Question:
During the end-of-life supportive-chanting of Amitabha, the deceased's body
cannot be moved for eight hours. But in Japan, especially in hospitals, if we
perform supportive-chanting when someone has just died, the hospital
immediately requires their body to be moved to the mortuary when they die. What should we do then?
Dharma Master Ding Hong:
…this depends on the merit of the
practitioner. If you wish to pass away with ease, have people chant Amitabha
for you right after you pass and have no one move your body, then you must
cultivate merit right now.
You save this merit to be used at the time of your death. When you cultivate
merit, you cannot yet enjoy it. When you enjoy your merits, it is used up.
Therefore, you must cultivate strongly, do giving, let go. At the same time, take suffering as your
teacher. Live simply where possible. This way, your merits are preserved. When
your end of life comes, you will have no problems.
We encountered the same problem in Hong Kong. Hong Kong law also dictates that
once a person dies, the police must be called. If in a hospital, they must be
immediately moved to the mortuary.
However, we have also sent off some fellow HK practitioners who had great
merit. They notified the police a full 24 hours later. The police came, took a look, and said,
"Okay, let's check the body." After examining the body, it was fine.
They did not investigate further.
There was no problem leaving the body there for 24 hours. They had great merit. At the time of their
passing, no karmic creditors came to disturb or interfere with them.
If one passes away in the hospital, it is quite troublesome because the
hospital cannot accommodate you, especially if you enter the Intensive Care
Unit [ICU]. Once you enter the ICU, your fate is completely handed over to the
doctors. Your family members can't do
anything; fellow practitioners can do even less...
I have seen it myself. We once went to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Hong Kong to
do supportive-chanting for a pureland practitioner. Her son didn’t know what to
do. His mother had a stroke and he immediately sent her to the hospital.
She was sent to the hospital, fell into a coma and went into the ICU. In the
ICU, you mostly go in and only come out when you are dead. They use these
machines to prolong your life or extend it for a few days. This is considered
fulfilling the medical staff's responsibility of saving life.
How did they prolong her life? They cut open her windpipe and inserted a
ventilator tube. Because your nose is no longer working, they insert it
directly into the windpipe. They use a machine to help you breathe and they add
a pump to the heart.
The entire body is inserted with tubes. There is a tube in the esophagus to
pump liquid food into you. Then there are urinary catheters, tubes for feces,
and so on. Anyway, you are full of tubes.
Plus, there are the wires and tubes for the monitors. This one is for
heartbeats, this one is for breathing. This kind is for blood pressure
etc. Anyway, the person is restrained to
the bed. Extremely suffering. Tell me, isn't this being cruel to the patient?
This was too terrifying. It was simply hell on earth. You are unable to move a
muscle.
When I went in and saw this, my tears just fell. The air conditioning was
blowing on her, her clothes were quite bare, she was only covered with a thin
blanket. Even normal healthy people would feel... most people would feel freezing cold in this environment.
Anyway, they don't care… as long as the machines are plugged in, it's fine to
them. Just a thin layer covering her, her body was freezing cold. You see, it's
like this.
Our group went in to chant Amitabha but the hospital wouldn't allow so many
people to chant, they only allowed one person. If you came out to go to the
toilet, there can't be a second person going in. The visit is considered over.
What to do? In the end, everyone sent me in. Before going in, I first went to
the restroom…
It was gloomy and eerie inside, as if entering the underworld. In that ICU, it
wasn't just her alone; there were other people. Some people, when they woke up,
were wailing. It truly sounded like ghosts crying. Going in, I felt my body
trembling.
I chanted for her for a long time, but there was no response. I didn't dare to
be loud. If it was loud, the medical staff would say, "Don't disturb the
others." Because there were several patients together there, I didn't dare
to chant loudly. But if I didn't chant loudly, I was afraid she couldn't hear
it.
What to do? I thought of a method. I took a piece of paper and rolled it into a
tube, placed this at her ear and chanted through it. I chanted softly to avoid
getting kicked out. It was truly quite difficult.
Because there were no chairs there, I could only bend over. I couldn't stand
too far away… after less than an hour of chanting, my lower back became sore.
Finally, I knelt down. Kneeling down, I could at least keep my back straight,
then my mouth was exactly level with her ear. So I chanted like this.
In the end, the doctor was touched and brought a stool over for me. Really,
that supportive-chanting session was the most grueling in my life…
So it's best if you know it is the end of life to remain at home. You just
chant Amitabha right where you are and seek rebirth in Sukhavati. Less
suffering, it is okay even if we leave this world a bit earlier…
At home, when you chant Amitabha, your mind is clear. If you chant Amitabha
with faith and aspiration to seek rebirth in Sukhavati, Amitabha will
definitely come to receive you. If by chance karmic obstacles manifest and you
lose consciousness, then faith and aspiration will all be absent.
Of course, that practitioner in Hongkong also lacked sufficient faith and
aspiration, which is why she suffered such an outcome. If she had true faith
and aspiration, she could have told her children that when her time comes, they
must absolutely not send her to the hospital.
Take my mother, for instance… I have her will with me today. Let me read her
will to everyone. This is from February 2008…
There are five clauses in total.
“Recalling my entire life, I am grateful
to my parents, grateful to my teachers. Grateful to the country and its people,
grateful to my siblings and all my friends. I was able to work peacefully until
retirement and am able to enjoy a wonderful twilight years. Grateful to all
sentient beings. Especially grateful to Venerable Master for teaching us to
learn traditional culture and understand Buddhism and Pureland practice. At the
time of departing this world, let me affectionately say: Thank you, everyone.”
This is the first clause.
“What makes me satisfied is that my
thirty years of effort in raising my son were not in vain. My only child, my
son Zhong Maosen, has allowed me to become the mother of a PhD and the mother
of a professor. What comforts me even more is that my son has embarked on the
path of learning from the past sages and propagating the teachings of the
sages. I hope Maosen will diligently study and promote the traditional cultures
of Confucianism, Buddhism, and Taoism. Delve deeply into teachings,
continuously teach, and follow the teachings of the sages. Cultivate moral
character, manage the family, govern the state, bring peace to the world,
benefit society and the people, and seek rebirth in the Pure Land.”
This is an expectation she has for me.
“In my later years, I personally studied
the Buddhist Pure Land sutras, and resolved to chant Amitabha to seek rebirth
in Sukhavati. I hope my son, Zhong Maosen, will preside over my end-of-life
matters and affairs after my passing. I also hope relatives, friends, and
fellow practitioners will chant Amitabha for me for twenty-four hours during my
final moments, and escort me to be reborn in Sukhavati.
“My body should only be moved twenty-four
hours after passing away. This is very important. If, due to old age I suffer
an illness, no matter at what time or place, absolutely do not send me to the
hospital. Even more so, do not attempt resuscitation or life-support. Please
immediately chant Amitabha for me.”
My mother is really smart.
Below it says, “If my lifespan has not yet ended, I will receive the Buddha's
blessing and recover. If my lifespan has ended, I can pass away amidst the
chanting of Amitabha’s name. Absolutely do not, under any circumstance, send
me to the hospital. Chant Amitabha right there. At the juncture of life and
death, chanting Amitabha is the number one thing to do."
This is the third clause.
“The family property, including the real
estate under my name and all bank deposits, cash, and household items, etc.,
shall all be inherited and managed by my son, Zhong Maosen. If there are still
plenty of deposits, please donate appropriately to make offerings to the Triple
Gem, print wholesome books, and engage in social public welfare and charitable
works.
“I hope that when relatives, friends, and
fellow practitioners learn of my passing, they can all recite the Ksitigarbha
Sutra, Amitayus Sutra, Amitabha Sutra and chant Amitabha within 49 days. This
will be the best memorial and help for me. Thank you!
“May we meet in Sukhavati again. Namo
Amituofo! Pureland practitioner Zhao
Liangyu. Written on February 29, 2008, in Guangzhou.”
This shows my mom had the most wisdom. Being able to completely and clearly
hand over all matters after death, one can rest completely at ease. Once people
reach old age, they should quickly think about writing a will properly.
Master Yinguang said: "Always hang the word 'Death' on your
forehead." If a person frequently thinks of death, they will have Dharma
in mind.
Amitabha Path
Tuesday, June 23, 2026
Sharing: Supportive-chanting at end of life
Sunday, June 21, 2026
Reciting till single-pointed emptiness
On an occasion of sharing by two venerable masters with their disciples.
Elder Master Chanyun: Layman Dong was an old man who stayed in Zhanshan Monastery as a language teacher. He was reciting Amitabha in a room when they called him to come out for mealtime.
Elder Master Mengcan: No, no-one called him. He recited Amitabha and simply exited the room. The door was locked. He locked the door from within but he left the room while reciting Amitabha. I was staying there at that time. I was there when this happened. This happened around 1938-39. I did not leave the monastery yet.
Elder Master Chanyun: So what happened was that: he entered his room and locked the door from within to prevent anyone else from entering. Then he recited Amitabha until a state of one-pointedness. Without opening the door, he went out of the room. Later, when he returned to his room, he couldn’t open the door because the door was locked from within. (Audience laughed)
Elder Master Mengcan: This is the state of “one-pointed undistracted mind”. It is “Form is emptiness; emptiness is form” (from Heart Sutra). His body-mind was empty, the external structure of the room was empty. He recited until all that remained was just that one phrase "Amitabha". Nothing else existed for him. In this state of union, he could pass through the door and leave the room.
Either progress or regress, there is no third alternative
In the view of Yogacara, when you do not repent a negative deed, it means you rejoice in it. There is no third alternative. Ordinary beings are not able to remain neutral in the middle.
Thus, from the perspective of Yogacara, if you do not repent your behavior, it means you approve of it. If you say, "I didn't repent, but I don’t approve of it either," that is wrong. If you do not repent, then you are complying with it.
In Yogacara, there are only two situations: you either purify and eliminate karmic seed, or you strengthen it.
This means that no one remains in the original condition without changing. The phrase "staying constant" does not apply to ordinary beings, only to holy beings (who have realisation). Holy beings have realised their mind to be unborn and unceasing, so they can stay constant.
We are not qualified to "stay the same." You are either improving or you are regressing, because your life is a flowing stream of thoughts which arises and ceases, so how is it possible to stay constant?
Therefore, from the perspective of Yogacara, if you do not repent and purify, it means that you are indulging in the behavior. “Not repenting” and “rejoicing” mean the same thing. Therefore, the power of the negative karma is augmented…
At first, you create the karma, but in the end, the karma will be the one compelling you to create further karma. A karmic seed will activate further ripenings. Originally, you were the one who created it, but later it influences you to do that same type of action again…
Therefore, a kind of mutually reinforcing cycle is generated. This seed will not cease until you repent and counteract it. It slowly snowballs and accumulates strength. This is the first point.
Saturday, June 20, 2026
Study but do not neglect practice
Khenpo Tsultrim Lodro
Remembering impermanence is the mark of a practitioner
Khenpo Sodargye
In Dharma practice, thinking of impermanence is of the highest importance. If we lack the remembrance of impermanence, we are no different from ordinary worldly people. Sometimes, we see certain Khenpos, Geshes, or other figures of high stature whose speech and behavior seem to lack the understanding of impermanence. Then, their Dharma practice will not be good either. If one lacks the contemplation of impermanence, one clings to permanence, leading to afflictions and negative karma which ultimately brings suffering.
For practitioners, the contemplation of impermanence is of the highest importance among all practices… Just as the teachings of the Kadampa masters show, when the feeling of impermanence arises in our mindstream, we no longer have much interest in worldly matters, realizing that if we do not listen, contemplate, and practice Dharma as soon as possible, this brief human life will pass by in the blink of an eye.
Amitabha's light
Saturday, June 13, 2026
Useful in Countering Afflictions
Jamyang Rinpoche
For instance, when we hear pleasant sounds, we are happy; when someone says something harsh, we get really upset. If we are still behaving like that, it means that our practice is not really good. If we had a good practice, we would have at least dissolved this sort of fixation. If we can’t dissolve this fixation, then we can say a great deal about the Dharma but it doesn’t do the slightest bit of good for our practice or afflictions.
Being unable to overcome our afflictions means that our practice has failed. If the military trains troops for a few years, yet these troops do not know how to fight their enemies on the battlefield, then the military is a failure and all its efforts are useless.
Afflictions are the enemies for a practitioner. If afflictions win, then the practitioner has failed. One can check for oneself if your practice has succeeded or failed. There is no need to ask the Guru.
When afflictions arrive, our training in renunciation and bodhichitta are completely lost, needless to mention emptiness —then your Dharma practice has been useless to you. What is the use of listing out all the amazing practices you have done? Useless! If Dharma is useful when it comes to dealing with your afflictions, then you are truly successful.
~~
Constantly trying to rest your mind in a state free of thoughts and thinking that this is Dharma practice is incorrect. In Tibet, many small animals called marmots hibernate for about 6 months each year. Keeping your mind in such a state is similar to the minds of these hibernating animals.
It is not necessary to control your mind in this way. What we need to address is the source of afflictions. We need to investigate where afflictions come from.
There is a certain sect in India that trains in keeping the mind still for hundreds of years. In history, the adherents of this sect have been said to achieve this feat. Long-life devas can also still their minds for hundreds of years. After all that effort, the only result is that they remain trapped in samsara.
The cause of samsara is self-grasping. When we rest our minds in stillness, this self-grasping is not dissolved, instead, on top of that, we add another layer of clinging at stillness.
In other words, we already have self-grasping, but this type of practice adds another layer of self-grasping on top of our existing self-grasping. In the meditation, a watcher observes the mind for distractions and brings it back to stillness; this watcher becomes another artificially created layer of self-grasping. Therefore, one remains entrapped in samsara instead of moving closer to liberation.
When this type of training is engaged in for a long time, one approaches a kind of state when consciousness seems to be extinguished. If this habit becomes deeply entrenched, then one takes rebirth as a long-life deva. These devas are still firmly enslaved by self-grasping.
The true view of Buddhism is to dismantle self-grasping. This is the only way to liberation. Beginning with self-grasping, discrimination arises, and the various objects of the five senses are judged as pleasant or unpleasant, attachment and aversion arises, one reacts and creates karma and all of samsara unfolds from there on…
Friday, June 12, 2026
Uprooting obstructions for pureland rebirth before death arrives
Dharma Master Jingjie
Pureland practitioners are inclined to emphasize on creating virtues while neglecting to stop existing non-virtuous habits. When we recite Amitabha, we are cultivating a positive force in our minds to take rebirth in Sukhavati. However, there remains many forces in our mind that obstruct pureland rebirth —these are our strong habits.
Compared to these obstructing habits, the positive force to take rebirth in Sukhavati is far weaker. Therefore, this becomes a hurdle you fail to cross when you are dying. You cannot expect someone to be there to counsel you when you are on the verge of dying. As a practitioner, you should now constantly examine what kind of thoughts arise in your mind and see where these karmic forces lead to.
When these disturbing thoughts arise, you can’t say, “Ah! Just recite Amitabha and distract myself.” Even if you succeed in distracting yourself from the disturbing thought, its underlying attachment still functions, therefore the habit is hidden and waiting to ambush you at any time.
Instead, you need to completely release this attachment through contemplation, analysis and investigation of its nature. You need to convince yourself that this attachment arises from deluded thinking and that it is the nature of suffering, only then can the mind completely relinquish this attachment and no longer give rise to such thoughts. This obstructing force would thus be removed from the mind.
Therefore, all pureland practitioners should support and encourage each other. Pureland practice is cultivating the positive force for rebirth in pureland, at the same time, one should also try one’s best to remove all countering forces that are obstacles to pureland rebirth.
Monday, June 1, 2026
Merits and the lack of it
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Reciting Amitabha is not a simple practice
Monday, May 25, 2026
Knowing time of death beforehand
Venerable Elder Guangqing
If there are many thoughts when chanting Amitabha, the method is to ignore these thoughts. Just recite Amitabha. If you try to get rid of distracting thoughts, that is adding one more thought or affliction on top of what you already have. Once you have recited Amitabha sufficiently, thoughts will be reduced on their own. Also, your worldly desires will decrease and it will be easier to reach single-minded focus…
When reciting Amitabha, every thought is never apart from Amitabha. You recite clearly and hear each recitation clearly. Every syllable is clearly recited. Your mind is placed on the sound of Amitabha that you hear through your ears while your mouth is reciting. In this way, the Amitabha chant engages your mind fully. You let go of everything else and suspend your attention on this sound, this is how you reach a single-pointed mind…
There are many methods of chanting Amitabha. When you have not reached a certain level, you often waver between methods. Sometimes you feel this method makes you concentrate better, later you feel another method is better. This is because our mind lacks stability. Sometimes we think “this is good, or is that better?”
This comparison of better or worse is from our discriminating mind. Before reaching a certain stage, one has such fluctuations and mind cannot settle down. Actually, every method is good. They are only an expression of our self-nature. If you let go, that is your self-nature. If you use a certain method, that is also your self-nature. Therefore, it is not necessary to generate such attachments when you practice…
When you are dying, do not hope for or try to see visions of Buddhas or Bodhisattvas. Whatever you seek is false or unreliable. Without any expectation of seeing anything, simply recite Amitabha with a pure mind; whatever arises from your mind naturally is then true.
Don’t speak of gaining anything, if there is something to gain, one has not yet reached. When reciting Amitabha, recite until there is only this one thought of Amitabha left in your mind without any other distracting thoughts. Then you will know your time of death beforehand. If there are other thoughts, they will obscure you and you will not know the time of death beforehand.
Thursday, May 21, 2026
No control in the bardo (Story)
An account by the Terton Jatson Nyingpo about his mother
At the same time I heard that my mother was dying, so I went to her; she died with her head pillowed in my lap. I performed the ejection of consciousness (phowa) and recited dedications and aspirations. I placed a liberation-through-wearing yantra on her body and placed samaya substances in her mouth. I cremated her myself. For seven weeks I dedicated virtue to her.
During those weeks I repeatedly met her in dreams; I would say to her, "Meditate on Chenrezig. Repeat the Mani mantra. Let your mind rest naturally, without alteration." During the first week she replied, "That is not easy; I don't trust myself. My awareness is vague and indistinct; it has no stability. I have seen no happiness in this world, only suffering. My son, do whatever you can to help me!"
During the second week I dreamed that she was as real as when alive. I taught her Dharma to clarify the bardo state as before, and she replied, "Oh father! Oh mother! I had no idea the bardo was going to be like this! All the people who don't practice Dharma during their lives are foolish, foolish! Guru! Three jewels! When I look up I see penetrating light rays and hear empty sound. When I look down I am terrified and hear wails of agony. I have no control over what I do now. Please keep trying to help me!"
I offered a lot of butter lamps, enlisted the help of the Three Jewels, and made burnt offerings including samaya substances; my mother was reborn as an animal.
Having witnessed what she had gone through I realized how much good I was doing myself by practicing Dharma. I wrote many songs then out of sadness. I repeatedly sponsored tea service for all those staying at softwater spring; distributed grain, salt, and butter, and gave them whatever ragged clothing I had to give; gave barley meal and other food to starving villagers; protected the area from blights and hail; caused rainfall; prevented sickness and epidemics; protected the area from predators; gave medicine to the sick; gave yantras for eating and wearing to those who mistook their own thoughts to be demons; gave authorizations and blessings; and banished obstructors. With the best intentions, I really did whatever I could to help everyone in the area.
(Note: Jatson Nyingpo was a famous treasure revealer who revealed the Konchok Chidu cycle. He did confined retreat for 17 years and was the Guru to the 10th Karmapa amongst other great masters.)
Be careful about criticizing others
HH Jigme Phuntsok Rinpoche
If we created the karma of abandoning Dharma, there will be no chance for liberation. This is something we have to be very careful about. What does the karma of abandoning Dharma include? It includes slandering or criticizing Bodhisattvas. We do not know at all where the Bodhisattvas are, therefore we should behave carefully towards anyone. There are Bodhisattvas amongst the monastics and laypeople. We will not know if even an animal is a Bodhisattva.
(Note: According to the sutras, the karma of abandoning Dharma prevents one from taking birth in Sukhavati. One must quickly confess and purify it if one has committed such karmas.)
Going to Sukhavati despite heavy killing karma
Kathok Rigzin Chenpo Rinpoche
There was an old man in Gansu named Langde. He was a war hero of his tribe, stayed in Mula village, his descendants are still around today.
In his youth, during the Mongol wars and tribal conflicts, he killed many people and created heavy negative karma. In his later years, he constantly repented. He recited an enormous number of Amitabha mantra and name over a long period of time and also recited Dampa Deshek’s phowa prayer.
In the 1950s, he was imprisoned for many years. After being released, he passed away in the Luqi County in Gansu. He said to the person who received him upon his release from prison, “I won’t be able to return to my home but I have done a great deal of Amitabha practice. My negative karma has been purified and I am about to go to Sukhavati.” Joyfully, he sat on the roadside reciting Dampa Deshek’s phowa prayer and passed away with total freedom and peace.
The same thing happened to my maternal grandfather. During chaotic times, he also killed many people and created very heavy karma. Later, he too recited Amitabha’s mantra and practiced phowa, attaining rebirth in Sukhavati.
In short, this Dharma method has immense blessings and power. Many ordinary people have practiced it and attained rebirth in Sukhavati. Although they do not have any attainment in the generation or completion stages, they possess sincere faith and a mind of repentance, through which even very grave karma can be purified.
When doing this practice, think often of Amitabha’s qualities and powers. In this world, people most easily resonate with practices related to the Lotus Family among the Five Buddha Families — such as Avalokiteshvara, Amitabha, and Guru Rinpoche. For beings with strong desire, the deities of the Lotus Family are especially effective. The requirements for practice is also easy—as long as you have faith in Amitabha, you can practice.
Of course, unwavering, stable faith, loving-kindness and compassion are in themselves not easy qualities to have. Perseverance is not easy either. The two people mentioned above did not attain their accomplishment in an easy manner. I once asked others about how they practiced.
Although they had created very heavy killing karma, they were also loyal, courageous and trustworthy people. Later on, for more than ten years, they diligently repented and did the practice of Amitabha. Langde did a walking pilgrimage from Gansu to Lhasa. For three years he avoided idle talk and devoted himself solely to Amitabha practice. My grandfather was the same. For over a decade he practiced continuously. Every day, he recited Amitabha’s mantra and practiced the phowa prayer without talking unnecessarily.
~~
Dampa Desheg's Phowa Prayer
(Note: Dampa Deshek is the founder of the Nyingma Kathok lineage and said to be an emanation of Amitabha himself.)
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Entering the Wrong Door