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This was put together by me:

 

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Each of us a Healer: Medicine Buddha and the Karma of Healing

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A glamorous fashion consultant was once diagnosed with cancer.

This is how she attempted to alleviate her suffering:

 

She sent a message through a friend of hers, a student at the

Vajrapani institute in California, to ask for advice about

healing practices. She was advised to buy animals that were in

danger of being killed and to then free them in a safe place,

thus enabling them to live longer.

 

This charming woman saved many animals from places where they

were going to be killed. She actually freed two or three thousand

animals, mostly chickens, fish, and worms. She had the chickens

taken care of on a farm, and she freed the fish in open water.

She also bought two thousand worms because they were cheap and

readily available, and released them in the garden outside her

home. Liberating worms was believed to be a particularly good

idea as they go straight under the ground when they are released.

Since they have some protection there from predators, they have a

chance to live longer. It was less certain that animals freed in

forests, lakes, or the ocean would have lived longer because they

have natural enemies in those places.

 

It is said that when she returned to the hospital for a checkup

after doing these practices, the doctors could not find any trace

of the cancer.

 

True or not, this story should not come as a surprise to those

subscribing to the karmic theory. In the words of Deepak Chopra:

 

"No debt in the universe ever goes unpaid. There is a perfect

accounting system in the universe, and everything is a constant

"to and fro" exchange."

 

Thus by granting those helpless animals the boon of life the lady

vindicated her faith in the authenticity of the karmic law,

namely that "karma is both action and the consequence of that

action." The actions she took were not magical or miraculous but

rather a patient planting of causes which eventually bloomed into

the effects of health and happiness. Indeed if we want to create

happiness in our own lives, we must learn to sow the seeds of

happiness for others. As with Buddhist practices more generally,

the result one receives depend on one's past karma. Indeed

everything that is happening at this moment is a result of the

actions we have performed in the past. This is but an

illustration of the proverb 'as we sow as shall we reap.' If we

have loving kindness and compassion, our prime concern will

always be not to hurt others, and this itself is healing.

According to Buddhist belief a compassionate person is the most

powerful healer, not only of their own diseases and problems, but

also those of others. Many of us will vouch that in a sickbay a

doctor's friendly smile among the prevalence of disease and

suffering all around can work wonders for the overall well being

of the patient. Truly the use of love is to heal. When it flows

without effort from the depth of the self, love creates health.

 

In Buddhist tradition the first and primordial healer was the

great Buddha himself. Known popularly as the Medicine Buddha he

is said to have revealed the teachings embodied in the sacred

bodies of texts known as the Four Medical Tantras. The whole of

Buddhist medicine is said to have derived from this sacred

scripture. As explained in the first of these texts, Buddha the

Great Healer was once seated in meditation surrounded by an

assembly of disciples including divine physicians, great sages,

non-Buddhist gods and bodhisattvas, all of whom wished to learn

the art of healing. Rendered speechless by the radiant glory of

his countenance, they were unable to request the desired

teachings. To accommodate their unspoken wishes, the Medicine

Buddha manifested two emanations, one to request the teachings

and the other to deliver them. In this way, then, the Buddhist

explanation of the various mental and physical ailments, their

causes, diagnoses, and treatment is said to have originated.

 

Illustration : http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/tc35.jpg

 

Other than that, the action of the Buddha in understanding his

disciple's needs without their explicitly stating so is in itself

a reminder of his infinite compassion. Indeed healers such as the

Buddha are referred to as great physicians not because of their

medical abilities -as great as these are- but because they have

the compassion and wisdom to diagnose and treat the root causes

underlying all mental and physical malaise.

 

In visual arts the Buddha of healing is sometimes represented as

golden in color, though his characteristic color is blue.

 

Illustration : http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/tc33.jpg

 

In either representation his left hand rests in his lap in the

mudra of meditation, supporting an iron begging-bowl. His right

palm faces outwards, offering, in a gesture of generosity, a stem

of the myrobalan plant. This is a healing fruit well-known in

Tibetan medicine and a symbol here of the botanical realm's

restorative fecundity, reminding us that the earth provides

freely, asking for nothing to sustain her fertility but gentle

care.

 

However Buddhist science of medicine grants only a limited

application to external medicine. These are considered sufficient

only up to the level of removal of external symptoms of the

disease. The cure for humankind's root illness is stressed to be

spiritual illumination, the way to which lies within our own

selves. Towards this end the Medicine Buddha is often shown

surrounded with various fragrant and healing plants of the

Tibetan pharmacopoeia, as also innumerable gods sages, and other

exalted beings. Such a densely packed arrangement is referred to

as the 'Paradise of the Medicine Buddha.'

 

Illustration :

http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/medicinebuddha.jpg

 

This paradise represents an idealized universe where remedies

exist for every ailment. The Buddha himself is said to have

stated, "For as many sentient beings as exist in this world

system, there is a path to liberation."

 

According to Romio Shrestha "The Medicine Buddha is our complete

spiritual apothecary. To discover the healing force within our

being is to enter the paradise of the 'master of remedies.'" In

other words this paradise lies within our own selves, only a

conditioning of the mind is required to identify it and partake

of its pleasures. Romio Shrestha further says: "Our body has the

capacity to cure itself of any ailment. Every plant, every herb,

every remedy has its counterpart within the subtle essences of

the human body."

 

We have the capacity to heal not only ourselves but also those

around us as the following story will demonstrate:

 

There was once a monk who lived in a small Tibetan village. He

was quite ordinary, and spent his life going about his monastic

duties. One year a terrible epidemic of small pox broke out in

the village, killing many people in the area, the monk also

contracted the disease and died. It was the middle of winter, the

ground was frozen and the wood was scarce, so his body was taken

to a lake and put under the ice. Shortly after this, the epidemic

stopped. In the springtime, as the ice was melting, people

noticed a rainbow over the place where the monk had been put.

They went back and found his body floating there, perfectly

preserved. He was brought back to the monastery and given a

special cremation ceremony. As his body disappeared into the

flames, rainbows came out of the pyre into the sky, and relics

were discovered in the ashes. Everyone then recognized that this

monk had been an extraordinary person in the garb of an 'ordinary

' one, and credited him with purifying the negative karma that

had caused the epidemic by taking it (absorbing it) into his own

body. In the world of Tibetan Buddhism, sickness can be a

manifestation of spiritual accomplishment and a sacrifice made on

the behalf of others. This is something a mother can understand,

who gives her own vitality to nourish her children. Indeed here

some find the justification for the wasting away of their bodies

by rigorous ascetics, treating sickness as the broom that sweeps

away bad karma, thus justifying their embracing of the hardships

and suffering on the spiritual path as the highest form of

purification.

 

Illustration : http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/zc89.jpg

 

An ordinary person has the capacity for extraordinary healing.

This ability is gained by recognizing the suffering of others as

our own, by suffering as they are suffering, by feeling one with

them. Cultivating such sentiments gives rise to a warm and caring

heart, full of compassion. Only then can be mobilized the

boundless powers of healing that reside within the infinite

depths of our consciousness. In fact disease and suffering are

believed to be particularly liberating in as much as they offer

us an opportunity to experience our interconnectedness with other

beings by making us aware of our own mortality. There is a story

about an abbot of a monastery who had gained much proficiency in

the powers of compassionate healing. One day while addressing his

disciples, he suddenly yelled in pain. When the lamas asked what

was wrong, he told them that a dog was being beaten outside.

Going out, they found an angry man with a stick chasing away a

dog. When the man was called in the abbot pulled down his own

robes to reveal his back. On the same place where the dog was hit

were fresh cuts and bruises. This is the sort of oneness that an

ideal healer is sought to possess.

 

The Buddhist tradition identifies the Medicine Buddha as the

ideal healer, and it also stresses that the utmost powers of

healing lie within our own selves. According to Deepak Chopra "We

have a pharmacy inside us that is absolutely exquisite. It makes

the right medicine, for the precise time, for the right target

organ - with no side effects."

 

Thus by extension we come to the realization that the venerable

Medicine Buddha is within each of us. The path to this

realization lies through meditation, specifically the meditation

of visualization. By meditating on him and visualizing him in

front of us we can come face to face with the Medicine Buddha

whose smile radiates compassion to the universe, and whose gentle

eyes melt with love for all living beings.

 

Illustration : http://www.exoticindia.com/artimages/zk40.jpg

 

Next, then, a ray of golden light comes from the heart of the

Buddha, and gently penetrates our own heart. (Heart here means

'heart center' - the core of our being inside the center of our

chest, not the physical pumping mechanism). This heart-center is

defined as:

 

"Within you there is a stillness and sanctuary to which you can

retreat at any time and be yourself. This sanctuary is a simple

awareness of comfort, which can't be violated by the turmoil of

events. This place feels no trauma and stores no hurt. It is the

healing mental space that one seeks to find in meditation."

 

----------------Deepak Chopra.

 

This realization comes to us as a flash of insight, and it is not

verbal, nor linguistically structured. It is a feeling of sudden,

liberating knowledge, when without words we experience the truth.

A truth gauged through words is not spontaneous since a finite

amount of time is required to dwell on their meaning. It is

through this imaginative, symbolic, and creative spiritual

experience that 'ordinary' beings are transformed into

extraordinary healers. This is the way to relate to the Medicine

Buddha, the greatest of all healers.

 

No wonder then that doctors believing in these ideals perform

this meditation and invoke the Medicine Buddha before they

prepare their medicines and when offering them to patients. While

doing so they also simultaneously chant his mantra. This mantra

is OM BEKANDZE BEKANDZE MAHA BEKANDZE RANDZE SAMUNGATE SOHA. As

they recite this sacred formula they visualize nectar flowing

down from the syllables of the mantra into the medicine. The

syllables then completely dissolve into the medicine and grant it

the potency and power to heal.

 

This is a symbolic gesture aimed at the realization that as the

sacred syllables making up the mantra grant the medicine its

capacity to heal, likewise by consciously following the path of

righteous karma, we are able to soak our lives with the nectar

which flows from the virtues gained through such action.

 

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References and Further Reading:

 

Baker, Ian. The Tibetan Art of Healing, New Delhi, 1997.

 

Chopra, Deepak. Journey Into Healing (Awakening the Wisdom Within

You), London, 1999.

 

Chopra, Deepak. The Seven Spiritual laws of Success: New Delhi,

2000.

 

Crow, David. In Search of the Medicine Buddha (A Himalayan

Journey), New York, 2001.

 

Landaw, Jonathan, and Weber, Andy. Images of Enlightenment

(Tibetan Art in Practice), New York, 1993.

 

Rinpoche, Lama Zopa, Foreword by Lillian Too. Ultimate Healing

(The Power of Compassion), Boston, 2001.

 

Shrestha, Romio. Celestial Gallery: New York, 2000.

 

Vessantara. Meeting the Buddhas (A Guide to Buddhas,

Bodhisattvas, and Tantric Deities), Birmingham, 1993.

 

Yanagi, The Unknown Craftsman (A Japanese Insight into Beauty),

Tokyo, 1989.

 

---------------------------

 

This article was sent as a newsletter from the website:

http://www.exoticindia.com

 

Nitin G.

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I always find Nitin Kumar's articles well illustrated and a joy to read...

 

Wim

 

 

sanjulag [sanjulag]

Saturday, August 03, 2002 6:28 AM

Each of us a Healer.....

 

This was put together by me:

 

=============================================

Each of us a Healer: Medicine Buddha and the Karma of Healing

=============================================

 

http://www.exoticindia.com/article/medicinebuddha/

 

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