I have been told that when a practitioner becomes attained they can ascend to a pureland such as tushita, or kecara where they spend their days and nights hearing the buddhas expound the Dharma and everything is great.
I find this exercise revealing:
A.
I can identify 2 main qualities of a pure land:
- Buddhas are teaching all the time
- All conducive conditions are there for my Dharma practice
B.
Do I find these 2 qualities now, right where I am?
C.
If answer is no, then perhaps it is best to create causes for me to experience a pure land.
How? By engaging in the activities I would do in a pure land. That's just logical.
D.
If answer is yes, then it is likely that I have made prayers in the past so as to experience what I experience here and now.
(Aren't Buddhas teaching all the time? They are only a you-tube click away!)
Thus two questions (that are actually the same):
1.
Is it possible that I am in a pure land already, but I can't see it because I thought that in a pure land I would not sweat anymore, nor go to toilet, nor feel hungry now and then, nor catch a cold in winter, nor have to brush my teeth, nor be in a traffic jam, nor get a parking fine, nor need a mobile phone, nor have to pay credit card bills and rentals, or because I don't see people floating on pink lotus flowers and daikinis in the sky, and colorful flowers blooming under the steps of lamas, because the floor is not yet soft lapis lazuli with gold inlay vajras...
2.
Is it possible that a pure land is not a place, but a state of mind created through merits?