The Six Paramitas (Perfections)
The
Sanskrit word paramita means to cross over to the other shore. Paramita may
also be translated as perfection, perfect realisation, or reaching beyond
limitation. Through the practice of these six paramitas, we cross over the sea
of suffering (samsara) to the shore of happiness and awakening (nirvana); we
cross over from ignorance and delusion to enlightenment. Each of the
six paramitas is an enlightened quality of the heart, a glorious
virtue or attribute – the innate seed of perfect realisation within us. The
paramitas are the very essence of our true nature. However,
since these enlightened qualities of the heart have become obscured by
delusion, selfishness, and other karmic tendencies, we must develop these
potential qualities and bring them into expression. In this way, the six
paramitas are an inner cultivation, a daily practice for wise, compassionate,
loving, and enlightened living. The paramitas are the six kinds of virtuous
practice required for skilfully serving the welfare of others and for the
attainment of enlightenment. We must understand that bringing these virtuous
qualities of our true nature into expression requires discipline, practice, and
sincere cultivation. This is the path of the Bodhisattva – one who is dedicated
to serving the highest welfare of all living beings with the awakened heart of
unconditional love, skilful wisdom, and all-embracing compassion.
1. The
Perfection of Giving (Dana Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of generosity, charity, giving, and
offering. The essence of this paramita is a boundless openness of heart and
mind, a selfless generosity and giving which is completely free from attachment
and expectation. From the depths of our heart, we practice generously offering
compassion, time, energy, and resources to serve the welfare of all beings.
Giving is one of the essential preliminary steps of our practice. Our giving
should always be unconditional and selfless; completely free of any selfish
desire for gratitude, recognition, advantage, reputation, or any wordly reward.
The perfection of generosity is not accomplished simply by the action of
giving, nor by the actual gift itself. Rather, the true essence of this
paramita is our pure motivation of genuine concern for others – the truly
generous motivation of the awakened heart of compassion, wisdom, and love. In
addition, our practice of giving should be free of discrimination regarding who
is worthy and who is unworthy to receive. To cultivate the paramita of
generosity, it is wise to contemplate the enormous benefits of this practice,
the disadvantages of being miserly, as well as the obvious fact that our body
and our wealth are impermanent. With this in mind, we will certainly be
encouraged to use both our body and wealth to practice generosity while we
still have them. Generosity is a cure for the afflictions of greed,
miserliness, and possessiveness. In this practice of giving, we may offer our
time, energy, money, food, clothing, or gifts so as to assist others. To the
best of our ability, we may offer the priceless treasure of Dharma instruction,
giving explanations on the Buddha’s teaching. This offering serves to free
others from misperceptions that cause confusion, pain, and suffering. We can
offer fearless giving and protection by delivering living beings (insects,
animals, and people) from harm, distress, fear, and terror. In this way, we
offer care and comfort, helping others to feel safe and peaceful. We do this
selflessly, without counting the cost to ourselves. We practice the perfection
of generosity in an especially powerful way when we embrace all living being
continually in the radiant love of our heart.
2. The
Perfection of Ethics (Sila Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of virtuous and ethical behaviour,
morality, self-discipline, impeccability, personal integrity, honour, and
harmlessness. The essence of this paramita is that through our love and
compassion we do not harm others; we are virtuous and harmless in our thoughts,
speech and actions. This practice of ethical conduct is the very foundation for
progressing in any practice of meditation and for attaining all higher
realisations on the path. Our practice of generosity must always be supported
by our practice of ethics; this ensures the lasting results of our generosity.
We should perfect our conduct by eliminating harmful behaviour. We abstain from
killing, stealing, sexual misconduct, lying, divisive speech, harsh speech,
gossip, greed, malice and wrong views. Following these precepts or guidelines
is not meant to be a burden or a restriction of our freedom. We follow these
precepts so we can enjoy greater freedom, happiness and security in our lives,
because through our virtuous behaviour we are no longer creating suffering for
ourselves and others. We must realise that unethical behaviour is always the
cause of suffering and unhappiness. If we give even the slightest consideration
to the advantages of cultivating ethical behaviour and the disadvantages of
unethical behaviour, we will certainly develop great enthusiasm for this
practice of ethics. Practicing the perfection of ethics, we are free of
negativity, we cause no harm to others by our actions, our speech is kind and
compassionate, and our thoughts are free of anger, malice and wrong views. When
our commitment is strong in the practice of ethics we are at ease, naturally
confident, without stress and happy because we are not carrying any underlying
sense of guilt or remorse for our actions; we have nothing to hide. Maintaining
our personal honour and integrity, our moral impeccability, this is the cause
of all goodness, happiness and even the attainment of enlightenment.
3. The
Perfection of Patient Endurance (Kshanti Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of patience, tolerance, forbearance, and
acceptance. The essence of this paramita of patience is the strength of mind
and heart that enables us to face the challenges and difficulties of life
without losing our composure an inner tranquillity. We embrace and forebear
adversity, insult, distress and the wrongs of others with patience and
tolerance, free of resentment, irritation, emotional reactivity, or
retaliation. We cultivate the ability to be loving and compassionate in the
face of criticism, misunderstanding, or aggression. With this enlightened
quality of patience, we are neither elated by praise, prosperity, or agreeable
circumstances nor are we angry, unhappy or depressed when faced with insult,
challenge, hardship or poverty. This enlightened attribute of patience, acceptance
and tolerance is not a forced suppression or denial of our thoughts and
feelings. Rather, it is a quality of being which comes from having our heart
open and our mind deeply concentrated upon the Dharma. In this way, we have a
clear and correct understanding of impermanence, of cause and effect (karma),
and with strong determination and patience we remain in harmony with this
understanding for the benefit of all beings. The ability to endure, to have
forbearance, is integral to our Dharma practice. Without this kind of patience
we cannot accomplish anything. A true Bodhisattva practices patience in such a
way that even when we are hurt physically, emotionally, or mentally by others,
we are not irritated or resentful. We always make an effort to see the goodness
and beauty in others. In practicing this perfection of patience and
forbearance, we never give up on an abandon others – we help them cross over
the sea of suffering. We maintain our inner peace, calmness, and equanimity
under all circumstances, having enduring patience and tolerance for ourselves
and others. With the strength of patience, we maintain our effort and
enthusiasm in our Dharma practice. Therefore, our practice of patience assists
us in developing the next paramita of effort and enthusiastic perseverance.
4. The
Perfection of Effort and Enthusiastic Perseverance (Virya Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of energy, vigour, vitality, endurance,
diligence, enthusiasm, continuous, persistent effort. In order to practice the
first three paramitas of generosity, virtuous conduct, and patience in the face
of difficulties, we need this paramita of effort and perseverance. Persistent
effort makes the previous paramitas increase and become even more powerful
influences in our life. The essence of this paramita of effort is the courage,
energy, and endurance to continuously practice the Dharma and pursue the
supreme goal of enlightenment for the highest good of all beings. From a
feeling of deep compassion for the suffering of all sentient beings, we are
urged to unfailing, persistent, and joyous effort. We use our body, speech, and
mind to work ceaselessly and untiringly for the benefit of others, with no
expectations for personal recognition or reward. We are always ready to serve
others to the best of our ability. With right effort, devoted energy, and the
power of sustained application, we practice the Dharma without getting
sidetracked by anything or failing under the influence of laziness. Without
developing Virya Paramita, we can become easily disillusioned and drop our
practice when we meet with adverse conditions. The word virya means persistence
and perseverance in the face of disillusionment, energetically striving to
attain the supreme goal of enlightenment. When we cultivate this type of
diligence and perseverance we have a strong and healthy mind. We practice with
persistent effort and enthusiasm because we realise the tremendous value and
benefit of our Dharma practice. Firmly establishing ourselves in this paramita,
we also develop self-reliance, and this becomes one of our most prominent
characteristics. With right effort and enthusiastic perseverance, we regard
failure as simply another step toward success, danger as an inspiration for
courage, and affliction as another opportunity to practice wisdom and
compassion. To develop strength of character, self-reliance, and the next
paramita of concentration, is not an easy achievement, thus we need
enthusiastic perseverance on the path.
5. The
Perfection of Concentration (Dhyana Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of awareness, concentration, meditation,
contemplation, mindfulness, mental stability. Our minds have the tendency to be
very distracted and restless, always moving from one thought or feeling to another.
Because of this, our attention stays fixated in the ego, in the surface layers
of the mind and emotions, and we just keep engaging in the same habitual
patterns of behaviour. The perfection of concentration means training our mind
so that it does what we want it to do. We stabilise our mind and emotions by
practicing meditation, by being mindful and aware in everything we do. When we
train the mind in this way, physical, emotional, and mental vacillations and
restlessness are eliminated. We achieve focus, composure, and tranquillity.
This ability to concentrate and focus the mind brings clarity, equanimity,
illumination. Concentration allows the deep insight needed to transform the
habitual misperceptions and attachments that cause confusion and suffering. As
we eliminate these misperceptions and attachments, we can directly experience
the joy, compassion, and wisdom of our true nature. There is no attainment of
wisdom and enlightenment without developing the mind through concentration and
meditation. This development of concentration requires perseverance. Thus the
previous paramita of effort and perseverance brings us to this paramita of
concentration. In addition, when there is no practice of meditation and
concentration, we cannot achieve the other paramitas, because their essence,
which is the inner awareness that comes from meditation, is lacking. To attain
wisdom, compassion, and enlightenment, it is essential that we develop the mind
through concentration, meditation, and mindfulness.
6. The
Perfection of Wisdom (Prajna Paramita)
This
paramita is the enlightened quality of transcendental wisdom, insight, and the
perfection of understanding. The essence of this paramita is the supreme
wisdom, the highest understanding that living beings can attain – beyond words
and completely free from the limitation of mere ideas, concepts, or
intellectual knowledge. Beyond the limited confines of intellectual and
conceptual states of mind, we experience the awakened heart-mind of wisdom and
compassion – prajna paramita. Prajna paramita is the supreme wisdom (prajna)
that knows emptiness (shunyata) and the interconnectedness of all things. This
flawless wisdom eliminates all false and distorted views of the absolute. We
see the essential nature of reality with utmost clarity; our perception goes
beyond the illusive and deceptive veils of material existence. With the
perfection of wisdom, we develop the ability to recognise the truth behind the
temporary display of all appearances. Prajna paramita is a result of contemplation,
meditation, and rightly understanding the nature of reality. Ultimately, the
full realisation of prajna paramita is that we are not simply a separate self
trying to do good. Rather, virtuously serving the welfare of all beings is
simply a natural expression of the awakening heart. We realise that the one
serving, the one being served, and the compassionate action of service, are all
the same totality – there is no separate ego or self to be found in any of
these. With this supreme wisdom, we go beyond acceptance and rejection, hope
and fear, dualistic thoughts, and ego-clinging. We completely dissolve all
these notions, realising everything as a transparent display of the primordial
truth. If our ego is attached even to the disciplines of these paramitas, this
is incorrect perception and we are merely going from one extreme to another. In
order to free ourselves from these extremes, we must release our ego attachment
and dissolve all dualistic concepts with the insight of supreme wisdom. This wisdom
transforms the other five paramitas into their transcendental state as well.
Only the illumination of supreme wisdom makes this possible.
- Dharma Mind Buddhist Group
- Dharma Mind Buddhist Group
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