Self-Transformation through Mind Training

39:05
When we face difficult situations and things go poorly in our lives, if we’re able to change our attitudes toward them, we’ll be able to transform these experiences into ones that will further our spiritual progress. The Tibetan tradition of “lojong,” mind training, offers a wide variety of beneficial attitudes we can train to develop that will enable us to better handle the challenges of life.

“Mind training” refers to methods for changing the way in which we regard a person or situation. We need to be careful, however, about the term “mind training,” since it sounds as though it includes training in concentration and memory. That’s not really what it’s talking about. In the Tibetan term for mind training, blo-sbyong, the word blo is not just “mind.” The word has more of the connotation of an “attitude.” The word “training,” sbyong in Tibetan, has two meanings: “to cleanse,” so you cleanse away a negative attitude, and “to train,” which is to train in a more positive one. So, sometimes it is clearer to understand mind training to be “attitude training.”

The main negative attitude to cleanse away is our self-cherishing attitude, which includes being self-centered and selfish, thinking only of ourselves. The positive one to train in is the attitude of cherishing others, which includes thinking primarily of the welfare of others with love and compassion. The method used in all the mind training techniques fits well with Buddha’s general approach, known as the “four noble truths.”

Original Audio from the Seminar

Top