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Kopan Course No. 24 (1991): eBook Series

(Archive ##872)

This series consists of four volumes of teachings given by Lama Zopa Rinpoche at the 24th Kopan meditation course, held at Kopan Monastery, Kathmandu, Nepal, in November 1991. Edited by Gordon McDougall and Sandra Smith.

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Kopan Course No. 24 Index Page

The Index Page provides an outline of the topics discussed in each of the lectures. Click on the links below to go directly to a particular lecture.

VOLUME 1
Lecture 1
  • Practicing Dharma
  • Actualizing the path
  • Compassion: Reasons to develop
  • Compassion: Universal responsibility
Lecture 2
  • Compassion: The best way to be selfish is to cherish others
  • Bodhicitta: The disadvantage of anger
  • Bodhicitta: The benefits of patience
  • The importance of compassion
  • The meaning of life
Lecture 3
  • Dedicating our life for others
  • The disadvantages of self-cherishing: Working just for the self
  • Dedicating our life for others
  • Bodhicitta: The benefits for ourselves and for others
Lecture 4
  • The realization of impermanence and death is the source of happiness in life
  • Following the dissatisfied mind brings problems
  • The dissatisfied mind causes illness
  • The evolution of human beings and skin cancer
  • Renouncing desire frees us from problems
Lecture 5
  • The wrong concept of permanence
  • Facing death without the Dharma
  • The is no anger when there is an understanding of impermanence
  • The Heart Sutra recitation
  • The meaning of life is to benefit others in three ways
  • The three levels of practice
  • We need to actualize the whole lamrim
  • The qualities of a buddha
Lecture 6
  • Meditation on impermanence and emptiness before the Heart Sutra
  • The Prayer to the Lineage Lamas
  • Conventional and absolute bodhicitta
  • Conventional and absolute Dharma
  • The five Hinayana paths
  • The five Mahayana paths
  • The lower and higher tantras
  • Conventional and absolute Dharma and Sangha
  • Vajrasattva practice
Lecture 7
  • Meditation on the reality of life
  • The real I can’t be found
  • Like a dream
  • Jorchö Lama Chöpa
  • The need to practice
  • The four kayas
  • The meaning of rig
Lecture 8
  • Emptiness: Like a dream
  • Emptiness: We need a valid base
  • Emptiness: The three ways of seeing a magician’s illusion
  • Emptiness: How we see things is just one view of many
  • Emptiness: First recognize the hallucination
Lecture 9
  • Motivation: Universal responsibility
  • Direct and inferential valid cognition
  • Emptiness: The nyi of tong-pa-nyi
  • The emptiness of letters and numbers
  • The emptiness of money
  • Having faith in the Buddha as a valid source
Lecture 10
  • Emptiness: Real appearance as a hallucination
  • Only the mind can remove the cause of the problems
  • How realizations protect us
  • We need to rely on the Buddha, Dharma and Sangha as our doctor, medicine and nurse
  • Causal and resultant refuge
  • Saying the refuge prayer
VOLUME 2
Lecture 11
  • The importance of compassion
  • The importance of compassion: Stories from the Buddha’s past lives
  • What a bodhisattva is
  • The need to study the mind
  • Rinpoche’s Amdo trip
  • The nature of the body and mind
  • Reincarnation can’t be disproved
Lecture 12
  • The suffering of change
  • The need for compassion
  • The shortcomings of following self-cherishing
  • The benefits of remembering impermanence and death
  • The problems of not understanding the mind
  • The goal of life
  • Q&A: Reincarnation
Lecture 13
  • Practicing Dharma to benefit sentient beings
  • The nature of the mind
  • Western science is about external development
  • Attaining clairvoyance
  • The generation and completion stages of Highest Yoga Tantra
  • Lama Yeshe’s astral travels
  • Reincarnation stories
  • Lama Yeshe and Ösel Rinpoche
Lecture 14
  • Samsara and nirvana are completely empty
  • The meaning of the Heart Sutra mantra
  • Why we are afraid to die
  • Spirit harm and pujas
  • Stories about spirits and pujas
  • Suicide
  • Perfect human rebirth: This body is so precious
  • Po-wa and the end of life
  • Curing disease with meditation
  • It’s wise to prepare for death
Lecture 15
  • The need to subdue the mind
  • Perfect human rebirth
  • Awareness and concentration are not enough
  • The three principal aspects of the path
  • The importance of motivation: Four people recite the Tara prayer
VOLUME 3
Lecture 16
  • Phenomena don’t exist as they appear
  • Karma: The four suffering results of sexual misconduct
  • Karma: The four happy results of abstaining from sexual misconduct
  • Individual and collective karma: The drought in Africa
  • Three beings see a bowl of liquid differently
  • The appearance at death comes from the mind
  • Everything comes from the mind
Lecture 17
  • The purpose of the eight Mahayana precepts
  • The three types of suffering
  • The disadvantages of self-cherishing
  • The kindness of others
  • The eight Mahayana precepts ceremony
Lecture 18
  • The eight Mahayana precepts motivation: The four noble truths
  • The eight Mahayana precepts motivation: How the twelve links work
  • The eight Mahayana precepts motivation: Everything comes from the mind
  • The eight Mahayana precepts ceremony
Lecture 19
  • The main mind and mental factors
  • Buddha nature
  • Understanding buddha nature brings hope
Lecture 20
  • The eight Mahayana precepts motivation: The disadvantages of self-cherishing
  • Experiencing disease without the self-cherishing thought
  • The preliminary practices
Lecture 21
  • Obscurations are temporary
  • Even the concept of I can be eliminated
  • In emptiness our mind and the Buddha’s are the same
  • The ultimate nature of the mind is buddha nature
Lecture 22
  • The eight Mahayana precepts motivation: The benefits of bodhicitta
  • Bodhicitta is worth more than any other realization
  • All happiness comes from bodhicitta
Lecture 23
  • Mental consciousness and memory
  • Rinpoche visits morgues, old people’s homes and institutions
  • Rinpoche’s gurus
  • Panchen Rinpoche
  • Becoming one with the guru
  • Kirti Tsenshab Rinpoche and the start of Root’s destitute home
VOLUME 4
Lecture 24
  • Eight Mahayana precepts motivation: The four wrong concepts
  • The need for bodhicitta
Lecture 25
  • Experiencing problems on behalf of others is the most beneficial thing
  • The nature of self-cherishing
  • The shortcomings of the self-cherishing thought
  • Exchanging self with others
  • Black food and tobacco
Lecture 26
  • Buddha nature and subtle dependent arising
  • Maitreya’s nine examples of buddha nature
  • Buddha statues, merit and obscurations
  • More of Maitreya’s nine examples of buddha nature
Lecture 27
  • Eight Mahayana precepts motivation: With bodhicitta nonvirtues become virtues
  • The four suffering results of killing, stealing and lying
  • The results of not committing the ten nonvirtues
  • The benefits of bodhicitta
Lecture 28
  • Meditation on impermanence and death
  • “This chronic disease of cherishing the self”
  • Advice for practice
  • The benefits of reciting the lamrim prayer
  • Vajrasattva
  • “This is no time to sleep!”
  • Universal responsibility
  • The kindness of Lama Yeshe
  • The karma to practice Dharma
  • Dedication
Lecture 29
  • Refuge ceremony motivation: The nature of samsara
  • Refuge ceremony motivation: The need to be free from all three types of suffering
  • Refuge ceremony motivation: The benefits of taking the vows
  • Refuge ceremony motivation: The general precepts
  • Refuge ceremony