Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly

Dreaming Ourselves into Existence

Of the many teachings of the Buddha, anatta, or selflessness, may be the hardest to understand. While we can all relate to the experience of dukkha, the ultimately unsatisfying nature of changing phenomena, and can observe first-hand the truth of impermanence, the concept of no-self is counterintuitive to our lived experience. Most of our lives revolve around the strongly conditioned belief in a self, with much of our energy devoted to gratifying it, defending it, aggrandizing it, and even at times disparaging it, all without even knowing quite what it is. As the great Tibetan Master Dilgo Khyentse wrote:

The idea of an enduring self has kept you wandering helplessly in the lower realms of samsara for countless past lifetimes. It is the very thing that now prevents you from liberating yourself and others from conditioned existence. If you could simply let go of that one thought of “I,” you would find it easy to be free, and to free others, too.

The great surprise that comes with deepening insight is that the self is not something in and of itself; rather, we create sense of it moment to moment. To help make sense of this, I like to use the analogy of the Big Dipper. On a clear night, we can look up at the sky and readily pick it out. Though that particular pattern seems to jump out at us, in reality there is no Big Dipper. What we see are only points of light—distant stars—in a fixed relationship to one another. We then create an image and concept in our minds, overlaying the bare experience of seeing. This points to our profound and commonplace conditioning of reifying patterns into things.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly

Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly9 min read
The Swift Path to Buddhahood
THERE IS A LEGEND of a female master, Machik Jobum, who lived sometime in the eleventh to twelfth century. After experiencing severe illness, her father taught her the Six Dharmas (Tibetan: Naro Chodruk), a series of meditations for accomplishing swi
Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly5 min read
Buddhadharma ON BOOKS
THE CHÖD TRADITION developed by the female Tibetan adept Machik Labdrön in the eleventh and twelfth centuries is a practice aimed at cutting (chod) one’s attachment to the idea of a self through ritualized meditative practices that involve specific m
Buddhadharma: The Practitioner's Quarterly11 min read
A Wake-Up Call
OF THE SIX Dharmas of Naropa, two are for the daytime (tummo/chandali and illusory form, or gyulu), two are for the night (milam, or dream dharma and osel, luminosity yoga), and two are for death and beyond (bardo yoga and phowa). Phowa and bardo yog

Related