I continue to find this little text by Gampopa quite amazing. To do it justice, I am constantly polishing the translation while I write these commentaries. This polishing has resulted in more changes to the translation on the website, some of them quite subtle.
These mahamudra instructions dovetail beautifully with the Diamond Sutra. I strongly urge you to make regular reading of the sutra part of your mahamudra practice. My translation of the Diamond Sutra, This Unexpected Jewel, is ideal. I translated it to be easy to read aloud, as several of the reviews on Amazon have corroborated. I’d love to hear about your experience of joining the practice of mahamudra as Gampopa teaches it with reading the Diamond Sutra. Please email me at ken@unfetteredmind.org about your experience and please consider posting a review on Amazon, too.
The second section of How to Lose Your Mind is “Pointing out how it comes to be.” These are essentially pointing out instructions, as the commentary below makes clear.
We have already looked at the first and second points, that faith, devotion, and awe are the genesis of mahamudra and that excellent teachers are conditions for mahamudra. Let’s now look at the last three points in this section.
Although mahamudra has no method, this unaffected mind is a method.
Although mahamudra has no path, this undistracted mind is a path.
Although mahamudra has no result, this freeing of mind in empty experience is the result.
Together, they form a practice unit, a three-legged stool so to speak. If one is missing, practice falls apart.
The first part of each sentence is about how mahamudra is. Mahamudra has no method, no path, and no result. In other words, mahamudra is not something that is fabricated. It is just there. Nor is it something you arrive at. It is already there. Nor does it become something through your practice. These are the three legs of the stool I mentioned above.
The second part of each sentence points out how you come to be mahamudra, that is, how you actually lose your mind. For this, there is a method, there is a path, and there is a result.
In developing clear stable attention, you are working at something. At the very least, you are working at developing the ability to rest clear and present. In the development of insight, you are working at looking, looking until you can actually see nothing. Then you learn how to rest in the looking and look in the resting, bringing these two together.
At some point, a subtle shift takes place. It may be initiated by a feeling of deep faith or devotion, by awe, or by compassion. It may be initiated by a pointing out instruction from a teacher. It may be initiated by a chance occurrence when you are doing nothing in particular. In this shift, at least for a moment, you are nothing, or, if you prefer, you are not a thing. Maybe it lasts more than a moment. For today, the important point is that there is a shift.
You may not experience the shift as a shift per se. You may quietly and undramatically become aware of a quality that you had not known was there. It may be a clarity of unfathomable depth, a peace in which thoughts are like sparks of light, or a feeling of well-being in which all physical and emotional tensions subside on their own, or some combination of these. It may be right at the limit of awareness, a possibility lurking behind clouds that your awareness does not quite penetrate, hiding in the ordinary activity of mind, or intimated in the eruption of strong reactions.
Once this kind of experience insinuates itself into your practice, how you practice needs to change. It needs to move from cultivating qualities and capabilities to becoming accustomed to what is already there. It moves from the metaphor of a path or journey to, possibly, the metaphor of recognizing a room that you have always been in, but forgotten.
As you practice, if and when that quality or qualities arise, don’t do anything. As my teacher used to say, “Just recognize and rest.” Just recognize what is happening, and rest there. This simple instruction is profoundly important. It is the key to gradually becoming accustomed to what the shift is revealing.
Here is where the three instructions come into play.
In the moment of recognition of that shift, whether it arises explicitly or through intimation, there is almost always an urge to bring it out more vividly, or hold onto it, or to make it happen again.
Do not do anything. Anything you might do to enhance the experience is an affectation, trying to make something special or different by adding something that is neither needed or called for. Rest in the unaffected mind. Not doing anything is the method. Don’t try to make the mind unaffected. That really does not work. It’s a contradiction in terms. The way to practice is to let things be just as they are, however wonderful, however horrible.
It is also quite common to feel that you are getting somewhere in your practice. You are experiencing intimations of clarity, peace, emptiness, well-being, etc. And you have a method, the unaffected mind. You are on the path! But mahamudra has no path. You are not going anywhere because there is nowhere to go. Again, do nothing. Just recognize what is happening, and rest.
A third impulse it to turn these shifts and intimations into evidence that you, precious you, are not only getting somewhere, you now know the destination. You have turned mahamudra into a result, something you can achieve.
This is where the third instruction comes into play. Mahamudra has no result. As long as there is any sense of you apart from what arises in experience, you have not lost your mind. Again, do nothing. Let these thoughts be. Just recognize what is happening, and rest.
These three instructions point out what gets in the way of your being mahamudra. You cannot do anything about the arising of thoughts, feelings, and sensations. That is life, and, in the end, that is all that life is.
What you can do is stop mucking things up.
Don’t make what you experience into something else.
Don’t make what you experience into signs of progress.
Don’t make what you experience a destination.
In other words, don’t panic.