Buddha’s Birds
ANDREA MILLER| JULY 4,
2016 Lion's Roar
From the swan that Siddhartha nursed as a boy to the fantastical
Garuda—Andrea Miller explores the intriguing role that birds play
in Buddhist mythology and teachings.
In my
freshman year of college, my religious studies class was at the
sleepy hour of two o’clock, and to make matters worse the professor
was hypnotically soft-spoken and wore tired shades of brown. So on
the day that he slowly enumerated the four noble truths on the
board, I failed to experience the flash of insight, which many
Buddhist converts talk about; the only thing I felt was my heavy
eyelids.
Then I
glimpsed movement.
I was
sitting by the window—sunlight pouring in—and a dark, glossy bird I
didn’t have a name for had landed on the stone windowsill outside.
If it weren’t for the glass, I could have touched it—I was that
close to its iridescent purple and green sheen, blunt tail, and
yellow bill. Watching the bird tilting its head as it looked at me
with alert, shiny eyes, I was suddenly wholly focused.
I’d never
before paid much attention to birds, but for me this particular one
was what Zen master Thich Nhat Hanh calls “a bell of mindfulness.”
The bird woke me up to the present moment.
It was
inevitable: I became both a Buddhist and a birdwatcher.
For me,
birding is a form of meditation—it’s just watching, just listening.
I appreciate how birding encourages equanimity, how it helps me
rest in ambiguity and uncertainty. In the field, I get a glimpse of
small, brown wings disappearing through the branches of an oak.
Then I look through my bird books and see page after page of almost
indistinguishable little brown birds with their subtle markings and
minor differences. Did the bird I see have yellow or tan legs? Was
its beak straight or did it curve? I can’t positively identify the
bird and I have to find some peace with that.
It’s easy
to find symbolism in birds—in the way they take flight, in the way
they preen and nest and sing. Poets have long made wordy use of
their wings, while mystics have revered them. In Buddhism, birds
are used to teach ethics and concepts. They are metaphors for our
muddled, unskillful selves, and also represent our best, no-self
selves. Buddhist bird lore goes all the way back to the beginning,
or so the story goes.
Siddhartha and the Swan
One day,
when the future Buddha, Siddhartha, was just a child, he and his
cousin Devadatta went walking in the forest. Devadatta was an avid
hunter, never without his bow and a sheaf of arrows, so when a
wedge of swans passed through the sky, he aimed at the leading bird
and pierced its wing. As the swan fell heavily to the ground both
boys ran to it, but it was Siddhartha who arrived first. He cradled
the injured creature in his arms and whispered comfort into its
curved, milky neck. Then he extracted the shaft of the arrow and
rubbed the wound with a cool and soothing herb.
Eventually,
Devadatta caught up to Siddhartha and demanded he hand over the
swan, but Siddhartha refused. When Devadatta persisted, Siddhartha
suggested that they bring the matter to the king, and so in front
of the whole court Devadatta and Siddhartha each presented their
side of the argument. They were both so persuasive that the court
was divided; some people thought that the swan belonged to
Devadatta because he shot it, while others believed that it was
Siddhartha’s for nursing it.
Suddenly,
an elderly man appeared and the king asked him his opinion. “The
prized possession of every creature is its life,” the elder stated.
“As such, a creature belongs to whoever protects it, not to the one
who attempts to take its life away.”
Seeing the
wisdom in this, the court awarded Siddhartha the swan. He sheltered
it until it was fully healed, and then set it free.
The
Golden Goose
The Buddha
often told his followers stories about his previous lives to teach
them ethical lessons. According to one story, he was a man who died
and was reborn as a golden goose. He still remembered his old
family and felt a pang thinking of how, since his death, they were
just barely scraping by. So he went to them and at their feet he
released one of his valuable feathers. “I’ll always provide for
you,” the goose promised. Then each day after that he gave the
family another feather until they had enough gold to buy soft beds
and rich foods.
But his
former wife grew greedy, and one day she lured the goose close to
her with sweet words. Then she grabbed him, pinned his beating
wings between her chest and the crook of her arm, and plucked all
of his resplendent feathers. Now, the goose couldn’t fly away, so
his wife threw him into a barrel, fed him skinny scraps of food,
and waited for his feathers to grow back. But when they did, she
was disappointed: instead of the golden glint she was hoping for,
the new feathers were as white as icy silence.
The
Rooster of Attachment
Buddhist
teachings place a bird at the very center of the wheel of life,
the bhavacakra. At root, Buddhism is
about how we can find true liberation from the suffering
ofsamsara, the wheel of cyclic existence. The bhavacakra,
which some say the Buddha himself created as a teaching tool, is
both a diagram to help us see why we’re stuck in samsara and a map
to help us find freedom from it.
At the hub
of the wheel of life there are three animals: a bird, a pig, and a
snake. In English we refer to this bird as a rooster or cock, but
Tibetan teacher Ringu Tulku says that it’s actually an Asian
species, one that is obsessively attached to its mate. The bird,
therefore, represents desire, clinging, or attachment, while the
snake symbolizes aggression or aversion and the pig symbolizes
ignorance or indifference. Together, these three animals represent
the three poisons—passion, aggression, and ignorance—that drive the
wheel of samsara.
The
wheel of life is both a diagram to help us see why we’re stuck in
samsara and a map to help us find freedom from it.
If you look
around, you may notice that the whole well of our world is
poisoned. From the spider crawling on your shin to the climate
crisis to a box of chocolates with creamy centers—everything in our
unenlightened lives always comes down to “I want it,” “I don’t want
it,” or “I don’t care about it.” It’s through this attachment,
aversion, or indifference that karma or action arises, which in
turn gives rise to suffering. In short, the three poisons are the
venomous fuel that drives samsara.
Look again
at the animals in the center of the wheel. Frequently, the bird and
snake are depicted coming out of the pig’s mouth, while at the same
time they are clenching his tail. This hints at how the poisons
bleed into each other: desire and aversion not only stem from
ignorance, they also feed it.
As Roshi
Bernie Glassman puts it, “The basic poison is ignorance, which
means being totally in the dark, not seeing life as it is because
of egocentric ideas.” But, he continues, “If we are rid of the
self, the three poisons become transmuted into the three virtues of
the bodhisattva. Ignorance becomes the state of total
nondiscrimination, so we no longer discriminate between good and
bad; instead we deal with what is in the appropriate way.
Similarly, anger becomes determination and greed becomes the
selfless, compassionate desire of the bodhisattva to help all
beings realize the enlightened way.”
Peacock in the Poison Grove
When the
monsoon started and the Buddha and his community of monks and nuns
gathered for the annual rainy season retreat, they would often hear
the plaintive call of the peacock. Ever since then, this bird with
its electric blue throat and tail strewn with eyes has captured the
Buddhist imagination.
Peacocks
are credited with being able to eat poisonous plants, snakes, and
insects, and not only survive but thrive. For this reason, these
boldly beautiful birds represent a particular way that we can
relate to our mental and spiritual poisons.
In the
Vajrayana tradition it’s said that there are three ways of dealing
with proverbial poison. The first, which is arguably the least
dangerous option, is to avoid it. If you have a poison tree in your
yard, chop it down. If you feel rage welling up in you, refrain
from venting it. And if everyone else is drinking scotch, order
apple juice.
But
poison—if used correctly—can be a medicine, so maybe you’d like to
put your axe down and let that tree in your yard live. It’s
important to remember, though, that you must be skillful to employ
this method or else you simply end up poisoned. If you want to use
the leaves of the poison tree as medicine, you need to know the
correct dosage to use and the right time to take it. And if you
want to use your so-called vices and unwholesome mental states as
the path to enlightenment, you really need to know how to transform
them.
To the
peacock, poison is no other than nourishment.
Finally, in
the third way of dealing with poison, we take a page from the
peacock’s playbook. The peacock struts over to that tree in your
yard and just gobbles down a whole venomous branch because, to the
peacock, poison is no other than nourishment. It’s what creates the
brilliant plumage.
Tenzin
Wangyal, a lineage holder in the Bön Dzogchen tradition, puts the
peacock’s method into spiritual terms: “Instead of avoiding or
manipulating poison, you host the poison. You bring naked awareness
directly to the pain or poison, and discover that the true ground
of being has never been poisoned. In so doing, the pain liberates
by itself.”
The
Bird That Stormed Heaven
Fabulous
and fantastical, Garuda is the lord of birds in both Buddhist and
Hindu traditions. According to legend, Garuda had a
five-hundred-year incubation and then hatched fully formed. His
golden body was so luminous that he was mistaken for the god of
fire and his wings beat with such vigor that the earth
shook.
One day,
Garuda’s mother Vinata and her sister had a disagreement about the
color of a horse’s tail, and apparently this sister was quite
testy, because to get revenge she kidnapped Vinata and held her
ransom in a serpent-pit prison.Amrita, the nectar of
immortality, was to serve as payment, and Garuda—desperate to free
his mother—stormed heaven to steal it.
Because
Garuda hatches fully mature, he represents the Vajrayana view that
enlightenment can happen fully on the spot.
After that,
however, things did not go quite as planned. Through subterfuge,
Garuda completed his rescue mission, but the gods were hot on his
heels and they eventually—with enormous effort—pried the amrita
from his beak. In the fray, a few drops fell on some sharp blades
of grass, and serpents licked these drops up, forever forking their
tongues. Moreover, the god Vishnu managed to subdue Garuda and,
taking him as his vehicle, granted him immortality.
Originally,
Garuda was always depicted straightforwardly as a large, powerful
bird. Later images, however, show him as a “bird-man.” In Tibetan
iconography, he has the torso and arms of a human, yet his thighs
are feathered and culminate in talons and he has the fierce head of
an eagle. It’s said that his two horns symbolize the two truths,
relative and ultimate, while his two angelic wings symbolize the
union of method and wisdom. Because Garuda hatches fully mature, he
represents the Vajrayana view that enlightenment can happen fully
on the spot, without a long gestation. Because he extends his wings
without limits and soars fearlessly into space, he represents
absolute confidence.
As the lord
of the skies, Garuda is traditionally seen as an enemy of the lion,
the lord of the earth. But in the Tibetan imagination, the rivals
mate and give birth to a beast that has the body of a lion and the
wings and horns of Garuda. A symbol of the union of earth and sky,
the Garuda-lion is one of what are called the three victorious
creatures in the fight against disharmony. The other two are also
born of animal enemies. The fish-otter’s body is covered in the
sleek, dark fur of an otter, but at the neck this fur gives way to
scales. The makara-conch, on the other
hand, is a dragonish water-monster, with its head and mane bursting
from a spired shell.
Ikkyu’s Crow
There is
only one thing more magical than wildly impossible avian-mammalian
hybrids—an absolutely ordinary bird. In 1420, Ikkyu, the celebrated
Zen master, poet, and troublemaker, was meditating in a boat on
Lake Biwa when he heard a crow cawing and found himself rattled
into satori, an experience of
enlightenment. “One pause between each crow’s/reckless shriek Ikkyu
Ikkyu Ikkyu,” he wrote. “No nothing/only those wintery crows bright
black in the sun.”
Beyond
being a pretty symbol, beyond being a character in a morality tale,
birds are just what they are and they can reveal to us what we are.
“All I am is the birds singing and fluttering,” said the late
meditation teacher Toni Packer. “Birdcalls and the songs of the
breeze do not exist when the mind is full of itself.”
Do you
remember that dark, glossy creature that, for me, made a nest in
the four noble truths? Well, almost as soon as class let out I
found a friend who could tell me about my mystery bird, and at
first I was disappointed by what I learned.
It was a
European starling.
That is, of
course, a lovely name. It has all the ancient allure of the Old
World, plus—with a star—it’s almost celestial. But European
starlings are worse than ho-hum common birds; they’re an invasive
species stealing the nest holes of purple martins and swallows and
nuthatches. They were introduced in 1890 when some hair-brained
humans decided to release sixty of them in Central Park because
they wanted all the birds mentioned in Shakespeare’s collected
works to fly free in North America. Now, from Alaska to Central
America, European starlings are perched on garbage cans pecking at
moldy sandwiches; they’re mobbing lawns; they’re shitting dirty
white on shiny cars. But this, all the same, is the truth:
Sometimes—even if it’s just for a moment—they still wake me up with
their unmusical song.