The Miracle of Meditation
“They thought something was wrong
with the machine”
Mingyur Rinpoche
belongs to a pioneering group of lamas and monks who agreed to have their brain
activity measured by scientists conducting research into the benefits of
meditation. In this interview, he talks about his experiences in the
laboratory.
❖
Rinpoche, how did you first come into contact with science when you
were young?
When I was about nine or ten
years old, I met a great scientist named Francisco Varela. He had come to
Nepal to receive teachings from my father, Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche. At that
time I was very little, but I was interested in the stars, galaxies and those
kinds of things. I would ask him a few questions and he would tell me about
his special interest in the brain. Through this, I developed an interest in
science.
Then I did a three-year retreat
and after that I joined a traditional shedra (monastic college). Every year,
the shedra had two months of winter holidays and I would sometimes go to
France or the USA. There I had the opportunity to meet many scientists and to
join meetings of the Mind and Life Institute.
I found it fascinating that
there are so many parallels between science and Buddhism. In Buddhism we have
known for a long time that phenomena are impermanent, created by causes and
conditions, and emptiness. But it is only more recently that scientists have
said that the atom is impermanent. One hundred years ago, they didn’t believe
that.
They also thought that the atom
was singular, but now they accept that atoms are made of sub-atomic
particles. Buddhists learned this through a kind of 'thought experiment', but
they learned it through mathematics and scientific experiments. So it’s all
very, very fascinating.
❖
How did you come to be a 'guinea pig' for scientific experiments?
The Mind
and Life Institute facilitated research on the brains of meditators. His
Holiness the Dalai Lama had said in meetings that it would be good to do
these tests, and after that they asked me to take part. I thought, “Why not”,
and so I became a 'guinea pig'.
When
we meditated, the gamma waves increased above normal levels, and when we
stopped meditating, the waves went down
The
experiments were done at the Waisman Laboratory for Brain Imaging and
Behavior at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. They have a big fMRI (Functional
Magnetic Resonance Imaging) machine.
The difference between a regular
MRI and fMRI is that MRI is more like a photo, while fMRI is more like video.
With an fMRI image you can see what the neurons are doing and how the signal
is moving inside the brain.
The machine is shaped like a big
white coffin, and the area where I had to lie down looked a bit like a big
tongue. I had to lie down on this tongue, like a corpse. They even gave me a
blanket because the temperature inside was very cold. It has to be very cold
for the magnetic power, which is very strong.
They tied my head so I couldn’t
move it at all, and they gave me some earphones to wear. Then they put me
into the machine. I felt like I was being swallowed up. It was very dark
inside.
Then they asked me to meditate
in three different ways. First, they asked me to remain open and present, to
rest in the nature of mind; second, I had to meditate on loving kindness and
compassion; and for the third exercise I practised shamatha with an object.
At first I could not find the
object, because it was completely dark and enclosed like a tunnel. Finally I
saw a little dot, very close, so I crossed my eyes and focused on the dot.
❖
The results, from the point of view of the scientists, were quite
incredible. They thought the machine was broken, didn’t they?
At first they said I was totally
crazy. I was very upset about that, because I thought maybe they might tell
me I was enlightened! I’m just joking!
Yes, at first they thought there
was something wrong with the machine, because the gamma waves, the frequency
of electrical signals occurring in the brain when many neurons work together,
increased a great deal, as did the activity in the left side of the brain.
Normally, when the level of gamma waves gets to a certain point, you are
totally crazy, out of control.
They got these results from many
other meditators too, not just me. When we meditated, the gamma waves
increased above normal levels, and when we stopped meditating, the waves went
down.
When they tested me, I had to
meditate for about two minutes and then stop. Meanwhile, the scientists were
in another room, having fun and drinking coffee. Sometimes they would say
loudly: “Compassion, please.” Then, two minutes later, “Stop compassion!”
Then, “Please meditate on compassion again.” And, “Stop meditating on
compassion!” And then: ”Focus!” “No focus!” “Focus!” “No focus!” And then:
”Be present!” “Don’t be present!” It was quite difficult. They did this over
and over.
❖
In your book, The Joy of Living, you describe how, when you were young,
you conquered your panic attacks and your fear. Could you explain to us,
scientifically, how that worked?
I’m not a scientist, so I cannot
tell you exactly. But I had panic attacks when I was young, and after that,
when I entered into three-year retreat, I used my panic as a support for
meditation. I applied meditation very strongly.
Your
brain is capable of change, and the best way to change it is to practise
meditation on a daily basis
Scientists
have told me that there are many neurons in the brain, and that these neurons
are able to make new connections with each other. The stronger the connection
becomes, the more powerful the message will be. That’s why, if you panic, at
first it may be small, but if you always think about it, then the connections
become bigger and bigger, and the panic stronger and stronger.
Researchers found that
meditation is one of the best ways to change your brain. It can even change
the structure of your brain and develop new cells. Even if there is some
damage, you can naturally rebuild the brain. This is what they call
neuroplasticity.
Your brain is capable of change,
and the best way to change it is to practise meditation on a daily basis.
That change is also good for your physical body. Research by Dr. Richard
Davidson has shown that meditation is good for the immune system and for high
blood pressure, and I think there is a
lot of other research on these benefits too.
❖
Perhaps these experiments confirm for scientists their belief that the
mind is a function of the brain, and that you can train the brain and be
happier in this life. But for them there is no concept of enlightenment. Is
this something that makes you uncomfortable, or that you try to point out
when you speak about the similarities between science and Buddhism?
The point of Buddhism is to
benefit other sentient beings. It is appropriate for some teachings, such as
shamatha, loving kindness and compassion, to be shared with everybody,
Buddhists and non-Buddhists alike. If benefits come from that, that’s
great—no problem. That’s why I don’t feel uncomfortable about that.
For scientists, the important
point is to benefit your own health, to become happier or a better person,
something like that. If someone practises loving kindness and compassion, it
is very beneficial, even if they don’t believe in Buddhism. I’m very happy if
everyone learns about loving kindness and compassion.
But I think the main point is
that the scientists don’t believe in enlightenment; they cannot say there’s
no enlightenment, nor can they say there is enlightenment. They cannot say
either.
Another important point is that
if you are training your brain by practising Buddhism, then you are doing so
in order to benefit others. But from the scientist’s point of view, you train
your brain for your own benefit. So the motivation is a little bit different.
❖
Do you think Buddhist practitioners need to study science?
By studying science, you may
become more open-minded. That’s very important. As Buddha said: “Just as gold
is tested by being burnt, cut and rubbed, the learned should accept my words
only after examining them, not simply out of faith or other such reasons.”
Scientists have the same goal, at least the good ones do: they want to know
the truth. For this reason, it can be very beneficial to study science.
❖
It seems that there are a lot of parallels between science and
Buddhism. But if we look at science, however far and however deep scientists
go, it seems that they never go beyond matter. Isn’t science limited to
explaining only relative truth?
I think the main difference
between science and Buddhism is that Buddhism is facing in to look at your
experience, to look at your mind. Scientists are facing out.
But some scientists, for example
those working in the field of quantum mechanics, and especially quantum
gravity, explained to me that when studying the nature of matter on a minute
scale, everything loses meaning. Time, space, energy, it all loses meaning;
and that’s why you go beyond matter. I joked with them: “You say space
collapses, time collapses, everything collapses. Even scientists collapse.”
They said: “True.”
At this level, they cannot even
apply mathematics. If there is no space, no time, then you cannot use
mathematics, can you? So everything is lost. They are not sure how to handle
their findings. Some of them find this a bit scary and don’t like what they
have discovered.
In the future, perhaps we will
find a way to bridge Buddhism and science. At the Mind and Life Institute’s
meetings, it is often said that we need 'the brain of a scientist and the
heart of a Buddhist'. Meaning that we need to be intelligent, yet have a warm
heart as well. If we put these two together, we can help make the world a
better place, whereas if we use knowledge in the wrong way, it can harm
others.
❖
Do you think that science will ever be able to find what constitutes
the mind?
The Dalai Lama recommended to
scientists that they study 'dying meditation'. When accomplished
practitioners die in Tibet, they can remain for some time, seven days, even
two weeks, in meditation. They continue to sit upright even though their
brain waves have stopped. Everything has died, but still their faces are very
bright. Sometimes the chest may even remain a little bit warm. My father, for
example, sat like that for three days. Chogyeé Trichen Rinpoche, a great
Sakya master who recently passed away, sat like that for weeks, I heard.
Scientists are starting to look
at this. Richard Davidson thought that this would be a very good time to see
the mind; the brain has stopped, there’s no normal functioning, but still
there’s something happening.
❖
What have you had learned from your association and collaboration with
science? Has it affected your teaching style and the way you think about
things?
It has been of great benefit for
my teachings on emptiness. If I teach emptiness according to Abhidharma, as I
learned it, everybody says, “This is so boring!” But if I discuss emptiness
in scientific terms, it has the same meaning, but everyone says, “That’s
interesting, that’s great!” From this point of view, scientific research
provides many good examples that I use in my teaching.
Studying science has also been
good for my own practice of analytical meditation on emptiness, and for
understanding the different qualities of the mind. For example, Abhidharma
describes the gap between the instant you perceive an object without concept,
and the instant the conceptual mind comes in, and this is also described in
neuroscience.
Interview by Andy Fraser
First
published in View, August 2009
Link to Mingyur Rinpoche |
© 2011
The Tertön Sogyal Trust
From View @ http://www.viewmagazine.org/index.php/articles/science/103--they-thought-something-was-wrong-with-the-machine.html
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