomings and harm of others, [4] rejoices at the existence of the
awakened being or beings who are the beloved object(s) of devotion, [5]
requests them to teach, thus expressing one’s openness and longing for
instruction, [6] asks them to remain in connection with suffering
samsaric beings and not disappear into nirvana, and [7] dedicates
whatever merit or goodness one has accumulated to the welfare of all
beings. In this simple, brief rite, one makes a link with the
transcendent ones, affirming and actualizing a specific kind of relationship with them.
The reason that we can do this in the first place is that the
buddhas, bodhisattvas, and departed masters already represent who we most
essentially are and must in fact become. This is why, in Tibetan
Buddhism, even the most devotional supplication to the most seemingly
external being is not finally theistic. For, in truth, we are longing to
meet our deepest selves face-to-face, and we are supplicating our own
hidden being. The path to this goal is first, to discover our innermost
being in the other, the awakened one, and then, through relationship with
him or her, gradually to come to awareness of that transcendent nature
within ourselves.
In Tibetan Buddhism, there are many ritual stages along this path
to awakening. What they share is visualization. We create a mental
picture of a departed teacher, a high-level bodhisattva, or a buddha.
Then we carry out a ritual in which we open ourselves and communicate
with this being in various ways, ritually participating in his or her
awakening. In this way, we cultivate our own awakened state.
This process of visualization is a powerful one. For example, in
our ordinary life, what we do not visualize as existing does not exist
for us. If we do not see another person as human, then for us their
humanity does not exist. The same is that much more true for beings who
live in nonmaterial forms outside of samsara. We may be surrounded by
buddhas and bodhisattvas all the time, but until they have a shape and a
name, we do not see them or have access to a relationship with them. For
us they might as well not exist. But the moment we give them a form in
our mind and begin to communicate with them, they exist, and their
wisdom, compassion, and power can enter into our own systems.
It is the many ritual forms of Tibetan Buddhism that enable us to
do this, and within traditional Tibet, the reality of ritual is simply
accepted as a matter of course. It is assumed that just as there are
forms by which to relate to other human beings, so there are other forms
that are used to communicate with the nonhuman and nonmaterial realms.
The status of ritual among Western followers of Tibetan Buddhism
is, however, more in question. Many have felt unable to entertain the
ideas of reincarnation or of the six realms. For them, many of the
traditional Tibetan rituals dealing with other beings and other realms do
not make sense. Sometimes this extends to thinking that even talk of
nonmaterial buddhas, bodhisattvas and protectors is “symbolic,” and that
there is nothing that really corresponds to these designations. In that
case, many of the Tibetan liturgies are seen as directed to no real
object, but are rather understood as psychological ploys to bring about
certain effects.
Even if we Westerners do pay lip service to the traditional Tibetan
cosmological ideas, often, as Jeremy Hayward has argued, we remain at
heart what he calls “scientific materialists.” In other words, while we
may accept the idea of other realms and other beings within and outside
of samsara, we do not actually believe in them. Instead, we live as if
the world were dead and this reality the only one that exists.
This attitude is reflected in many Westerners’ difficulties with
Tibetan ritual. Among Western practitioners, there is frequently a kind
of dead feeling in ritual, and many of us fall back on the idea that rote
repetition, without any particular engagement or feeling, is sufficient.
We fall back, in other words, on attitudes to ritual learned in our
upbringing, where simply to be physically present was all that was
required. In order to survive the many meaningless rituals we may have
been subjected to, we also learned to disengage ourselves psychologically
and to occupy our time with thinking about other things. What is missing
here is the understanding that ritual is a way of communicating with
beings who, on the relative plane, really are there and really are
important to us. This lively and compelling sense of ritual is, at
present, sometimes hard to come by in Western adaptations of Tibetan
Buddhism.
Through ritual, genuinely undertaken, one is led to take a larger
view of one’s life and one’s world; one experiences a shift in
perspective—sometimes subtle, sometimes dramatic. This shift feels like a
diminishing of one’s sense of isolated individuality and an increase in
one’s sense of connectedness with other people, with the nonhuman
presences of our realm, and with purposes that transcend one’s usual
self-serving motivations.
Ritual is a way of reconnecting with the larger and deeper purposes
of life, ones that are oriented toward the general good conceived in the
largest sense. Ironically, through coming to such a larger and more
inclusive sense of connection and purpose, through rediscovering oneself
as a member of a much bigger and more inclusive enterprise, one feels
that much more oneself and grounded in one’s own personhood. Through
ritual, one’s energy and motivation are roused and mobilized so that one
can better fulfill the responsibilities, challenges and demands that life
presents.