All
cultivators of Falun Gong must make cultivation of character their top priority
and regard character as the key to developing gong. This is the principle for
cultivating at high levels. Strictly speaking, the gong potency that determines your level
isn’t developed through doing exercises but through character cultivation.
Improving character is easier said than done. Cultivators must be able to put
forth great effort, improve their awakening capacity, bear hardships upon
hardships, and endure almost unendurable things, to name a few. Why hasn’t some
people’s gong grown despite
practicing for years? The fundamental reasons are: first, they disregard
character; and second, they do not know of a high-level upright cultivation way.
This point must be brought to light. Many masters who teach a practice system
talk about character—they are teaching real things. Those who only teach
movements and techniques without ever discussing character are actually teaching
crooked cultivation. So practitioners have to exert great effort in improving
their character before they can start cultivating at higher levels.
1. The Meaning of Character
The
“character” referred to in Falun Gong can’t be fully encompassed by the word
“virtue” alone. It contains much more than virtue. It contains many different
facets of things, including those of virtue. Virtue is only one manifestation of
a person’s character, so using only virtue to understand the meaning of
character isn’t enough. Character
encompasses how to deal with gain and loss. “Gain” is to gain conformity to
the nature of the universe. The nature that constitutes the universe is Truth,
Kindness, Tolerance. A cultivator’s degree of conformity to the nature of the
universe is reflected in the amount of his or her virtue. “Loss” is to abandon
negative thoughts and behavior, such as greed, the pursuit of wealth, lust,
desire, killing, fighting, theft, robbery, deception, jealousy, etc. If a person
is to cultivate to high levels, he or she needs to break free from the pursuit
of wants, something inherent in human beings. In other words, you should let go
of all attachments and take lightly all matters of fame and gain.
A
complete human being is composed of his flesh and his temperament. Similarly,
with the universe, along with the existence of its matter, there also exists its
nature, to be True, Kind, and Tolerant. Every particle of air contains this
nature. This nature is made manifest in human society in the fact that good
actions bring rewards and bad ones bring punishment. At a high level this nature
manifests as supernatural abilities. People who align themselves with this
nature are good people; those who depart from it are bad. People who comply with
it and assimilate to it are those who attain the Dao. In order to conform to
this nature, practitioners need to have extremely high character. Only that way
can a person cultivate to high levels.
It
is easy to be a good person, but it’s not easy to cultivate character—a
cultivator must ready his mind. Sincerity is a prerequisite if you are to
rectify your mind. People live in a world where society has become complicated.
Though you might want to do good things, there might be some people who don’t
want you to; you might not want to harm others, but others might harm you for
various reasons. Some of these things happen for unapparent reasons. Will you be
able to enlighten to the reasons? Then what should you do? The challenges in
this world test your character
at every moment. When experiencing indescribable humiliation, when losing out,
when tempted by money and lust, when in a power struggle, when rage and jealousy
emerge in conflicts, when discord in society and in the family take place, and
when experiencing all kinds of hardships, can you always follow closely the
character criteria? Of course, if you could handle everything then you would
already be an enlightened being. Most practitioners start as everyday people
after all, and the cultivation of their character occurs gradually; it moves
upward little by little. Determined cultivators will eventually gain Rightful
Attainment if they are prepared to endure great hardships and face ordeals with
an unwavering mind. I hope that each of you cultivators will maintain your
character well and raise your gong
potency rapidly!
2. Loss and Gain
Both
qigong and religious circles talk
about loss and gain. Some people take “loss” to mean being charitable, doing
some good deeds, or giving a hand to people in need, and “gain” to mean gaining
gong. Temple monks say that one should be charitable.
That understanding narrows the meaning of loss. The loss we talk about is much
broader—it’s something of a larger scale. The things we require you to lose are
the attachments of everyday people and the mindset that doesn’t let go of those
attachments. If you can let go of the things you consider important and part
with the things you think you can’t part with, that is loss in the truest sense.
Offering help and displays of charity are only a part of loss.
An
everyday person wants to enjoy prestige, prosperity, a better standard of
living, more comfort, and more money. Those are everyday people’s goals. As
practitioners, we are different, for what we gain is gong, not those things. We need to care
less about personal gain and take it lightly, but we aren’t really asked to lose
any material things; we cultivate in society and need to live as everyday people
do. The key is for you to break your attachments—you aren’t really required to
lose anything. You won’t lose anything that belongs to you, and you won’t gain
anything that does not belong to you. If you do get such things, they will have
to be returned. To gain, you must lose. Of course, it’s not possible to
immediately handle everything well, just as it’s not possible to become an
enlightened being overnight. Yet by cultivating little by little and improving
step by step, it is achievable. You will gain however much you lose. You should
always take matters of personal gain lightly and prefer to have peace of mind
over gaining more. When it comes to material things you might suffer some
losses, but you will gain in terms of virtue and gong. This is a truth. You aren’t to
intentionally gain virtue and gong by exchanging your prestige, money,
or personal gain for it. You should be able to understand this further as your
awakening capacity grows.
Someone
who cultivated in a high-level Daoist practice once said: “I don’t want the
things others want, and I don’t have the things others have; but I have things
others don’t, and I want things others don’t.” An everyday person hardly has a
moment when he or she feels content. These people want everything except the
rocks lying on the ground that nobody wants to pick up. Yet that Daoist
cultivator said, “Then I’ll pick up those rocks.” A proverb goes like this:
“Rarity makes something precious, scarcity makes something unique.” Rocks are
worthless here but could be very valuable in other dimensions. This is a
principle that an everyday person can’t understand. Many enlightened, high-level
masters with great virtue have no material possessions. For them there is
nothing that can’t be given up.
The
path of cultivation is the most correct one, and practitioners are actually the
smartest people. The things that everyday people struggle for and the minute
benefits they gain are fleeting. Even if you get things by fighting for them,
find something for free, or profit a little, so what? There is a saying among
everyday people: “You can’t bring anything with you when you are born, and you
can’t take anything away with you when you die.” You enter the world having
nothing, and you take away nothing when you leave—even your bones will be burned
to ashes. It doesn’t matter if you have tons of money or are a dignitary—nothing
can be taken with you when you leave. Yet since gong grows on the body of your main
consciousness, it can be taken forth.
What I am saying is that gong is hard
to get. It is so precious and so hard to acquire that it can’t be exchanged for
any amount of money. Once your gong
reaches an advanced level, if one day you decide not to cultivate anymore, then
as long as you don’t do anything bad, your gong can be converted into any material
thing you want—you will be able to have them all. But you will no longer have
the things that cultivators have. You will instead have only the things that a
person can gain in this world.
Self-interest
leads some people to use improper means to take things that belong to others.
These people think that they’ve gotten a good deal. The truth is that they came
to benefit by exchanging their virtue with others, only they don’t know it. For
a practitioner, that would have to be deducted from his or her gong. For a non-practitioner, it would
have to be deducted from his or her life expectancy or from something else. In
short, the books will be balanced. This is a law in the universe. There are some
people who always mistreat others, harm others with abusive words, and so on.
When doing those things they throw a corresponding portion of their virtue to
the other party, exchanging their virtue
for the act of hurting or insulting others.
Some
people think it’s disadvantageous to be a good person. From an everyday person’s
viewpoint a good person is at a disadvantage. But what they acquire is something
that everyday people cannot: virtue, a form of white matter that is extremely
precious. Without virtue a person
cannot have gong—this is an absolute
truth. Why is it that many people cultivate but their gong fails to develop? Exactly because
they don’t cultivate virtue. Many people emphasize virtue and require cultivation of virtue, yet
they fail to disclose the real principles of how virtue is evolved into gong. It’s left for you to figure out.
Those nearly ten-thousand volumes of the Tripitaka and the principles that
Shakyamuni taught for forty-some years all talked about one thing: virtue. The
ancient Chinese books of Daoist cultivation all discuss virtue. The
five-thousand-word book by Lao-zi,[1] Dao De Jing,
also contemplates virtue. Some people still fail to grasp this.
Let’s
now address “loss.” When you gain, you must lose. You will encounter some trials
when you genuinely want to cultivate. When they come up in your life, you might
experience a little bodily suffering or feel discomfort here or there. But it’s
not sickness. The hardships can also come up in society, in the family, or in
the workplace—anything is possible. Discord will suddenly arise over personal
gain or emotional tensions. The goal is to enable you to improve your character.
These things usually happen suddenly and seem very intense. If you encounter
something that is annoying or troublesome, embarrassing for you, that makes you
lose face, or puts you in an awkward position, how are you going to handle it at
that point? If you stay calm and unruffled—if you’re able to do that—your
character will be improved through the trial and your gong will develop proportionately. If
you can achieve a little, you will gain a little. How much you put in is how
much you get out. Typically when we’re in the middle of some ordeal we might not
be able to realize that, yet we have to try. We shouldn’t treat ourselves like
everyday people. We should hold ourselves to higher standards when discord
arises. Our character will be tempered among everyday people since we cultivate
amidst them. We are bound to make some mistakes and to learn something from
them. Your gong can’t develop when
you are comfortable and don’t meet with any problems.
3. Cultivating Truth, Kindness, and Tolerance
Simultaneously
Our
discipline cultivates Truth, Kindness, and Tolerance simultaneously. “Truth” is
about telling the truth, doing things truly, returning to one’s original, true
self, and ultimately becoming a true person. “Kindness” is about developing
great compassion, doing good things, and saving people. We emphasize Tolerance
in particular. Only with Tolerance can a person cultivate into somebody with
great virtue. Tolerance is a powerful thing, and it surpasses Truth and
Kindness. Throughout the entire cultivation process you are asked to tolerate,
to mind your character, and to exercise self-control.
It’s
not easy to tolerate things when you run into problems. Some people say, “If you
don’t hit back when beaten, don’t talk back when slandered, or if you tolerate
it even when you lose face in front of your family, relatives, and close
friends, haven’t you turned into an Ah-Q??"[2] I’d
say that if you act normal in all regards, if your intelligence is no less than
that of others, and if it’s only that you have taken personal gain lightly,
nobody is going to say you are foolish. Being able to tolerate is not weakness,
nor is it being like Ah-Q. It is a display of strong will and self-restraint.
There was a person in Chinese history named Han Xin who once suffered the
humiliation of crawling between someone’s legs. That was great tolerance.
There’s an ancient saying: "When the common man is disgraced, he draws his sword
to fight.” It means that when a typical person is humiliated, he will draw his
sword to retaliate, will yell at others, or will throw punches their way. An
opportunity to become human and live a life here doesn’t come easily. Some
people live for their ego, which really isn’t worth it and is just exhausting.
There is a saying in China: “With one step back, you will
discover a boundless sea and sky.” Take a step back when you are confronted with
troubles, and you will find it a whole different scenario.
A
practitioner should not only show tolerance towards the people with whom he has
conflicts and those who embarrass him directly, but should also have a generous
attitude and even thank them. How could you improve your character if you didn’t
go through those trials with them? How could the black matter be transformed
into the white matter? How could you develop your gong? It’s hard when you are in the
midst of an ordeal, but you must exercise self-restraint. Ordeals will
constantly get more intense as your gong
potency increases. Everything relies on whether you can improve your
character. That ordeal might be upsetting to you at first and make you
unbearably angry—so angry your veins bulge—but you don’t erupt and manage to
contain your anger. Then that’s good. You have started to exercise tolerance, to
intentionally exercise tolerance. You will then gradually and continually
improve your character, truly taking those things lightly. And that is an even
greater improvement. Everyday people take little tensions and minor problems
really seriously. They live for their ego and tolerate nothing. They will dare
to do anything when they are angered to an unbearable point. Yet as a
practitioner you will find the things that people take seriously to be very,
very trivial—even too trivial—because your goal is extremely long-term and
far-reaching. You will live as long as this universe. Then think about those
things again: It doesn’t matter if you have them or not. You can put them all
aside when you think from a broader perspective.
4. Ridding Yourself of Jealousy
Jealousy
is a huge obstacle in cultivation and one that has a large impact on
practitioners. It directly impacts a practitioner’s gong potency, harms
fellow cultivators, and seriously interferes with our ascension in cultivation.
As a practitioner, you have to eliminate it one hundred percent. Some people
have yet to forgo jealousy even though they’ve cultivated to a certain level.
Moreover, the harder it is to abandon, the easier it is for jealousy to grow
stronger. The negative effects of this attachment make the improved parts of
one’s character fragile. Why is jealousy being singled out for discussion?
Because jealousy is the strongest, most prominent thing that manifests among
Chinese people; it weighs most heavily in people’s thinking. Yet many people
aren’t aware of it. Called Oriental jealousy, or Asian jealousy, it is
characteristic of the East. The Chinese people are quite introverted, reserved,
and don’t express themselves openly. All of this easily leads to jealousy.
Everything has two sides. Thus, an introverted personality has its pros and
cons. Westerners are relatively extroverted. For example, a child who scored a
one hundred in school might happily call out on his way home, “I got a hundred!”
Neighbors would open their doors and windows to congratulate him,
“Congratulations, Tom!” All of them would be happy for him. If this happened in China—think
about it—people would be disgusted once they heard it: “He scored a hundred. So
what? What’s there to show off about?” The reaction is completely different when
a person is prone to jealousy.
Jealous
types look down upon others and don’t allow others to surpass them. When they
see someone more capable than they, their minds lose all perspective, they find
it unbearable, and they deny the fact. They want to get pay raises when others
do, get equal bonuses, and share the same burden when something goes wrong. They
get green-eyed and jealous when they see others making more money. At any rate,
they can’t take it if others do better than they. Some people are afraid of
accepting a bonus when they have achieved certain things in their scientific
research; they’re afraid of others becoming jealous. Some people who have been
awarded certain honors don’t dare reveal them for fear of jealousy and sarcasm.
Some qigong masters can’t stand to
see other qigong masters teach, so
they go make trouble for them. That is a character problem. Suppose that in a
group that does qigong exercises
together, some people who started later are nonetheless the first persons to
develop supernatural abilities. There are people who would then say: “What’s he
got to brag about? I’ve practiced for so many years and have a huge pile of
certificates. How could he develop abilities before me?” His jealousy would then
emerge. Cultivation focuses inward, and a cultivator should cultivate him or
herself and look within to find the source of problems. You should work hard on
yourself and try to improve in the areas you haven’t done enough with. If you
look hard at others to find the source of friction, others will succeed in
cultivation and ascend, while you will be the only one left here. Won’t you have
wasted all of your time? Cultivation is for cultivating
yourself!
Jealousy
also harms fellow cultivators, such as when a person’s badmouthing makes it hard
for others to enter into a state of quiet mind. When that type of person has
abilities, he or she might use them out of jealousy to harm fellow cultivators.
For example, a person sits there meditating, and he has been cultivating fairly
well. He sits there like a mountain since he has gong. Then two beings float by, one of
whom used to be a monk but who, due to jealousy, didn’t achieve Enlightenment;
even though he has a certain gong
potency, he has not reached Perfection. When they arrive at where the person
is meditating, one says, “So-and-so is meditating here. Let’s go around him.”
Yet the other brags, “In the past, I chopped off a corner of Mount Tai.” He then tries to strike the
practitioner. But when he raises his hand he can’t bring it down. That being is
unable to strike the practitioner because he is cultivating in an upright
practice and has a protective shield. He wants to harm someone who cultivates in
an upright way, so it becomes a serious matter and he will be punished. People
who are jealous harm themselves as well as others.
5. Ridding Yourself of
Attachments
“Having
attachments” refers to the relentless, excessive pursuit of a particular object
or goal by those practitioners who aren’t able to liberate themselves or are too
stubborn to heed any advice. Some people pursue supernatural abilities in this
world, and that will certainly impact their cultivating to high levels. The
stronger the feelings, the more difficult to abandon. Their minds will become
ever more unsettled and frustrated. Later on these people will think that
they’ve gained nothing, and they will even start to doubt the things that they
have been learning. Attachments stem from human desires. The characteristics of
attachments are that their targets or goals are obviously limited, fairly clear
and particular, and often the person might be unaware of the attachments. An
everyday person has many attachments. He might use any means necessary in order
to pursue something and get it. A cultivator’s attachments manifest differently,
such as in his pursuing a particular ability, his indulging a certain vision,
his obsessing over a certain phenomenon, and so on. No matter what you, a
practitioner, pursue, it is not right—pursuit has to be abandoned. The Daoist
system teaches nothingness, while the Buddhist system teaches emptiness and how
to enter the gate of emptiness. We ultimately want to achieve the state of
nothingness and emptiness, and be rid of every attachment. Anything that you
can’t let go must be let go. The pursuit of supernatural abilities is an
example: If you pursue them it means you want to use them. In reality, that is
going against the nature of our universe. It’s actually still an issue of
character. You want to have them, and you want to flaunt them and show them off
in front of others. But those abilities aren’t something to showcase for others.
Even if the goal of your using them were innocent and you just wanted to use
them to do some good deeds, the good deeds that you did could turn out to be not
so good. It’s not necessarily a good idea to handle ordinary affairs using
supernormal means. After some people hear me remark that seventy percent of the
class has had the Third Eye opened, they start to wonder, “Why can’t I sense
anything?” Their attention focuses on the Third Eye when they return home and do
the exercises—even to the point of getting a headache. They still can’t see
anything in the end. That is an attachment. Individuals differ in physical state
of being and underlying base. It’s not possible that all of them come to see
through the Third Eye at the same time, and neither can each person’s Third Eye
be at the same level. Some people might be able to see and some might not.
Whatever the case, it’s normal.
Attachments
can cause the development of a cultivator’s gong potency to come to a
standstill or to fluctuate. In more serious cases they might even result in
practitioners taking a crooked path. To be specific, certain supernatural
abilities might be used by people with an inferior character to do bad things.
There have been cases in which a person’s unreliable character has resulted in
abilities being used to commit bad deeds. Somewhere there was a male college
student who developed the ability of mind control. With it he could use his own
thoughts to manipulate the thoughts and conduct of others, and he used his
ability to do bad things. Some people might witness visions appearing when they
do the exercises. They always want to have a clear look and full understanding.
That’s also a form of attachment. A certain hobby might become an addiction for
some, and they aren’t able to shake it. That, too, is a form of attachment.
Because of differences in underlying base and intentions, some people cultivate
in order to reach the highest level while some cultivate just to gain certain
things. The latter mentality surely limits the goal of one’s cultivation. If a
person doesn’t eliminate that kind of attachment, his or her gong won’t develop even through
practicing. So practitioners should take all material gain lightly, pursue
nothing, and let everything unfold naturally, thus avoiding the emergence of new
attachments. Whether that can be done depends on a practitioner’s character. You
can’t succeed in cultivation if your character is not fundamentally changed or
if any attachments remain.
6. Karma
(1) The Origin of Karma
Karma
is a type of black matter that is the opposite of virtue. In Buddhism it is
called sinful karma, while here we call it karma. So, we call doing bad things
“producing karma.” Karma is produced by a person’s doing wrong in this life or
in past lives. For instance, killing, taking advantage of others, infringing
upon others’ interests, gossiping about someone behind his or her back, being
unfriendly to someone, and so on can all create karma. In addition, some karma
is passed on from ancestors, family and relatives, or close friends. When
somebody throws punches at someone else, he also throws his white matter over to
the other person, and the vacated area in his body is then filled with the black
matter. Killing is the worst evildoing—it is wrong and will generate heavy
karma. Karma is the primary factor that causes sickness in people. Of course, it
doesn’t always manifest in the form of sickness—it can also manifest as running
into problems and the like. All of these things are karma at work. So
practitioners must not do anything bad. Any misconduct will result in negative
influences that will seriously impact your cultivation.
Some people encourage collecting the qi of
plants. When they teach their exercises they teach how to collect qi from plants; they discuss with
intense interest which trees have better qi and the colors of different trees’ qi. There were some people in a park in
our northeastern region who practiced a kind of so-called qigong in which they would roll all over
the ground. After getting up, they would circle around the pine trees to collect
their qi. Within half a year the
grove of pine trees had withered and turned yellow. That kind of action
generates karma! That too is killing! Collecting qi from plants is not right, whether
it’s viewed in light of our country’s reforestation effort, maintaining the
ecological balance, or from a high-level perspective. The universe is vast and
boundless, with qi available
everywhere for you to collect. Knock yourself out and go collect it—why abuse
plants? If you’re a practitioner, where is your heart of mercy and
compassion?
Everything
has intelligence. Modern science has recognized that plants have not only life,
but also intelligence, thoughts, feelings, and even super-sensory functions.
When your Third Eye reaches the level of Law Eyesight, you will discover that
the world is a totally different place. When you go outside, rocks, walls, and
even trees will talk to you. All objects have life. As soon as an object is
formed, a life enters it. It is the people living on Earth who categorize matter
as organic and inorganic. People who live in monasteries get upset when they
break a bowl, for the moment it is destroyed, its living entity is released. It
hasn’t finished its life journey, so it will have nowhere to go, and thus harbor
extreme hate toward the person who ended its life. The angrier it gets, the more
karma the person accrues. Some “qigong masters” even go hunting. Where
did their kindness and compassion go? A Buddhist or a Daoist doesn’t do things
that violate the laws of heaven. When a person does these things, it is an act
of killing.
Some
people say that in the past they produced a lot of karma, for example, by
killing fish or chickens, by fishing, etc. Does it mean that they can no longer
cultivate? No, it doesn’t. Back then you did that without knowing the
consequences, so it wouldn’t have created extra karma. Just don’t do it anymore
in the future, and that should be fine. If you do it again you will be knowingly
violating the principles, and that’s not allowed. Some of our practitioners do
have that kind of karma. Your attendance at our seminar means that you are
predestined, and that you can cultivate upward. Should we swat flies or
mosquitoes when they come inside? As to your handling of this at your present
level, it isn’t considered wrong if you swat and kill them. If you can’t drive
them out, then killing them is not a problem. When the time has come for
something to die, naturally it will die. Once, when Shakyamuni was still alive,
he wanted to take a bath and asked his disciple to clean the bathtub. The
disciple found a lot of bugs in the bathtub, so he returned and asked what he
should do. Shakyamuni said it again, “It is the bathtub that I want you to
clean.” The disciple understood, and he went back and cleaned the bathtub. You
shouldn’t take certain things too seriously. We don’t intend to make you an
overly cautious person. In a complicated environment it is not right, I think,
if you’re nervous at every moment and afraid of doing something wrong. It would
be a form of attachment—fear itself is an attachment.
We
should have a compassionate and merciful heart. When we handle things with a
compassionate and merciful heart we are less likely to cause problems. Take
self-interest lightly and be kindhearted, and your compassionate heart will keep
you from doing wrong. Believe it or not, you will discover that if you always
have a spiteful attitude and always want to fight and contend, you will even
turn good things into bad ones. I often see some people who, when right, won’t
let others be; when this type of person is right he has finally found grounds
for mistreating others. Similarly, we shouldn’t stir up conflict if we disagree
with certain things. The things you dislike might at times not necessarily be
wrong. As you keep on raising your level as a practitioner, every sentence you
say will carry energy. You shouldn’t speak as you please, since your words will
be able to restrain everyday people. It’s especially easy for you to do wrong
and create karma when you can’t see the truth of problems and their karmic
causes.
(2) Eliminating
Karma
The
laws in this world are the same as those in heaven: Eventually you have to pay
what you owe others. Even everyday people have to pay what they owe others. All
the hardships and problems you encounter in your life result from karma. You
have to pay. The path of life for our true cultivators will be altered. A new
path that suits your cultivation will be arranged. Your shifu will reduce
some of your karma, and what remains will be used to improve your character. You
exchange and pay for your karma through performing the exercises and through
cultivating your character. From now on the problems you confront won’t happen
by chance. So please be mentally prepared. By enduring some hardships, you will
come to let go of all the things an everyday person can’t. You will run into
many troubles. Problems will arise in the family, socially, and from other
sources, or you might suddenly meet with disaster, and it could even be that you
will get blamed for what is actually someone else’s fault, to name just a few.
Practitioners aren’t supposed to get sick, yet you might suddenly come down with
a serious sickness. The sickness could come on with intense force, causing you
to suffer to the point where you can no longer bear it. Even hospital exams
might yield no diagnosis. Yet for an unknown reason the sickness may disappear
later without any treatment. In fact, it’s that your debts are paid in this
manner. Perhaps one day your spouse will lose his or her temper and start a
fight with you for no reason at all; even trivial things might set off big
arguments. Afterwards your spouse will be confused over his or her loss of
temper. As you are a practitioner, you should be clear as to why that kind of
incident takes place: It’s because that thing came—you are being asked to pay
for your karma. To resolve such incidents, you have to keep yourself under
control during those moments and mind your character. Be appreciative and
thankful that your spouse has helped you pay for your karma.
The
legs will start to ache after you sit in meditation for a long while, and
sometimes the pain is excruciating. People with a high-level Third Eye can see
the following: When a person is in great pain, there is a large chunk of the
black matter—both inside and outside of the body—coming down and being
eliminated. The pain you experience while sitting in meditation is intermittent
and excruciating. Some people understand it and are determined not to take their
legs down. The black matter will then be eliminated and transformed into the
white matter, and it will in turn be evolved into gong. Practitioners can’t possibly pay
for all of their karma through sitting in meditation and doing the exercises.
They also need to improve their character and their awakening capacity, and go
through some ordeals. What’s important is that we be compassionate. Your
compassion emerges quickly in our Falun Gong. Many people find that tears start
to fall for no reason while they meditate. Whatever they think of, they feel
grief. Whoever they look at, they see suffering. That is actually the heart of
great compassion emerging. Your nature, your true self, will start to connect
with the nature of the universe: to be True, Kind, and Tolerant. When your
compassionate nature emerges, you will do things with much kindness. From your
inner heart to your outer appearance, everyone will be able to see that you are
really kind. At that point no one will mistreat you anymore. If someone were to
treat you unfairly then, your heart of great compassion would take effect and
you wouldn’t do the same to him in return. That is a type of power, a power that
makes you different from everyday people.
When
you encounter a tribulation, that great compassion will help you overcome it. At
the same time, my Law Bodies will look after you and protect your life, but you
will still have to go through the ordeal. For example, when I was giving a class
in Taiyuan City there was an older
couple that came to attend my class. They were hurrying when they crossed the
street, and when they got to the middle of the road a car came speeding along.
It knocked the woman right down and dragged her along for more than ten meters
before she finally fell in the middle of the street. The car couldn’t stop for
another twenty meters. The driver got out of the car and said some rude things,
and the passengers sitting in the car said some bad things too. At that moment
the woman remembered what I had said, and she didn’t say a word. After she got
up, she said, “It’s fine. I’m not hurt.” She then went into the auditorium with
her husband. Had she said at that moment, “Oh, it hurts here, it hurts there…
You’d better take me to the hospital,” things would have turned out really
badly. But she didn’t say that. The woman said to me: “Shifu, I know what
that was all about. It was helping me pay for my karma!” A huge disaster was
averted and a big chunk of karma removed. As you can imagine, she had really
high character and her awakening capacity was good. She was of that age, the car
was traveling that fast, and she was dragged that far before finally hitting the
ground hard—and yet she got up having a right mind.
Sometimes
when calamity befalls us it seems just huge—it’s so overwhelming there seems to
be no way out. And perhaps it stays around for quite a few days. But then a path
suddenly appears, and things start to take a big turn. In fact, that is because
we improved our character and the problem naturally
disappeared.
In
order to improve your realm of mind, you have to be tested by hardship in this
world. If your character has really improved and stabilized, karma will be
eliminated during the process, the hardship will pass, and your gong will develop. Don’t be discouraged
if during tests of character you fail to guard your character and you did
something wrong. Take the initiative to find what you learned from that lesson,
to discover where you fell short, and to put effort into cultivating Truth,
Kindness, and Tolerance. The next problem that will test your character might
come shortly thereafter. As your gong
potency develops, the hardships
that test your xinxing might come on even stronger. Your gong
potency will grow a bit higher with every problem you overcome. The
development of your gong will come to
a standstill if you aren’t able to overcome a problem. Small tests lead to small
improvements, big tests lead to big improvements. I hope that every practitioner
is ready to endure great hardship, and will have the determination and willpower
to embrace the hardship. You won’t acquire real gong without expending effort. No
principle exists that will let you gain gong comfortably without any hardship or
effort. You will never cultivate to become an enlightened being if your
character doesn’t become fundamentally better and you still harbor personal
attachments!
7. Meddling by
Wicked Entities
“Meddling
by wicked entities” refers to the manifestations or visions that appear during
the cultivation process and that interfere with a person’s practice. Their goal
is to prevent practitioners from cultivating to high levels. In other words,
wicked entities come to collect debts.
The
problem of meddling by wicked entities is sure to arise when a person is
cultivating to high levels. There is no chance a person hasn’t done wrong in his
lifetime, just as his ancestors must have done wrong in their lives, and those
bad acts are called karma. Whether a person’s underlying base is good or not
reflects how much karma the person carries on him or her. Even if he or she is a
rather good person it’s still impossible to be free of karma. A person can’t
sense it if he or she does not cultivate. Wicked entities won’t care if your
practice is only for healing and improving health. But they will bother you once
you begin cultivating to high levels. They can disturb you by using many
different methods, the goal of which is to prevent you from cultivating to high
levels and to make you fail in your practice. Wicked entities manifest
themselves in a variety of ways. Some manifest themselves as daily life
happenings, while others take the form of phenomena from other dimensions. They
command things to interfere with you every time you sit down to meditate, and
they make it impossible for you to still your mind or, as a result, cultivate to
high levels. Sometimes the moment you sit down to meditate you begin to doze off
or have all kinds of thoughts going through your mind, and it makes it so that
you can’t enter into a cultivation state. At other times, the moment you start
to perform the exercises, your once-quiet surroundings suddenly are filled with
the noise of footsteps, doors slamming, cars honking, telephones ringing, and a
variety of other forms of disturbance, making it impossible for you to enter
into a state of mental calm.
Another
kind of wicked entity is sexual attraction. A beautiful woman or handsome man
might appear in front of a practitioner during his or her meditation or dreams.
That person will entice you and seduce you by making stimulating gestures that
evoke your attachment of sexual attraction. If you can’t overcome it the first
time, it will gradually escalate and continue to seduce you until you abandon
the idea of cultivating to a high level. It’s a hard test to pass, and a fair
number of practitioners have failed because of it. I hope you are mentally
prepared for it. If someone doesn’t guard his or her character well enough and
fails the first time, he or she should truly learn a lesson from it. It will
come again and interfere with you many times until you truly guard your
character and completely break that attachment. This is a big hurdle that you
must overcome, or you won’t be able to attain the Dao and cultivate to
success.
There
is another kind of wicked entity that also presents itself as you do the
exercises or in your dreams. Some people suddenly see some horrifying faces that
are ugly and real, or figures that are holding knives and threatening to kill.
But all they can do is scare people. If they really were to stab, they couldn’t
touch the practitioner since the master has installed a protective shield around
the practitioner’s body to prevent harm. They try to scare the person off so
that he or she will stop cultivating. These only appear at a certain level or
during a certain period of time and will pass quickly, like in a few days, a
week, or a few weeks. It all depends on how high your character is and how you
treat this matter.
8. A Person’s
Underlying Base and Awakening Capacity
“Underlying
base” refers to the white matter a person brings along at birth. It is, in fact,
virtue—a tangible form of matter. The more of this matter you bring with you,
the better your underlying base. People with a good underlying base more easily
return to their true selves and become enlightened, as their thinking is
unimpeded. Once they hear about learning qigong or about things related to
cultivation, they immediately get interested and want to learn. They can connect
with the universe. It’s exactly as Lao-zi said: “When the highest type of men
hear the Dao, with diligence they will practice it. When average men hear the
Dao, it seems some is kept and some is lost. When the lowest type of men hear
the Dao, they laugh at it heartily. If they didn’t laugh at it, it wouldn’t be
the Dao.” Those people who can easily return to their true selves and become
enlightened are wise people. In contrast, a person with a lot of the black
matter and an inferior underlying base has a barrier formed outside of his body
that makes it impossible for him to accept good things. The black matter will
make him doubt good things when he encounters them. In fact, that is one of the
roles karma plays.
Any
talk of underlying base has to include the topic of awakening capacity. When we
talk about awakening, or enlightening, some people think that being awakened or
enlightened is equivalent to being clever. A “clever” or “cunning” person, as
everyday people think of it, is actually far away from the cultivation we are
talking about. Those types of “clever” people usually have a hard time achieving
Enlightenment. They’re only concerned with the practical, material world, so as
to avoid being taken advantage of and or losing out on something. Most notably,
a few individuals out there who regard themselves as knowledgeable, educated,
and smart, think that cultivation is the stuff of fairy tales. They can’t
imagine a person cultivating himself and improving his character. They think
practitioners are foolish and backward. The awakening or enlightenment that we
speak of doesn’t refer to being smart but to the return of human nature to its
true nature, to being a good person, and to conforming to the nature of the
universe. A person’s underlying base determines his or her awakening capacity.
If somebody’s underlying base is good, his or her awakening capacity tends to be
good as well. Underlying base does determine awakening capacity, but, awakening
capacity isn’t entirely dictated by underlying base. No matter how good your
underlying base is, if your understanding is poor and you fail to enlighten to
things, it still won’t do. The underlying base of some individuals isn’t so
good, but they are able to enlighten to things, and so they can cultivate to a
high level. Since we offer salvation to all sentient beings, we look at people’s
awakening capacity, not their underlying base. Even though you may have many
negative things, as long as you are determined to go up in cultivation, that
thought of yours is an upright one. With that thought you only need to forgo a
little more than others and you will in the end achieve
Enlightenment.
The
bodies of practitioners are purified. They won’t contract illness after gong develops, for the presence of that
high-energy matter in the body prevents black matter from being present. Yet
some people just refuse to believe it and always think they’re sick. They
complain, “Why am I feeling so bad?” We say that what you have gained is gong. How could you not have discomfort
when you have gained such a good thing? In cultivation you have to give things
up in exchange. In fact, all of the discomfort is on the surface and has no
impact whatsoever on your body. It appears to be sickness but it’s definitely
not. It all depends on whether you can awaken to this. Practitioners must not
only manage to bear the worst suffering, but also have a great awakening
capacity. Some people don’t even try to comprehend things when they are
confronted with troubles. They still treat themselves as everyday people despite
my teaching them at a high level and showing them how to measure themselves with
higher criteria. They can’t even bring themselves to cultivate as true
practitioners. Nor can they believe that they will reach a high
level.
The
enlightenment discussed at high levels refers to becoming enlightened, and it is
categorized into Sudden Enlightenment and Gradual Enlightenment. Sudden
Enlightenment refers to having the entire process of cultivation take place in a
locked mode. At the last moment after you have completed the entire cultivation
process and your character has reached a high level, all of your supernatural
abilities will be unlocked at once, your Third Eye will instantly open to its
highest level, and your mind will be able to communicate with high-level beings
in other dimensions. You will instantly be able to see the reality of the entire
universe and its different dimensions and unitary paradises, and you will then
be able to communicate with them. And you will be able to use your great
supernatural powers. The path of Sudden Enlightenment is the hardest to take.
Throughout history only people with a superb underlying base have been selected
to become its disciples; it has been passed on privately and individually.
Average people would find it unbearable! The path I took was that of Sudden
Enlightenment.
The
things I’m imparting to you belong to the path of Gradual Enlightenment. Your
abilities will develop in due time during your cultivation process. But the
abilities that emerge will not necessarily be available for you to use, as it’s
easy for you to commit wrongdoing when you haven’t raised your character to a
certain level and still cannot handle yourself properly. You won’t be able to
use these abilities for the time being, though they will eventually be made
available to you. By cultivating you will gradually raise your level and come to
understand the truth of this universe. Just as with Sudden Enlightenment, you
will eventually reach Perfection. The path of Gradual Enlightenment is a little
easier and takes no risks. What’s tough about it is that you can see the entire
cultivation process, so the demands you place upon yourself should be even
stricter.
9. A Clear and
Still Mind
Some
people can’t quiet their minds when they do qigong exercises, and so they search for
a method. Some have asked me: “Shifu, why can’t I quiet my mind when I
perform qigong exercises? Can you
teach me a method or technique so that I can quiet my mind down when I
meditate?” I’d ask, how could you quiet your mind?? You still couldn’t even if a
deity were to come teach you a method. Why? The reason is that your own mind
isn’t clear and still. Because you live amid this society, things such as
emotions and desires, self-interest, personal things, and even the affairs of
your friends and family come to occupy your mind too much and assume a high
priority. How could you have a state of mental calm when meditating? Even if you
intentionally suppress them they will still surface on their
own.
Buddhism’s
cultivation teaches “precept, meditation, wisdom.” Precepts are for
letting go of the things that you are attached to. Some Buddhists adopt the
approach of chanting a Buddha’s name, which requires concentrated chanting in
order to achieve the state of “one thought replacing thousands of others.” Yet
it’s not simply an approach, but a type of skill. You can try chanting if you
don’t believe it. I can promise you that other things will arise in your mind
when you use your mouth to chant a Buddha’s name. It was Tibetan Tantrism that
first taught people how to chant a Buddha’s name; one had to chant a Buddha’s
name hundreds of thousands of times each day for a week. They would chant until
they got dizzy, and finally at some point nothing would be left in their minds.
That one thought had replaced all others. It’s a type of skill that you might
not be able to perform. There are some other methods that teach you how to focus
your mind on your elixir field, how to do counting, how to fixate your eyes on
objects, and so on. In actuality, none of those methods can quiet your mind.
Practitioners have to attain a clear and still mind, discard their preoccupation
with self-interest, and let go of the greed in their hearts.
Whether
you can enter into a state of calm mind, into deep stillness (ding), is
in fact a reflection of your skill and level. Being able to still your mind the
moment you sit down indicates a high level. It’s all right if for the time being
you can’t enter into stillness—you can slowly accomplish that through
cultivation. Your character rises gradually, as does your gong. But your gong will never develop unless you
attach little importance to self-interest and your own
desires.
Practitioners
should hold themselves to higher standards at all times. Practitioners are
bothered regularly by all kinds of complicated social phenomena, lots of vulgar
and unhealthy things, and a range of emotions and desires. The things that are
encouraged on television, in the movies, and in literature teach you to become a
stronger and more practical person among everyday people. But if you can’t
transcend these things you will be far from a cultivator’s character and state
of mind, and you will acquire less gong. Practitioners should have little
or no involvement with those vulgar and unhealthy things. They should turn a
blind eye and a deaf ear to them, and be unaffected by people and things. I
often say that the thoughts of everyday people cannot affect me. I won’t become
happy when someone praises me, nor will I get upset when someone insults me. I
remain unfazed no matter how serious the challenges for my character among
everyday people may be. Practitioners should take all personal gain lightly and
not even care about it. Only then can your intention to become enlightened be
considered mature. If you can be without strong pursuit of renown and personal
gain, and even regard them as something trivial, then you won’t get frustrated
or upset and your mind will always stay calm. Once you can let go of everything,
your mind will naturally become clear and still.
I
have taught you Dafa and all five exercises. I have adjusted your bodies and
placed Law Wheels and energy mechanisms in them. My Law Bodies will protect you.
All of what should be given to you has been given. During the class it’s all up
to me. From this point on, it’s all up to you. As the saying goes, “A master
leads you through the door, but it’s up to you to cultivate.” As long as you
learn Dafa thoroughly, be attentive to and learn from what you experience, mind
your character at every moment, cultivate diligently, endure the toughest
hardships of all, and tolerate the intolerable, I believe you are sure to
cultivate to success.
The mind is the path to cultivating gong
Hardship is the ferry across the boundless sea of Dafa