How to Keep Loving in Marriage
      CW41_No.127
      The Buddhist Yogi C. M. Chen
      
        It seems very difficult for Western people to keep love 
        in marriage forever. I have seen many examples of this problem, but I have 
        the hope and wish that couples may overcome their difficulties and toward 
        that end I give a few of my own ideas in this booklet. To the West my 
        thoughts may seem very foolish, but I am just a person of the East and can 
        talk only about the Eastern traditions. 
      It is said by modern youths, "Marriage is the grave 
        burying all love!" Most of these youths have for a long time centered 
        their thoughts and energies on fornication. Hence in one bed a couple has 
        four minds, each person having two minds: one thinking about how to make 
        love and fornicate again soon, the other thinking about how to get another 
        lover or love. They do not want marriage. Especially nowadays there are 
        many community groups which help give such people the opportunity to meet 
        new sexual partners. Many religious centers utilize their members' sinful 
        habits and gather young males and females together for meeting and 
        choosing each other in order to collect more money from them. This kind of 
        love is not really human love but animal love. The result of such love is 
        only quarrels, fights, and suicides. 
      "The union of man and wife is from God, but divorce is 
        from the devil," so said St. Augustine. It is also said in the Jewish holy 
        book, the Talmud: "The very altar sheds tears on him or her who divorces 
        his wife or her husband." If the couple is religious, their marriage is 
        joined together by God. It is wrong to put such a union asunder. For those 
        to whom God is a father, the Church is also a mother, hence divorce is 
        born of perverted morals and vicious habits in public and private life. To 
        help this problem it is very important to keep loving after marriage. This 
        is the main principle I now wish to write about. 
      
        I. Appreciation
      The first condition you must have is appreciation. 
        According to Buddhist philosophy, among all the various kinds of human 
        relationships, the partnership of husband and wife is the most important. 
        Try to think of one's lifetime. The time spent with one's parents is only 
        in early childhood, the first 6 years. After this the child goes to school 
        and spends much time with teachers and professors for the next 12 years. 
        The time spent with friends may last from a few hours, with eating and 
        drinking friends, to a few years, as with friends who are fellow-workers. 
        It is only the husband and wife who have a relationship which may last 
        through one's whole adult lifetime. Let us think in terms of space, 
        certainly the closest relationship is that of husband and wife. They live 
        together, sleep together, play together, eat and shop together, and give 
        "pillow lectures" to each other together. They share happiness and sadness 
        together, they feed and educate their own children together. They seem to 
        be two people, yet they are just like one body. 
      It is traditionally held that God created woman for man 
        and said that man should not be alone. Woman and man should mutually help 
        each other. It is said that God created Eve from Adam's rib. Ancient sages 
        and scholars have three different explanations about this: 
      
        - 
          The first explanation is that, since the rib is a little crooked, "if 
            you straighten it, you will break it; if you leave it alone, it will 
            always be crooked." This is written in the scripture of Islam. This is 
            thought to be a good way to treat each other. I don't agree with it.  
- 
          The second explanation is that the rib is always covered, even when a 
            man is naked. This explanation is also written down by Mohammedans. 
            Hence, Moslems think their wives should be kept concealed and that a 
            woman must be kept from other's sight, when out in public, by wearing 
            clothing even over her head and face. This idea I also do not think is 
            very good.  
- 
          The last explanation which I appreciate the most is that the rib is 
            very close to the heart. It is written in the Talmud that "a wife comes 
            from his side, that she should be near his heart." This is why marriage 
            is really a partnership and spouses call each other sweetheart. If you 
            appreciate your spouse as your own heart, then you will love each other 
            forever.  
If instead of from a rib, God had made woman from Adam's 
        eye, she might always see his faults; if from his head, she would control 
        him; from his arms, she might fight with him; or from his feet, she might 
        run after and watch him and never let him work alone; from his belly she 
        might ask him to share her difficulties in pregnancy. The rib is really 
        the best part of the body which is close to the heart. I like this 
        explanation. Please remember Robert Browning's poem: 
      If two lives join, 
        There is oft a scar, 
        They are one and one, 
        With a shadowy third, 
        One near one, is 
        too far. 
        Because they are still two not really one. 
        One must melt 
        into the other then they 
        become really one.
      Hence, both should melt oneself into the other as one 
        person, or as one looks at oneself in the glass. 
      It is said that one must be like a mirror image to the 
        other. When one smiles, the other in the mirror must also be happy, when 
        one is sad, the other must also share the sorrow. When one laughs, the 
        other will smile. Always treat your spouse as if your were his or her 
        mirror image and think of yourselves as one person, not two people. 
      However, the story of creation and its explanation is a 
        myth and not reasonably based on scientific foundation. True talk on this 
        subject may be found in Buddhism. All relationships are based on the 
        accumulation of karmas (the results of one's actions) through many past 
        lives of endless transmigration through which every person drives himself 
        by his actions and ignorance. Among all kinds of relationships, the 
        partnership of husband and wife results from the gathering of much more 
        and deeper mutual karma than any other kind of relationship. And in this 
        lifetime's marriage they gather more good karma or bad karma which will 
        influence not only their happiness or sadness in their present married 
        life together, but also in their future lives. It is not easy to get such 
        a relationship, therefore one should deeply appreciate it. 
      A man and a woman in love are incomplete until they have 
        married. It is quite true that wives are young men's mistresses, 
        companions of their middle age, and old men's nurses. The opposite is also 
        true, that husbands are young women's lovers, companions for their middle 
        years, and old women's nurses. A modern idea is as Helen Rowland said, 
        "Love is the quest; Marriage, the conquest; divorce, the inquest." It 
        seems that the progression of marriage is from bad to worse. George Jessel 
        even frankly joked, "Marriage is a mistake every man should make!" 
      To a Buddhist, marriage is a true confirmation of love. 
        Buddha never spoke about unequalness between the two sexes as Christianity 
        emphasized in the Bible. Buddha never said the male was created by the 
        female or vice versa. Buddha always taught his lay disciples how to keep 
        their right love in three right ways: first of all, a husband should pay 
        respect to his wife with right manners, feed his wife with right food, and 
        comfort his wife with right treatment. It is written in the sutra titled 
        "The 'Good Born' Young Man Sutra." He also explained about seven kinds of 
        wives: 
      
        - 
          Mother-like Wife: She thinks of her husband as though she were his 
            mother, daily helping her husband without tire. She treats him as her 
            own son. It is good karma to reward her husband because she had been his 
            mother in past lives and he had also been her filial son for many lives.  
- 
          Sister-like Wife: She serves her husband as her brother, with 
            reverence, like older brother and younger brother. It is good karma to 
            reward her husband because she had been his young sister in the past and 
            had been kindly protected and affectionately loved by him in many lives.  
- 
          Wife of Knowledge: She faithfully and skillfully tells the truth of 
            every kind of knowledge to her husband and helps not only in tasks of 
            family economy but also in education and home plans. She is like his 
            teacher. It is good karma to reward her husband because he had been her 
            dutiful guru or professor for many lifetimes.  
- 
          A Good Wife: She is as good as a good wife should be. She is humble 
            without pride, simple without much cosmetics. She is not talkative. She 
            does everything to make her husband happy. She is meek and agreeable and 
            never causes her husband anger. It is the very best karma to reward her 
            husband who had been her very helpful friend or neighbor or doctor and 
            who had done a lot of goodness for her health and wealth in past lives.  
- 
          Maid-like Wife: She is filial and kind to her husband. She is a 
            careful housekeeper and faithful, grateful servant to her husband. She 
            is never proud, never angry, never does anything to make her husband 
            unhappy. She is chaste and never has any other boy friend. She has no 
            quarrels, no fights, no bad manners. She treats her husband like a king.  
- 
          Enemy-like Wife: Whenever she sees her husband she feels very angry. 
            Though they live together, her mind always thinks of other people and 
            desires. She wants to run away and does not take care of her own 
            children. She loves the husbands of others without shame. It is a bad 
            karmic result. Her husband had been her enemy and treated her very badly 
            in past lives.  
- 
          Murderous Wife: She may put some poison in the food or do something 
            else to kill her husband. She remarries again only a few days after her 
            former husband dies. This is the worst punishment for her husband who 
            had in previous lives killed his wife with the same poison or knives.  
A similar classification holds true for seven kinds of 
        husbands. Most men who have bad wives committed the sin of adultery in 
        their own past lives. They have already received such bad consequences as: 
        1. No protection for himself. 2. No protection for his wife. 3. No 
        protection for his family. 4. Always doubting his wife through which he 
        commits sins again. 5. He is subject to be killed by his enemy. 6. He is 
        bothered by many distresses and many diseases. 7. He cannot get rich at 
        any risk. 8. He will be yet poorer again. 
      As Buddhism is not a gynaeco-centric theory as emphasized 
        by the American scholar Ward, nor a male domination theory, one should 
        respect his or her partner in marriage. Neither husband nor wife is the 
        better half or the worse half. Both should respect each other even as well 
        as they hold respect toward God. Richard Garnett said, "Thou canst pray to 
        God without praying to love, but thou mayst pray to love without praying 
        to God." Longland Said, "Love is the bliss of life, next to our Lord. It 
        is the graft of peace, the nearest road to heaven." J. R. Lowell has a 
        very sweet poem to show the love of a married couple: 
      True love is but a humble, low-born thing, 
        And hath its food served up in earthen ware, 
        It is a thing to walk 
        with hand in hand 
        Through the everydayness of this workday.
      Many people do not distinguish among the different kinds 
        of love. Nuptial love makes mankind, friendly love perfects it, wanton 
        love corrupts and debases it. Love after marriage is not getting but 
        giving, not a wild dream of pleasure as is wanton love or the madness of 
        desire. It should be goodness, honor, and peace, pure and living. 
      Love after marriage is full of emotion which is beyond 
        any reason or scale of justice. The person who tries to find out the 
        reason or define justice within their partnership just discovers some 
        quarrels and fights. I remember that when I was on my honeymoon I got a 
        poem at the pillow with my bride, it said: 
      Under you I do lie, 
        And for you I may 
        die. 
        don't know the reason, 
        But I never ask why.
      One who has never loved has never lived. One hour of true 
        love is worth an age of dully living on. Respect derives from love and no 
        other condition or reason can interfere with it. 
      If a married couple is living together without love, how 
        can they continuously live together? John Gay's poem has criticized this 
        frankly: 
      Love then has every bliss in store, 
        It is friendship, it is something more. 
        Each other every wish they give, 
        Not to know love is not to live.
      If a husband and wife are themselves humble and respect 
        their spouse as they Lord, then their love in marriage will last 
        throughout their whole lives. That is why it is written in the Talmud, "Be 
        the husband only as big as an ant, yet the wife seats herself among the 
        great." For wives the opposite of this sermon is also true. If you are a 
        wife you should think that it is also true for yourself, saying, "Be the 
        wife only as big as an ant, yet the husband seats himself among the 
        great." If both respect each other like this, their love after marriage 
        will become deeper and deeper forever. 
      In Confucianism there is a very well-known proverb which 
        says, "Husband and wife should always be respectful to each other as if 
        newly comes a noble guest." 
      Respect is positive for love. It is also negative to 
        one's incorrect thoughts and all vicious antagonisms without surrendering 
        one's belief or principles. In short, where there is respect and 
        appreciation there is nothing lacking in a relationship. 
      
        II. Sympathy
      The second condition to keep love after marriage is to 
        have sympathy for each other. Scott said in his poem: 
      True love's the gift which God has given, 
        To man alone beneath the heaven. 
        It is the secret sympathy, 
        The silver link, the silken tie, 
        Which heart to heart, and mind to 
        mind, 
        In body and in soul to bind.
      When a family is fully infused with the air of sympathy, 
        even the heavens will be in harmony. That was why Shakespeare said, "When 
        love speaks, the voice of all Gods make heaven drowsy with the harmony." 
        After marriage a husband and wife in everyday life, on every occasion, at 
        all times must cooperate and be united so that the two are really one. 
        Both must always keep this idea, "I must give what is my own to him or 
        her. I must feel that his or her delight is my own." You must know that 
        whensoever you seek for yourself, then you fall from love. A proverb holds 
        that "To be wife and lover is hardly granted to the Gods above." 
      It is not reason that governs love. Love draws us one 
        way, reason another. So far I have learned that only Vajra love of the 
        Buddhist Tantra can make love and reason go together. That practice uses 
        different terms and holds love as great compassion and reason as deep 
        Sunyata. But I cannot write here an essay on this profound subject which 
        is not easy for an ordinary person to practice. 
      For most ordinary people, the first sign of love is the 
        last of wisdom. That is why a German proverb says, "The bachelor is a 
        peacock, the engaged man a lion and the married man a jackass who has no 
        more wisdom but does have sex." It is not from reason and prudence that 
        people marry, but from inclination when two souls are one, and two hearts 
        melt into one heart. The woman or man once loved will always be right 
        because love finds no fault in its object. 
      Love after marriage becomes much deeper and sympathetic. 
        Whenever there is pleasure between a couple they love all in all; whenever 
        there is sorrow or sadness between them there is sympathy for each other. 
        They confound their enemies and delight their friends. They have the same 
        good feelings. The husband will feel that, "It is not beauty but fine 
        qualities that keep a husband." The wife also feels that a woman's best 
        possession is a sympathetic husband. In women, sympathy begets love; in 
        men, love begets sympathy; and all husbands will feel that of all the 
        paths that lead to a wife's love, sympathy is the straightest. 
      One must always feel sympathy for the other. In this way, 
        one can keep the opposite one in love until life is gone. Within a 
        partnership there is nothing to rule or control but love and sympathy. 
        Authority is only for children and servants. The reason why so many 
        couples are not happy is because they spend their time in making nets to 
        get fish from every kind of water or in making cages to put their spouse 
        into. Hence, adultery without controlling oneself and selfishness without 
        sympathy are both enemies to happiness. This is why we not only need 
        appreciation as the first condition but also sympathy as the second 
        condition. 
      Many men and women think they must control their spouses. 
        They think "I must make him obey me." This kind of talk is foolish and 
        selfish. The two opposites of male and female are just like the positive 
        and negative forces of electricity. They must be like this so that they 
        can help each other. Let them have different ideas, let them have 
        different opinions and things to talk about, but they can still harmonize 
        every kind of contradiction together. You must learn to agree with each 
        other and settle all contradictory ideas into a harmonization. Do not fear 
        if there is some quarrel, but we must always have sympathy with the other 
        side. Then when we love together, there is love; and when we quarrel 
        together, there is also love, everlasting love. In this way our love will 
        last a long time. 
      It is so pitiful that most young couples try to know each 
        other and fall in love in only 3 days, love each other for only 3 weeks, 
        squabble with each other for 3 months, tolerate each other for 3 years, 
        and then some of them get divorced while a few others continuously bear 
        their pains for about 30 years and die under such unhappy conditions. And 
        their children learn about this from them and repeat the pattern. Our 
        society is full of such sorrows. That is why there is a crying need for 
        sympathy. 
      One should not let one's spouse discover that one's 
        bravery is only bravado, that one's strength is only a uniform, that one's 
        power is only a gun in the hands of a fool. You should give appreciation 
        to each other, humbly respect each other and have sympathy for each other. 
      Many people want to justify their divorces. Actually 
        there is no reason at all for any case of divorce. As I have already said, 
        love is a kind of emotion or passion or sensation, it is like a fire you 
        cannot weigh and like a wind you cannot measure. The only word instead of 
        love after marriage is sympathy. 
      The New Testament taught us how to be sympathetic, 
        "Rejoice with them that do rejoice, weep with them that weep." Do not let 
        your wife or husband weep alone. We sink as easily as we rise through 
        sympathy and we learn to flow for others' good and melt for others' woes. 
        When your own teeth ache then you know how to be sympathetic towards 
        someone who has a toothache. Sympathy is a supporting atmosphere and in it 
        we unfold easily and well. Sympathy is having your pain in my heart. We 
        should try to be sympathetic in time, before an affliction is digested, 
        consolation never comes too soon and after a problem is digested, it comes 
        too late. When one is married, deep love is when sympathy comes just in 
        time. Every sorrow or pain of any cause will be dissolved into it. 
      
        III. Forgiveness
      There is no one who is without fault or sin. We, just as 
        all sentient beings, have been in transmigration for countless life times. 
        A married couple has loved and hated each other through many lifetimes of 
        marriage. Unless and until we are able to free ourselves altogether from 
        transmigration, we must bear the pain that arises from each other. If we 
        try to appreciate each other and have sympathy for each other but find we 
        are still unable to stop the thought of divorce, the only way to cure this 
        is forgiveness. 
      Our God forgives us so much so we must forgive each 
        other. There is no perfect man. Many foolish people just like to imagine 
        that there is a perfect wife for them somewhere and do not trust their 
        existing wife. This is very foolish. You must trust each other and not 
        imagine any one else. Just keep your faith in each other and if something 
        unpleasant happens, you must forgive each other. When you forgive each 
        other, the argument is finished and you can love deeply again. 
      The main problem leading to divorce appears to be 
        infidelity. Once the marriage vows are broken there is an unwillingness to 
        forgive. The problem is just like an onion which has a strong outer 
        coating but which, once removed grows a new one. Both sides of a couple, 
        male or female, easily commit adultery in our Kali age. Before marriage, 
        it seems that everyone nowadays has committed the sexual act. Parents 
        cannot stop it, teachers cannot forbid it, doctors cannot cure it. And 
        after marriage, who dares to say that you suddenly have the power to 
        control your spouse who has not been controlled before. 
      Once I was asked by a Tibetan pilgrim for a divination. 
        He wanted to know whether his wife remained chaste or not after his 
        departure. I immediately replied without making a divination, "This needs 
        no divination. Please reflect upon yourself, if you have committed 
        adultery three times after your departure, your wife will not commit 
        adultery less than three times." Sir Philip Sidney said, "Who doth desire 
        that chaste his wife should be, first he be true, for truth doth truth 
        deserve." 
      If you yourself have committed adultery and you can 
        forgive yourself, why can't you do the same for your wife's actions? One 
        should keep one's eyes wide open only before marriage, but half shut 
        afterwards. Actually, even if your eyes were widely open before marriage, 
        your eyes at that time were clouded by your love which hid all your 
        spouse's faults. You chose to believe that she was still a virgin. If 
        after marriage you keep your love, you need not shut your eyes but should 
        still trust her as well as if she were still a virgin, as if even you 
        yourself kept her virginity intact. As I have said before, there is no 
        reason or fault to be held against your spouse. We should love without 
        reserve. That is why Rabindranath Tagore said, "Chastity is a wealth that 
        comes from the abundance of love." A strong doubt about the other's 
        chastity is just selfishness. You should trust each other. Ebert Hubbard 
        writes in his work "The Note Book" (1927): "There are six requisites in 
        every happy marriage. The first is faith, and the remaining five are 
        confidence." A man who marries a woman to educate her falls a victim to 
        the same fallacy as the woman who marries a man to reform him. One should 
        not try to change the other but always be aware of what the whole life of 
        marriage is made of, three parts of love to seven parts of forgiveness. 
      As I have mentioned many times in this article, the 
        relationship of husband and wife is based principally on love, not on 
        reason. Whence our manner to each other should be only to forgive, not to 
        judge. We should pardon each other as long as we love each other. Through 
        forgiveness what is broken is made whole again and what is soiled is again 
        made clean. 
      Another problem which very often occurs in married life 
        is quarrels. Do not fear a quarrel. This can also be a requisite for love. 
        A quarrel can be considered an opportunity to get some rest as too much 
        sex is not good for your health. You can think, "Oh, God wants me to rest 
        and have some time to relax and to reflect on myself. It will be good to 
        have a few days separation. Afterwards we can become harmonized again." 
      One should not selfishly say that my wife must obey me 
        and I must control her, because it is not right for either wife or husband 
        to control the other. Try to learn from the chickens. When the hen crows 
        after she lays her egg, the rooster keeps still. When the cock heralds the 
        dawn, the hen sleeps. They never quarrel with each other. 
      If there is no way to stop the opposite spouse from 
        quarreling, one must bear it for the time being and wait with love and 
        patience and keep silent yourself. He or she will feel tired when they 
        find no one to quarrel with. A sharp tongue is the only edged tool that 
        grows keener with constant use against the same kind of tool. 
      Don't let a little thing start a long quarrel and from 
        that let it lead to a divorce. Before a quarrel grows, one must use 
        forgiveness. A quarrel takes place between a couple and never takes place 
        alone. If either side has forgiveness, the quarrel will be stopped in 
        time. Otherwise, as Edgar Lee Masters said, "Hats may make a divorce" and 
        as Shakespeare said, "Why quarrel with a man that has a hair less in his 
        beard than you have." A little flame may cause a large calamity destroying 
        one hundred miles of forest. 
      There can be fearful excitement on any side. Any one is 
        able to accuse the other. Accusation may divide their true hearts as a 
        mighty stream of water can divide mountains of solid rock. So our 
        measurement of true love is not where he or she stands in moments of 
        comfort and convenience, but where he or she stands at times of challenge 
        and controversy. To keep such a standard of love, forgiveness is the most 
        important source which enables discord to give way to the relish of 
        concord. One must recognize that even the sun and moon which are as 
        different as bright day and night, still float each in their own orbit but 
        make a great harmony of the universe. The sun never takes over the moon 
        any more than the Red Communists of the East can take over the free world 
        of the West. In Confucianism there is an example of a couple with the 
        husband as the sun and the wife as the moon who together make the Chinese 
        "Ming" word of brightness with the sun on the left and the moon on the 
        right. Hence we need not fear different ideas occurring between couples 
        but we must forgive each other and achieve the harmony which dissipates 
        all differences and opposites without quarrels and fights but with love 
        and sympathy. We must pardon each other as long as we love each other. 
        When we love we find nothing missing and no sins in our spouse. 
      If one side can forgive the other, it will cause 
        forgiveness to come from the other side, too. It is just as Allah says, 
        "He who approaches near to me one span, I will approach to him one cubit; 
        and he who approaches to me one cubit, I will approach to him one fathom, 
        and he who ever approaches to me walking, I will come to him running, and 
        he who meets with sins equivalent to the whole world, I will greet him 
        with forgiveness equal to it." 
      As we love, we must forgive to the same degree that we 
        love. Whenever there is a cause for anger or quarrel, we should use 
        forgiveness at the starting point of such a time. In doing this we will 
        not have to endure its passing and suffer in unnecessary pain. Whenever 
        forgiveness is done, it ought to be like a canceled check, torn into 
        several pieces and burnt up so that it can never be made whole again and 
        held against the other side. After forgiveness is offered, immediately 
        choose some pleasure which your spouse likes, and enjoy it together. Just 
        as when one eats too much hot pepper, one should immediately drink some 
        ice water or eat something sweet. One must recognize that you yourself are 
        not so good and perfect so that your spouse may sometimes dislike you and 
        have anger, then you can easily use forgiveness. And forgiveness offered 
        in such a way is surely the means to give and gain new love and new life 
        on both sides. 
      Following the act of forgiveness, sweet harmony may prevail in the family! The   harmonious family produces divine life. Every home works through this harmony or   agreement and is like a steamship pulled in one direction by both partners--if   it were pulled in opposite directions it would keel over. 
      There should be no separation, no divorce, only love and 
        happiness. This is what I hope my readers may share with me. 
      
        Conclusion:
      Through the above three conditions of appreciation, 
        sympathy, and forgiveness, one's marriage may never be broken. In that 
        hope, our sages arranged some special good names to celebrate each period 
        of marriage that we pass through. I would like to introduce all these good 
        and lovely celebration names below as an auspicious conclusion of this 
        article. May all my good readers celebrate all of them! 
      
        
          
            | Years of Marriage | Name of Wedding Anniversary | 
          
            | 25 | Silver | 
          
            | 30 | Pearl | 
          
            | 35 | Coral | 
          
            | 40 | Ruby | 
          
            | 45 | Sapphire | 
          
            | 50 | Gold | 
          
            | 55 | Beryl | 
          
            | 60 | Diamond | 
          
            | 70 | Platinum (White Gold) | 
        
      
      After the platinum wedding anniversary, a couple may be 
        about 100 years old. Is it possible to be reborn as the same couple in 
        every lifetime? Yes! If their vows and their good karmas in this lifetime 
        have been well accumulated, this may happen. Nevertheless, such a mundane 
        marriage will eventually come to an end, sooner or later. It may be asked, 
        is there any extra-mundane marriage which consists of real and everlasting 
        love? Yes! I am sorry to say that even the above three principles of 
        appreciation, sympathy, and forgiveness have nothing to do with 
        everlasting love, even as practiced by Mary and Joseph who were married 
        with the God-Jehovah as their go-between. However, in Tantric Buddhism 
        which emphasizes Vajra Love, there really is an eternal marriage as 
        exemplified or personified by many Indian and Tibetan sages such as 
        Padmasambhva, Saraha, and Marpa. 
      Actually, Yoga is the holy name of extra-mundane 
        marriage. Yoga means union. Buddhist yoga is the Great Compassion of the 
        male marrying with the Deep Wisdom of the female, or in other terms, the 
        Great Bodhicitta marrying the Deep Sunyata. Whenever such a marriage 
        occurs, there is ceaseless love lasting forever. 
      Appreciation is connected with the Yidam and Dakini, 
        sympathy is between altruism and non-egoism, while forgiveness is 
        witnessed by the Buddhas of the ten directions and three periods (past, 
        present, and future). These are holy, sacred, everlasting, and a total 
        salvation of the entire sphere of the Nine-Havenesses including all Gods. 
      As the three principles of appreciation, sympathy and 
        forgiveness under mundane circumstances are still so difficult for most 
        people to practice, how can I trust any modern youths to practice the 
        extra-mundane ones? This is why in this article I have not written any 
        Tantric methods of marriage love. I do hope there might be some people who 
        have the foundation to learn and practice Vajra Love from our Gurus. 
      
        Thanks to Ann Klein for improving the English of this 
        Booklet. 
        Yutang Lin 
        December, 1992
      
      My Bodhicitta Vows
        (Used for Dedication of 
        Merits)
      Dr. Yutang Lin
      
        1. May virtuous gurus remain with us and those departed return soon!
        2. May perverse views and violence soon become extinct and Dharma spread without hindrance!
        3. May all beings proceed diligently on the path and achieve Buddhahood before death!
        4. May all beings develop Great Compassion and never regress until they reach perfect Buddhahood!
        5. May all beings develop Great Wisdom and never regress until they reach perfect Buddhahood!
      
      Acknowledgement
      
        Thanks to Upasaka Kwok Sing Hung for formatting the 
        computer file.
        Thanks to all Buddhists who helped the publication of 
        this booklet.
      
      How to Keep Loving in Marriage
      NOT FOR SALE
        Donation toward printing and free 
        distribution is welcome. 
      
        A Talk by The Buddhist Yogi C. M. Chen
        Published by 
        Dr. Yutang Lin
      Reprinted, January, 1999
        3,000 copies
        Printed in 
        Taiwan
            
        All rights reserved by Dr. Yutang Lin.
        Reprint or 
        redistribute only with permission from Dr. Yutang Lin
      
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