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A TASTE OF FREEDOM

by Ajahn Chah
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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About This Mind...
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On Meditation (An informal talk given in the Northeastern dialect, taken
from an unidentified tape.)
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The Path in Harmony (A composite of two talks given in England in 1979
and 1977, respectively.)
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The Middle Way Within (Given in the Northeastern dialect to an assembly
of monks and laypeople in 1970.)
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The Peace Beyond (A condensed version of a talk given to the Chief Provy
Councillor of Thailand, Mr. Sanya Dharmasakti, at Wat Nong Pah Pong, 1978).
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Opening the Dhamma Eye (Given at Wat Nong Pah Pong to the assembly of
monks and novices in october, 1968.)
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Convention and Liberation (An informal talk given in the Northeastern
dialect, taken from an unidentified tape.)
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No Abiding (A talk given to the monks, novices, and laypeople of Wat Pah
Nanachat on a visit to Wat Nong Pah Pong during the rains of 1980.)
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Right View The Place of Coolness (Given to the assembly of monks and
novices at Wat Pah Nanachat, during the rains retreat, 1978.)
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Epilogue
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About the Author
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Notes
Acknowledgments
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The production
manager would like to thank Venerable Ajahn Puriso, the translator, who kindly
not only revised the text for this edition, but also helped with the final
proof reading.
This book has
come into existence with the help of many devoted people. Khun Vanee Lamsam,
along with her brother Khun Parl Na Pombejra, raised the Fund to support all
costs of publication. Khun Thanu Malakul Na Ayudhaya supplied us a slide of
his beautiful painting for the cover. Khun Panya Vijinthanasarn helped with
the cover design and illustrations. Khun Chutima Thanapura helped with the
first proof-reading. Khun Pansak Panpak-deeddisakul supplied us an invaluable
photograph of Luang Por Chah (Phra Bodhinyana Thera). Khun Karoon
Hansachainand helped with the pasting some parts of the artwork and saw the
book through the press. May the kind meritorious deeds of the above-mentioned
people help them experience the supreme bliss, Nibbana.
Introduction
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The talks
translated in this book were all taken from old cassette tape recordings of
Venerable Ajahn Chah, some in Thai and some in the North-Eastern dialect, most
recorded on poor quality equipment under less than optimum conditions. This
presented some difficulty in the work of translation, which was overcome by
occasionally omitting very unclear passages and at other times asking for
advice from other listeners more familiar with those languages. Nevertheless
there has inevitably been some editing in the process of making this book.
Apart from the difficulties presented by the lack of clarity of the tapes,
there is also the necessity of editing when one is taking words from the
spoken to the written medium. For this, the translator takes full
responsibility.
Pali words have
occasionally been left as they are, in other cases translated. The criteria
here has been readability. Those Pali words which were considered short enough
or familiar enough to the reader already conversant with Buddhist terminology
have generally been left untranslated. This should present no difficulty, as
they are generally explained by the Venerable Ajahn in the course of the talk.
Longer words, or words considered to be probably unfamiliar to the average
reader, have been translated. Of these, there are two which are particularly
noteworthy. They are Kamasukhallikanuyogo and Attakilamathanuyogo,
which have been translated as Indulgence in Pleasure and Indulgence in Pain
respectively. These two words occur in no less than five of the talks included
in this book and although the translations provided here are not those
generally used for these word, they are nevertheless in keeping with the
Venerable Ajahn's use of them.
Venerable Ajahn
Chah always gave his talks in simple, everyday language. His objective was to
clarify the Dhamma, not to confuse his listeners with an overlog of
information. Consequently the talks presented here have been rendered into
correspondingly simple English. The aim has been to present Ajahn Chah's
teaching in both the spirit and the letter.
In this third
printing of A Taste of Freedom, a number of corrections have been made
to clumsily worded passages, of which there are now hopefully less than in the
first editions. For such inadequacies the translator must also take
responsibility, and hopes the reader will bear with any literary shortcomings
in order to receive the full benefit of the teachings contained herein.
The translator
About This Mind...
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About this
mind... In truth there is nothing really wrong with it. It is intrinsically
pure. Within itself it's already peaceful. That the mind is not peaceful these
days is because it follows moods. The real mind doesn't have anything to it,
it is simply (an aspect of) Nature. It becomes peaceful or agitated because
moods deceive it. The untrained mind is stupid. Sense impressions come and
trick it into happiness, suffering, gladness and sorrow, but the mind's true
nature is none of those things. That gladness or sadness is not the mind, but
only a mood coming to deceive us. The untrained mind gets lost and follows
these things, it forgets itself. Then we think that it is we who are upset or
at ease or whatever.
But really this
mind of ours is already unmoving and peaceful... really peaceful! Just like a
leaf which is still as long as no wind blows. If a wind comes up the leaf
flutters. The fluttering is due to the wind the "fluttering" is due to those
sense impressions; the mind follows them. If it doesn't follow them, it
doesn't "flutter." If we know fully the true nature of sense impressions we
will be unmoved.
Our practice is
simply to see the Original Mind. So we must train the mind to know those sense
impressions, and not get lost in them. To make it peaceful. Just this is the
aim of all this difficult practice we put ourselves through.
"... That which "looks over" the various factors which arise in
meditation is 'sati', mindfulness. Sati is life. Whenever we don't have
sati, when we are heedless, it's as if we are dead... This sati is simply
presence of mind. It's cause for the arising of self-awareness and wisdom...
Even when we are no longer in samadhi, sati should be present throughout..."
On Meditation
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To calm the mind
means to find the right balance. If you try to force your mind too much it
goes too far; if you don't try enough it doesn't get there, it misses the
point of balance.
Normally the mind
isn't still, it's moving all the time, it lacks strength. Making the mind
strong and making the body strong are not the same. To make the body strong we
have to exercise it, to push it, in order to make it strong, but to make the
mind strong means to make it peaceful, not to go thinking of this and that.
For most of us the mind has never been peaceful, it has never had the energy
of samadhi,
1 so we establish it within a
boundary. We sit in meditation, staying with the One who knows.
If we force our
breath to be too long or too short we're not balanced, the mind won't become
peaceful. It's like when we first start to use a pedal sewing machine. At
first we just practice pedaling the machine to get our co-ordination right,
before we actually sew anything. Following the breath is similar. We don't get
concerned over how long or short, weak or strong it is, we just note it. We
simply let it be, following the natural breathing.
When it's
balanced, we take the breathing as our meditation object. When we breathe in,
the beginning of the breath is at the nose tip, the middle of the breath at
the chest and the end of the breath at the abdomen. This is the path of the
breath. When we breathe out, the beginning of the breath is at the abdomen,
the middle at the chest and the end at the nose tip. We simply take note of
this path of the breath at the nose tip, the chest and the abdomen, then at
the abdomen, the chest and the tip of the nose. We take note of these three
points in order to make the mind firm, to limit mental activity so that
mindfulness and self-awareness can easily arise.
When we are adept
at noting these three points we can let them go and note the in and out
breathing, concentrating solely at the nose-tip or the upper lip where the air
passes on its in and out passage. We don't have to follow the breath, just
establish mindfulness in front of us at the nose-tip, and note the breath at
this one point entering, leaving, entering, leaving. There's no need to
think of anything special, just concentrate on this simple task for now,
having continuous presence of mind. There's nothing more to do, just breathing
in and out.
Soon the mind
becomes peaceful, the breath refined. The mind and body become light. This is
the right state for the work of meditation.
When sitting in
meditation the mind becomes refined, but whatever state it's in we should try
to be aware of it, to know it. Mental activity is there together with
tranquillity. There is vitakka.
Vitakka is the action of bringing the mind to the theme of contemplation.
If there is not much mindfulness, there will be not much vitakka. Then
vicara, the contemplation around that theme, follows. Various "weak"
mental impressions may arise from time to time but our self-awareness is the
important thing whatever may be happening we know it continuously. As we go
deeper we are constantly aware of the state of our meditation, knowing whether
or not the mind is firmly established. Thus, both concentration and awareness
are present.
To have a
peaceful mind does not mean that there's nothing happening, mental impressions
do arise. For instance, when we talk about the first level of absorption, we
say it has five factors. Along with vitakka and vicara, piti
(rapture) arises with the theme of contemplation and then sukha
(happiness). These four things all lie together in the mind established in
tranquillity. They are as one state.
The fifth factor
is ekaggata or one-pointedness. You may wonder how there can be one-pointedness
when there are all these other factors as well. This is because they all
become unified on that foundation of tranquillity. Together they are called a
state of samadhi. They are not everyday states of mind, they are
factors of absorption. There are these five characteristics, but they do not
disturb the basic tranquillity. There is
vitakka, but it does not disturb the mind; vicara, rapture and
happiness arise but do not disturb the mind. The mind is therefore as one with
these factors. The first level of absorption is like this.
We don't have to
call it First Jhana,
2 Second
Jhana, third Jhana and so on, let's just call it "a peaceful
mind." As the mind becomes progressively calmer it will dispense with
vitakka and vicara, leaving only rapture and happiness. Why does
the mind discard vitakka and vicara? This is because, as the
mind becomes more refined, the activity of vitakka and vicara is
too coarse to remain. At this stage, as the mind leaves off vitakka and
vicara, feelings of great rapture can arise, tears may gush out. But as
the samadhi deepens rapture, too, is discarded, leaving only happiness
and one-pointedness, until finally even happiness goes and the mind reaches
its greatest refinement. There are only equanimity and one-pointedness, all
else has been left behind. The mind stands unmoving.
Once the mind is
peaceful this can happen. You don't have to think a lot about it, it just
happens by itself. This is called the energy of a peaceful mind. In this state
the mind is not drowsy; the five hindrances, sense desire, aversion,
restlessness, dullness and doubt, have all fled.
But if mental
energy is still not strong and mindfulness weak, there will occasionally arise
intruding mental impressions. The mind is peaceful but it's as if there's a
"cloudiness" within the calm. It's not a normal sort of drowsiness though,
some impressions will manifest maybe we'll hear a sound or see a dog or
something. It's not really clear but it's not a dream either. This is because
these five factors have become unbalanced and weak.
The mind tends to
play tricks within these levels of tranquillity. "Imagery" will sometimes
arise when the mind is in this state, through any of the senses, and the
meditator may not be able to tell exactly what is happening. "Am I sleeping?
No. Is it a dream? No, it's not a dream..." These impressions arise from a
middling sort of tranquillity; but if the mind is truly calm and clear we
don't doubt the various mental impressions or imagery which arise. Questions
like, "Did I drift off then? Was I sleeping? did I get lost?..." don't arise,
for they are characteristics of a mind which is still doubting. "Am I asleep
or awake?"... Here, it's fuzzy! This is the mind getting lost in its moods.
It's like the moon going behind a cloud. You can still see the moon but the
clouds covering it render it hazy. It's not like the moon which has emerged
from behind the clouds clear, sharp and bright.
When the mind is
peaceful and established firmly in mindfulness and self-awareness, there will
be no doubt concerning the various phenomena which we encounter. The mind will
truly be beyond the hindrances. We will clearly know as it is everything which
arises in the mind. We do not doubt it because the mind is clear and bright.
The mind which reaches
samadhi is like this.
However some
people find it hard to enter samadhi because it doesn't suit their
tendencies. There is samadhi, but it's not strong or firm. But one can
attain peace through the use of wisdom, through contemplating and seeing the
truth of things, solving problems that way. This is using wisdom rather than
the power of samadhi. To attain calm in practice it's not necessary to
sit in meditation, for instance. Just ask yourself, "Ehh, what is that?..."
and solve your problem right there! A person with wisdom is like this. Perhaps
he can't really attain high levels of
samadhi, although he develops some, enough to cultivate wisdom. It's
like the difference between farming rice and farming corn. One can depend on
rice more than corn for one's livelihood. Our practice can be like this, we
depend more on wisdom to solve problems. When we see the truth, peace arises.
The two ways are
not the same. Some people have insight and are strong in wisdom but do not
have much samadhi. When they sit in meditation they aren't very
peaceful. They tend to think a lot, contemplating this and that, until
eventually they contemplate happiness and suffering and see the truth of them.
Some incline more towards this than samadhi. Whether standing, walking,
sitting or lying,
3 enlightenment of the Dhamma
can take place. Through seeing, through relinquishing, they attain peace. They
attain peace through knowing the truth without doubt, because they have seen
it for themselves.
Other people have
only little wisdom but their samadhi is very strong. They can enter
very deep samadhi quickly, but not having much wisdom, they cannot
catch their defilements, they don't know them. They can't solve their
problems.
But regardless of
whichever approach we use, we must do away with wrong thinking, leaving only
Right View. We must get rid of confusion, leaving only peace. Either way we
end up at the same place. There are these two sides to practice, but these two
things, calm and insight, go together. We can't do away with either of them.
They must go together.
That which "looks
over" the various factors which arise in meditation is 'sati', mindfulness.
This sati is a condition which, through practice, can help other
factors to arise. Sati is life. Whenever we don't have sati,
when we are heedless, it's as if we are dead. If we have no sati, then
our speech and actions have no meaning. This sati is simply recollection. It's
a cause for the arising of self-awareness and wisdom. Whatever virtues we have
cultivated are imperfect if lacking in sati. Sati is that which watches
over us while standing, walking, sitting and lying. Even when we are no longer
in samadhi,
sati should be present throughout.
Whatever we do we
take care. A sense of shame
4 will
arise. We will feel ashamed about the things we do which aren't correct. As
shame increases, our collectedness will increase as well. When collectedness
increases, heedlessness will disappear. Even if we don't sit in meditation,
these factors will be present in the mind.
And this arises
because of cultivating sati. Develop
sati! This is the dhamma which looks over the work we are doing or have
done in the past. It has usefulness. We should know ourselves at all times. If
we know ourselves like this, right will distinguish itself from wrong, the
path will become clear, and cause for all shame will dissolve. Wisdom will
arise.
We can bring the
practice all together as morality, concentration and wisdom. To be collected,
to be controlled, this is morality. The firm establishing of the mind within
that control is concentration. Complete, overall knowledge within the activity
in which we are engaged is wisdom. The practice in brief is just morality,
concentration and wisdom, or in other words, the path. There is no other way.
"...With right samadhi, no matter what level of calm is reached, there
is awareness. There is full mindfulness and clear comprehension. This is the
samadhi which can give rise to wisdom, one cannot get lost in it.
Practitioners should understand this well..."
The Path in Harmony
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Today I would
like to ask you all. "Are you sure yet, are you certain in your meditation
practice?" I ask because these days there are many people teaching meditation,
both monks and laypeople, and I'm afraid you may be subject to wavering and
doubt. If we understand clearly, we will be able to make the mind peaceful and
firm.
You should
understand "the Eightfold Path" as morality, concentration and wisdom. The
path comes together as simply this. Our practice is to make this path arise
within us.
When sitting
meditation we are told to close the eyes, not to look at anything else,
because now we are going to look directly at the mind. When we close our eyes,
our attention comes inwards. We establish our attention on the breath, center
our feelings there, put our mindfulness there. When the factors of the path
are in harmony we will be able to see the breath, the feelings, the mind and
its mood for what they are. Here we will see the "focus point," where
samadhi and the other factors of the Path converge in harmony.
When we are
sitting in meditation, following the breath, think to yourself that now you
are sitting alone. There is no-one sitting around you, there is nothing at
all. Develop this feeling that you are sitting alone until the mind lets go of
all externals, concentrating solely on the breath. If you are thinking, "This
person is sitting over here, that person is sitting over there," there is no
peace, the mind doesn't come inwards. Just cast all that aside until you feel
there is no-one sitting around you, until there is nothing at all, until you
have no wavering or interest in your surroundings.
Let the breath go
naturally, don't force it to be short or long or whatever, just sit and watch
it going in and out. When the mind lets go of all external impressions, the
sounds of cars and such will not disturb you. Nothing, whether sights or
sounds, will disturb you, because the mind doesn't receive them. Your
attention will come together on the breath.
If the mind is
confused and won't concentrate on the breath, take a full, deep breath, as
deep as you can, and then let it all out till there is none left. Do this
three times and then re-establish your attention. The mind will become calm.
It's natural for
it to be calm for a while, and then restlessness and confusion may arise
again. When this happens, concentrate, breathe deeply again, and them
re-establish your attention on the breath. Just keep going like this. When
this has happened many times you will become adept at it, the mind will let go
of all external manifestations. External impressions will not reach the mind.
Sati will be firmly established. As the mind becomes more refined, so does
the breath. Feelings will become finer and finer, the body and mind will be
light. Our attention is solely on the inner, we see the in-breaths and
out-breaths clearly, we see all impressions clearly. We will see the coming
together of Morality, Concentration and Wisdom. This is called the Path in
harmony. When there is this harmony our mind will be free of confusion, it
will come together as one. This is called samadhi.
After watching
the breath for a long time, it may become very refined; the awareness of the
breath will gradually cease, leaving only bare awareness. The breath may
become so refined it disappears! Perhaps we are "just sitting," as if there is
no breathing at all. Actually there is breathing, but it seems as if there's
none. This is because the mind has reached its most refined state, there is
just bare awareness. It has gone beyond the breath. The knowledge that the
breath has disappeared becomes established. What will we take as our object of
meditation now? We take just this knowledge as our object, that is, the
awareness that there's no breath.
Unexpected things
may happen at this time; some people experience them, some don't. If they do
arise, we should be firm and have strong mindfulness. Some people see that the
breath has disappeared and get a fright, they're afraid they might die. Here
we should know the situation just as it is. We simply notice that there's no
breath and take that as our object of awareness. This, we can say, is the
firmest, surest type of samadhi. There is only one firm, unmoving state
of mind. Perhaps the body will become so light it's as if there is no body at
all. We feel like we're sitting in empty space, all seems empty. Although this
may seem very unusual, you should understand that there's nothing to worry
about. Firmly establish your mind like this.
When the mind is
firmly unified, having no sense impressions to disturb it, one can remain in
that state for any length of time. There will be no painful feelings to
disturb us. When samadhi has reached this level, we can leave it when
we choose, but if we come out of this
samadhi we do so comfortably, not because we've become bored with it or
tired. We come out because we've had enough for now, we feel at ease, we have
no problems at all.
If we can develop
this type of samadhi, then if we sit, say, thirty minutes or an hour, the mind
will be cool and calm for many days. When the mind is cool and calm like this,
it is clean. Whatever we experience, the mind will take up and investigate.
This is a fruit of samadhi.
Morality has one
function, concentration has another function and Wisdom another. These factors
are like a cycle. We can see them all within the peaceful mind. When the mind
is calm it has collectedness and restraint because of wisdom and the energy of
concentration. As it becomes more collected it becomes more refined, which in
turn gives morality the strength to increase in purity. As our morality
becomes purer, this will help in the development of concentration. When
concentration is firmly established it helps in the arising of wisdom.
Morality, concentration and wisdom help each other, they are inter-related
like this. In the end the Path becomes one and functions at all times. We
should look after the strength which arises from the path, because it is the
strength which leads to Insight and Wisdom.
* * *
On The Dangers
Of Samadhi
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Samadhi is
capable of bringing much harm or much benefit to the meditator, you can't say
it brings only one or the other. For one who has no wisdom it is harmful, but
for one who has wisdom it can bring real benefit, it can lead him to Insight.
That which can be
most harmful to the meditator is Absorption Samadhi (Jhana), the
samadhi with deep, sustained calm. This samadhi brings great peace. Where
there is peace, there is happiness. When there is happiness, attachment and
clinging to that happiness arise. The meditator doesn't want to contemplate
anything else, he just wants to indulge in that pleasant feeling. When we have
been practicing for a long time we may become adept at entering this
samadhi very quickly. As soon as we start to note our meditation object,
the mind enters calm, and we don't want to come out to investigate anything.
We just get stuck on that happiness. This is a danger to one who is practicing
meditation.
We must use
Upacara Samadhi. Here, we enter calm and then, when the mind is
sufficiently calm, we come out and look at outer activity.
5 Looking at the outside with a calm mind gives rise to wisdom.
This is hard to understand, because it's almost like ordinary thinking and
imagining. When thinking is there, we may think the mind isn't peaceful, but
actually that thinking is taking place within the calm. There is contemplation
but it doesn't disturb the calm. We may bring thinking up in order to
contemplate it. Here we take up the thinking to investigate it, it's not that
we are aimlessly thinking to investigate it, it's not that we are aimlessly
thinking or guessing away; it's something that arises from a peaceful mind.
This is called "awareness within calm and calm within awareness." If it's
simply ordinary thinking and imagining, the mind won't be peaceful, it will be
disturbed. But I am not talking about ordinary thinking, this is a feeling
that arises from the peaceful mind. It's called "contemplation." Wisdom is
born right here.
So, there can be
right samadhi and wrong samadhi. Wrong samadhi is where
the mind enters calm and there's no awareness at all. One could sit for two
hours or even all day but the mind doesn't know where it's been or what's
happened. It doesn't know anything. There is calm, but that's all. It's like a
well-sharpened knife which we don't bother to put to any use. This is a
deluded type of calm, because there is not much self-awareness. The meditator
may think he has reached the ultimate already, so he doesn't bother to look
for anything else. Samadhi can be an enemy at this level. Wisdom cannot
arise because there is no awareness of right and wrong.
With right
samadhi, no matter what level of calm is reached, there is awareness.
There is full mindfulness and clear comprehension. This is the samadhi
which can give rise to wisdom, one cannot get lost in it. Practitioners should
understand this well. You can't do without this awareness, it must be present
from beginning to end. This kind of
samadhi has no danger.
You may wonder
where does the benefit arise, how does the wisdom arise, from samadhi?
When right samadhi has been developed, wisdom has the chance to arise
at all times. When the eye sees form, the ear hears sound, the nose smells
odor, the tongue experiences taste, the body experiences touch or the mind
experiences mental impressions in all postures the mind stays with full
knowledge of the true nature of those sense impressions, it doesn't "pick and
choose." In any posture we are fully aware of the birth of happiness and
unhappiness. We let go of both of these things, we don't cling. This is called
Right Practice, which is present in all postures. These words "all postures"
do not refer only to bodily postures, they refer to the mind, which has
mindfulness and clear comprehension of the truth at all times. When samadhi
has been rightly developed, wisdom arises like this. This is called "insight,"
knowledge of the truth.
There are two
kinds of peace the coarse and the refined. The peace which comes from
samadhi is the coarse type. When the mind is peaceful there is happiness.
The mind then takes this happiness to be peace. But happiness and unhappiness
are becoming and birth. There is no escape from
samsara 6
here because we still cling to them. So happiness is not peace, peace is not
happiness.
The other type of
peace is that which comes from wisdom. Here we don't confuse peace with
happiness; we know the mind which contemplates and knows happiness and
unhappiness as peace. The peace which arises from wisdom is not happiness, but
is that which sees the truth of both happiness and unhappiness. Clinging to
those states does not arise, the mind rises above them. This is the true goal
of all Buddhist practice.
"...The Buddha laid down Morality, Concentration and Wisdom as the Path
to peace, the way to enlightenment. But in truth these things are not the
essence of Buddhism. They are merely the Path... The essence of Buddhism is
peace, and that peace arises from truly knowing the nature of all things..."
The Middle Way Within
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The teaching of
Buddhism is about giving up evil and practicing good. Then, when evil is given
up and goodness is established, we must let go of both good and evil. We have
already heard enough about wholesome and unwholesome conditions to understand
something about them, so I would like to talk about the Middle Way, that is,
the path to escape from both of those things.
All the Dhamma
talks and teachings of the Buddha have one aim to show the way out of
suffering to those who have not yet escaped. The teachings are for the purpose
of giving us the right understanding. If we don't understand rightly, then we
can't arrive at peace.
When the various
Buddhas became enlightened and gave their first teachings, they all declared
these two extremes indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain.
7 These two ways are the ways of
infatuation, they are the ways between which those who indulge in sense
pleasures must fluctuate, never arriving at peace. They are the paths which
spin around in samsara.
The Enlightened
One observed that all beings are stuck in these two extremes, never seeing the
Middle Way of Dhamma, so he pointed them out in order to show the penalty
involved in both. Because we are still stuck, because we are still wanting, we
live repeatedly under their way. The Buddha declared that these two ways are
the ways of intoxication, they are not the way of a meditator, nor the ways to
peace. These ways are indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain, or, to
put it simply, the way of slackness and the way of tension. If you investigate
within, moment by moment, you will see that the tense way is anger, the way of
sorrow. Going this way there is only difficulty and distress. Indulgence in
Pleasure if you've escaped from this, it means you've escaped from
happiness. These ways, both happiness and unhappiness, are not peaceful
states. The Buddha taught to let go of both of them. This is right practice.
This is the Middle Way.
These words, "the
Middle Way," do not refer to our body and speech, they refer to the mind. When
a mental impression which we don't like arises, it affects the mind and there
is confusion. When the mind is confused, when it's "shaken up," this is not
the right way. When a mental impression arises which we like, the mind goes to
indulgence in pleasure that's not the way either.
We people don't
want suffering, we want happiness. But in fact happiness is just a refined
form of suffering. Suffering itself is the coarse form. You can compare them
to a snake. The head of the snake is unhappiness, the tail of the snake is
happiness. The head of the snake is really dangerous, it has the poisonous
fangs. If you touch it, the snake will bite straight away. But never mind the
head, even if you go and hold onto the tail, it will turn around and bite you
just the same, because both the head and the tail belong to the one snake.
In the same way,
both happiness and unhappiness, or pleasure and sadness, arise from the same
parent wanting. So when you're happy the mind isn't peaceful. It really
isn't! For instance, when we get the things we like, such as wealth, prestige,
praise or happiness, we become pleased as a result. But the mind still harbors
some uneasiness because we're afraid of losing it. That very fear isn't a
peaceful state. Later on we may actually lose that thing and then we really
suffer. Thus, if you aren't aware, even if you're happy, suffering is
imminent. It's just the same as grabbing the snake's tail if you don't let
go it will bite. So whether it's the snake's tail or its head, that is,
wholesome or unwholesome conditions, they're all just characteristics of the
Wheel of Existence, of endless change.
The Buddha
established morality, concentration and wisdom as the path to peace, the way
to enlightenment. But in truth these things are not the essence of Buddhism.
They are merely the path. The Buddha called them "Magga," which means "path."
The essence of Buddhism is peace, and that peace arises from truly knowing the
nature of all things. If we investigate closely, we can see that peace is
neither happiness nor unhappiness. Neither of these is the truth.
The human mind,
the mind which the Buddha exhorted us to know and investigate, is something we
can only know by its activity. The true "original mind" has nothing to measure
it by, there's nothing you can know it by. In its natural state it is
unshaken, unmoving. When happiness arises all that happens is that this mind
is getting lost in a mental impression, there is movement. When the mind moves
like this, clinging and attachment to those things come into being.
The Buddha has
already laid down the path of practice fully, but we have not yet practiced,
or if we have, we've practiced only in speech. Our minds and our speech are
not yet in harmony, we just indulge in empty talk. But the basis of Buddhism
is not something that can be talked about or guessed at. The real basis of
Buddhism is full knowledge of the truth of reality. If one knows this truth
then no teaching is necessary. If one doesn't know, even if he listens to the
teaching, he doesn't really hear. This is why the Buddha said, "The
Enlightened One only points the way." He can't do the practice for you,
because the truth is something you cannot put into words or give away.
All the teachings
are merely similes and comparisons, means to help the mind see the truth. If
we haven't seen the truth we must suffer. For example, we commonly say
"sankharas"
8 when referring to the body.
Anybody can say it, but in fact we have problems simply because we don't know
the truth of these sankharas, and thus cling to them. Because we don't
know the truth of the body, we suffer.
Here is an
example. Suppose one morning you're walking to work and a man yells abuse and
insults at you from across the street. As soon as you hear this abuse your
mind changes from its usual state. You don't feel so good, you feel angry and
hurt. That man walks around abusing you night and day. When you hear the
abuse, you get angry, and even when you return home you're still angry because
you feel vindictive, you want to get even.
A few days later
another man comes to your house and calls out, "Hey! That man who abused you
the other day, he's mad, he's crazy! Has been for years! He abuses everybody
like that. Nobody takes any notice of anything he says." As soon as you hear
this you are suddenly relieved. That anger and hurt that you've pent up within
you all these days melts away completely. Why? Because you know the truth of
the matter now. Before, you didn't know, you thought that man was normal, so
you were angry at him. Understanding like that caused you to suffer. As soon
as you find out the truth, everything changes: "Oh, he's mad! That explains
everything!" When you understand this you feel fine, because you know for
yourself. Having known, then you can let go. If you don't know the truth you
cling right there. When you thought that man who abused you was normal you
could have killed him. But when you find out the truth, that he's mad, you
feel much better. This is knowledge of the truth.
Someone who sees
the Dhamma has a similar experience. When attachment, aversion and delusion
disappear, they disappear in the same way. As long as we don't know these
things we think, "What can I do? I have so much greed and aversion." This is
not clear knowledge. It's just the same as when we thought the madman was
sane. When we finally see that he was mad all along we're relieved of worry.
No-one could show you this. Only when the mind sees for itself can it uproot
and relinquish attachment.
It's the same
with this body which we call sankharas. Although the Buddha has already
explained that it's not substantial or a real being as such, we still don't
agree, we stubbornly cling to it. If the body could talk, it would be telling
us all day long, "You're not my owner, you know." Actually it's telling us all
the time, but it's Dhamma language, so we're unable to understand it. For
instance, the sense organs of eye, ear, nose, tongue and body are continually
changing, but I've never seen them ask permission from us even once! Like when
we have a headache or a stomachache the body never asks permission first, it
just goes right ahead, following its natural course. This shows that the body
doesn't allow anyone to be its owner, it doesn't have an owner. The Buddha
described it as an empty thing.
We don't
understand the Dhamma and so we don't understand these sankharas; we
take them to be ourselves, as belonging to us or belonging to others. This
gives rise to clinging. When clinging arises, "becoming" follows on. Once
becoming arises, then there is birth. Once there is birth, then old age,
sickness, death... the whole mass of suffering arises. This is the
Paticcasamuppada.
9 We say ignorance gives rise to
volitional activities, they give rise to consciousness and so on. All these
things are simply events in mind. When we come into contact with something we
don't like, if we don't have mindfulness, ignorance is there. Suffering arises
straight away. But the mind passes through these changes so rapidly that we
can't keep up with them. It's the same as when you fall from a tree. Before
you know it "Thud!" you've hit the ground. Actually you've passed many
branches and twigs on the way but you couldn't count them, you couldn't
remember them as you passed them. You just fall, and then "Thud!"
The
Paticcasamuppada is the same as this. If we divide it up as it is in the
scriptures, we say ignorance gives rise to volitional activities, volitional
activities give rise to consciousness, consciousness gives rise to mind and
matter, mind and matter give rise to the six sense bases, the sense bases give
rise to sense contact, contact gives rise to feeling, feeling gives rise to
wanting, wanting gives rise to clinging, clinging gives rise to becoming,
becoming gives rise to birth, birth gives rise to old age, sickness, death,
and all forms of sorrow. But in truth, when you come into contact with
something you don't like, there's immediate suffering! That feeling of
suffering is actually the result of the whole chain of the Paticcasamuppada.
This is why the Buddha exhorted his disciples to investigate and know fully
their own minds.
When people are
born into the world they are without names - once born, we name them. This is
convention. We give people names for the sake of convenience, to call each
other by. The scriptures are the same. We separate everything up with labels
to make studying the reality convenient. In the same way, all things are
simply sankharas. Their original nature is merely that of things born
of conditions. The Buddha said that they are impermanent, unsatisfactory and
not-self. They are unstable. We don't understand this firmly, our
understanding is not straight, and so we have wrong view. This wrong view is
that the sankharas are ourselves, we are the sankharas, or that
happiness and unhappiness are ourselves, we are happiness and unhappiness.
Seeing like this is not full, clear knowledge of the true nature of things.
The truth is that we can't force all these things to follow our desires, they
follow the way of nature.
A simple
comparison is this: suppose you go and sit in the middle of a freeway with the
cars and trucks charging down at you. You can't get angry at the cars,
shouting, "Don't drive over here! Don't drive over here!" It's a freeway, you
can't tell them that! So what can you do? You get off the road! The road is
the place where cars run, if you don't want the cars to be there, you suffer.
It's the same
with sankharas. We say they disturb us, like when we sit in meditation
and hear a sound. We think, "Oh, that sound's bothering me." If we understand
that the sound bothers us then we suffer accordingly. If we investigate a
little deeper, we will see that it's we who go out and disturb the sound! The
sound is simply sound. If we understand like this then there's nothing more to
it, we leave it be. We see that the sound is one thing, we are another. One
who understands that the sound comes to disturb him is one who doesn't see
himself. He really doesn't! Once you see yourself, then you're at ease. The
sound is just sound, why should you go and grab it? You see that actually it
was you who went out and disturbed the sound. This is real knowledge of the
truth. You see both sides, so you have peace. If you see only one side, there
is suffering. Once you see both sides, then you follow the Middle Way. This is
the right practice of the mind. This is what we call "straightening out our
understanding."
In the same way,
the nature of all sankharas is impermanence and death, but we want to
grab them, we carry them about and covet them. We want them to be true. We
want to find truth within the things that aren't true! Whenever someone sees
like this and clings to the
sankharas as being himself, he suffers. The Buddha wanted us to consider
this.
The practice of
Dhamma is not dependent on being a monk, a novice, or a layman; it depends on
straightening out your understanding. If our understanding is correct, we
arrive at peace. Whether you are ordained or not it's the same, every person
has the chance to practice Dhamma, to contemplate it. We all contemplate the
same thing. If you attain peace, it's all the same peace; it's the same Path,
with the same methods.
Therefore the
Buddha didn't discriminate between laymen and monks, he taught all people to
practice to know the truth of the sankharas. When we know this truth,
we let them go. If we know the truth there will be no more becoming or birth.
How is there no more birth? There is no way for birth to take place because we
fully know the truth of sankharas. If we fully know the truth, then
there is peace. Having or not having, it's all the same. Gain and loss are
one. The Buddha taught us to know this. This is peace; peace from happiness,
unhappiness, gladness and sorrow.
We must see that
there is no reason to be born. Born in what way? Born into gladness: When we
get something we like we are glad over it. If there is no clinging to that
gladness there is no birth; if there is clinging, this is called "birth." So
if we get something, we aren't born (into gladness). If we lose, then we
aren't born (into sorrow). This is the birthless and the deathless. Birth and
death are both founded in clinging to and cherishing the sankharas.
So the Buddha
said. "There is no more becoming for me, finished is the holy life, this is my
last birth." There! He knew the birthless and the deathless! This is what the
Buddha constantly exhorted his disciples to know. This is the right practice.
If you don't reach it, if you don't reach the Middle Way, then you won't
transcend suffering.
"...Meditation means to make the mind peaceful in order to let wisdom
arise... To put it shortly, it's just a matter of happiness and unhappiness.
Happiness is pleasant feeling in the mind, unhappiness is just unpleasant
feeling. The Buddha taught to separate this happiness and unhappiness from
the mind..."
The Peace Beyond
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It's of great
importance that we practice the Dhamma. If we don't practice, then all our
knowledge is only superficial knowledge, just the outer shell of it. It's as
if we have some sort of fruit but we haven't eaten it yet. Even though we have
that fruit in our hand we get no benefit from it. Only through the actual
eating of the fruit we really know its taste.
The Buddha didn't
praise those who merely believe others, he praised the person who knows within
himself. Just as with that fruit, if we have tasted it already, we don't have
to ask anyone else if it's sweet or sour. Our problems are over. Why are they
over? Because we see according to the truth. One who has realized the Dhamma
is like one who has realized the sweetness or sourness of the fruit. All
doubts are ended right here.
When we talk
about Dhamma, although we may say a lot, it can usually be brought down to
four things. They are simply to know suffering, to know the cause of
suffering, to know the end of suffering and to know the path of practice
leading to the end of suffering. This is all there is. All that we have
experienced on the path of practice so far comes down to these four things.
When we know these things, our problems are over.
Where are these
four things born? They are born just within the body and the mind, nowhere
else. So why is the Dhamma of the Buddha so broad and expansive? This is so in
order to explain these things in a more refined way, to help us to see them.
When Siddhattha
Gotama was born into the world, before he saw the Dhamma, he was an ordinary
person just like us. When he knew what he had to know, that is the truth of
suffering, the cause, the end and the way leading to the end of suffering, he
realized the Dhamma and became a perfectly Enlightened Buddha.
When we realize
the Dhamma, wherever we sit we know Dhamma, wherever we are we hear the
Buddha's teaching. When we understand Dhamma, the Buddha is within our mind,
the Dhamma is within our mind, and the practice leading to wisdom is within
our own mind. Having the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha within our mind
means that whether our actions are good or bad, we know clearly for ourselves
their true nature. It was thus that the Buddha discarded worldly opinions, he
discarded praise and criticism. When people praised or criticized him he just
accepted it for what it was. These two things are simply worldly conditions so
he wasn't shaken by them. Why not? Because he knew suffering. He knew that if
he believed in that praise or criticism they would cause him to suffer.
When suffering
arises it agitates us, we feel ill at ease. What is the cause of that
suffering? It's because we don't know the Truth, this is the cause. When the
cause is present, then suffering arises. Once arisen we don't know how to stop
it. The more we try to stop it, the more it comes on. We say, "Don't criticize
me," or "Don't blame me". Trying to stop it like this, suffering really comes
on, it won't stop.
So the Buddha
taught that the way leading to the end of suffering is to make the Dhamma
arise as a reality within our own minds. We become one who witnesses the
Dhamma for himself. If someone says we are good we don't get lost in it; they
say we are no good we don't get lost in it; they say we are no good and we
don't forget ourselves. This way we can be free. "Good" and "evil" are just
worldly dhammas, they are just states of mind. If we follow them our mind
becomes the world, we just grope in the darkness and don't know the way out.
If it's like this then we have not yet mastered ourselves. We try to defeat
others, but in doing so we only defeat ourselves; but if we have mastery over
ourselves then we have mastery over all over all mental formations, sights,
sounds, smells, tastes and bodily feelings.
Now I'm talking
about externals, they're like that, but the outside is reflected inside also.
Some people only know the outside, they don't know the inside. Like when we
say to "see the body in the body." Having seen the outer body is not enough,
we must know the body within the body. Then, having investigated the mind, we
should know the mind within the mind.
Why should we
investigate the body? What is this "body in the body"? When we say to know the
mind, what is this "mind"? If we don't know the mind then we don't know the
things within the mind. This is to be someone who doesn't know suffering,
doesn't know the cause, doesn't know the end and doesn't know the way. The
things which should help to extinguish suffering don't help, because we get
distracted by the things which aggravate it. It's just as if we have an itch
on our head and we scratch our leg! If it's our head that's itchy then we're
obviously not going to get much relief. In the same way, when suffering arises
we don't know how to handle it, we don't know the practice leading to the end
of suffering.
For instance,
take this body, this body that each of us has brought along to this meeting.
If we just see the form of the body there's no way we can escape suffering.
Why not? Because we still don't see the inside of the body, we only see the
outside. We only see it as something beautiful, something substantial. The
Buddha said that only this is not enough. We see the outside with our eyes; a
child can see it, animals can see it, it's not difficult. The outside of the
body is easily seen, but having seen it we stick to it, we don't know the
truth of it. Having seen it we grab onto it and it bites us!
So we should
investigate the body within the body. Whatever's in the body, go ahead and
look at it. If we just see the outside it's not clear. We see hair, nails and
so on and they are just pretty things which entice us, so the Buddha taught to
see the inside of the body, to see the body within the body. What is in the
body? Look closely within! We will see many things inside to surprise us,
because even though they are within us, we've never seen them. Wherever we
walk we carry them with us, sitting in a car we carry them with us, but we
still don't know them at all!
It's as if we
visit some relatives at their house and they give us a present. We take it and
put it in our bag and then leave without opening it to see what is inside.
When at last we open it full of poisonous snakes! Our body is like this. If
we just see the shell of it we say it's fine and beautiful. We forget
ourselves. We forget impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self. If we look
within this body it's really repulsive. If we look according to reality,
without trying to sugar things over, we'll see that it's really pitiful and
wearisome. Dispassion will arise. This feeling of "disinterest" is not that we
feel aversion for the world or anything; it's simply our mind clearing up, our
mind letting go. We see things are naturally established just as they are.
However we want them to be, they just go their own way regardless. Whether we
laugh or cry, they simply are the way they are. Things which are unstable are
unstable; things which are not beautiful are not beautiful.
So the Buddha
said that when we experience sights, sounds, tastes, smells, bodily feelings
or mental states, we should release them. When the ear hears sounds, let them
go. When the nose smells an odor, let it go... just leave it at the nose! When
the bodily feelings arise, let go of the like or dislike that follow, let them
go back to their birth-place. The same for mental states. All these things,
just let them go their way. This is knowing. Whether it's happiness or
unhappiness, it's all the same. This is called meditation.
Meditation means
to make the mind peaceful in order to let wisdom arise. This requires that we
practice with body and mind in order to see and know the sense impressions of
form, sound, taste, smell, touch and mental formations. To put it shortly,
it's just a matter of happiness and unhappiness. Happiness is pleasant feeling
in the mind, unhappiness is just unpleasant feeling. The Buddha taught to
separate this happiness and unhappiness from the mind. The mind is that which
knows. Feeling
10 is
the characteristic of happiness or unhappiness, like or dislike. When the mind
indulges in these things we say that it clings to or takes that happiness and
unhappiness to be worthy of holding. That clinging is an action of mind, that
happiness or unhappiness is feeling.
When we say the
Buddha told us to separate the mind from the feeling, he didn't literally mean
to throw them to different places. He meant that the mind must know happiness
and know unhappiness. When sitting in
samadhi, for example, and peace fills the mind, then happiness comes
but it doesn't reach us, unhappiness comes but doesn't reach us. This is to
separate the feeling from the mind. We can compare it to oil and water in a
bottle. They don't combine. Even if you try to mix them, the oil remains oil
and the water remains water. Why is this so? Because they are of different
density.
The natural state
of the mind is neither happiness nor unhappiness. When feeling enters the mind
then happiness or unhappiness is born. If we have mindfulness then we know
pleasant feeling as pleasant feeling. The mind which knows will not pick it
up. Happiness is there but it's "outside" the mind, not buried within the
mind. The mind simply knows it clearly.
If we separate
unhappiness from the mind, does that mean there is no suffering, that we don't
experience it? Yes, we experience it, but we know mind as mind, feeling as
feeling. We don't cling to that feeling or carry it around. The Buddha
separated these things through knowledge. Did he have suffering? He knew the
state of suffering but he didn't cling to it, so we say that he cut suffering
off. And there was happiness too, but he knew that happiness, if it's not
known, is like a poison. He didn't hold it to be himself. Happiness was there
through knowledge, but it didn't exist in his mind. Thus we say that he
separated happiness and unhappiness from his mind.
When we say that
the Buddha and the Enlightened Ones killed defilements,
11 it's not that they really killed them. If they had killed all
defilements then we probably wouldn't have any! They didn't kill defilements;
when they knew them for what they are, they let them go. Someone who's stupid
will grab them, but the Enlightened Ones knew the defilements in their own
minds as a poison, so they swept them out. They swept out the things which
caused them to suffer, they didn't kill them. One who doesn't know this will
see some things, such as happiness, as good, and then grab them, but the
Buddha just knew them and simply brushed them away.
But when feeling
arises for us we indulge in it, that is, the mind carries that happiness and
unhappiness around. In fact they are two different things. The activities of
mind, pleasant feeling, unpleasant feeling and so on, are mental impressions,
they are the world. If the mind knows this it can equally do work involving
happiness or unhappiness. Why? Because it knows the truth of these things.
Someone who doesn't know them sees them as equal. If you cling to happiness it
will be the birth-place of unhappiness later on, because happiness is
unstable, it changes all the time. When happiness disappears, unhappiness
arises.
The Buddha knew
that because both happiness and unhappiness are unsatisfactory, they have the
same value. When happiness arose he let it go. He had right practice, seeing
that both these things have equal values and drawbacks. They come under the
Law of Dhamma, that is, they are unstable and unsatisfactory. Once born, they
die. When he saw this, right view arose, the right way of practice became
clear. No matter what sort of feeling or thinking arose in his mind, he knew
it as simply the continuous play of happiness and unhappiness. He didn't cling
to them.
When the Buddha
was newly enlightened he gave a sermon about indulgence in Pleasure and
Indulgence in Pain. "Monks! Indulgence in Pleasure is the loose way,
Indulgence in Pain is the tense way." These were the two things that disturbed
his practice until the day he was enlightened, because at first he didn't let
go of them. When he knew them, he let them go, and so was able to give his
first sermon.
So we say that a
meditator should not walk the way of happiness or unhappiness, rather he
should know them. Knowing the truth of suffering, he will know the cause of
suffering, the end of suffering and the way leading to the end of suffering.
And the way out of suffering is meditation itself. To put it simply, we must
be mindful.
Mindfulness is
knowing, or presence of mind. Right now what are we thinking, what are we
doing? What do we have with us right now? We observe like this, we are aware
of how we are living. When we practice like this wisdom can arise. We consider
and investigate at all times, in all postures. When a mental impression arises
that we like to know it as such, we don't hold it to be anything substantial.
It's just happiness. When unhappiness arises we know that it's Indulgence in
Pain, it's not the path of a meditator.
This is what we
call separating the mind from the feeling. If we are clever we don't attach,
we leave things be. We become the 'one who knows'. The mind and feeling are
just like oil and water; they are in the same bottle but they don't mix. Even
if we are sick or in pain, we still know the feeling as feeling, the mind as
mind. We know the painful or comfortable states but we don't identify with
them. We stay only with peace: the peace beyond both comfort and pain.
You should
understand it like this, because if there is no permanent self then there is
no refuge. You must live like this, that is, without happiness and without
unhappiness. You stay only with the knowing, you don't carry things around.
As long as we are
still unenlightened all this may sound strange but it doesn't matter, we just
set our goal in this direction. The mind is the mind. It meets happiness and
unhappiness and we see them as merely that, there's nothing more to it. They
are divided, not mixed. If they are all mixed up then we don't know them. It's
like living in a house; the house and its occupant are related, but separate.
If there is danger in our house we are distressed because we must protect it,
but if the house catches fire we get out of it. If painful feeling arises we
get out of it, just like that house. When it's full of fire and we know it, we
come running out of it. They are separate things; the house is one thing, the
occupant is the other.
We say that we
separate mind and feeling in this way but in fact they are by nature already
separate. Our realization is simply to know this natural separateness
according to reality. When we say they are not separated it's because we're
clinging to them through ignorance of the truth.
So the Buddha
told us to meditate. This practice of meditation is very important. Merely to
know with the intellect is not enough. The knowledge which arises from
practice with a peaceful mind and the knowledge which comes from study are
really far apart. The knowledge which comes from study is not real knowledge
of our mind. The mind tries to hold onto and keep this knowledge. Why do we
try to keep it? Just lose it! And then when it's lost we cry!
If we really
know, then there's letting go, leaving things be. We know how things are and
don't forget ourselves. If it happens that we are sick we don't get lost in
that. Some people think, "This year I was sick the whole time, I couldn't
meditate at all." These are the words of a really foolish person. Someone
who's sick and dying should really be diligent in his practice. One may say he
doesn't trust his body, and so he feels that he can't meditate. If we think
like this then things are difficult. The Buddha didn't teach like that. He
said that right here is the place to meditate. When we're sick or almost dying
that's when we can really know and see reality.
Other people say
they don't have the chance to meditate because they're too busy. Sometimes
school teachers come to see me. They say they have many responsibilities so
there's no time to meditate. I ask them, "When you're teaching do you have
time to breathe?" They answer, "Yes." "So how can you have time to breathe if
the work is so hectic and confusing? Here you are far from Dhamma."
Actually this
practice is just about the mind and its feelings. It's not something that you
have to run after or struggle for. Breathing continues while working. Nature
takes care of the natural processes all we have to do is try to be aware.
Just to keep trying, going inwards to see clearly. Meditation is like this.
If we have that
presence of mind then whatever work we do will be the very tool which enables
us to know right and wrong continually. There's plenty of time to meditate, we
just don't fully understand the practice, that's all. While sleeping we
breathe, eating we breathe, don't we? Why don't we have time to meditate?
Wherever we are we breathe. If we think like this then our life has as much
value as our breath, wherever we are we have time.
All kinds of
thinking are mental conditions, not conditions of body, so we need simply have
presence of mind, then we will know right and wrong at all times. Standing,
walking, sitting and lying, there's plenty of time. We just don't know how to
use it properly. Please consider this.
We cannot run
away from feeling, we must know it. Feeling is just feeling, happiness is just
happiness, unhappiness is just unhappiness. They are simply that. So why
should we cling to them? If the mind is clever, simply to hear this is enough
to enable us to separate feeling from the mind.
If we investigate
like this continuously the mind will find release, but it's not escaping
through ignorance. The mind lets go, but it knows. It doesn't let go through
stupidity, not because it doesn't want things to be the way they are. It lets
go because it knows according to the truth. This is seeing nature, the reality
that's all around us.
When we know this
we are someone who's skilled with the mind, we are skilled with mental
impressions. When we are skilled with mental impressions we are skilled with
the world. This is to be a "Knower of the World." The Buddha was someone who
clearly knew the world with all its difficulty. He knew the troublesome, and
that which was not troublesome was right there. This world is so confusing,
how is it that the Buddha was able to know it? Here we should understand that
the Dhamma taught by the Buddha is not beyond our ability. In all postures we
should have presence of mind and self-awareness and when it's time to sit
meditation we do that.
We sit in
meditation to establish peacefulness and cultivate mental energy. We don't do
it in order to play around at anything special. Insight meditation is sitting
in samadhi itself. At some places they say, "Now we are going to sit in
samadhi, after that we'll do insight meditation." Don't divide them like
this! Tranquillity is the base which gives rise to wisdom; wisdom is the fruit
of tranquillity. To say that now we are going to do calm meditation, later
we'll do insight you can't do that! You can only divide them in speech. Just
like a knife, the blade is on one side, the back of the blade on the other.
You can't divide them. If you pick up one side you get both sides.
Tranquillity gives rise to wisdom like this.
Morality is the
father and mother of Dhamma. In the beginning we must have morality. Morality
is peace. This means that there are no wrong doings in body or speech. When we
don't do wrong then we don't get agitated; when we don't become agitated then
peace and collectedness arise within the mind. So we say that morality,
concentration and wisdom are the path on which all the Noble Ones have walked
to enlightenment. They are all one. Morality is concentration, concentration
is morality. Concentration is wisdom, wisdom is concentration. It's like a
mango. When it's a flower we call it a flower. When it becomes a fruit we call
it a mango. When it ripens we call it a ripe mango. It's all one mango but it
continually changes. The big mango grows from the small mango, the small mango
becomes a big one. You can call them different fruits or all one. Morality,
concentration and wisdom are related like this. In the end it's all the path
that leads to enlightenment.
The mango, from
the moment it first appears as a flower, simply grows to ripeness. This is
enough, we should see it like this. Whatever others call it, it doesn't
matter. Once it's born it grows to old age, and then where? We should
contemplate this.
Some people don't
want to be old. When they get old they become regretful. These people
shouldn't eat ripe mangoes! Why do we want the mangoes to be ripe? If they're
not ripe in time, we ripen them artificially, don't we? But when we become old
we are filled with regret. Some people cry, they're afraid to get old or die.
If it's like this then they shouldn't eat ripe mangoes, better eat just the
flowers! If we can see this then we can see the Dhamma. Everything clears up,
we are at peace. Just determine to practice like that.
So today the
Chief Privy Councillor and his party have come together to hear the Dhamma.
You should take what I've said and contemplate it. If anything is not right,
please excuse me. But for you to know whether it's right or wrong depends on
your practicing and seeing for yourselves. Whatever's wrong, throw it out. If
it's right then take it and use it. But actually we practice in order to let
go both right and wrong. In the end we just throw everything out. If it's
right, throw it out; wrong, throw it out! Usually if it's right we cling to
rightness, if it's wrong we hold it to be wrong, and then arguments follow.
But he Dhamma is the place where there's nothing nothing at all.
"...The Buddha was enlightened in the world, he contemplated the world.
If he hadn't contemplated the world, if he hadn't seen the world, he
couldn't have risen above it. The Buddha's enlightenment was simply
enlightenment of this very world. The world was still there: gain and loss,
praise and criticism, fame and disrepute, happiness and unhappiness were all
still there. If there weren't these things there would be nothing to become
enlightened to..."
Opening the Dhamma Eye
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Some of us start
to practice, and even after a year or two, still don't know what's what. We
are still unsure of the practice. When we're still unsure, we don't see that
everything around us is purely Dhamma, and so we turn to teachings from the
Ajahns. But actually, when we know our own mind, when there is sati to
look closely at the mind, there is wisdom. All times and all places become
occasions for us to hear the Dhamma.
We can learn
Dhamma from nature, from trees for example. A tree is born due to causes and
it grows following the course of nature. Right here the tree is teaching us
Dhamma, but we don't understand this. In due course, it grows until it buds,
flowers and fruit appear. All we see is the appearance of the flowers and
fruit; we're unable to bring this within and contemplate it. Thus we don't
know that the tree is teaching us Dhamma. The fruit appears and we merely eat
it without investigating: sweet, sour or salty, it's the nature of the fruit.
And this Dhamma, the teaching of the fruit. Following on, the leaves grow old.
They wither, die and then fall from the tree. All we see is that the leaves
have fallen down. We step on them, we sweep them up, that's all. We don't
investigate thoroughly, so we don't know that nature is teaching us. Later on
the new leaves sprout, and we merely see that, without taking it further. We
don't bring these things into our minds to contemplate.
If we can bring
all this inwards and investigate it, we will see that the birth of a tree and
our own birth are no different. This body of ours is born and exists dependent
on conditions, on the elements of earth, water, wind and fire. It has its
food, it grows and grows. Every part of the body changes and flows according
to its nature. It's no different from the tree; hair, nails, teeth and skin
all change. If we know the things of nature, then we will know ourselves.
People are born.
In the end they die. Having died they are born again. Nails, teeth and skin
are constantly dying and re-growing. If we understand the practice then we can
see that a tree is no different from ourselves. If we understand the teaching
of the Ajahns, then we realize that the outside and the inside are comparable.
Things which have consciousness and those without consciousness do not differ.
They are the same. And if we understand this sameness, then when we see the
nature of a tree, for example, we will know that it's no different from our
own five khandhas
12
body, feeling, memory, thinking and consciousness. If we have this
understanding then we understand Dhamma. If we understand Dhamma we understand
the five khandhas, how they constantly shift and change, never
stopping.
So whether
standing, walking, sitting or lying we should have sati to watch over
and look after the mind. When we see external things it's like seeing
internals. When we see internals it's the same as seeing externals. If we
understand this then we can hear the teaching of the Buddha. If we understand
this, then we can say that Buddha-nature, the 'One who knows', has been
established. It knows the external. It knows the internal. It understands all
things which arise. Understanding like this, then sitting at the foot of a
tree we hear the Buddha's teaching. Standing, walking, sitting or lying, we
hear the Buddha's teaching. Seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching and
thinking, we hear the Buddha's teaching. The Buddha is just this 'One who
knows' within this very mind. It knows the Dhamma, it investigates the Dhamma.
It's not that the Buddha-nature, the 'one who knows', arises. The mind becomes
illumined.
If we establish
the Buddha within our mind then we see everything, we contemplate everything,
as no different from ourselves. We see various animals, trees, mountains and
vines as no different from ourselves. We see poor people and rich people
they're no different! They all have the same characteristics. One who
understands like this is content wherever he is. He listens to the Buddha's
teaching at all times. If we don't understand this, then even if we spend all
our time listening to teachings from the various Ajahns, we still won't
understand their meaning.
The Buddha said
that enlightenment of the Dhamma is just knowing Nature,
13 the reality which is all around us, the Nature which is right
here! If we don't understand this Nature we experience disappointment and joy,
we get lost in moods, giving rise to sorrow and regret. Getting lost in mental
objects is getting lost in Nature. When we get lost in Nature then we don't
know Dhamma. The Enlightened One merely pointed out this Nature.
Having arisen,
all things change and die. Things we make, such as plates, bowls and dishes,
all have the same characteristic. A bowl is molded into being due to a cause,
man's impulse to create, and as we use it, it gets old, breaks up and
disappears. Trees, mountains and vines are the same, right up to animals and
people.
When Aρρa
Kondaρρa, the first disciple, heard the Buddha's teaching for the first time,
the realization he had was nothing very complicated. He simply saw that
whatever thing is born, that thing must change and grow old as a natural
condition and eventually it must die. Aρρa Kondaρρa had never thought of this
before, or if he had it wasn't thoroughly clear, so he hadn't yet let go, he
still clung to the khandhas. As he sat mindfully listening to the
Buddha's discourse, Buddha-nature arose in him. He received a sort of Dhamma
"transmission," which was the knowledge that all conditioned things are
impermanent. Any thing which is born must have aging and death as a natural
result.
This feeling was
different from anything he'd ever known before. He truly realized his mind,
and so "Buddha" arose within him. At that time the Buddha declared that Aρρa
Kondaρρa had received the Eye of Dhamma.
What is it that
this Eye of Dhamma sees? This Eye sees that whatever is born has aging and
death as a natural result. "Whatever is born" means everything! Whether
material or immaterial, it all comes under this "whatever is born." It refers
to all of Nature. Like this body for instance it's born and then proceeds to
extinction. When it's small it "dies" from smallness to youth. After a while
it "dies" from youth and becomes middle-aged. Then it goes on to "die" from
middle-age and reach old-age, finally reaching the end. Trees, mountains and
vines all have this characteristic.
So the vision or
understanding of the 'One who knows' clearly entered the mind of Aρρa Kondaρρa
as he sat there. This knowledge of "whatever is born" became deeply embedded
in his mind, enabling him to uproot attachment to the body. This attachment
was sakkayaditthi. This means that he didn't take the body to be a self
or a being, or in terms of "he" or "me." He didn't cling to it. He saw it
clearly, thus uprooting
sakkayaditthi.
And the
vicikiccha (doubt) was destroyed. Having uprooted attachment to the body
he didn't doubt his realization. Silabbata paramasa
14 was also uprooted. His practice became firm and straight. Even
if his body was in pain or fever he didn't grasp it, he didn't doubt. He
didn't doubt, because he had uprooted clinging. This grasping of the body is
called silabbata paramasa. When one uproots the view of the body being
the self, grasping and doubt are finished with. If just this view of the body
as the self arises within the mind then grasping and doubt begin right there.
So as the Buddha
expounded the Dhamma, Aρρa Kondaρρa opened the Eye of Dhamma. This Eye is just
the "One who knows clearly." It sees things differently. It sees this very
nature. Seeing Nature clearly, clinging is uprooted and the 'One who knows' is
born. Previously he knew but he still had clinging. You could say that he knew
the Dhamma but he still hadn't seen it, or he had seen the Dhamma but still
wasn't one with it.
At this time the
Buddha said, "Kondaρρa knows." What did he know? He just knew Nature! Usually
we get lost in Nature, as with this body of ours. Earth, water, fire and wind
come together to make this body. It's an aspect of Nature, a material object
we can see with the eye. It exists depending on food, growing and changing
until finally it reaches extinction.
Coming inwards,
that which watches over the body is consciousness just this 'One who knows',
this single awareness. If it receives through the ear it's called hearing;
through the nose it's called smelling; through the tongue, tasting; through
the body, touching; and through the mind, thinking. This consciousness is just
one but when it functions at different places we call it different things.
Through the eye we call it one thing, through the ear we call it another. But
whether it functions at the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body or mind it's just one
awareness. Following the scriptures we call it the six consciousness, but in
reality there is only one consciousness arising at these six different bases.
There are six "doors" but a single awareness, which is this very mind.
This mind is
capable of knowing the truth of Nature. If the mind still has obstructions,
then we say it knows through ignorance. It knows wrongly and it sees wrongly.
Knowing wrongly and seeing wrongly, or knowing and seeing rightly, it's just a
single awareness. We say wrong view and right view but it's just one thing.
Right and wrong both arise from this one place. When there is wrong knowledge
we say that Ignorance conceals the truth. When there is wrong knowledge then
there is wrong view, wrong intention, wrong action, wrong livelihood
everything is wrong! And on the other hand the path of right practice is born
in this same place. When there is right then the wrong disappears.
The Buddha
practiced enduring many hardships and torturing himself with fasting and so
on, but he investigated deeply into his mind until finally he uprooted
ignorance. All the Buddhas were enlightened in mind, because the body knows
nothing. You can let it eat or not, it doesn't matter, it can die at any time.
The Buddhas all practiced with the mind. They were enlightened in mind.
The Buddha,
having contemplated his mind, gave up the two extremes of practice
indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain and in his first discourse
expounded the Middle Way between these two. But we hear his teaching and it
grates against our desires. We're infatuated with pleasure and comfort,
infatuated with happiness, thinking we are good, we are fine this is
indulgence in pleasure. It's not the right path. Dissatisfaction, displeasure,
dislike and anger this is indulgence in pain. These are the extreme ways
which one on the path of practice should avoid.
These "ways" are
simply the happiness and unhappiness which arise. The "one on the path" is
this very mind, the 'One who knows'. If a good mood arises we cling to it as
good, this is indulgence in pleasure. If an unpleasant mood arises we cling to
it through dislike- this is indulgence in pain. These are the wrong paths,
they aren't the ways of a meditator. They're the ways of the worldly, those
who look for fun and happiness and shun unpleasantness and suffering.
The wise know the
wrong paths but they relinquish them, they give them up. They are unmoved by
pleasure and displeasure, happiness and unhappiness. These things arise but
those who know don't cling to them, they let them go according to their
nature. This is right view. When one knows this fully there is liberation.
Happiness and unhappiness have no meaning for an Enlightened One.
The Buddha said
that the Enlightened Ones were far from defilements. This doesn't mean that
they ran away from defilements, they didn't run away anywhere. Defilements
were there. He compared it to a lotus leaf in a pond of water. The leaf and
the water exist together, they are in contact, but the leaf doesn't become
damp. The water is like defilements and the lotus leaf is the Enlightened
Mind.
The mind of one
who practices is the same; it doesn't run away anywhere, it stays right there.
Good, evil, happiness, and unhappiness, right and wrong arise, and he knows
them all. The meditator simply knows them, they don't enter his mind. That is,
he has no clinging. He is simply the experiencer. To say he simply experiences
is our common language. In the language of Dhamma we say he lets his mind
follow the Middle Way.
These activities
of happiness, unhappiness and so on are constantly arising because they are
characteristics of the world. The Buddha was enlightened in the world, he
contemplated the world. If he hadn't contemplated the world, if he hadn't seen
the world, he couldn't have risen above it. The Buddha's Enlightenment was
simply enlightenment of this very world. The world was still there: gain and
loss, praise and criticism, fame and disrepute, happiness and unhappiness were
still there. If there weren't these things there would be nothing to become
enlightened to! What he knew was just the world, that which surrounds the
hearts of people. If people follow these things, seeking praise and fame, gain
and happiness, and trying to avoid their opposites, they sink under the weight
of the world.
Gain and loss,
praise and criticism, fame and disrepute, happiness and unhappiness this is
the world. The person who is lost in the world has no path of escape, the
world overwhelms him. This world follows the Law of Dhamma so we call it
worldly dhamma. He who lives within the worldly dhamma is called a worldly
being. He lives surrounded by confusion.
Therefore the
Buddha taught us to develop the path. We can divide it up into morality,
concentration and wisdom develop them to completion! This is the path of
practice which destroys the world. Where is this world? It is just in the
minds of beings infatuated with it! The action of clinging to praise, gain,
fame, happiness and unhappiness is called "world." when it is there in the
mind, then the world arises, the worldly being is born. The world is born
because of desire. Desire is the birthplace of all worlds. To put an end to
desire is to put an end to the world.
Our practice of
morality, concentration and wisdom is otherwise called the Eightfold Path.
This Eightfold Path and the eight worldly dhammas are a pair. How is it that
they are a pair? If we speak according to the scriptures, we say that gain and
loss, praise and criticism, fame and disrepute, happiness and unhappiness are
the eight worldly dhammas. Right view, Right Intention, Right Speech, Right
Action, Right Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness and Right
Concentration, this is the Eightfold Path. These two eightfold ways exist in
the same place. The eight worldly dhammas are right here in this very mind,
with the 'One who knows' but this 'One who knows' has obstructions, so it
knows wrongly and thus becomes the world. It's just this one 'One who knows',
no other! The Buddha-nature has not yet arisen in this mind, it has not yet
extracted itself from the world. The mind like this is the world.
When we practice
the path, when we train our body and speech, it's all done in that very same
mind. It's the same place so they see each other; the path sees the world. If
we practice with this mind of ours we encounter this clinging to praise, fame,
pleasure and happiness, we see the attachment to the world.
The Buddha said,
"You should know the world. It dazzles like a king's royal carriage. Fools are
entranced, but the wise are not deceived." It's not that he wanted us to go
all over the world looking at everything, studying everything about it. He
simply wanted us to watch this mind which is attached to it. When the Buddha
told us to look at the world he didn't want us to get stuck in it, he wanted
us to investigate it, because the world is born just in this mind. sitting in
the shade of a tree you can look at the world. When there is desire the world
comes into being right there. Wanting is the birth place of the world. To
extinguish wanting is to extinguish the world.
When we sit in
meditation we want the mind to become peaceful, but it's not peaceful. Why is
this? We don't want to think but we think. It's like a person who goes to sit
on an ant's nest: the ants just keep on biting him. When the mind is the world
then even sitting still with our eyes closed, all we see is the world.
Pleasure, sorrow, anxiety, confusion it all arises. Why is this? It's
because we still haven't realized Dhamma. If the mind is like this the
meditator can't endure the worldly dhammas, he doesn't investigate. It's just
the same as if he were sitting on an ants' nest. The ants are going to bite
because he's right on their home! So what should he do? He should look for
some poison or use fire to drive them out.
But most Dhamma
practitioners don't see it like that. If they feel content they just follow
contentment, feeling discontent they just follow that. Following the worldly
dhammas the mind becomes the world. Sometimes we may think, "Oh, I can't do
it, it's beyond me...", so we don't even try! This is because the mind is full
of defilements, the worldly dhammas prevent the path from arising. We can't
endure in the development of morality, concentration and wisdom. It's just
like that man sitting on the ants' nest. He can't do anything, the ants are
biting and crawling all over him, he's immersed in confusion and agitation. He
can't rid his sitting place of the danger, so he just sits there, suffering.
So it is with our
practice. The worldly dhammas exist in the minds of worldly beings. When those
beings wish to find peace the worldly dhammas arise right there. When the mind
is ignorant there is only darkness. When knowledge arises the mind is
illumined, because ignorance and knowledge are born in the same place. When
ignorance has arisen, knowledge can't enter, because the mind has accepted
ignorance. When knowledge has arisen, ignorance cannot stay.
So the Buddha
exhorted his disciples to practice with the mind, because the world is born in
this mind, the eight worldly dhammas are there. The Eightfold Path, that is,
investigation through calm and insight meditation, our diligent effort and the
wisdom we develop, all these things loosen the grip of the world. Attachment,
aversion and delusion become lighter, and being lighter, we know them as such.
If we experience fame, material gain, praise, happiness or suffering we're
aware of it. We must know these things before we can transcend the world,
because the world is within us.
When we're free
of these things it's just like leaving a house. When we enter a house what
sort of feeling do we have? We feel that we've come through the door and
entered the house. When we leave the house we feel that we've left it, we come
into the bright sunlight, it's not dark like it was inside. The action of the
mind entering the worldly dhammas is like entering the house. The mind which
has destroyed the worldly dhammas is like one who has left the house.
So the Dhamma
practitioner must become one who witnesses the Dhamma for himself. He knows
for himself whether the worldly dhammas have left or not, whether or not the
path has been developed. When the path has been well developed it purges the
worldly dhammas. It becomes stronger and stronger. Right view grows as wrong
view decreases, until finally the path destroys defilements either that or
defilements will destroy the path!
Right view and
wrong view, there are only these two ways. Wrong view has its tricks as well,
you know, it has its wisdom but it's wisdom that's misguided. The meditator
who begins to develop the path experiences a separation. Eventually it's as if
he is two people one in the world and the other on the path. They divide,
they pull apart. Whenever he's investigating there's this separation, and it
continues on and on until the mind reaches insight, vipassana.
Or maybe it's
vipassanu!
15 Having tried to establish
wholesome results in our practice, seeing them, we attach to them. This type
of clinging comes from our wanting to get something from the practice. This is
vipassanu, the wisdom of defilements (i.e., "defiled wisdom"). Some
people develop goodness and cling to it, they develop purity and cling to
that, or they develop knowledge and cling to that. The action of clinging to
that goodness or knowledge is vipassanu, infiltrating our practice.
So when you
develop vipassana, be careful! Watch out for vipassanu, because
they're so close that sometimes you can't tell them apart. But with right view
we can see them both clearly. If it's
vipassanu there will be suffering arising at times as a result. If it's
really vipassana there's no suffering. There is peace. Both happiness
and unhappiness are silenced. This you can see for yourself.
This practice
requires endurance. Some people, when they come to practice, don't want to be
bothered by anything, they don't want friction. But there's friction the same
as before. We must try to find an end to friction through friction itself! So,
if there's friction in your practice, then it's right. If there's no friction
it's not right, you just eat and sleep as much as you want. When you want to
go anywhere or say anything you just follow your desires. The teaching of the
Buddha grates. The supermundane goes against the worldly. Right view opposes
wrong view, purity opposes impurity. The teaching grates against our desires.
There's a story
in the scriptures about the Buddha, before he was enlightened. At that time,
having received a plate of rice, he floated that plate on a stream of water,
determining in his mind, "If I am to be enlightened, may this plate float
against the current of the water." The plate floated upstream! That plate was
the Buddha's right view, or the Buddha-nature that he became awakened to. It
didn't follow the desires of ordinary beings. It floated against the flow of
his mind, it was contrary in every way.
These days, in
the same way, the Buddha's teaching is contrary to our hearts. People want to
indulge in greed and hatred but the Buddha won't let them. They want to be
deluded but the Buddha destroys delusion. So the mind of the Buddha is
contrary to that of worldly beings. The world calls the body beautiful, he
says it's not beautiful. They say the body belongs to us, he says not so. They
say it's substantial, he says it's not. Right view is above the world. Worldly
beings merely follow the flow of the stream.
Continuing on,
when the Buddha got up from there, he received eight handfuls of grass from a
brahman. The real meaning of this is that the eight handfuls of grass were the
right worldly dhammas gain and loss, praise and criticism, fame and
disrepute, happiness and unhappiness. The Buddha, having received this grass,
determined to sit on it and enter
samadhi. The action of sitting on the grass was itself samadhi,
that is, his mind was above the worldly dhammas, subduing the world until it
realized the transcendent. The worldly dhammas became like refuse for him,
they lost all meaning. He sat over them but they didn't obstruct his mind in
any way. The various maras came to try to overcome him, but he just sat there
in samadhi, subduing the world, until finally he became enlightened to
the Dhamma and completely defeated Mara.
16 That is, he defeated the
world. So the practice of developing the path is that which kills defilements.
People these days
have little faith. Having practiced a year or two they want to get there, and
they want to go fast. They don't consider that the Buddha, our Teacher, had
left home a full six years before he became enlightened. This is why we have
"freedom from dependence."
17
According to the scriptures, a monk must have at least five rains
18
before he is considered able to live on his own. By this time he has studied
and practiced sufficiently, he has adequate knowledge, he has faith, his
conduct is good. Someone who practices for five years, I say he's competent.
But he must really practice, not just "hang out" in the robes for five years.
He must really look after the practice, really do it!
Until you reach
five rains you may wonder, "What is this 'freedom from dependence' that the
Buddha talked about?" You must really try to practice for five years and then
you'll know for yourself the qualities he was referring to. After that time
you should be competent, competent in mind, one who is certain. At the very
least, after five rains, one should be at the first stage of enlightenment.
This is not just five rains in body but five rains in mind as well. That monk
has fear of blame, a sense of shame and modesty. He doesn't dare to do wrong
either in front of people or behind their backs, in the light or in the dark.
Why not? Because he has reached the Buddha, 'The One who knows'. He takes
refuge in the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha.
To depend truly
on the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha we must see the Buddha. What use
would it be to take refuge without knowing the Buddha? If we don't yet know
the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha, our taking refuge in them is just an
act of body and speech, the mind still hasn't reached them. Once the mind
reaches them we know what the Buddha, the Dhamma, and the Sangha are like.
Then we can really take refuge in them, because these things arise in our
minds. Wherever we are we will have the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha with
us.
One who is like
this doesn't dare to commit evil acts. This is why we say that one who has
reached the first stage of enlightenment will no longer be born in the woeful
states. His mind is certain, he has entered the Stream, there is no doubt for
him. If he doesn't reach full enlightenment today it will certainly be some
time in the future. He may do wrong but not enough to send him to Hell, that
is, he doesn't regress to evil bodily and verbal actions, he is incapable of
it. So we say that person has entered the Noble Birth. He cannot return. This
is something you should see and know for yourselves in this very life.
These days, those
of us who still have doubts about the practice hear these things and say, "Oh,
how can I do that?" Sometimes we feel happy, sometimes troubled, pleased or
displeased. For what reason? Because we don't know Dhamma. What Dhamma? Just
the Dhamma of Nature, the reality around us, the body and the mind.
The Buddha said,
"Don't cling to the five khandhas, let them go, give them up!" Why
can't we let them go? Just because we don't see them or know them fully. We
see them as ourselves, we see ourselves in the
khandhas. Happiness and suffering, we see as ourselves, we see
ourselves in happiness and suffering. We can't separate ourselves from them.
When we can't separate them it means we can't see Dhamma, we can't see Nature.
Happiness,
unhappiness, pleasure and sadness none of them is us but we take them to be
so. These things come into contact with us and we see a lump of 'atta', or
self. Wherever there is self there you will find happiness, unhappiness and
everything else. So the Buddha said to destroy this "lump" of self, that is to
destroy sakkaya ditthi. When atta (self) is destroyed, anatta
(non-self) naturally arises.
We take Nature to
be us and ourselves to be Nature, so we don't know Nature truly. If it's good
we laugh with it, if it's bad we cry over it. But Nature is simply sankharas.
As we say in the chanting, Tesam vupasamo sukho pacifying the
sankharas is real happiness. How do we pacify them? We simply remove
clinging and see them as they really are.
So there is truth
in this world. Trees, mountains and vines all live according to their own
truth, they are born and die following their nature. It's just we people who
aren't true! We see it and make a fuss over it, the Nature is impassive, it
just is as it is. We laugh, we cry, we kill, but Nature remains in truth, it
is truth. No matter how happy or sad we are, this body just follows its own
nature. It's born, it grows up and ages, changing and getting older all the
time. It follows Nature in this way. Whoever takes the body to be himself and
carries it around with him, will suffer.
So Aρρa Kondaρρa
recognized this "whatever is born" in everything, be it material or
immaterial. His view of the world changed. He saw the truth. Having got up
from his sitting place he took that truth with him. The activity of birth and
death continued but he simply looked on. Happiness and unhappiness were
arising and passing away but he merely noted them. His mind was constant. He
no longer fell into the woeful states. He didn't get over-pleased or unduly
upset about these things. His mind was firmly established in the activity of
contemplation.
There! Aρρa
Kondaρρa had received the Eye of Dhamma. He saw Nature, which we call
sankharas, according to truth. Wisdom is that which knows the truth of
sankharas. This is the mind which knows and sees Dhamma, which has
surrendered.
Until we have
seen the Dhamma we must have patience and restraint. We must endure, we must
renounce! We must cultivate diligence and endurance. Why must we cultivate
diligence? Because we're lazy! Why must we develop endurance? Because we don't
endure! That the way it is. But when we are already established in our
practice, have finished with laziness, then we don't need to use diligence. If
we already know the truth of all mental states, if we don't get happy or
unhappy over them, we don't need to exercise endurance, because the mind is
already Dhamma. The 'One who knows' has seen the Dhamma, he is the Dhamma.
When the mind is
Dhamma, it stops. It has attained peace. There's no longer a need to do
anything special, because the mind is Dhamma already. The outside is Dhamma,
the inside is Dhamma. The 'One who knows' is Dhamma. The state is Dhamma and
that which knows the state is Dhamma. It is one. It is free.
This Nature is
not born, it does not age nor sicken. This Nature does not die. This Nature is
neither happy nor sad, neither big nor small, heavy nor light; neither short
nor long, black nor white. There's nothing you can compare it to. No
convention can reach it. This is why we say
Nirvana has no color. All colors are merely conventions. The state
which is beyond the world is beyond the reach of worldly conventions.
So the Dhamma is
that which is beyond the world. It is that which each person should see for
himself. It is beyond language. You can't put it into words, you can only talk
about ways and means of realizing it. The person who has seen it for himself
has finished his work.
"...Regardless of time and place, the whole practice of Dhamma comes to
completion at the place where there is nothing. It's the place of surrender,
of emptiness, of laying down the burden..."
Convention and Liberation
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The things of
this world are merely conventions of our own making. Having established them
we get lost in them, and refuse to let go, giving rise to clinging to our
personal views and opinions. This clinging never ends, it is samsara,
flowing endlessly on. It has no completion. Now, if we know conventional
reality then we'll know Liberation. If we clearly know Liberation, then we'll
know convention. This is to know the Dhamma. Here there is completion.
Take people, for
instance. In reality people don't have any names, we are simply born naked
into the world. If we have names, they arise only through convention. I've
contemplated this and seen that is you don't know the truth of this convention
it can be really harmful. It's simply something we use for convenience.
Without it we couldn't communicate, there would be nothing to say, no
language.
I've seen the
Westerners when they sit in meditation together in the West. When they get up
after sitting, men and women together, sometimes they go and touch each other
on the head!
19 When I saw this I thought,
"Ehh, if we cling to convention it gives rise to defilements right there." If
we can let go of convention, give up our opinions, we are at peace.
Like the generals
and colonels, men of rank and position, who come to see me. When they come
they say, "Oh, please touch my head."
20 If
they ask like this there's nothing wrong with it, they're glad to have their
heads touched. But if you tapped their heads in the middle of the street it'd
be a different story! This is because of clinging. So I feel that letting go
is really the way of peace. Touching a head is against our customs, but in
reality it is nothing. When they agree to having it touched there's nothing
wrong with it, just like touching a cabbage or a potato.
Accepting, giving
up, letting go this is the way of lightness. Wherever you're clinging
there's becoming and birth right there. There's danger right there. The Buddha
taught about convention and he taught to undo convention in the right way, and
so reach Liberation. This is freedom, not to cling to conventions. All things
in this world have a conventional reality. Having established them we should
not be fooled by them, because getting lost in them really leads to suffering.
This point concerning rules and conventions is of utmost importance. One who
can get beyond them is beyond suffering.
However, they are
a characteristic of our world. Take Mr. Boonmah, for instance; he used to be
just one of the crowd but now he's been appointed the District Commissioner.
It's just a convention but it's a convention we should respect. It's part of
the world of people. If you think, "Oh, before we were friends, we used to
work at the tailor's together," and then you go and pat him on the head in
public, he'll get angry. It's not right, he'll resent it. So we should follow
the conventions in order to avoid giving rise to resentment. It's useful to
understand convention, living in the world is just about this. Know the right
time and place, know the person.
Why is it wrong
to go against conventions? It's wrong because of people! You should be clever,
knowing both convention and Liberations. Know the right time for each. If we
know how to use rules and conventions comfortably then we are skilled. But if
we try to behave according to the higher level of reality in the wrong
situation, this is wrong. Where is it wrong? It's wrong with people's
defilements, nothing else! People all have defilements. In one situation we
behave one way, in another situation we must behave in another way. We should
know the ins and outs because we live within conventions. Problems occur
because people cling to them. If we suppose something to be, then it is. It's
there because we suppose it to be there. But if you look closely, in the
absolute sense these things don't really exist.
As I have often
said, before we were laymen and now we are monks. We lived within the
convention of "layman" and now we live within the convention of "monk." We are
monks by convention, not monks through Liberation. In the beginning we
establish conventions like this, but if a person merely ordains, this doesn't
mean he overcomes defilements. If we take a handful of sand and agree to call
it salt, does this make it salt? It is salt, but only in name, not in reality.
You couldn't use it to cook with. It's only use is within the realm of that
agreement, because there's really no salt there, only sand. It becomes salt
only through our supposing it to be so.
This word
"Liberation" is itself just a convention, but it refers to that beyond
conventions. Having achieved freedom, having reached liberation, we still have
to use convention in order to refer to it as liberation. If we didn't have
convention we couldn't communicate, so it does have its use.
For example,
people have different names but they are all people just the same. If we
didn't have names to differentiate between them, and we wanted to call out to
somebody standing in a crowd, saying, "Hey, Person! Person!", that would be
useless. You couldn't say who would answer you because they're all "person."
But if you called, "Hey, John!", then John would come, the others wouldn't
answer. Names fulfill just this need. Through them we can communicate, they
provide the basis for social behavior.
So you should
know both convention and liberation. Conventions have a use, but in reality
there really isn't anything there. Even people are non-existent! They are
merely groups of elements, born of causal conditions, growing dependent on
conditions, existing for a while, or control it. But without conventions we
would have nothing to say, we'd have no names, no practice, no work. Rules and
conventions are established to give us a language, to make things convenient,
and that's all.
Take money, for
example. In olden times there weren't any coins or notes, they had no value.
People used to barter goods, but those things were difficult to keep, so they
created money using coins and notes. Perhaps in the future we'll have a new
king decree that we don't have to use paper money, we should use wax, melting
it down and pressing it into lumps. We say this is money and use it throughout
the country. Let alone wax, it may even happen that they decide to make
chicken dung the local currency all the other things can't be money, just
chicken dung! Then people would fight and kill each other over chicken dung!
This is the way it is. You could use many examples to illustrate convention.
What we use for money is simply a convention that we have set up, it has its
use within that convention. Having decreed it to be money, it becomes money.
But in reality, what is money? Nobody can say. When there is a popular
agreement about something, then a convention comes about to fulfill the need.
The world is just this.
This is
convention, but to get ordinary people to understand liberation is really
difficult. Our money, our house, our family, our children and relatives are
simply conventions that we have invented, but really, seen in the light of
Dhamma, they don't belong to us. Maybe if we hear this we don't feel so good,
but in reality is like that. These things have value only through the
established conventions. If we establish that it doesn't have value, then it
doesn't have value. This is the way it is, we bring convention into the world
to fulfill a need.
Even this body is
not really ours, we just suppose it to be so. It's truly just a supposition.
If you try to find a real, substantial self within it, you can't. There are
merely elements which are born, continue for a while and then die. Everything
is like this. There's no real, true substance to it, but it's proper that we
use it. It's a tool for your use. If it breaks there is trouble, so even
though it must break, you should try your utmost to preserve it. And so we
have the four supports
21 which the Buddha taught
again and again to contemplate. They are the supports on which a monk depends
to continue his practice. As long as you live you must depend on them, but you
should understand them. Don't cling to them, giving rise to craving in your
mind.
Convention and
liberation are related like this continually. Even though we use convention,
don't place your trust in it as being the truth. If you cling to it, suffering
will arise. The case of right and wrong is a good example. Some people see
wrong as being right and right as being wrong, but in the end who really knows
what is right and what is wrong? We don't know. Different people establish
different conventions about what's right and what's wrong, but the Buddha took
suffering as his guide-line. If you want to argue about it there's no end to
it. One says, "right," another says, "wrong." One says "wrong," another says
"right." In truth we don't really know right and wrong at all! But at a
useful, practical level, we can say that right is not to harm oneself and not
to harm others. This way fulfills a use.
So, after all,
both rules and conventions and liberation are simply dhammas. One is higher
than the other, but they go hand in hand. There is no way that we can
guarantee that anything is definitely like this or like that, so the Buddha
said to just leave it be. Leave it be as uncertain. However much you like it
or dislike it, you should understand it as uncertain.
Regardless of
time and place, the whole practice of Dhamma comes to completion at the place
where there is nothing. It's the place of surrender, of emptiness, of laying
down the burden. This is the finish. It's not like the person who says, "Why
is the flag fluttering in the wind? I say it's because of the wind." Another
person say's it's because of the flag. The other retorts that it's because of
the wind. There's no end to this! The same as the old riddle, "Which came
first, the chicken or the egg?" There's no way to reach a conclusion, this is
just Nature.
All these things
we say are merely conventions, we establish them ourselves. If you know these
things with wisdom then you'll know impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and
not-self. This is the outlook which leads to enlightenment.
You know,
training and teaching people with varying levels of understanding is really
difficult. Some people have certain ideas, you tell them something and they
don't believe you. You tell them the truth and they say it's not true. "I'm
right, you're wrong..." There's no end to this. If you don't let go there will
be suffering. I've told you before about the four men who go into the forest.
They hear a chicken crowing, "Kak-ka-dehhh!" One of them wonders, "Is that a
rooster or a hen?" Three of them say together, "It's a hen," but the other
doesn't agree, he insists it's a rooster. "How could a hen crow like that?" he
asks. They retort, "Well, it has a mouth, hasn't it?" They argue till the
tears fall, really getting upset over it, but in the end they're all wrong.
Whether you say a hen or a rooster, they're only names. We establish these
conventions, saying a rooster is like this, a hen is like that; a rooster
cries like this, a hen cries like that... and this is how we get stuck in the
world! Remember this! Actually, if you just say that really there's no hen and
no rooster then that's the end of it. In the field of conventional reality one
side is right and the other side it wrong, but there will never be complete
agreement. Arguing till the tears fall has no use!
The Buddha taught
not to cling. How do we practice non-clinging? We practice simply to give up
clinging, but this non-clinging is very difficult to understand. It takes keen
wisdom to investigate and penetrate this, to really achieve non-clinging. When
you think about it, whether people are happy or sad, content or discontent,
doesn't depend on their having little or having much it depends on wisdom.
All distress can be transcended only through wisdom, through seeing the truth
of things.
So the Buddha
exhorted us to investigate, to contemplate. This "contemplation" means simply
to try to solve these problems correctly. This is our practice. Like birth,
old age, sickness and death they are the most natural and common of
occurrences. The Buddha taught to contemplate birth, old age, sickness and
death, but some people don't understand this. "What is there to contemplate?"
they say. They're born but they don't know birth, they will die but they don't
know death.
A person who
investigates these things repeatedly will see. Having seen he will gradually
solve his problems. Even if he still has clinging, if he has wisdom and sees
that old age, sickness and death are the way of Nature, then he will be able
to relieve suffering. We study the Dhamma simply for this to cure suffering.
There isn't really much as the basis of Buddhism, there's just the birth and
death of suffering, and this the Buddha called the truth. Birth is suffering,
old age is suffering, sickness is suffering and death is suffering. People
don't see this suffering as the truth. If we know truth, then we know
suffering.
This pride in
personal opinions, these arguments, they have no end. In order to put our
minds at rest, to find peace, we should contemplate our past, the present, and
the things which are in store for us. Like birth, old age, sickness and death.
What can we do to avoid being plagued by these? Even though we may still have
a little worry, if we investigate till we know according to the truth, all
suffering will abate, we will no longer cling to it.
"...The worldly way is to do things for a reason, to get some return,
but in Buddhism we do things without any gaining idea.. If we don't want
anything at all, what will we get? We don't get anything! Whatever you get
is just a cause for suffering, so we practice not getting anything... Just
make the mind peaceful and have done with it!..."
No Abiding
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We hear some
parts of the teachings and can't really understand them. We think they
shouldn't be the way they are, so we don't follow them, but really there is a
reason to all the teachings. Maybe it seems that things shouldn't be that way,
but they are. At first I didn't even believe in sitting meditation. I couldn't
see what use it would be to just sit with your eyes closed. And walking
meditation... walk from this tree, turn around and walk back again... "Why
bother?" I thought, "What's the use of all that walking?" I thought like that,
but actually walking and sitting meditation are of great use.
Some people's
tendencies make them prefer walking meditation, others prefer sitting, but you
can't do without either of them. In the scriptures they talk about the four
postures: standing, walking, sitting and lying. We live with these four
postures. We may prefer one to the other, but we must use all four.
They say to make
these four postures even, to make the practice even in all postures. At first
I couldn't figure out what this meant, to make them even. Maybe it means we
sleep for two hours, then stand for two hours, then walk for two hours...
maybe that's it? I tried it couldn't do it, it was impossible! That's not
what it meant to make the postures even. "Making the postures even" refers to
the mind, to our awareness. That is, to make the mind give rise to wisdom, to
illumine the mind. This wisdom of ours must be present in all postures; we
must know, or understand, constantly. Standing, walking, sitting or lying, we
know all mental states as impermanent, unsatisfactory and not-self. Making the
postures even in this way can be done, it is possible. Whether like or dislike
are present in the mind we don't forget our practice, we are aware.
If we just focus
our attention on the mind constantly then we have the gist of the practice.
Whether we experience mental states which the world knows as good or bad we
don't forget ourselves, we don't get lost in good or bad. We just go straight.
Making the postures constant in this way is possible. If we have constancy in
our practice and we are praised, then it's simply praise; if we are blamed,
then it's just blame. We don't get high or low over it, we stay right here.
Why? Because we see the danger in all those things, we see their results. We
are constantly aware of the danger in both praise and blame. Normally, if we
have a good mood the mind is good also, we see them, as the same thing; if we
have a bad mood the mind goes bad as well, we don't like it. This is the way
it is, this is uneven practice.
If we have
constancy just to the extent of knowing our moods, and knowing we're clinging
to them, this is better already. That is, we have awareness, we know what's
going on, but we still can't let go. We see ourselves clinging to good and
bad, and we know it. We cling to good and know it's still not right practice,
but we still can't let go. This is 50% or 70% of the practice already. There
still isn't release but we know that if we could let go that would be the way
to peace. We keep going like that, seeing the equally harmful consequences of
all our likes and dislikes, of praise and blame, continuously. Whatever there
is, the mind is constant in this way.
But for worldly
people, if they get blamed or criticized they get really upset. If they get
praised it cheers them up, they say it's good and get really happy over it. If
we know the truth of our various moods, if we know the consequences of
clinging to praise and blame, the danger of clinging to anything at all, we
will become sensitive to our moods. We will know that clinging to them really
causes suffering. We see this suffering, and we see our very clinging as the
cause of that suffering. We begin to see the consequences of grabbing and
clinging to good and bad, because we've grasped them and seen the result
before no real happiness. So now we look for the way to let go.
Where is this
"way to let go"? In Buddhism we say "Don't cling to anything." We never stop
hearing about this "don't cling to anything!" This means to hold, but not to
cling. Like this flashlight. We think, "What is this?" So we pick it up, "Oh,
it's a flashlight," then we put it down again. We hold things in this way. If
we didn't hold anything at all, what could we do? We couldn't walk meditation
or do anything, so we must hold things first. It's wanting, yes, that's true,
but later on it leads to
parami (virtue or perfection). Like wanting to come here, for instance...
Venerable Jagaro
22 came to Wat Pah Pong. He had to want to come first. If he hadn't
felt that he wanted to come he wouldn't have come. For anybody it's the same,
they come here because of wanting. But when wanting arises don't cling to it!
So you come, and then you go back... What is this? We pick it up, look at it
and see, "Oh, it's a flashlight," then we put it down. This is called holding
but not clinging, we let go. We know and then we let go. To put it simply we
say just this, "Know, then let go." Keep looking and letting go. "This, they
say is good; this, they say is not good"... know, and then let go. Good and
bad, we know it all, but we let it go. We don't foolishly cling to things, but
we "hold" them with wisdom. Practicing in this "posture" can be constant. You
must be constant like this. Make the mind know in this way, let wisdom arise.
When the mind has wisdom, what else is there to look for?
We should reflect
on what we are doing here. For what reason are we living here, what are we
working for? In the world they work for this or that reward, but the monks
teach something a little deeper than that. Whatever we do, we ask for no
return. We work for no rewards. Worldly people work because they want this or
that, because they want some gain or other, but the Buddha taught to work just
in order to work, we don't ask for anything beyond that. If you do something
just to get some return it'll cause suffering. Try it out for yourself! You
want to make your mind peaceful so you sit down and try to make it peaceful
you'll suffer! Try it. Our way is more refined. We do, and then let go; do,
and then let go.
Look at the
brahman who makes a sacrifice: he has some desire in mind, so he makes a
sacrifice. Those actions of his won't help him transcend suffering because
he's acting on desire. In the beginning we practice with some desire in mind;
we practice on and on, but we don't attain our desire. So we practice until we
reach a point where we're practicing for no return, we're practicing in order
to let go. This is something we must see for ourselves, it's very deep. Maybe
we practice because we want to go to
Nirvana right there, you won't get to Nirvana! It's natural to
want peace, but it's not really correct. We must practice without wanting
anything at all. If we don't want anything at all, what will we get? We don't
get anything! Whatever you get is just a cause for suffering, so we practice
not getting anything.
Just this is
called "making the mind empty." It's empty but there is still doing. This
emptiness is something people don't usually understand, but those who reach it
see the value of knowing it. It's not the emptiness of not having anything,
it's emptiness within the things that are here. Like this flashlight: we
should see this flashlight as empty, because of the flashlight there is
emptiness. It's not the emptiness where we can't see anything, it's not like
that. People who understand like that have got it all wrong. You must
understand emptiness within the things are here.
Those who are
still practicing because of some gaining idea are like the brahman who makes a
sacrifice just to fulfill some wish. Like the people who come to see me to be
sprinkled with "holy water." When I ask them, "Why do you want this 'holy
water'?" they say, "We want to live happily and comfortably and not get sick."
There! They'll never transcend suffering that way. The worldly way is to do
things for a reason, to get some return, but in Buddhism we do things without
any gaining idea. The world has to understand things in terms of cause and
effect, but the Buddha teaches us to go above cause, beyond effect; to go
above birth and beyond death; to go above happiness and beyond suffering.
Think about it... there's nowhere to stay. We people live in a "home." To
leave home and go where there is no home... we don't know how to do it,
because we've always lived with becoming, with clinging. If we can't cling we
don't know what to do.
So most people
don't want to go to Nirvana, there's nothing there; nothing at all.
Look at the roof and the floor here. The upper extreme is the roof, that's an
"abiding." The lower extreme is the floor, and that's another "abiding." But
in the empty space between the floor and the roof there's nowhere stand. One
could stand on the roof, or stand on the floor, but not on that empty space.
Where there is no abiding, that's where there's emptiness, and, to put it
bluntly, we say that Nirvana is this emptiness. People hear this and
they back up a bit, they don't want to go. They're afraid they won't see their
children or relatives.
This is why, when
we bless the laypeople, we say "May you have long life, beauty, happiness and
strength." This makes them really happy,
"Sadhu!"
23 they all say. They like these things. If you start talking about
emptiness they don't want it, they're attached to abiding. But have you ever
seen a very old person with a beautiful complexion? Have you ever seen an old
person with a lot of strength, or a lot of happiness?... No... But we say,
"Long life, beauty, happiness and strength" and they're all really pleased,
every single one says "Sadhu!" This is like the brahman who makes
oblations to achieve some wish. In our practice we don't "make oblations," we
don't practice in order to get some return. We don't want anything. If we
still want something then there is still something there. Just make the mind
peaceful and have done with it! But if I talk like this you may not be very
comfortable, because you want to be "born" again.
So all you lay
practitioners should get close to the monks and see their practice. To be
close to the monks means to be close to the Buddha, to be close to his Dhamma.
The Buddha said, "Ananda, practice a lot, develop your practice! Whoever sees
the Dhamma sees me, and whoever sees me sees the Dhamma." Where is the Buddha?
We may think the Buddha has been and gone, but the Buddha is the Dhamma, the
Truth. Some people like to say, "Oh, if I was born in the time the Buddha I
would go to Nirvana." Here, stupid people talk like this. The Buddha is
still here. The Buddha is truth. Regardless of whoever is born or dies, the
truth is still here. The truth never departs from the world, it's there all
the time. Whether a Buddha is born or not, whether someone knows it or not,
the truth is still there. So we should get close to the Buddha, we should come
within and find the Dhamma. When we reach the Dhamma we will reach the Buddha;
seeing the Dhamma we will see the Buddha and all doubts will dissolve.
To put it simply,
it's like Teacher Choo.
24 At
first he wasn't a teacher, he was just Mr. Choo. When he studied and passed
the necessary grades he became a teacher, and became known as Teacher Choo.
How did he become a teacher? Through studying the required things, thus
allowing Mr. Choo to become Teacher Choo. When Teacher Choo dies, the study to
become a teacher still remains, and whoever studies it will become a teacher.
That course of study to become a teacher doesn't disappear anywhere, just like
the Truth, the knowing of which enabled the Buddha to become the Buddha. So
the Buddha is still here. Whoever practices and sees the Dhamma sees the
Buddha. These days people have got it all wrong, they don't know where the
Buddha is. They say, "If I was born in the time of the Buddha I would have
become a disciple of his and become enlightened." That's just foolishness. You
should understand this.
Don't go thinking
that at the end of the rains retreat you'll disrobe. Don't think like that! In
an instant an evil thought can arise in the mind, you could kill somebody. In
the same way, it only takes a split-second for good to flash into the mind,
and you're there already. Don't think that you have to ordain for a long time
to be able to meditate. Where the right practice lies is in the instant we
make kamma. In a flash an evil thought arises... before you know it you've
committed some really heavy kamma. And in the same way, all the disciples of
the Buddha practiced for a long time, but the time they attained enlightenment
was merely one thought moment. So don't be heedless, even in minor things. Try
hard, try to get close to the monks, contemplate things and then you'll know
about monks. Well, that's enough, huh? It must be getting late now, some
people are getting sleepy. The Buddha said not to teach Dhamma to sleepy
people.
"...Our discontent is due to wrong view. Because we don't exercise sense
restraint we blame our suffering on externals... The right abiding place for
monks, the place of coolness, is just Right View itself. We shouldn't look
for anything else..."
Right View The Place of Coolness
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The practice of
Dhamma goes against our habits, the truth goes against our desires, so there
is difficulty in the practice. Some things which we understand as wrong may be
right, while the things we take to be right may be wrong. Why is this? Because
our minds are in darkness, we don't clearly see the Truth. We don't really
know anything and so are fooled by people's lies. They point out what is right
as being wrong and we believe it; that which is wrong, they say is right, and
we believe that. This is because we are not yet our own masters. Our moods lie
to us constantly. We shouldn't take this mind and its opinions as our guide,
because it doesn't know the truth.
Some people don't
want to listen to others at all, but this is not the way of a man of wisdom. A
wise man listens to everything. One who listens to Dhamma must listen just the
same, whether he likes it or not, and not blindly believe or disbelieve. He
must stay at the half-way mark, the middle point, and not be heedless. He just
listens and then contemplates, giving rise to the right results accordingly.
A wise man should
contemplate and see the cause and effect for himself before he believes what
he hears. Even if the teacher speaks the truth, don't just believe it, because
you don't yet know the truth of it for yourself.
It's the same for
all of us, including myself. I've practiced before you, I've seen many lies
before. For instance, "This practice is really difficult, really hard." Why is
the practice difficult? It's just because we think wrongly, we have wrong
view.
Previously I
lived together with other monks, but I didn't feel right. I ran away to the
forests and mountains, fleeing the crowd, the monks and novices. I thought
that they weren't like me, they didn't practice as hard as I did. They were
sloppy. That person was like this, this person was like that. This was
something that really put me in turmoil, it was the cause for my continually
running away. But whether I lived alone or with others I still had no peace.
On my own I wasn't content, in a large group I wasn't content. I thought this
discontent was due to my companions, due to my moods, due to my living place,
the food, the weather, due to this and that. I was constantly searching for
something to suit my mind.
As a dhutanga
25 monk, I went traveling,
but things still weren't right. So I contemplated, "What can I do to make
things right? What can I do?" Living with a lot of people I was dissatisfied,
with few people I was dissatisfied. For what reason? I just couldn't see it.
Why was I dissatisfied? Because I had wrong view, just that; because I still
clung to the wrong Dhamma. Wherever I went I was discontent, thinking, "Here
is no good, there is no good..." on and on like that. I blamed others. I
blamed the weather, heat and cold, I blamed everything! Just like a mad dog.
It bites whatever it meets, because it's mad. When the mind is like this our
practice is never settled. Today we feel good, tomorrow no good. It's like
that all the time. We don't attain contentment or peace.
The Buddha once
saw a jackal, a wild dog, run out of the forest where he was staying. It stood
still for a while, then it ran into the underbrush, and them out again. Then
it ran into a tree hollow, then out again. Then it went into a cave, only to
run out again. One minute it stood, the next it ran, then it lay down, then it
jumped up... That jackal had mange. When it stood the mange would eat into its
skin, so it would run. Running it was still uncomfortable, so it would lie
down. Then it would jump up again, running into the underbrush, the tree
hollow, never staying still.
The Buddha said,
"Monks, did you see that jackal this afternoon? Standing it suffered, running
it suffered, sitting it suffered, lying down it suffered. In the underbrush, a
tree hollow or a cave, it suffered. It blamed standing for its discomfort, it
blamed sitting, it blamed running and lying down; it blamed the tree, the
underbrush and the cave. In fact the problem was with none of those things.
That jackal had mange. The problem was with the mange."
We monks are just
the same as that jackal. Our discontent is due to wrong view. Because we don't
exercise sense restraint we blame our suffering on externals. Whether we live
at Wat Pah Pong, in America or in London we aren't satisfied. Going to live at
Bung Wai or any of the other branch monasteries we're still not satisfied. Why
not? Because we still have wrong view within us, just that! Wherever we go we
aren't content.
But just as that
dog, if the mange is cured, is content wherever it goes, so it is for us. I
reflect on this often, and I teach you this often, because it's very
important. If we know the truth of our various moods we arrive at contentment.
Whether it's hot or cold we are satisfied, with many people or with few people
we are satisfied. Contentment doesn't depend on how many people we are with,
it comes only from right view. If we have right view then wherever we stay we
are content.
But most of us
have wrong view. It's just like a maggot! A maggot's living place is filthy,
its food is filthy... but they suit the maggot. If you take a stick and brush
it away from its lump of dung, it'll struggle to crawl back into it. It's the
same when the Ajahn teaches us to see rightly. We resist, it makes us feel
uneasy. We run back to our "lump of dung" because that's where we feel at
home. We're all like this. If we don't see the harmful consequences of all our
wrong views then we can't leave them, the practice is difficult. So we should
listen. There's nothing else to the practice.
If we have right
view wherever we go we are content. I have practiced and seen this already.
These days there are many monks, novices and laypeople coming to see me. If I
still didn't know, if I still had wrong view, I'd be dead by now! The right
abiding place for monks, the place of coolness, is just right view itself. We
shouldn't look for anything else.
So even though
you may be unhappy it doesn't matter, that unhappiness is uncertain. Is that
unhappiness your "self"? Is there any substance to it? Is it real? I don't see
it as being real at all. Unhappiness is merely a flash of feeling which
appears and then is gone. Happiness is the same. Is there a consistency to
happiness? Is it truly an entity? It's simply a feeling that flashes suddenly
and is gone. There! It's born and then it dies. Love just flashes up for a
moment and then disappears. Where is the consistency in love, or hate, or
resentment? In truth there is no substantial entity there, they are merely
impressions which flare up in the mind and then die. They deceive us
constantly, we find no certainty anywhere. Just as the Buddha said, when
unhappiness arises it stays for a while, then disappears. When unhappiness
disappears, happiness arises and lingers for a while and then dies. When
happiness disappears, unhappiness arises again... on and on like this.
In the end we can
say only this apart from the birth, the life and the death of suffering,
there is nothing. There is just this. But we who are ignorant run and grab it
constantly. We never see the truth of it, that there's simply this continual
change. If we understand this then we don't need to think very much, but we
have much wisdom. If we don't know it, then we will have more thinking than
wisdom and maybe no wisdom at all! It's not until we truly see the harmful
results of our actions that we can give them up. Likewise, it's not until we
see the real benefits of practice that we can follow it, and begin working to
make the mind "good."
If we cut a log
of wood and throw it into the river, and that log doesn't sink or rot, or run
aground on either of the banks of the river, that log will definitely reach
the sea. Our practice is comparable to this. If you practice according to the
path laid down by the Buddha, following it straightly, you will transcend two
things. What two things? Just those two extremes that the Buddha said were not
the path of a true meditator indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain.
These are the two banks of the river. One of the banks of that river is hate,
the other is love. Or you can say that one bank is happiness, the other
unhappiness. The "log" is this mind. As it "flows down the river" it will
experience happiness and unhappiness. If the mind doesn't cling to that
happiness or unhappiness it will reach the "ocean" of Nirvana. You
should see that there is nothing other than happiness and unhappiness arising
and disappearing. If you don't "run aground" on these things then you are on
the path of a true meditator.
This is the
teaching of the Buddha. Happiness, unhappiness, love and hate are simply
established in Nature according to the constant law of nature. The wise person
doesn't follow or encourage them, he doesn't cling to them. This is the mind
which lets go of indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain. It is the
right practice. Just as that log of wood will eventually flow to the sea, so
will the mind which doesn't attach to these two extremes inevitably attain
peace.
Epilogue
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...Do you know
where it will end? Or will you just keep on learning like this?... Or is there
an end to it?... That's okay but it's the external study, not the internal
study. For the internal study you have to study these eyes, these ears, this
nose, this tongue, this body and this mind. This is the real study. The study
of books is just the external study, it's really hard to get it finished.
When the eye sees
form what sort of things happens? When ear, nose, and tongue experience
sounds, smells and tastes, what takes place? When the body and mind come into
contact with touches and mental states, what reactions take place? Are there
still greed, aversion and delusion there? Do we get lost in forms, sounds,
smells, tastes, textures and moods? This is the internal study. It has a point
of completion.
If we study but
don't practice we won't get any results. It's like a person who raises cows.
In the morning he takes the cow out to eat grass, in the evening he brings it
back to its pen but he never drinks the cow's milk. Study is alright, but
don't let it be like this. You should raise the cow and drink it's milk too.
You must study and practice as well to get the best results.
Here, I'll
explain it further. It's like a person who raises chickens, but he doesn't get
the eggs. All he gets is the chicken dung! This is what I tell people who
raise chickens back home! Watch out you don't become like that! This means we
study the scriptures but we don't know how to let go of defilements, we don't
know how to "push" greed, aversion and delusion from our mind. Study without
practice, without this "giving up," brings no results. This is why I compare
it to someone who raises chickens but doesn't collect the eggs, he just
collects the dung. It's the same thing.
Because of this,
the Buddha wanted us to study the scriptures, and then to give up evil actions
through body, speech and mind; to develop goodness in our deeds, speech and
thoughts. The real worth of mankind will come to fruition through our deeds,
speech and thoughts. But if we only talk well, without acting accordingly,
it's not yet complete. Or if we do good deeds but the mind is still not good,
this is still not complete. The Buddha taught to develop fine deeds, fine
speech and fine thoughts. This is the treasure of mankind. The study and the
practice must both be good.
The Eightfold
Path of the Buddha, the path of practice, has eight factors. These eight
factors are nothing other than this very body: two eyes, two ears, two
nostrils, one tongue and one body. This is the path. And the mind is the one
who follows the path. Therefore both the study and the practice exist in our
body, speech and mind.
Have you ever
seen scriptures which teach about anything other than the body, the speech and
the mind? The scriptures only teach about this; nothing else. Defilements are
born here. If you know them they die right here. So you should understand that
the practice and the study both exist right here. If we study just this much
we can know everything. It's like our speech: to speak one word of Truth is
better than a lifetime of wrong speech. Do you understand? One who studies and
doesn't practice is like a ladle of soup pot. It's in the pot every day but it
doesn't know the flavor of the soup. If you don't practice, even if you study
till the day you die, you won't know the taste of Freedom!
About the Author
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Venerable Ajahn
Chah (Pra Bhodinyana Thera) was born into a typical farming family in Bahn Gor
village, in the province of Ubol Rachathani, N.E. Thailand, in 1917. He lived
the first part of his life as any other youngster in rural Thailand, and,
following the custom, took ordination as a novice in the local village Wat for
a number of years, where he learned to read and write, in addition to some
basic Buddhist teachings. After a number of years he returned to the lay life
to help his parents, but, feeling an attraction to the monastic life, at the
age of twenty he again entered a Wat, this time for higher ordination as a
bhikkhu, or Buddhist monk.
He spent the
first few years of his bhikkhu life studying scriptures and learning
Pali, but the death of his father awakened him to the transience of life and
instilled in him a desire to find the real essence of the Buddha's teaching.
He began to travel to other monasteries, studying the monastic discipline in
detail and spending a very brief but significant time with Venerable Ajahn Mun,
the most outstanding meditation Master of the ascetic, forest-dwelling
tradition. Following his time with Venerable Ajahn Mun, he spent a number of
years traveling around Thailand, spending his time in forests and charnel
grounds, ideal places for developing meditation practice.
At length he came
within the vicinity of the village of his birth, and when word got around that
he was in the area, he was invited to set up a monastery at the Pa Pong
forest, a place at that time reputed to be the habitat of wild animals and
ghosts. Venerable Ajahn Chah's impeccable approach to meditation, or Dhamma
practice, and his simple, direct style of teaching, with the emphasis on
practical application and a balanced attitude, began to attract a large
following of monks and laypeople.
In 1966 the first
westerner came to stay at Wat Pa Pong, Venerable Sumedho Bhikkhu. From that
time on, the number of foreign people who came to Ajahn Chah began to steadily
increase, until in 1975, the first branch monastery for western and other
non-Thai nationals, Wat Pa Nanachat, was set up with Venerable Ajahn Sumedho
as the abbot.
In 1976 Venerable
Ajahn Chah was invited to England together with Ajahn Sumedho, the outcome of
which was eventually the establishment of the first branch monastery of Wat Pa
Pong outside of Thailand. Since then, further branch monasteries have been
established in England, Switzerland, Australia, New Zealand and Italy.
In 1980 Venerable
Ajahn Chah began to feel more acutely the symptoms of dizziness and memory
lapse which he had been feeling for some years. This led to an operation in
1981, which, however, failed to reverse the onset of the paralysis which
eventually rendered him completely bedridden and unable to speak. However this
did not stop the growth of monks and laypeople who came to practice at his
monastery, for whom the teachings of Ajahn Chah are a constant guide and
inspiration.
Notes
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1. Samadhi is the state of concentrated calm resulting from
meditation practice.
2. Jhana is an advanced state of concentration or samadhi,
wherein the mind becomes absorbed into its meditation subject. It is divided
into four levels, each level progressively more refined than the previous one.
3. That is, at all times, in all activities.
4. This is a "shame" based on knowledge of cause and effect, rather
than mere emotional guilt.
5. "Outer activity" refers to all manner of sense impressions. It is
used in contrast to the "inner activity" of absorption samadhi (jhana),
where the mind does not "go out" to external sense impressions.
6. Samsara, the wheel of Birth of Death, is the world of all
conditioned phenomena, mental and material, which has the three-fold
characteristic of Impermanence, Unsatisfactoriness, and Not-self.
7. See
Introduction.
8. In the Thai language the word "sungkahn," from the Pali word
sankhara (the name given to all conditioned phenomena), is a commonly used
term for the body. The Venerable Ajahn uses the word in both ways.
9. Paticcasamuppada The Chain of Conditioned Arising, one of
the central doctrines of Buddhist philosophy.
10. Feeling is a translation of the Pali word vedana, and
should be understood in the sense Ajahn Chah herein describes it: as the
mental states of like, dislike, gladness, sorrow, etc.
11. Defilements, or
kilesa, are the habits born of ignorance which infest the minds of all
unenlightened beings.
12. Khandhas. They are the five "groups" which go to make up
what we call "a person."
13. Nature here refers to all things, mental and physical, not just
trees, animals, etc.
14. Silabbata paramasa is traditionally translated as
attachment to rites and rituals. Here the Venerable Ajahn relates it, along
with doubt, specifically to the body. These three things, sakkayaditthi,
vicikiccha, and silabbata paramasa, are, in the scriptures, the
first three of the ten "fetters," which are given up on the first glimpse of
Enlightenment, known as "stream-entry." At full Enlightenment all ten fetters
are transcended.
15. I.e.,
vipassanupakkilesa the subtle defilements arising from meditation
practice.
16. Mara (the Tempter), the Buddhist personification of evil. To the
meditator it is all that obstructs the quest for enlightenment.
17. "Freedom from dependence," that is, he lives under the guidance of
a senior monk, for the first five years.
18. "Rains" refers to the yearly three-month rains retreat by which
monks count their age. Thus, a monk of five rains has been ordained for five
years.
19. The head is regarded as sacred in Thailand, and to touch a
person's head is considered an insult. Also, according to tradition, men and
women do not touch each other in public. On the other hand, sitting in
meditation is regarded as a "holy" activity. Perhaps here the Venerable Ajahn
was using an example of Western behavior which particularly shock a Thai
audience.
20. It is considered auspicious in Thailand to have one's head touched
by a highly esteemed monk.
21. The four supports robes, alms-food, lodgings, and medicines.
22. Venerable Jagaro, the Australian abbot of Wat Pah Nanachat at that
time, who brought his party of monks and laypeople to see Ajahn Chah.
23. Sadhu is the traditional Pali word used to acknowledge a
blessing, dhamma teaching, etc. It means "it is well."
24. In Thailand the word "Teacher" is used as a title of address much
like "Doctor" is used in English. "Teacher Choo" is one of four elderly local
residents who came to spend the rains retreat at Wat Pah Nanachat, to whom the
latter part of this talk was addressed.
25. Dhutanga properly means "ascetic." A Dhutanga monk is one
who keeps some of the thirteen ascetic practices allowed by the Buddha.
Dhutanga monks traditionally spend time traveling (often on foot) in search of
quiet places for meditation, other teachers, or simply as a practice in
itself.
Source :
http://www.accesstoinsight.org
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