A Collection of Dhamma Talks by
The Venerable Ajahn Chah
(Phra Bodhinyana Thera)
Copyright © 1982 The Sangha, Bung Wai Forest Monastery
For free distribution only.
Any reproduction, in whole or part, in any form,
for sale, profit or material gain, is prohibited.
However, copies of this book, or permission to reprint
for free distribution, may be obtained upon notification.
The Abbot
Wat Pah Nanachat
Ampher Warin
Ubon Rajathani
Thailand
Printed for free distribution through the generosity of the devoted
Buddhists of Thailand. Fourth impression 1982. This electronic edition was
transcribed from the print edition in January, 1997 by W.D. Savage with the kind
permission of the copyright holder.
The blessing of this Dharma gift is offered in memory of Mrs. Beatrice
Saslav.
Preface to the Third Edition
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This third edition of "Bodhinyana" is an adaptation of the second edition
printed by the World Fellowship of Buddhists as "The Practice of Buddhism." For
this new edition we have retained only Ajahn Chah's teachings, thus this is
essentially a compilation of the original "Bodhinyana" and a pamphlet called
"Fragments of a Teaching and Notes from a Session of Questions and Answers."
This pamphlet was first printed many years ago and has proved to be a very
popular and helpful guide for many meditators. Thus by compiling this new
edition we hope our efforts will be of increased benefit.
As regards the translations, we have tried to be as exact as possible with
the content of the Teachings but have omitted much of the repetition inevitably
arising in oral instruction. Pali words absorbed into the Thai language have, in
the course of time, acquired additional meanings: e.g. the Thai "arome" refers
to the Pali "Arammana" -- sense object or mental impression, but its common
meaning is "mood" or "emotion." The Venerable Ajahn uses these words in both
ways and we have translated accordingly. Finding the middle way between a dull,
over-literal approach and a more flowing, but less precise rendering hasn't
always been easy. Each of the various translators has compromised in different
ways. Hopefully we have managed to bring out both the clear simplicity, the
directness and the humour of these talks on the one hand, and at the same time,
the profundity that underlies and inspires them.
The translators would like to apologize for any passages which remain
unclear, or for clumsiness of style. We trust that this material will provide
nourishing contemplation for the growing number of meditators.
May all beings be free from Suffering.
The Sangha,
Bung Wai Forest Monastery.
Ajaan Chah
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Ajahn Chah was born into a large and comfortable family in a rural village in
Northeast Thailand. He ordained as a novice in early youth and on reaching the
age of twenty took higher ordination as a monk. As a young monk he studied some
basic Dhamma, Discipline and scriptures. Later he practiced meditation under the
guidance of several of the local Meditation Masters in the Ascetic Forest
Tradition. He wandered for a number of years in the style of an ascetic monk,
sleeping in forests, caves and cremation grounds, and spent a short but
enlightening period with Ajahn Mun, one of the most famous and respected Thai
Meditation Masters of this century.
After many years of travel and practice, he was invited to settle in a thick
forest grove near the village of his birth. This grove was uninhabited, known as
a place of cobras, tigers and ghosts, thus being as he said, the perfect
location for a forest monk. Around Ajahn Chah a large monastery formed as more
and more monks, nuns and lay-people came to hear his teachings and stay on to
practice with him. Now there are disciples teaching more than forty mountain and
forest branch temples throughout Thailand and in England.
On entering Wat Pah Pong one is likely to encounter monks drawing water from
a well, and a sign on the path that says: "You there, be quiet! We're trying to
meditate." Although there is group meditation twice a day and sometimes a talk
by Ajahn Chah, the heart of the meditation is the way of life. Monks do manual
work, dye and sew their own robes, make most of their own requisites and keep
the monastery buildings and grounds in immaculate shape. Monks here live
extremely simply following the ascetic precepts of eating once a day from the
almsbowl and limiting their possessions and robes. Scattered throughout the
forest are individual huts where monks live and meditate in solitude, and where
they practice walking meditation on cleared paths under the trees.
Discipline is extremely strict enabling one to lead a simple and pure life in
a harmoniously regulated community where virtue, meditation and understanding
may be skillfully and continuously cultivated.
Ajahn Chah's simple yet profound style of teaching has a special appeal to
Westerners, and many have come to study and practice with him, quite a few for
many years. In 1975 Wat Pa Nanachat was established near Wat Pah Pong as a
special training monastery for the growing numbers of Westerners interested in
undertaking monastic training. Since then Ajahn Chah's large following of senior
Western disciples has begun the work of spreading the Dhamma to the West. Ajahn
Chah has himself travelled twice to Europe and North America, and has
established a thriving branch monastery in Sussex, England.
Wisdom is a way of living and being, and Ajahn Chah has endeavoured to
preserve the simple life-style of the monks order that people may study and
practice the Dhamma in the present day.
Ajahn Chah's wonderfully simple style of teaching can be deceptive. It is
often only after we have heard something many times that suddenly our minds are
ripe and somehow the Teaching takes on a much deeper meaning. His skillful means
in tailoring his explanations of Dhamma to time and place, and to the
understanding and sensitivity of his audience, is marvelous to see. Sometimes on
paper though, it can make him seem inconsistent or even self-contradictory! At
such times the reader should remember that these words are a record of a living
experience. Similarly, if the Teachings may seem to vary at times from
tradition, it should be borne in mind that the Venerable Ajahn speaks always
from the heart, from the depths of his own meditative experience.
Namo Tassa Bhagavato Arahato Samma-Sambuddhassa
Fragments of a Teaching
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All of you have believed in Buddhism for many years now through hearing about
the Buddhist Teachings from many sources -- especially from various monks and
teachers. In some cases Dhamma is taught in very broad and vague terms to the
point where it is difficult to know how to put it into practice in daily life.
In other instances Dhamma is taught in high language or special jargon to the
point where most people find it difficult to understand, especially if the
teaching is done too literally from scripture. Lastly there is Dhamma taught in
a balanced way, neither too vague nor too profound, neither too broad nor too
esoteric -- just right for the listener to understand and practice to personally
benefit from the Teachings. Today I would like share with you Teachings of the
sort I have often used to instruct my disciples in the past; Teachings which I
hope may possibly be of personal benefit to those of you here listening today.
One who wishes to reach the Buddha-Dhamma
One who wishes to reach the Buddha-Dhamma must firstly be one who has faith
or confidence as a foundation. He must understand the meaning of Buddha-Dhamma
as follows:
Buddha: the One-Who-Knows, the one who has purity, radiance and
peace in his heart.
Dhamma: the characteristics of purity, radiance and peace which
arise from morality, concentration and wisdom.
Therefore, one who is to reach the Buddha-Dhamma is one who cultivates and
develops morality, concentration and wisdom within himself.
Walking the Path of Buddha-Dhamma
Naturally people who wish to reach their home are not those who merely sit
and think of travelling. They must actually undertake the process of travelling
step by step, and in the right direction as well, in order to finally reach
home. If they take the wrong path they may eventually run into difficulties such
as swamps or other obstacles which are hard to get around. Or they may run into
dangerous situations in this wrong direction, thereby possibly never reaching
home.
Those who reach home can relax and sleep comfortably -- home is a place of
comfort for body and mind. Now they have really reached home. But if the
traveller only passed by the front of his home or only walked around it, he
would not receive any benefit from having travelled all the way home.
In the same way, walking the path to reach the Buddha-Dhamma is something
each one of us must do individually ourselves, for no one can do it for us. And
we must travel along the proper path of morality, concentration and wisdom until
we find the blessings of purity, radiance and peacefulness of mind that are the
fruits of travelling the path. However, if one only has knowledge of books and
scriptures, sermons and sutras, that is, only knowledge of the map or plans for
the journey, even in hundreds of lives one will never know purity, radiance and
peacefulness of mind. Instead one will just waste time and never get to the real
benefits of practice. Teachers are those who only point out the direction of the
Path. After listening to the teachers, whether or not we walk the Path by
practicing ourselves, and thereby reap the fruits of practice, is strictly up to
each one of us.
Another way to look at it is to compare practice to a bottle of medicine a
doctor leaves for his patient. On the bottle is written detailed instructions on
how to take the medicine, but no matter how many hundred times the patient reads
the directions, he is bound to die if that is all he does. He will gain no
benefit from the medicine. And before he dies he may complain bitterly that the
doctor wasn't any good, that the medicine didn't cure him! He will think that
the doctor was a fake or that the medicine was worthless, yet he has only spent
his time examining the bottle and reading the instructions. He hasn't followed
the advice of the doctor and taken the medicine.
However, if the patient actually follows the doctor's advice and takes the
medicine regularly as prescribed, he will recover. And if he is very ill, it
will be necessary to take a lot of medicine, whereas if he is only mildly ill,
only a little medicine will be needed to finally cure him. The fact that we must
use a lot of medicine is a result of the severity of our illness. It's only
natural and you can see it for yourself with careful consideration.
Doctors prescribe medicine to eliminate disease from the body. The Teachings
of the Buddha are prescribed to cure disease of the mind, to bring it back to
its natural healthy state. So the Buddha can be considered to be a doctor who
prescribes cures for the ills of the mind. He is, in fact, the greatest doctor
in the world.
Mental ills are found in each one of us without exception. When you see these
mental ills, does it not make sense to look to the Dhamma as support, as
medicine to cure your ills? Travelling the path of the Buddha-Dhamma is not done
with the body. You must travel with the mind to reach the benefits. We can
divide these travellers into three groups:
First Level: this is comprised of those who understand that they must
practice themselves, and know how to do so. They take the Buddha, Dhamma and
Sangha as their refuge and have resolved to practice diligently according to the
Teachings. These persons have discarded merely following customs and traditions,
and instead use reason to examine for themselves the nature of the world. These
are the group of "Buddhist believers."
Middle Level: This group is comprised of those who have practiced until they
have an unshakable faith in the Teachings of the Buddha, the Dhamma and the
Sangha. They also have penetrated to the understanding of the true nature of all
compounded formations. These persons gradually reduce clinging and attachment.
They do not hold onto things and their minds reach deep understanding of the
Dhamma. Depending upon the degree of non-attachment and wisdom they are
progressively known as Stream- Enterers, Once-Returners and Non-Returners, or
simply, Noble Ones.
Highest Level: This is the group of those whose practice has led them to the
body, speech and mind of the Buddha. They are above the world, free of the
world, and free of all attachment and clinging. They are known as Arahats or
Free Ones, the highest level of the Noble Ones.
How to Purify One's Morality
Morality is restraint and discipline of body and speech. On the formal level
this is divided into classes of precepts for lay people and for monks and nuns.
However, to speak in general terms, there is one basic characteristic -- that is
INTENTION. When we are mindful or self-recollected, we have right intention.
practicing self-recollection and mindfulness will generate good morality.
It is only natural that when we put on dirty clothes and our bodies are
dirty, that out minds too will feel uncomfortable and depressed. However, if we
keep our bodies clean and wear clean, neat clothes, it makes our minds light and
cheerful. So too, when morality is not kept, our bodily actions and speech are
dirty, and this is a cause for making the mind unhappy, distressed and heavy. We
are separated from right practice and this prevents us from penetrating in the
essence of the Dhamma in our minds. The wholesome bodily actions and speech
themselves depend on mind, properly trained, since mind orders body and speech.
Therefore, we must continue practice by training our minds.
Practice of Concentration Training
The training in concentration is practice to make the mind firm and steady.
This brings about peacefulness of mind. Usually our untrained minds are moving
and restless, hard to control and manage. Mind follows sense distractions wildly
just like water flowing this way and that, seeking the lowest level.
Agriculturists and engineers, though, know how to control water so that it is of
greater use to mankind. Men are clever, they know how to dam water, make large
reservoirs and canals -- all of this merely to channel water and make it more
useable. In addition the water stored becomes a source of electrical power and
light, further benefits from controlling its flow so that it doesn't run wild
and eventually settle into a few low spots, its usefulness wasted.
So too, the mind which is dammed and controlled, trained constantly, will be
of immeasurable benefit. The Buddha Himself taught, "The mind that has been
controlled brings true happiness, so train you minds well for the highest of
benefits." Similarly, the animals we see around us -- elephants, horses, cattle,
buffalo, etc., must be trained before they can be useful for work. Only after
they have been trained is their strength of benefit to us.
In the same way, the mind that has been trained will bring many times the
blessings of that of an untrained mind. The Buddha and His Noble Disciples all
started out in the same way as us -- with untrained minds; but afterwards look
how they became the subjects of reverence for us all, and see how much benefit
we can gain through their teaching. Indeed, see what benefit has come to the
entire world from these men who have gone through the training of the mind to
reach the freedom beyond. The mind controlled and trained is better equipped to
help us in all professions, in all situations. The disciplined mind will keep
our lives balanced, make work easier and develop and nurture reason to govern
our actions. In the end our happiness will increase accordingly as we follow the
proper mind training.
The training of the mind can be done in many way, with many different
methods. The method which is most useful and which can be practiced by all types
of people is known as "mindfulness of breathing." It is the developing of
mindfulness on the in-breath and the out-breath. In this monastery we
concentrate our attention on the tip of the nose and develop awareness of the
in- and out-breaths with the mantra word "BUD-DHO." If the meditator wishes to
use another word, or simply be mindful of the air moving in and out, this is
also fine. Adjust the practice to suit yourself. The essential factor in the
meditation is that the noting or awareness of the breath be kept up in the
present moment so that one is mindful of each in-breath and each out-breath just
as it occurs. While doing walking meditation we try to be constantly mindful of
the sensation of the feet touching the ground.
This practice of meditation must be pursued as continuously as possible in
order for it to bear fruit. Don't meditate for a short time one day and then in
one or two weeks, or even a month, meditate again. This will not bring results.
The Buddha taught us to practice often, to practice diligently, that is, to be
as continuous as we can in the practice of mental training. To practice
meditation we should also find a suitably quiet place free from distractions. In
gardens or under shady trees in our back yards, or in places where we can be
alone are suitable environments. If we are a monk or nun we should find a
suitable hut, a quiet forest or cave. The mountains offer exceptionally suitable
places for practice.
In any case, wherever we are, we must make an effort to be continuously
mindful of breathing in and breathing out. If the attention wanders to other
things, try to pull it back to the object of concentration. Try to put away all
other thoughts and cares. Don't think about anything -- just watch the breath.
If we are mindful of thoughts as soon as they arise and keep diligently
returning to the meditation subject, the mind will become quieter and quieter.
When the mind is peaceful and concentrated, release it from the breath as the
object of concentration. Now begin to examine the body and mind comprised of the
five khandas: material form, feelings, perceptions, mental formations and
consciousness. Examine these five khandas as they come and go. You will see
clearly that they are impermanent, that this impermanence makes them
unsatisfactory and undesirable, and that they come and go of their own -- there
is no "self" running things. There is to be found only nature moving according
to cause and effect. All things in the world fall under the characteristics of
instability, unsatisfactoriness and being without a permanent ego or soul.
Seeing the whole of existence in this light, attachment and clinging to the
khandas will gradually be reduced. This is because we see the true
characteristics of the world. We call this the arising of wisdom.
The Arising of Wisdom
Wisdom is to see the truth of the various manifestations of body and mind.
When we use our trained and concentrated minds to examine the five khandas, we
will see clearly that both body and mind are impermanent, unsatisfactory and
soul-less. In seeing all compounded things with wisdom we do not cling or grasp.
Whatever we receive, we receive mindfully. We are not excessively happy. When
things of ours break up or disappear, we are not unhappy and do not suffer
painful feelings -- for we see clearly the impermanent nature of all things.
When we encounter illness and pain of any sort, we have equanimity because our
minds have been well trained. The true refuge is the trained mind.
All of this is known as wisdom which knows the true characteristics of things
as they arise. Wisdom arises from mindfulness and concentration. Concentration
arises from a base of morality or virtue. All of these things, morality,
concentration and wisdom, are so inter-related that it is not really possible to
separate them. In practice it can be looked at in this way: first there is the
disciplining of the mind to be attentive to breathing. This is the arising of
morality. When mindfulness of breathing is practiced continuously until the mind
is quiet, this is the arising of concentration. Then examination showing the
breath as impermanent, unsatisfactory and not-self, and the subsequent
non-attachment, is the arising of wisdom. Thus the practice of mindfulness of
breathing can be said to be a course for the development of morality,
concentration and wisdom. They all come together.
When morality, concentration and wisdom are all developed, we call this
practicing the Eightfold Path which the Buddha taught as our only way out of
suffering. The Eightfold Path is above all others because if properly practiced
it leads directly to Nibbana, to peace. We can say that this practice reaches
the Buddha-Dhamma truly and precisely.
Benefits from Practice
When we have practiced meditation as explained above, the fruits of practice
will arise in the following three stages:
First, for those practitioners who are at the level of "Buddhist be faith,"
there will arise increasing faith in the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha. This faith
will become the real inner support of each person. Also, they will understand
the cause-and-effect nature of all things, that wholesome action brings
wholesome result and that unwholesome action brings unwholesome result. So for
such a person there will be a great increase in happiness and mental peace.
Second, those who have reached the noble attainments of Stream-Winner, Once-Returner
or Non-Returner, have unshakable faith in the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha. They
are joyful and are pulled towards Nibbana.
Third, for those Arahats or Perfected Ones, there will be the happiness free
from all suffering. These are the Buddhas, free from the world, complete in the
Faring of the Holy Way.
We all have had the good fortune to be born as human beings and to hear the
Teachings of the Buddha. This is an opportunity that millions of other beings do
not have. Therefore do not be careless or heedless. Hurry and develop merits, do
good and follow the path of practice in the beginning, in the middle and in the
highest levels. Don't let time roll by unused and without purpose. Try to reach
the truth of the Buddha's Teachings even today. Let me close with a Lao
folk-saying: "Many rounds of merriment and pleasure past, soon it will be
evening. Drunk with tears now, rest and see, soon it will be too late to finish
the journey."
A Gift of Dhamma
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(A Discourse delivered to the assembly of Western Monks, Novices and
Lay-disciples at Bung Wai Forest Monastery, Ubon, on 10th October, 1977. This
Discourse was offered to the parents of one of the monks on the occasion of
their visit from France.)
I am happy that you have taken this opportunity to come and visit Wat Pah
Pong, and to see your son who is a monk here, however I'm sorry I have no gift
to offer you. France already has so many material things, but of Dhamma there's
very little. Having been there and seen for myself, there isn't really any
Dhamma there which could lead to peace and tranquillity. There are only things
which continually make one's mind confused and troubled.
France is already materially prosperous, it has so many things to offer which
are sensually enticing -- sights, sounds, smells, tastes and textures. However,
people ignorant of Dhamma only become confused by them. So today I will offer
you some Dhamma to take back to France as a gift from Wat Pah Pong and Wat Pah
Nanachat.
What is Dhamma? Dhamma is that which can cut through the problems and
difficulties of mankind, gradually reducing them to nothing. That's what is
called Dhamma and that's what should be studied throughout our daily lives so
that when some mental impression arises in us, we'll be able to deal with it and
go beyond it.
Problems are common to us all whether living here in Thailand or in other
countries. If we don't know how to solve them, we'll always be subject to
suffering and distress. That which solves problems is wisdom and to have wisdom
we must develop and train the mind.
The subject of practice isn't far away at all, it's right here in our body
and mind. Westerners and Thais are the same, they both have a body and mind. A
confused body and mind means a confused person and a peaceful body and mind, a
peaceful person.
Actually, the mind, like rain water, is pure in its natural state. If we were
to drop green coloring into clear rain water, however, it would turn green. If
yellow coloring it would turn yellow.
The mind reacts similarly. When a comfortable mental impression "drops" into
the mind, the mind is comfortable. When the mental impression is uncomfortable,
the mind is uncomfortable. The mind becomes "cloudy" just like the colored
water.
When clear water contacts yellow, it turns yellow. When it contacts green, it
turns green. It will change color every time. Actually, that water which is
green or yellow is naturally clean and clear. This is also the natural state of
the mind, clean and pure and unconfused. It becomes confused only because it
pursues mental impressions; it gets lost in its moods!
Let me explain more clearly. Right now we are sitting in a peaceful forest.
Here, if there's no wind, a leaf remains still. When a wind blows it flaps and
flutters. The mind is similar to that leaf. When it contacts a mental
impression, it, too, "flaps and flutters" according to the nature of that mental
impression. And the less we know of Dhamma, the more the mind will continually
pursue mental impressions. Feeling happy, it succumbs to happiness. Feeling
suffering, it succumbs to suffering. It's constant confusion!
In the end people become neurotic. Why? Because they don't know! They just
follow their moods and don't know how to look after their own minds. When the
mind has no one to look after it, it's like a child without a mother or father
to take care of him. An orphan has no refuge and, without a refuge, he's very
insecure.
Likewise, if the mind is not looked after, if there is no training or
maturation of character with right understanding, it's really troublesome.
The method of training the mind which I will give you today is Kammatthana. "Kamma"
means "action" and "thana" means "base." In Buddhism it is the method of making
the mind peaceful and tranquil. It's for you to use in training the mind and
with the trained mind investigate the body.
Our being is composed of two parts: one is the body, the other, the mind.
There are only these two parts. What is called "the body," is that which can be
seen with our physical eyes. "The mind," on the other hand, has no physical
aspect. The mind can only be seen with the "internal eye" or the "eye of the
mind." These two things, body and mind, are in a constant state of turmoil.
What is the mind? The mind isn't really and "thing." Conventionally speaking,
it's that which feels or senses. That which senses, receives and experiences all
mental impressions is called "mind." Right at this moment there is mind. As I am
speaking to you, the mind acknowledges what I am saying. Sounds enter through
the ear and you know what is being said. That which experiences this is called
"mind."
This mind doesn't have any self or substance. It doesn't have any form. It
just experiences mental activities, that's all! If we teach this mind to have
right view, this mind won't have any problems. It will be at ease.
The mind is mind. Mental objects are mental objects. Mental objects are not
the mind, the mind is not mental objects. In order to clearly understand our
minds and the mental objects in our minds, we say that the mind is that which
receives the mental objects which pop into it.
When these two things, mind and its object, come into contact with each
other, they give rise to feelings. Some are good, some bad, some cold, some hot,
all kinds! Without wisdom to deal with these feelings, however, the mind will be
troubled.
Meditation is the way of developing the mind so that it may be a base for the
arising of wisdom. Here the breath is a physical foundation. We call it
Anapanasati or "mindfulness of breathing." Here we make breathing our mental
object. We take this object of meditation because it's the simplest and because
it has been the heart of meditation since ancient times.
When a good occasion arises to do sitting meditation, sit cross-legged: right
leg on top of the left leg, right hand on top of the left hand. Keep your back
straight and erect. Say to yourself, "Now I will let go of all my burdens and
concerns." You don't want anything that will cause you worry. Let go of all
concerns for the time being.
Now fix your attention on the breath. Then breathe in and breathe out. In
developing awareness of breathing, don't intentionally make the breath long or
short. Neither make it strong or weak. Just let it flow normally and naturally.
Mindfulness and self-awareness, arising from the mind, will know the in-breath
and the out-breath.
Be at ease. Don't think about anything. No need to think of this or that. The
only thing you have to do is fix your attention on the breathing in and
breathing out. You have nothing else to do but that! Keep your mindfulness fixed
on the in-and out-breaths as they occur. Be aware of the beginning, middle and
end of each breath. On inhalation, the beginning of the breath is at the nose
tip, the middle at the heart, and the end in the abdomen. On exhalation, it's
just the reverse: the beginning of the breath is in the abdomen, the middle at
the heart, and the end at the nose tip. Develop the awareness of the breath: 1,
at the nose tip; 2, at the heart; 3, in the abdomen. Then in reverse: 1, in the
abdomen; 2, at the heart; and 3, at the nose tip.
Focusing the attention on these three points will relieve all worries. Just
don't think of anything else! Keep your attention on the breath. Perhaps other
thoughts will enter the mind. It will take up other themes and distract you.
Don't be concerned. Just take up the breathing again as your object of
attention. The mind may get caught up in judging and investigating your moods,
but continue to practice, being constantly aware of the beginning, middle and
the end of each breath.
Eventually, the mind will be aware of the breath at these three points all
the time. When you do this practice for some time, the mind and body will get
accustomed to the work. Fatigue will disappear. The body will feel lighter and
the breath will become more and more refined. Mindfulness and self-awareness
will protect the mind and watch over it.
We practice like this until the mind is peaceful and calm, until it is
one. One means that the mind will be completely absorbed in the
breathing, that it doesn't separate from the breath. The mind will be unconfused
and at ease. It will know the beginning, middle and end of the breath and remain
steadily fixed on it.
Then when the mind is peaceful, we fix our attention on the in-breath and
out-breath at the nose tip only. We don't have to follow it up and down to the
abdomen and back. Just concentrate on the tip of the nose where the breath comes
in and goes out.
This is called "calming the mind," making it relaxed and peaceful. When
tranquillity arises, the mind stops; it stops with its single
object, the breath. This is what's known as making the mind peaceful so that
wisdom may arise.
This is the beginning, the foundation of our practice. You should try to
practice this every single day, wherever you may be. Whether at home, in a car,
lying or sitting down, you should be mindfully aware and watch over the mind
constantly.
This is called mental training which should be practiced in all the four
postures. Not just sitting, but standing, walking and lying as well. The point
is that we should know what the state of the mind is at each moment, and, to be
able to do this, we must be constantly mindful and aware. Is the mind happy or
suffering? Is it confused? Is it peaceful? Getting to know the mind in this
manner allows it to become tranquil, and when it does become tranquil, wisdom
will arise.
With the tranquil mind investigate the meditation subject which is the body,
from the top of the head to the soles of the feet, then back to the head. Do
this over and over again. Look at and see the hair of the head, hair of the
body, the nails, teeth and skin. In this meditation we will see that this whole
body is composed of four "elements': earth, water, fire and wind.
The hard and solid parts of our body make up the earth element; the liquid
and flowing parts, the water element. Winds that pass up and down our body make
up the wind element, and the heat in our body, the fire element.
Taken together, they compose what we call a "human being." However, when the
body is broken down into its component parts, only these four elements remain.
The Buddha taught that there is no "being" per se, no human, no Thai, no
Westerner, no person, but that ultimately, there are only these four elements --
that's all! We assume that there is a person or a "being" but, in reality, there
isn't anything of the sort.
Whether taken separately as earth, water, fire and wind, or taken together
labelling what they form a "human being," they're all impermanent, subject to
suffering and not-self. They are all unstable, uncertain and in a state of
constant change -- not stable for a single moment!
Our body is unstable, altering and changing constantly. Hair changes, nails
change, teeth change, skin changes -- everything changes, completely!
Our mind, too, is always changing. It isn't a self or substance. It isn't
really "us," not really "them," although it may think so. Maybe it will think
about killing itself. Maybe it will think of happiness or of suffering -- all
sorts of things! It's unstable. If we don't have wisdom and we believe this mind
of ours, it'll lie to us continually. And we alternately suffer and be happy.
This mind is an uncertain thing. This body is uncertain. Together they are
impermanent. Together they are a source of suffering. Together they are devoid
of self. These, the Buddha pointed out, are neither a being, nor a person, nor a
self, nor a soul, nor us, nor they. They are merely elements: earth, water, fire
and wind. Elements only!
When the mind sees this, it will rid itself of attachment which holds that
"I" am beautiful, "I" am good, "I" am evil, "I" am suffering, "I" have, "I" this
or "I" that. You will experience a state of unity, for you'll have seen that all
of mankind is basically the same. There is no "I." There are only elements.
When you contemplate and see impermanence, suffering and not-self, there will
no longer be clinging to a self, a being, I or he or she. The mind which sees
this will give rise to Nibbida, world-weariness and dispassion. It will see all
things as only impermanent, suffering and not-self.
The mind then stops. The mind is Dhamma. Greed, hatred and delusion
will then diminish and recede little by little until finally there is only mind
-- just the pure mind. This is called "practicing meditation."
Thus, I ask you to receive this gift of Dhamma which I offer you to study and
contemplate in your daily lives. Please accept this Dhamma Teaching from Wat Pah
Pong and Wat Pah Nanachat as an inheritance handed down to you. All of the monks
here, including your son, and all the Teachers, make you an offering of this
Dhamma to take back to France with you. It will show you the way to peace of
mind, it will render your mind calm and unconfused. Your body may be in turmoil,
but your mind will not. Those in the world may be confused, but you will not.
Even though there is confusion in your country, you will not be confused because
the mind will have seen, the mind is Dhamma. This is the right path, the
proper way.
May you remember this Teaching in the future.
May you be well and happy.
Dhamma Nature
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(Delivered to the Western disciples at Bung Wai Forest Monastery
during the Rains Retreat 1977)
Sometimes, when a fruit tree is in bloom, a breeze stirs and scatters
blossoms to the ground. Some buds remain and grow into a small green fruit. A
wind blows and some of them, too, fall! Still others may become fruit or nearly
ripe, or some even fully ripe, before they fall.
And so it is with people. Like flowers and fruit in the wind they, too,
fall in different stages of life. Some people die while still in the womb,
others within only a few days after birth. Some people live for a few years then
die, never having reached maturity. Men and women die in their youth. Still
others reach a ripe old age before they die.
When reflecting upon people, consider the nature of fruit in the wind: both
are very uncertain.
This uncertain nature of things can also be seen in the monastic life. Some
people come to the monastery intending to ordain but change their minds and
leave, some with heads already shaved. Others are already novices, then they
decide to leave. Some ordain for only one Rains Retreat then disrobe. Just like
fruit in the wind -- all very uncertain!
Our minds are also similar. A mental impression arises, draws and pulls at
the mind, then the mind falls -- just like fruit.
The Buddha understood this uncertain nature of things. He observed the
phenomenon of fruit in the wind and reflected upon the monks and novices who
were his disciples. He found that they, too, were essentially of the same nature
-- uncertain! How could it be otherwise? This is just the way of all things.
Thus, for one who is practicing with awareness, it isn't necessary to have
someone to advise and teach all that much to be able to see and understand. An
example is the case of the Buddha who, in a previous life, was King Chanokomun.
He didn't need to study very much. All he had to do was observe a mango tree.
One day, while visiting a park with his retinue of ministers, from atop his
elephant, he spied some mango tees heavily laden with ripe fruit. Not being able
to stop at that time, he determined in his mind to return later to partake of
some. Little did he know, however, that his ministers, coming along behind,
would greedily gather them all up; that they would use poles to knock them down,
beating and breaking the branches and tearing and scattering the leaves.
Returning in the evening to the mango grove, the king, already imagining in
his mind the delicious taste of the mangoes, suddenly discovered that they were
all gone, completely finished! And not only that, but the branches and leaves
had been thoroughly thrashed and scattered.
The king, quite disappointed and upset, then noticed another mango tree
nearby with its leaves and branches still intact. He wondered why. He then
realized it was because that tree had no fruit. If a tree has no fruit nobody
disturbs it and so its leaves and branches are not damaged. This lesson kept him
absorbed in thought all the way back to the palace: "It is unpleasant,
troublesome and difficult to be a king. It requires constant concern for all his
subjects. What if there are attempts to attack, plunder and seize parts of his
kingdom?" He could not rest peacefully; even in his sleep he was disturbed by
dreams.
He saw in his mind, once again, the mango tree without fruit and its
undamaged leaves and branches. "If we become similar to that mango tree," he
thought, "our "leaves" and "branches," too, would not be damaged."
In his chamber he sat and meditated. Finally, he decided to ordain as a monk,
having been inspired by this lesson of the mango tree. He compared himself to
that mango tree and concluded that if one didn't become involved in the ways of
the world, on would be truly independent, free from worries or difficulties. The
mind would be untroubled. Reflecting thus, he ordained.
From then on, wherever he went, when asked who his teacher was, he would
answer, "A mango tree." He didn't need to receive teaching all that much. A
mango tree was the cause of his awakening to the Opanayiko-Dhamma, the teaching
leading inwards. And with this awakening, he became a monk, one who has few
concerns, is content with little, and who delights in solitude. His royal status
given up, his mind was finally at peace.
In this story the Buddha was a Bodhisatta who developed his practice in this
way continuously. Like the Buddha as King Chanokomun, we, too, should look
around us and be observant because everything in the world is ready to teach us.
With even a little intuitive wisdom, we will then be able to see clearly
through the ways of the world. We will come to understand that everything in the
world is a teacher. Trees and vines, for example, can all reveal the true nature
of reality. With wisdom there is no need to question anyone, no need to study.
We can learn from Nature enough to be enlightened, as in the story of King
Chanokomun, because everything follows the way of Truth. It does not diverge
from Truth.
Associated with wisdom are self-composure and restraint which, in turn, can
lead to further insight into the ways of Nature. In this way, we will come to
know the ultimate truth of everything being "Anicca-Dukkha-Anatta."[1]
Take trees, for example; all trees upon the earth are equal, are One,
when seen through the reality of "Anicca-Dukkha-Anatta." First, they come into
being, then grow and mature, constantly changing, until they die finally die as
every tree must.
In the same way, people and animals are born, grow and change during their
life-times until they eventually die. The multitudinous changes which occur
during this transition from birth to death show the Way of Dhamma. That is to
say, all things are impermanent, having decay and dissolution as their natural
condition.
If we have awareness and understanding, if we study with wisdom and
mindfulness, we will see Dhamma as reality. Thus, we sill see people as
constantly being born, changing and finally passing away. Everyone is subject to
the cycle of birth and death, and because of this, everyone in the universe is
as One being. Thus, seeing one person clearly and distinctly is the same
as seeing every person in the world.
In the same way, everything is Dhamma. Not only the things we see with our
physical eye, but also the things we see in our minds. A thought arises, then
changes and passes away. It is "Nama Dhamma," simply a mental impression that
arises and passes away. This is the real nature of the mind. Altogether, this is
the Noble Truth of Dhamma. If one doesn't look and observe in this way, one
doesn't really see! If one does see, one will have the wisdom to listen
to the Dhamma as proclaimed by the Buddha.
Where is the Buddha?
The Buddha is in the Dhamma.
Where is the Dhamma?
The Dhamma is in the Buddha.
Right here, now!
Where is the Sangha?
The Sangha is in the Dhamma.
The Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha exist in our minds, but we have to see
it clearly. Some people just pick this up casually saying, "Oh! The Buddha, the
Dhamma and the Sangha exist in my mind." Yet their own practice is not suitable
or appropriate. It is thus not befitting that the Buddha, the Dhamma and the
Sangha should be found in their minds, namely, because the "mind" must first be
that mind which knows the Dhamma.
Bringing everything back to this point of Dhamma, we will come to know that,
in the world, Truth does exist, and thus it is possible for us to practice to
realize it.
For instance, "Nama Dhamma," feelings, thoughts, imagination, etc., are all
uncertain. When anger arises, it grows and changes and finally disappears.
Happiness, too, arises, grows and changes and finally disappears. They are
empty. They are not any "thing." This is always the way of all things, both
mentally and materially. Internally, there are this body and mind. Externally,
there are trees, vines and all manner of things which display this universal law
of uncertainty.
Whether a tree, a mountain or an animal, it's all Dhamma, everything is
Dhamma. Where is this Dhamma? Speaking simply, that which is not Dhamma doesn't
exist. Dhamma is Nature. This is called the "Sacca-Dhamma," the True Dhamma. If
one sees Nature, one sees Dhamma; if one sees Dhamma, one sees Nature. Seeing
Nature, one know the Dhamma.
And so, what is the use of a lot of study when the ultimate reality of life,
in its every moment, in its every act, is just an endless cycle of births and
deaths? If we are mindful and clearly aware when in all postures (sitting,
standing, walking, lying), then self-knowledge is ready to be born; that is,
knowing the truth of Dhamma already in existence right here and now.
At present, the Buddha, the real Buddha, is still living, for He is
the Dhamma itself, the "Sacca-Dhamma." And "Sacca-Dhamma," that which enables
one to become Buddha, still exists. It hasn't fled anywhere! It gives rise to
two Buddhas: one in body and the other in mind.
"The real Dhamma," the Buddha told Ananda, "can only be realized through
practice!" Whoever sees the Buddha, sees the Dhamma. And how is this?
Previously, no Buddha existed; it was only when Siddhartha Gotama [2]
realized the Dhamma that he became the Buddha. If we explain it in this way,
then He is the same as us. If we realize the Dhamma, then we will likewise be
the Buddha. This is called the Buddha in mind or "Nama-Dhamma."
We must be mindful of everything we do, for we become the inheritors of our
own good or evil actions. In doing good, we reap good. In doing evil, we reap
evil. All you have to do is look into your everyday lives to know that this is
so. Siddhartha Gotama was enlightened to the realization of this Truth, and this
gave rise to the appearance of a Buddha in the world. Likewise, if each and
every person practices to attain to this Truth, then they, too, will change to
be Buddha.
Thus, the Buddha still exists. Some people are very happy saying, "If the
Buddha still exists, then I can practice Dhamma!" That is how you should see it.
The Dhamma that the Buddha realized is the Dhamma which exists permanently in
the world. It can be compared to ground water which permanently exists in the
ground. When a person wishes to dig a well, he must dig down deep enough to
reach the ground water. The ground water is already there. He does no create the
water, he just discovers it. Similarly, the Buddha did not invent the Dhamma,
did not decree the Dhamma. He merely revealed what was already there. Through
contemplation, the Buddha saw the Dhamma. Therefore, it is said that the
Buddha was Enlightened, for Enlightenment is knowing the Dhamma. The Dhamma is
the Truth of this world. Seeing this, Siddhartha Gotama is called "The Buddha."
And the Dhamma is that which allows other people to become a Buddha,
"One-who-knows," one who knows Dhamma.
If beings have good conduct and are loyal to the Buddha-Dhamma, then those
beings will never be short of virtue and goodness. With understanding, we will
see that we are really not far from the Buddha, but sitting face to face with
Him. When we understand the Dhamma, then at that moment we will see the Buddha.
If one really practices, one will hear the Buddha-Dhamma whether sitting at
the root of a tree, lying down or in whatever posture. This is not something to
merely think about. It arises from the pure mind. Just remembering these words
is not enough, because this depends upon seeing the Dhamma itself,
nothing other than this. Thus we must be determined to practice to be able to
see this, and then our practice will really be complete. Wherever we sit, stand,
walk or lie, we will hear the Buddha's Dhamma.
In order to practice His Teaching, the Buddha taught us to live in a quiet
place so that we can learn to collect and restrain the senses of the eye, ear,
nose, tongue, body and mind. This is the foundation for our practice since these
are the places where all things arise, and only in these places. Thus we collect
and restrain these six senses in order to know the conditions that arise there.
All good and evil arise through these six senses. They are the predominant
faculties in the body. The eye is predominant in seeing, the ear in hearing, the
nose in smelling, the tongue in tasting, the body in contacting hot, cold, hard
and soft, and the mind in the arising of mental impressions. All that remains
for us to do is to build our practice around these points.
The practice is easy because all that is necessary has already been set down
by the Buddha. This is comparable to the Buddha planting an orchard and inviting
us to partake of its fruit. We, ourselves, do not need to plant one.
Whether concerning morality, meditation or wisdom, the is no need to create,
decree or speculate, because all that we need to do is follow the things which
already exist in the Buddha's Teaching.
Therefore, we are beings who have much merit and good fortune in having heard
the Teachings of the Buddha. The orchard already exists, the fruit is already
ripe. Everything is already complete and perfect. All that is lacking is someone
to partake of the fruit, someone with faith enough to practice!
We should consider that our merit and good fortune are very valuable. All we
need to do is look around to see how much other creatures are possessed of
ill-fortune; take dogs, pigs, snakes and other creatures for instance. They have
no chance to study Dhamma, no chance to know Dhamma, no chance to practice
Dhamma. These are beings possessed of ill-fortune who are receiving karmic
retribution. When one has no chance to study, to know, to practice Dhamma, then
one has no chance to be free from Suffering.
As human beings we should not allow ourselves to become victims of
ill-fortune, deprived of proper manners and discipline. Do not become a victim
of ill-fortune! That is to say, one without hope of attaining the Path of
Freedom to Nibbana, without hope of developing virtue. Do not think that we are
already without hope! By thinking in that way, we would then become possessed of
ill-fortune the same as other creatures.
We are beings who have come within the sphere of influence of the Buddha.
Thus we human beings are already of sufficient merit and resources. If we
correct and develop our understanding, opinions and knowledge in the present,
then it will lead us to behave and practice in such a way as to see and know
Dhamma in this present life as human beings.
We are thus different from other creatures, beings that should be enlightened
to the Dhamma. The Buddha taught that at this present moment, the Dhamma exists
here in front of us. The Buddha sits facing us right here and now! At what other
time or place are you going to look?
If we don't think rightly, if we don't practice rightly, we will fall back to
being animals or creatures in Hell or hungry ghosts or demons.[3]
How is this? Just look in your mind. When anger arises, what is it? There it is,
just look! When delusion arises, what is it? That's it, right there! When greed
arises, what is it? Look at it right there!
By not recognizing and clearly understanding these mental states, the mind
changes from being that of a human being. All conditions are in the state of
becoming. Becoming gives rise to birth or existence as determined by the present
conditions. Thus we become and exist as our minds condition us.
The Two Faces of Reality
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(A Discourse delivered to the Assembly of Monks after the recitation
of the Patimokkha, the Monk's Disciplinary Code, at Wat Pah Pong during the
Rains Retreat 1976)
In our lives we have two possibilities: indulging in the world or going
beyond the world. The Buddha was someone who was able to free Himself from the
world and thus realized spiritual Liberation.
In the same way, there are two types of knowledge -- knowledge of the worldly
realm and knowledge of the spiritual, or true wisdom. If we have not yet
practiced and trained ourselves, no matter how much knowledge we have, it is
still worldly, and thus cannot liberate us.
Think and really look closely! The Buddha said that things of the world spin
the world around. Following the world, the mind is entangled in the world, it
defiles itself whether coming or going, never remaining content. Worldly people
are those who are always looking for something -- who can never find enough.
Worldly knowledge is really ignorance; it isn't knowledge with clear
understanding, therefore there is never an end to it. It revolves around the
worldly goals of accumulating things, gaining status, seeking praise and
pleasure; it's a mass of delusion which has us stuck fast.
Once we get something, there is jealousy, worry and selfishness. And when we
feel threatened and can't ward it off physically, we use our minds to invent all
sorts of devices, right up to weapons and even nuclear bombs, only to blow each
other up. Why all this trouble and difficulty?
This is the way of the world. The Buddha said that if one follows it around
there is no reaching an end.
Come to practice for liberation! It isn't easy to live in accordance with
true wisdom, but whoever earnestly seeks the Path and Fruit and aspires to
Nibbana will be able to persevere and endure. Endure being contented and
satisfied with little; eating little, sleeping little, speaking little and
living in moderation. By doing this we can put an end to worldliness.
If the seed of worldliness has not yet been uprooted, then we are continually
troubled and confused in a never-ending cycle. Even when you come to ordain, it
continues to pull you away. It creates your views, your opinions, it colours and
embellishes all your thoughts -- that's the way it is.
People don't realize! They say that they will get things done in the world.
It's always their hope to complete everything. Just like a new government
minister who is eager to get started with his new administration. He thinks that
he has all the answers, so he carts away everything of the old administration
saying, "Look out! I'll do it all myself." That's all they do, cart things in
and cart things out, never getting anything done. They try, but never reach any
real completion.
You can never do something which will please everyone -- one person likes a
little, another likes a lot; one like short and one likes long; some like salty
and some like spicy. To get everyone together and in agreement just cannot be
done.
All of us want to accomplish something in our lives, but the world, with all
of its complexities, makes it almost impossible to bring about any real
completion. Even the Buddha, born with all the opportunities of a noble prince,
found no completion in the worldly life.
The Trap of the Senses
The Buddha talked about desire and the six things by which desire is
gratified: sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch and mind-objects. Desire and
lust for happiness, for suffering, for good, for evil and so on, pervade
everything!
Sights...there isn't any sight that's quite the same as that of a woman.
Isn't that so? Doesn't a really attractive woman make you want to look? One with
a really attractive figure comes walking along, "sak, sek, sak, sek, sak, sek,"
-- you can't help but stare! How about sounds? There's no sound that grips you
more than that of a woman. It pierces your heart! Smell is the same; a woman's
fragrance is the most alluring of all. There's no other smell that's quite the
same. Taste -- even the taste of the most delicious food cannot compare with
that of a woman. Touch is similar; when you caress a woman you are stunned,
intoxicated and sent pinning all around.
There was once a famous master of magical spells from Taxila in ancient
India. He taught his disciple all his knowledge of charms and incantations. When
the disciple was well-versed and ready to fare on his own, he left with this
final instruction from his teacher, "I have taught you all that I know of
spells, incantations and protective verses. Creatures with sharp teeth, antlers
or horns, and even big tusks, you have no need to fear. You will be guarded from
all of these, I can guarantee that. However, there is only one thing that I
cannot ensure protection against, and that is the charms of a woman.[4]
I can not help you here. There's no spell for protection against this one,
you'll have to look after yourself."
Mental objects arise in the mind. They are born out of desire: desire for
valuable possessions, desire to be rich, and just restless seeking after things
in general. This type of greed isn't all that deep or strong, it isn't enough to
make you faint or lose control. However, when sexual desire arises, you're
thrown off balance and lose your control. You would even forget those raised and
brought you up -- your own parents!
The Buddha taught that the objects of our senses are a trap -- a trap of
Mara's.[5] Mara should be understood as something
which harms us. The trap is something which binds us, the same as a snare. It's
a trap of Mara's, a hunter's snare, and the hunter is Mara.
If animals are caught in the hunter's trap, it's a sorrowful predicament.
They are caught fast and held waiting for the owner of the trap. Have you ever
snared birds? The snare springs and "boop" -- caught by the neck! A good strong
string now holds it fast. Wherever the bird flies, it cannot escape. It flies
here and flies there, but it's held tight waiting for the owner of the snare.
When the hunter comes along, that's it -- the bird is struck with fear, there's
no escape!
The trap of sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch and mind-objects is the
same. They catch us and bind us fast. If you attach to the senses, you're the
same as a fish caught on a hook. When the fisherman comes, struggle all you
want, but you can't get loose. Actually, you're not caught like a fish, it's
more like a frog -- a frog gulps down the whole hook right to its guts, a fish
just gets caught in its mouth.
Anyone attached to the senses is the same. Like a drunk whose liver is not
yet destroyed -- he doesn't know when he has had enough. He continues to indulge
and drink carelessly. He's caught and later suffers illness and pain.
A man comes walking along a road. He is very thirsty from his journey and is
craving for a drink of water. The owner of the water says, "you can drink this
water if you like; the colour is good, the smell is good, the taste is good, but
if you drink it you will become ill. I must tell you this beforehand, it'll make
you sick enough to die or nearly die." The thirsty man does not listen. He's as
thirsty as a person after an operation who has been denied water for seven days
-- he's crying for water!
It's the same with a person thirsting after the senses. The Buddha taught
that they are poisonous -- sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch and
mind-objects are poison; they are a dangerous trap. But this man is thirsty and
doesn't listen; because of his thirst he is in tears, crying, "Give me water, no
matter how painful the consequences, let me drink!" So he dips out a bit and
swallows it down finding it very tasty. He drinks his fill and gets so sick that
he almost dies. He didn't listen because of his overpowering desire.
This is how it is for a person caught in the pleasures of the senses. He
drinks in sights, sounds, smells, tastes, touch and mind-objects -- they are all
very delicious! So he drinks without stopping and there he remains, stuck fast
until the day he dies.
The Worldly Way and Liberation
Some people die, some people almost die -- that's how it is to be stuck in
the way of the world. Worldly wisdom seeks after the senses and their objects.
However wise it is, it's only wise in a worldly sense. No matter how appealing
it is, it's only appealing in a worldly sense. However much happiness it is,
it's only happiness in a worldly sense. It isn't the happiness of liberation; it
won't free you from the world.
We have come to practice as monks in order to penetrate true wisdom, to rid
ourselves of attachment. Practice to be free of attachment! Investigate the
body, investigate everything around you until you become weary and fed up with
it all and then dispassion will set in. Dispassion will not arise easily
however, because you still don't see clearly.
We come and ordain -- we study, we read, we practice, we meditate. We
determine to make our minds resolute but it's hard to do. We resolve to do a
certain practice, we say that we'll practice in this way -- only a day or two
goes by, maybe just a few hours pass and we forget all about it. Then we
remember and try to make our minds firm again, thinking, "This time I'll do it
right!" Shortly after that we are pulled away by one of our senses and it all
falls apart again, so we have to start all over again! This is how it is.
Like a poorly built dam, our practice is weak. We are still unable to see and
follow true practice. And it goes on like this until we arrive at true wisdom.
Once we penetrate to the Truth, we are freed from everything. Only peace
remains.
Our minds aren't peaceful because of our old habits. We inherit these because
of our past actions and thus they follow us around and constantly plague us. We
struggle and search for a way out, but we're bound by them and they pull us
back. These habits don't forget their old grounds. They grab onto all the old
familiar things to use, to admire and to consume -- that's how we live.
The sexes of man and woman -- woman cause problems for men, men cause
problems for women. That's the way it is, they are opposites. If men live
together with men, then there's no trouble. If women live together with women,
then there's no trouble. When a man sees a woman his heart pounds like a rice
pounder, "deung, dung, deung, dung, deung, dung." What is this? What are those
forces? It pulls and sucks you in -- no one realizes that there's a price to
pay!
It's the same in everything. No matter how hard you try to free yourself,
until you see the value of freedom and the pain in bondage, you won't be able to
let go. People usually just practice enduring hardships, keeping the discipline,
following the form blindly and not in order to attain freedom or liberation. You
must see the value in letting go of your desires before you can really practice;
only then is true practice possible.
Everything that you do must be done with clarity and awareness. When you see
clearly, there will no longer be any need for enduring or forcing yourself. You
have difficulties and are burdened because you miss this point! Peace comes from
doing things completely with your whole body and mind. Whatever is left undone
leaves you with a feeling of discontent. These things bind you with worry
wherever you go. You want to complete everything, but it's impossible to get it
all done.
Take the case of the merchants who regularly come here to see me. They say,
"Oh, when my debts are all paid and property in order, I'll come to ordain."
They talk like that but will they ever finish and get it all in order? There's
no end to it. They pay up their debts with another loan, they pay off that one
and do it all again. A merchant thinks that if he frees himself from debt he
will be happy, but there's no end to paying things off. That's the way
worldliness fools us -- we go around and around like this never realizing our
predicament.
Constant Practice
In our practice we just look directly at the mind. Whenever our practice
begins to slacken off, we see it and make it firm -- then shortly after, it goes
again. That's the way it pulls you around. But the person with good mindfulness
takes a firm hold and constantly re-establishes himself, pulling himself back,
training, practicing and developing himself in this way.
The person with poor mindfulness just lets it all fall apart, he strays off
and gets side-tracked again and again. He's not strong and firmly rooted in
practice. Thus he's continuously pulled away by his worldly desires -- something
pulls him here, something pulls him there. He lives following his whims and
desires, never putting an end to this worldly cycle.
Coming to ordain is not so easy. You must determine to make your mind firm.
You should be confident in the practice, confident enough to continue practicing
until you become fed up with both your like and dislikes and see in accordance
with Truth. Usually, you are dissatisfied with only your dislike, if you like
something then you aren't ready to give it up. You have to become fed up with
both your dislike and your likes, your suffering and your happiness.
You don't see that this is the very essence of the Dhamma! The Dhamma of the
Buddha is profound and refined. It isn't easy to comprehend. If true wisdom has
not yet arisen, then you can't see it. You don't look forward and you don't look
back. When you experience happiness, you think that there will only be
happiness. Whenever there is suffering, you think that there will only be
suffering. You don't see that wherever there is big, there is small; wherever
there is small, there is big. You don't see it that way. You see only one side
and thus it's never-ending.
There are two sides to everything; you must see both sides. Then, when
happiness arises, you don't get lost; when suffering arises, you don't get lost.
When happiness arises, you don't forget the suffering, because you see that they
are interdependent.
In a similar way, food is beneficial to all beings for the maintenance of the
body. But actually, food can also be harmful, for example when it causes various
stomach upsets. When you see the advantages of something, you must perceive the
disadvantages also, and vice versa. When you feel hatred and aversion, you
should contemplate love and understanding. In this way, you become more balanced
and your mind becomes more settled.
The Empty Flag
I once read a book about Zen. In Zen, you know, they don't teach with a lot
of explanation. For instance, if a monk is falling asleep during meditation,
they come with a stick and "whack!" they give him a hit on the back. When the
erring disciple is hit, he shows his gratitude by thanking the attendant. In Zen
practice one is taught to be thankful for all the feelings which give one the
opportunity to develop.
One day there was an assembly of monks gathered for a meeting. Outside the
hall a flag was blowing in the wind. There arose a dispute between two monks as
to how the flag was actually blowing in the wind. One of the monks claimed that
it was because of the wind while the other argued that it was because of the
flag. Thus they quarrelled because of their narrow views and couldn't come to
any kind of agreement. They would have argued like this until the day they died.
However, their Teacher intervened and said, "Neither of you is right. The
correct understanding is that there is no flag and there is no wind."
This is the practice, not to have anything, not to have the flag and not to
have the wind. If there is a flag, then there is a wind; if there is a wind,
then there is a flag. You should contemplate and reflect on this thoroughly
until you see in accordance with Truth. If considered well, then there will
remain nothing. It's empty -- void; empty of the flag and empty of the wind. In
the great Void there is no flag and there is no wind. There is no birth, no old
age, no sickness or death. Our conventional understanding of flag and wind is
only a concept. In reality there is nothing. That's all! There is nothing more
than empty labels.
If we practice in this way, we will come to see completeness and all of our
problems will come to an end. In the great Void the King of Death will never
find you. There is nothing for old age, sickness and death to follow. When we
see and understand in accordance with Truth, that is, with Right Understanding,
then there is only this great emptiness. It's here that there is no more "we,"
no "they," no "self" at all.
The Forest of the Senses
The world with its never-ending ways goes on and on. If we try to understand
it all, it leads us only to chaos and confusion. However, if we contemplate the
world clearly, then true wisdom will arise. The Buddha Himself was one who was
well-versed in the ways of the world. He had great ability to influence and lead
because of His abundance of worldly knowledge. Through the transformation of his
worldly mundane wisdom, He penetrated and attained to supermundane wisdom,
making Him a truly superior being.
So, if we work with this Teaching, turning it inwards for contemplation, we
will attain to an understanding on an entirely new level. When we see an object,
there is no object. When we hear a sound, the is no sound. In smelling, we can
say that there is no smell. All of the senses are manifest, but they are void of
anything stable. They are just sensations that arise and then pass away.
If we understand according to this reality, then the senses cease to be
substantial. They are just sensations which come and go. In Truth there isn't
any "thing." If there isn't any "thing," then there is no "we" and no "they." If
there is no "we" as a person, then there is nothing belonging to "us." It's in
this way that suffering is extinguished. There isn't anybody to acquire
suffering, so who is it who suffers?
When suffering arises, we attach to the suffering and thereby must really
suffer. In the same way, when happiness arises, we attach to the happiness and
consequently experience pleasure. Attachment to these feelings gives rise to the
concept of "self" or "ego" and thoughts of "we" and "they" continually manifest.
Nah!! Here is where it all begins and then carries us around in its never-ending
cycle.
So, we come to practice meditation and live according to the Dhamma. We leave
our homes to come and live in the forest and absorb the peace of mind it gives
us. We have fled in order to contend with ourselves and not through fear or
escapism. But people who come and live in the forest become attached to living
in it; just as people who live in the city become attached to the city. They
lose their way in the forest and they lose their way in the city.
The Buddha praised living in the forest because the physical and mental
solitude that it gives us is conducive to the practice for liberation. However,
He didn't want us to become dependent upon living in the forest or get stuck in
its peace and tranquillity. We come to practice in order for wisdom to arise.
Here in the forest we can sow and cultivate the seeds of wisdom. Living amongst
chaos and turmoil these seeds have difficulty in growing, but once we have
learned to live in the forest, we can return and contend with the city and all
the stimulation of the senses that it brings us. Learning to live in the forest
means to allow wisdom to grow and develop. We can then apply this wisdom no
matter where we go.
When our senses are stimulated, we become agitated and the senses become our
antagonists. The antagonize us because we are still foolish and don't have the
wisdom to deal with them. In reality they are our teachers, but, because of our
ignorance, we don't see it that way. When we lived in the city we never thought
that our senses could teach us anything. As long as true wisdom has not yet
manifested, we continue to see the senses and their objects as enemies. Once
true wisdom arises, they are no longer our enemies but become the doorway to
insight and clear understanding.
A good example is the wild chickens here in the forest. We all know how much
they are afraid of humans. However, since I have lived here in the forest I have
been able to teach them and learn from them as well. At one time I began
throwing out rice for them to eat. At first they were very frightened and
wouldn't go near the rice. However, after a long time they got used to it and
even began to expect it. You see, there is something to be learned here -- they
originally thought that there was danger in the rice, that the rice was an
enemy. In truth there was no danger in the rice, but they didn't know that the
rice was food and so were afraid. When they finally saw for themselves that
there was nothing to fear, they could come and eat without any danger.
The chickens learn naturally in this way. Living here in the forest we learn
in a similar way. Formerly we thought that our senses were a problem, and
because of our ignorance in the proper use of them, they caused us a lot
trouble. However, by experience in practice we learn to see them in accordance
with Truth. We learn to make use of them just as the chickens could use the
rice. Then they are no longer opposed to us and problems disappear.
As long as we thing, investigate and understand wrongly, these things will
oppose us. But as soon as we begin to investigate properly, that which we
experience will bring us to wisdom and clear understanding, just as the chickens
came to their understanding. In this way, we can say that they practiced "Vipassana."
They know in accordance with Truth, it's their insight.
In our practice, we have our senses as tools which, when rightly used, enable
us to become enlightened to the Dhamma. This is something which all meditator
should contemplate. When we don't see this clearly, we remain in perpetual
conflict.
So, as we live in the quietude of the forest, we continue to develop subtle
feelings and prepare the ground for cultivating wisdom. Don't think that when
you have gained some peace of mind living here in the quiet forest that that's
enough. Don't settle for just that! Remember that we have to cultivate and grow
the seeds of wisdom.
As wisdom matures and we begin to understand in accordance with the Truth, we
will no longer be dragged up and down. Usually, if we have a pleasant mood, we
behave one way; and if we have an unpleasant mood, we are another way. We like
something and we are up; we dislike something and we are down. In this way we
are still in conflict with enemies. When these things no longer oppose us, they
become stabilized and balance out. There are no longer ups and downs or highs
and lows. We understand these things of the world and know that that's just the
way it is. It's just "worldly dhamma."
"Worldly dhamma"[6] changes to become the "Path".[7]
"Worldly dhamma" has eight ways; the "Path" has eight ways. Wherever "worldly
dhamma" exists, the "Path" is to be found also. When we live with clarity, all
of our worldly experience becomes the practicing of the "Eightfold Path."
Without clarity, "worldly dhamma" predominates and we are turned away from the
"Path." When Right Understanding arises, liberation from suffering lies right
here before us. You will not find liberation by running around looking
elsewhere!
So don't be in a hurry and try to push or rush your practice. Do your
meditation gently and gradually step by step. In regard to peacefulness, if you
want to become peaceful, then accept it; if you don't become peaceful, then
accept that also. That's the nature of the mind. We must find our won practice
and persistently keep at it.
Perhaps wisdom does not arise! I used to think, about my practice, that when
there is no wisdom, I could force myself to have it. But it didn't work, things
remained the same. Then, after careful consideration, I saw that to contemplate
things that we don't have cannot be done. So what's the best thing to do? It's
better just to practice with equanimity. If there is nothing to cause us
concern, then there's nothing to remedy. If there's no problem, then we don't
have to try to solve it. When there is a problem, that's when you must solve it,
right there! There's no need to go searching for anything special, just live
normally. But know what your mind is! Live mindfully and clearly comprehending.
Let wisdom be your guide; don't live indulging in your moods. Be heedful and
alert! If there is nothing, that's fine; when something arises, then investigate
and contemplate it.
Coming to the Center
Try watching a spider. A spider spins its web in any convenient niche and
then sits in the center, staying still and silent. Later, a fly comes along and
lands on the web. As soon as it touches and shakes the web, "boop!" -- the
spider pounces and winds it up in thread. It stores the insect away and then
returns again to collect itself silently in the center of the web.
Watching a spider like this can give rise to wisdom. Our six senses have mind
at the center surrounded by eye, ear, nose, tongue and body. When one of the
senses is stimulated, for instance, form contacting the eye, it shakes and
reaches the mind. The mind is that which knows, that which knows form. Just this
much is enough for wisdom to arise. It's that simple.
Like a spider in its web, we should live keeping to ourselves. As soon as the
spider feels an insect contact the web, it quickly grabs it, ties it up and once
again returns to the center. This is not at all different from our own minds.
"Coming to the center" means living mindfully with clear comprehension, being
always alert and doing everything with exactness and precision -- this is our
center. There's really not a lot for us to do; we just carefully live in this
way. But that doesn't mean that we live heedlessly thinking, "There is no need
to do siting or walking meditation!" and so forget all about our practice. We
can't be careless! We must remain alert just as the spider waits to snatch up
insects for its food.
This is all that we have to know -- sitting and contemplating that spider.
Just this much and wisdom can arise spontaneously. Our mind is comparable to the
spider, our moods and mental impressions are comparable to the various insects.
That's all there is to it! The senses envelop and constantly stimulate the mind;
when any of them contact something, it immediately reaches the mind. The mind
then investigates and examines it thoroughly, after which it returns to the
center. This is how we abide -- alert, acting with precision and always
mindfully comprehending with wisdom. Just this much and our practice is
complete.
This point is very important! It isn't that we have to do sitting practice
throughout the day and night, or that we have to do walking meditation all day
and all night long. If this is our view of practice, then we really make it
difficult for ourselves. We should do what we can according to our strength and
energy, using our physical capabilities in the proper amount.
It's very important to know the mind and the other senses well. Know how they
come and how they go, how they arise and how they pass away. Understand this
thoroughly! In the language of Dhamma we can also say that, just as the spider
traps the various insects, the mind binds up the senses with
Anicca-Dukkha-Anatta (impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, not-self). Where can
they go? We keep them for food, these things are stored away as our
nourishment.[8] That's enough; there's no more to do,
just this much! This is the nourishment for our minds, nourishment for one who
is aware and understanding.
If you know that these things are impermanent, bound up with suffering and
that none of it is you, then you would be crazy to go after them! If you don't
see clearly in this way, then you must suffer. When you take a good look and see
these things as really impermanent, even though they may seem worth going after,
really they are not. Why do you want them when their nature is pain and
suffering? It's not ours, there is no self, there is nothing belonging to us. So
why are you seeking after them? All problems are ended right here. Where else
will you end them?
Just take a good look at the spider and turn it inwards, turn it back unto
yourself. You will see that it's all the same. When the mind has seen
Anicca-Dukkha Anatta, it lets go and releases itself. It no longer attaches to
suffering or to happiness. This is the nourishment for the mind of one who
practices and really trains himself. That's all, it's that simple! You don't
have to go searching anywhere! So no matter what you are doing, you are there,
no need for a lot of fuss and bother. In this way the momentum and energy of
your practice will continuously grow and mature.
Escape
This momentum of practice leads us towards freedom from the cycle of birth
and death. We haven't escaped from that cycle because we still insist on craving
and desiring. We don't commit unwholesome or immoral acts, but doing this only
means that we are living in accordance with the Dhamma of morality: for
instance, the chanting when people ask that all beings not be separated from the
things that they love and are fond of. If you think about it, this is very
childish. It's the way of people who still can't let go.
This is the nature of human desire -- desire for things to be other than the
way that they are; wishing for longevity, hoping that there is no death or
sickness. This is how people hope and desire, then when you tell them that
whatever desires they have which are not fulfilled cause suffering, it clobbers
them right over the head. What can they say? Nothing, because it's the Truth!
You're pointing right at their desires.
When we talk about desires we know that everyone has them and wants them
fulfilled, but nobody is willing to stop, nobody really wants to escape.
Therefore our practice must be patiently refined down. Those who practice
steadfastly, without deviation or slackness, and have a gentle and restrained
manner, always persevering with constancy, those are the ones who will know. No
matter what arises, they will remain firm and unshakable.
The Training of the Heart
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(A talk given to a group of Western Monks from Wat Bovornives,
Bangkok, March 1977)[9]
In the time of Ajahn Mun[10] and Ajahn Sao[11]
life was a lot simpler, a lot less complicated than it is today. In those days
monks had few duties and ceremonies to perform. They lived in the forests
without permanent resting places. There they could devote themselves entirely to
the practice of meditation.
In those times one rarely encountered the luxuries that are so commonplace
today, there simply weren't any. One had to make drinking cups and spittoons out
of bamboo and laypeople seldom came to visit. One didn't want or expect much and
was content with what one had. One could live and breathe meditation!
The monks suffered many privations living like this. If someone caught
malaria and went to ask for medicine, the Teacher would say, "You don't need
medicine! Keep practicing." Besides, there simply weren't all the drugs that are
available now. All one had were the herbs and roots that grew in the forest. The
environment was such that monks had to have a great deal of patience and
endurance; they didn't bother over minor ailments. Nowadays you get a bit of an
ache and you're off to the hospital!
Sometimes one had to walk ten to twelve kilometers on almsround (pindapad).
You would leave as soon as it was light and maybe return around ten or eleven
o'clock. One didn't get very much either, perhaps some glutinous rice, salt or a
few chilis. Whether you got anything to eat with the rice or not didn't matter.
That's the way it was. No one dared complain of hunger or fatigue; they were
just not inclined to complain but learned to take care of themselves. They
practiced in the forest with patience and endurance alongside the many dangers
that lurked in the surroundings. There were many wild and fierce animals living
in the jungles and there were many hardships for body and mind in the ascetic
practice of the Dhutanga or Forest-Dwelling monk. Indeed, the patience and
endurance of the monks in those days was excellent because the circumstances
compelled them to be so.
In the present day, circumstances compel us in the opposite direction. In
ancient times, one had to travel by foot; then came the oxcart and then the
automobile. Aspiration and ambition increased, so that now, if the car is not
air-conditioned, one will not even sit in it; impossible to go if there is no
air-conditioning! The virtues of patience and endurance are becoming weaker and
weaker. The standards for meditation and practice are lax and getting laxer,
until we find that meditators these days like to follow their own opinions and
desires. When the old folks talk about the old days, it's like listening to a
myth or a legend. You just listen indifferently, but you don't understand. It
just doesn't reach you!
As far as we should be concerned about the ancient monks' tradition, a monk
should spend at least five years with his Teacher. Some days you should avoid
speaking to anyone. Don't allow yourself to speak or talk very much. Don't read
books! Read your own heart instead. Take Wat Pah Pong for example. These days
many university graduates are coming to ordain. I try to stop them from spending
their time reading books about Dhamma, because these people are always reading
books. They have so many opportunities for reading books, but opportunities for
reading their own hearts are rare. So, when they come to ordain for three months
following the Thai custom, we try to get them to close their books and manuals.
While they are ordained they have this splendid opportunity to read their own
hearts.
Listening to your own heart is really very interesting. This untrained heart
races around following its own untrained habits. It jumps about excitedly,
randomly, because it has never been trained. Therefore train your heart!
Buddhist meditation is about the heart; to develop the heart or mind, to develop
your own heart. This is very, very important. This training of the heart is the
main emphasis. Buddhism is the religion of the heart. Only this! One who
practices to develop the heart is one who practices Buddhism.
This heart of ours lives in a cage, and what's more, there's a raging tiger
in that cage. If this maverick heart of ours doesn't get what it wants, it makes
trouble. You must discipline it with meditation, with Samadhi. This is called
"Training the Heart." At the very beginning, the foundation of practice is the
establishment of moral discipline (Sila). Sila is the training of the body and
speech. From this arises conflict and confusion. When you don't let yourself do
what you want to do, there is conflict.
Eat little! Sleep little! Speak little! Whatever it may be of worldly habit,
lessen them, go against their power. Don't just do as you like, don't indulge in
your thought. Stop this slavish following. You must constantly go against the
stream of ignorance. This is called "Discipline." When you discipline your
heart, it becomes very dissatisfied and begins to struggle. It becomes
restricted and oppressed. When the heart is prevented from doing what it wants
to do, it starts wandering and struggling. Suffering (Dukkha) [12]
becomes apparent to us.
This Dukkha, this suffering, is the first of the Four Noble Truths. Most
people want to get away from it. They don't want to have any kind of suffering
at all. Actually, this suffering is what brings us wisdom; it makes us
contemplate Dukkha. Happiness (Sukha) tends to make us close our eyes and ears.
It never allows us to develop patience. Comfort and happiness make us careless.
Of these two defilements, Dukkha is the easiest to see. Therefore we must bring
up suffering in order to put an end to our suffering. We must first know what
Dukkha is before we can know how to practice meditation.
In the beginning you have to train your heart like this. You may not
understand what is happening or what the point of it is, but when the Teacher
tells you to do something, then you must do it. You will develop the virtues of
patience and endurance. Whatever happens, you endure, because that is the way it
is. For example, when you begin to practice Samadhi you want peace and
tranquillity. But you don't get any. You don't get any because you have never
practiced this way. Your heart says, "I'll sit until I attain tranquillity." But
when tranquillity doesn't arise, you suffer. And when there is suffering, you
get up and run away! To practice like this can not be called "developing the
heart." It's called "desertion."
Instead of indulging in your moods, you train yourself with the Dhamma of the
Buddha. Lazy or diligent, you just keep on practicing. Don't you think that this
is a better way? The other way, the way of following your moods, will never
reach the Dhamma. If you practice the Dhamma, then whatever the mood may be, you
keep on practicing, constantly practicing. The other way of self-indulgence is
not the way of the Buddha. When we follow our own views on practice, our own
opinions about the Dhamma, we can never see clearly what is right and what is
wrong. We don't know our own heart. We don't know ourselves.
Therefore, to practice following your own teachings is the slowest way. To
practice following the Dhamma is the direct way. Lazy you practice; diligent you
practice. You are aware of time and place. This is called "developing the
heart."
If you indulge in following your own views and try to practice accordingly,
then you will start thinking and doubting a lot. You think to yourself, "I don't
have very much merit. I don't have any luck. I've been practicing meditation for
years now and I'm still unenlightened. I still haven't seen the Dhamma." To
practice with this kind of attitude can not be called "developing the heart." It
is called "developing disaster."
If, at this time, you are like this, if you are a meditator who still doesn't
know, who doesn't see, if you haven't renewed yourself yet, it's because you've
been practicing wrongly. You haven't been following the Teachings of the Buddha.
The Buddha taught like this: "Ananda, practice a lot! Develop your practice
constantly! Then all your doubts, all your uncertainties, will vanish." These
doubts will never vanish through thinking, nor through theorizing, nor through
speculation, nor through discussion. Nor will doubts disappear by not doing
anything. All defilements will vanish through developing the heart, through
right practice only.
The way of developing the heart as taught by the Buddha is the exact opposite
of the way of the world, because his Teachings come from a pure heart. A pure
heart, unattached to defilements, is the Way of the Buddha and His Disciples.
If you practice the Dhamma, you must bow your heart to the Dhamma. You must
not make the Dhamma bow to you. When you practice this way. suffering arises.
There isn't a single person who can escape this suffering. So when you commence
your practice suffering is right there.
The duties of meditators are mindfulness, collectedness and contentment.
These things stop us. They stop the habits of the hearts of those who have never
trained. And why should we bother to do this? If you don't bother to train your
heart, then it remains wild, following the ways of nature. It's possible to
train that nature so that it can be used to advantage. This is comparable to the
example of trees. If we just left trees in their natural state, then we would
never be able to build a house with them. We couldn't make planks or anything of
use in building a house. However, if a carpenter came along wanting to build a
house, he would go looking for trees such as these. He would take this raw
material and use it to advantage. In a short time he could have a house built.
Meditation and developing the heart are similar to this. You must take this
untrained heart, the same as you would take a tree in its natural state in the
forest, and train this natural heart so that it is more refined, so that it's
more aware of itself and is more sensitive. Everything is in its natural state.
Wen we understand nature, then we can change it, we can detach from it, we can
let go of it. Then we won't suffer anymore.
The nature of our heart is such that whenever it clings and grasps there is
agitation and confusion. First it might wander over there, then it might wander
over here. When we come to observe this agitation, we might think that it's
impossible to train the heart and so we suffer accordingly. We don't understand
that this is the way the heart is. There will be thought and feelings moving
about like this even though we are practicing, trying to attain peace. That's
the way it is.
When we have contemplated many times the nature of the heart, then we will
come to understand that this heart is just as it is and can't be otherwise. We
will know that the heart's ways are just as they are. That's its nature. If we
see this clearly, then we can detach from thoughts and feelings. And we don't
have to add on anything more by constantly having to tell ourselves that "that's
just the way it is." When the heart truly understands, it lets go of everything.
Thinking and feeling will still be there, but that very thinking and feeling
will be deprived of power.
This is similar to a child who likes to play and frolic in ways that annoy
us, to the extent that we scold or spank him. We should understand that it's
natural for a child to act that way. Then we could let go and leave him to play
in his own way. So our troubles are over. How are they over? Because we accept
the ways of children. Our outlook changes and we accept the true nature of
things. We let go and our heart becomes more peaceful. We have "Right
Understanding."
If we have wrong understanding, then even living in a deep, dark cave would
be chaos, or living high up in the air would be chaos. The heart can only be at
peace when there is "Right Understanding." Then there are no more riddles to
solve and no more problems to arise.
This is the way it is. You detach. You let go. Whenever there is any feeling
of clinging, we detach from it, because we know that that very feeling is just
as it is. It didn't come along especially to annoy us. We might think that it
did, but in truth it is just that way. If we start to think and consider it
further, that too, is just as it is. If we let go, then form is merely form,
sound is merely sound, odour is merely odour, taste is merely taste, touch is
merely touch and the heart is merely the heart. It's similar to oil and water.
If you put the two together in a bottle, they won't mix because of the
difference in their nature.
Oil and water are different in the same way that a wise man and an ignorant
man are different. The Buddha lived with form, sound, odour, taste, touch and
thought. He was an Arahant (Enlightened One), so He turned away from rather than
toward these things. He turned away and detached little by little since He
understood that the heart is just the heart and thought is just thought. He
didn't confuse and mix them together.
The heart is just the heart; thoughts and feelings are just thoughts and
feelings. Let things be just as they are! Let form be just form, let sound be
just sound, let thought be just thought. Why should we bother to attach to them?
If we think and feel in this way, then there is detachment and separateness. Our
thoughts and feelings will be on one side and our heart will be on the other.
Just like oil and water -- they are in the same bottle but they are separate.
The Buddha and His Enlightened Disciples lived with ordinary, unenlightened
people. They not only lived with these people, but they taught these ordinary,
unenlightened, ignorant ones how to be Noble, Enlightened, Wise Ones. They could
do this because they knew how to practice. They knew that it's a matter of the
heart, just as I have explained.
So, as far as your practice of meditation goes, don't bother to doubt it. If
we run away from home to ordain, it's not running away to get lost in delusion.
Nor out of cowardice or fear. It's running away in order to train ourselves, in
order to master ourselves. If we have understanding like this, then we can
follow the Dhamma. The Dhamma will become clearer and clearer. The one who
understands the Dhamma, understands himself; and the one who understands
himself, understands the Dhamma. Nowadays, only the sterile remains of the
Dhamma have become the accepted order. In reality, the Dhamma is everywhere.
There is no need to escape to somewhere else. Instead escape through wisdom.
Escape through intelligence. Escape through skill. don't escape through
ignorance. If you want peace, then let it be the peace of wisdom. That's enough!
Whenever we see the Dhamma, then there is the right way, the right path.
Defilements are just defilements, the heart is just the heart. Whenever we
detach and separate so that there are just these things as they really are, then
they are merely objects to us. When we are on the right path, then we are
impeccable. When we are impeccable, there is openness and freedom all the time.
The Buddha said, "Listen to me, Monks. You must not cling to any dhammas." [13]
What are these dhammas? They are everything; there isn't anything which is not
dhamma. Love and hate are dhammas, happiness and suffering are dhammas, like and
dislike are dhammas; all of these things, no matter how insignificant, are
dhammas. When we practice the Dhamma, when we understand, then we can let go.
And thus we can comply with the Buddha's Teaching of not clinging to any dhammas.
All conditions that are born in our heart, all conditions of our mind, all
conditions of our body, are always in a state of change. The Buddha taught not
to cling to any of them. He taught His Disciples to practice in order to detach
from all conditions and not to practice in order to attain to any more.
If we follow the Teachings of the Buddha, then we are right. We are right but
it is also troublesome. It's not that the Teachings are troublesome, but it's
our defilements which are troublesome. The defilements wrongly comprehended
obstruct us and cause us trouble. There isn't really anything troublesome with
following the Buddha's Teaching. In fact we can say that clinging to the Path of
the Buddha doesn't bring suffering, because the Path is simply "let go" of every
single dhamma!
For the ultimate in the practice of Buddhist Meditation, the Buddha taught
the practice of "letting go." don't carry anything around! Detach! If you see
goodness, let it go. If you see rightness, let it go. These words, "let go," do
not mean that we don't have to practice. It means that we have to practice
following the method of "letting go" itself. The Buddha taught us to contemplate
all dhammas, to develop the Path through contemplating our own body and heart.
The Dhamma isn't anywhere else. It's right here! Not someplace far away. It's
right here in this very body and heart of ours.
Therefore a meditator must practice with energy. Make the heart grander and
brighter. Make it free and independent. Having done a good deed, don't carry it
around in your heart, let it go. Having refrained from doing an evil deed, let
it go. The Buddha taught us to live in the immediacy of the present, in the here
and now. Don't lose yourself in the past or the future.
The Teaching that people least understand and which conflicts the most with
their own opinions, is this Teaching of "letting go" or "working with an empty
mind." This way of talking is called "Dhamma language." When we conceive this in
worldly terms, we become confused and think that we can do anything we want. It
can be interpreted this way, but its real meaning is closer to this: It's as if
we are carrying a heavy rock. After a while we begin to feel its weight but we
don't know how to let it go. So we endure this heavy burden all the time. If
someone tells us to throw it away, we say, "If I throw it away, I won't have
anything left!" If told of all the benefits to be gained from throwing it away,
we wouldn't believe them but would keep thinking, "If I throw it away, I will
have nothing!" So we keep on carrying this heavy rock until we become so weak
and exhausted that we can no longer endure, then we drop it.
Having dropped it, we suddenly experience the benefits of letting go. We
immediately feel better and lighter and we know for ourselves how much of a
burden carrying a rock can be. Before we let go of the rock, we couldn't
possibly know the benefits of letting go. So if someone tells us to let go, an
unenlightened man wouldn't see the purpose of it. He would just blindly clutch
at the rock and refuse to let go until it became so unbearably heavy that he
just had to let go. Then he can feel for himself the lightness and relief and
thus know for himself the benefits of letting go. Later on we may start carrying
burdens again, but now we know what the results will be, so we can now let go
more easily. This understanding that it's useless to carry burdens around and
that letting go brings ease and lightness is an example of knowing ourselves.
Our pride, our sense of self that we depend on, is the same as that heavy
rock. Like that rock, if we think about letting go of self-conceit, we are
afraid that without it, there would be nothing left. But when we can finally let
it go, we realize for ourselves the ease and comfort of not clinging.
In the training of the heart, you mustn't cling to either praise or blame. To
just want praise and not to want blame is the way of the world. The Way of the
Buddha is to accept praise when it is appropriate and to accept blame when it is
appropriate. For example, in raising a child it's very good not to just scold
all the time. Some people scold too much. A wise person knows the proper time to
scold and the proper time to praise. Our heart is the same. Use intelligence to
know the heart. Use skill in taking care of your heart. Then you will be one who
is clever in the training of the heart. And when the heart is skilled, it can
rid us of our suffering. Suffering exists right here in our hearts |