Demonic Forces - The Four Maras - Study Buddhism
Demonic Forces - The Four Maras - Study Buddhism
Demonic Forces - The Four Maras - Study Buddhism
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· To make one stupefied (rmongs-byed), which perhaps suggests making one spaced out or senile
· To make one thin, emaciated and dried out (skem-byed), which, in this context, could mean worn
out, hungry, and thirsty, so that one gives up meditation. In other contexts, perhaps it is the work
of Mara that we become dried out and have no moisture of compassion.
· To make one dead (‘chi-byed), which, in this context, could perhaps make Shiva worry that he will
die while meditating, so being afraid of that, he would get up.
These five are called the five types of troubles that are the work of Mara.
Shiva was annoyed, and burned Kama to a crisp with fire from his third eye. But, then, at the request of
Rati, Shiva allowed Kama to be reborn as Pradyumna. When Pradyumna was six years old, he was
stolen by the demon Shambara who threw him in the sea, since there was a prophecy that Pradyumna
would kill Shambara. Pradyumna was swallowed by fish, but a fisherman caught the fish, and gave the
boy inside its stomach to Shambhara’s mistress Mayavati, who raised him. Mayavati developed desire
for Pradyumna’s beauty, but Pradyumna reproached her since he thought she was his mother. She
revealed to him that he was the son of Krishna and Rukmini, and that Shambara had thrown him in the
sea. Pradyumna got angry at Shambara, and killed him using his power of emanations. Then Mayavati
took him to the house of Krishna, and Pradyumna and Mayavati became husband and wife.
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Thus, Mara can be personified in the form of a divine being. In Buddhist cosmology, he resides in the
highest of the divine realms of the plane of sensory desires (Desire Realm), on top of Mount Meru.
This is called the Heaven of Those Who Have the Power of Emanations over Others (gZhan-‘phrul
dbang-byed, Skt. Paranirmita-vashavartin). Buddhists usually explain this heaven as where gods have
the power to enjoy the emanations of others, but the Tibetan and Sanskrit terms make more sense
when they are understood in accord with the Hindu myth.
In Buddhism, Mara then personifies incorrect non-Buddhist views, which were the final thing Buddha
needed to overcome with the third-eye of wisdom. This is analogous to the account in Hindu
mythology that when Kama tried to disturb Shiva, Shiva destroyed him with the fire of his third eye.
Several accounts in various sutras describe Buddha’s defeat of Mara. For example, in The Striving Sutta
(Padhana Sutta) in the Pali canon, Mara comes to Shakyamuni when Shakyamuni is doing ascetic
practices, and says, “You are so thin and pale. Don’t seek liberation and release – which would mean
leaving the world – but stay in the world and do good.” In other words, he enjoins Shakyamuni to lead
a worldly life, albeit one that is involved with helping others. Mara sends an army to defeat
Shakyamuni. Shakyamuni enumerates the armies of Mara as: sensual desire, discontent, hunger and
thirst, craving, laziness, fear, indecisive wavering (doubt), restlessness, longing for the transitory things
in life (gain, praise, honor, and fame), and praising oneself and belittling others. Buddha saw that to
overcome all of these, he must stop identifying with thoughts of these things.
Later, Mara appears as a poor farmer and as an old wheezing brahmin – symbolizing the world.
Shakyamuni recognizes Mara is in all the aggregates that appear, but he tells Mara that he cannot hide.
Shakyamuni sees him for the pathetic creature that he is, as is symbolized by the pathetic form of the
farmer and the brahmin. Mara then appears as natural disasters and dangerous wild beasts. But
Shakyamuni has no fear of death. Mara then sends his three daughters to try to seduce Shakyamuni,
but to no avail. Mara then tries to trick Shakyamuni by agreeing that death is nothing to fear, and
therefore one can ignore it. But based on that reasoning, he tries to convince Shakyamuni that life is
long and so just enjoy life. Shakyamuni says no, the life span is short, so one needs to live as if one’s
head is on fire – which means to ignore personal danger. Since life can end abruptly at any time, one
needs to take advantage immediately of one’s precious human life. Mara then gives up and slinks away.
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Death, of course, causes the greatest interference to our spiritual practice. It is not certain that in our
next lives we will have precious human rebirths with all the respites and enrichments allowing us the
most unhindered practice. Even with such a rebirth, we need to start our spiritual path once more as a
child. Moreover, death recurs uncontrollably at the end of each lifetime.
Thus, Mara is also considered Yama (gShin-rje), the Lord of Death (‘Chi-bdag); while in the
anuttarayoga tantra system, Buddha is Yamantaka (gShin-rje gshed), the One Who Puts an End to Yama.
In tantra, however, Yama is not simply death itself, but rather there are three levels of Yama, which
detail three levels of what is involved with death:
· inner Yama is the disturbing emotions and attitudes, which activate karmic aftermath and thus
propel us into a subsequent rebirth and perpetuate the birth and death cycle.
· hidden or secret Yama is the three subtlest conceptual minds that make appearances of true
existence: threshold (nyer-thob, near attainment, black appearance), light diffusion (mched,
increase, red appearance), and appearance congealment (snang, appearance, white appearance).
Each rebirth begins with these three subtlest conceptual minds making appearances of true
existence. Based on unawareness, we believe that the appearances they make correspond to
reality, and thus we have grasping for true existence and all the disturbing emotions and attitudes
based on that unawareness and grasping.
There are six shortcomings of not being mindful of death, which cause interference to our spiritual
study and practice.
· Even if we are mindful of them, we will not put them into practice,
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We don’t practice the Dharma purely because, being unmindful of death, we get caught up in the eight
transitory things of this life (‘jig-rten-pa’i chos-brgyad, the eight worldly Dharmas). We are pleased and
delighted with the first of each of the following pairs and displeased, depressed, or disappointed with
the second:
· Praise or criticism
· Hearing good or bad news – including hearing or not hearing from our loved ones, and hearing
pleasant sounds or unpleasant noise
· Things going well or poorly – such as being healthy and happy or being sick and depressed.
We can gain equanimity toward the eight transitory things in life through adopting the ten gem-like
innermost attitudes from the Kadam Tradition (bka’-gdams phugs-nor bcu). These are the four trusting
acceptances (gtad-pa bzhi), the three diamond-strong convictions (rdo-rje gsum), and the mature
attitudes toward being expelled, finding and attaining (bud-rnyed-thob gsum).
· As our innermost outlook on life, being willing to accept with total trust the Dharma measures
· As our innermost attitude towards the Dharma measures, being willing to accept with total trust
even becoming a beggar
· As our innermost attitude towards becoming a beggar, being willing to accept with total trust even
having to die
· As our innermost attitude towards death, being willing to accept with total trust even having to
die friendless and alone in an empty cave.
· To go ahead with our Dharma practice without consideration for what others think about our
doing so
The mature attitudes toward being expelled, finding and attaining are:
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On a deeper level, of course, we can only overcome the mara of death with the understanding of
voidness (emptiness), so that we gain liberation and are no longer subject to samsaric death and
rebirth.
When we have any of these disturbing emotions or attitudes strongly, we can practice tonglen (gtong-
len, giving and taking). We think of all others who have the same disturbing emotion or attitude, and
how this is a problem not only for us, but for everyone. Thinking in this way is reasonable because,
since this is a problem of all samsaric beings and we are one of those beings, we need to tackle this
general problem for everyone. It is like if we are a woman facing prejudice in the work place, prejudice
against women is not just our problem; it is the problem of all women. Therefore, to get rid of our
problem with prejudice against us as a woman, we need to take on the problem of prejudice against all
women.
In the Seven Point Mind Training (Blo-sbyong don-bdun-ma) by Geshe Chaykawa (dGe-bshes ‘Chad-kha-
ba), one of the four actions (sbyor-ba bzhi), in the point concerning transforming adverse conditions
into path to enlightenment, is to make offerings to harmful spirits (maras) and ask them to give us
more difficult circumstances. So, this practice of “feeding the demon” is somewhat like tonglen. But
here, we practice “giving” first and then we ask the demon to help us take on more suffering from
others.
In Vajrayogini and some other tantric offering rituals, feeding the demon is part of making offerings to
various guests: specifically, to guests who are our enemies.
The mara of the aggregates refers to the tainted aggregates (zag-bcas-kyi phung-po, contaminated
aggregates), as the example of the all-pervasively affecting suffering (khyab-byed-kyi sdug-bsngal) of
samsara. Remember, in the Pali sutta, Shakyamuni identified Mara as being in all the aggregates.
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In Treasure House of Special Topics of Knowledge (Chos mngon-pa’i mdzod, Skt. Abhidharmakosha),
Vasubandhu defines “tainted phenomena” as nonstatic phenomena that derive from a disturbing
emotion or attitude. When such items are the objects cognized by either our own or someone else’s
limited mind, the result is further disturbing emotions or attitudes on the mental continuum that
cognizes them. Also tainted are the five aggregate factors that are in the company of disturbing
emotions or attitudes. Thus, Vasubandhu specifies tainted phenomena to be all nonstatic (imperma‐
nent) phenomena other than those that constitute the fourth noble truth.
Thus, the hardware of our aggregates – our limited bodies and minds – is the mara of aggregates
because they limit us with more and more suffering and kill our chances for liberation.
This mara can also refer to the 62 wrong views (lta-ba ngan-pa, bad views) propounded by the 18
non-Buddhist extremists (mu-stegs, Skt. tirthika).
· The mara of the aggregates refers to the obscurations of the body, which are imputable on the
subtle creative energy-drop of the awake occasion.
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The mara of the disturbing attitudes refers to the obscurations of speech, which are imputable on
·
the subtle creative energy-drop of the dream occasion.
· The mara of the Lord of Death refers to the obscurations of the mind, which are imputable on the
subtle creative energy-drop of the dreamless deep sleep occasion.
· The mara who is the son of the gods refers to entering externally into unawareness (phyi-rol-gyi
ma-rig-pa la ‘jug-pa), which perhaps refers to the obscurations associated with the subtle creative
energy-drop of the fourth occasion, the peak occasion of bliss. Perhaps this refers to the
obscurations of unawareness that cause us to emit our subtle energies with the bliss of orgasm.
When we achieve unchanging blissful awareness of voidness, then we possess the celibate
behavior of reality (de-kho-na nyid-gyi tshangs-spyod), with which we never have any shift from
unchanging bliss (mi-‘gyur-ba’i bde-ba) and never have the bliss of orgasmic emission (dzag-bde).
This is because our minds remain absorbed in the clear light realization of voidness and do not
leave it with the generation of the three subtlest appearance-making conceptual minds, which are
analogous with orgasmic emission. This attainment is referred to as having a vajra stick (rdo-rje
dbyug-pa) for overcoming the maras. To possess such a vajra stick is one of the ten qualities of a
vajra master, according to Kalachakra.
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