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by Ven Ajahn Chah

Copyright © 1992 The Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat
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
Bahn Bung Wai
Warinchamrab
Ubol Rajathani 34310
Thailand
First Impression 1992. This electronic edition was transcribed
from the print edition in 1994 by David Savage under the auspices of the
DharmaNet Dharma Book Transcription Project, with the kind permission of
the copyright holder.
Introduction
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One of the most notable features of Venerable Ajahn Chah's teaching was
the emphasis he gave to the Sangha, the monastic order, and its use as a
vehicle for Dhamma practice. This is not to deny his unique gift for
teaching lay people, which enabled him to communicate brilliantly with
people from all walks of life, be they simple farmers or University
professors. But the results he obtained with teaching and creating solid
Sangha communities are plainly visible in the many monasteries which grew
up around him, both within Thailand and, later, in England, Australia,
Europe and elsewhere. Ajahn Chah foresaw the necessity of establishing the
Sangha in the West if long-term results were to be realized.
This book is a collection of talks he gave to the monastic communities
in Thailand. They are exhortations given to the communities of bhikkhus,
or Buddhist monks, at his own monastery, Wat Ba Pong, and some of its
branches. This fact should be born in mind by the lay reader. These talks
are not intended to, and indeed cannot, serve as an introduction to
Buddhism and meditation practice. They are monastic teachings, addressed
primarily to the lifestyle and problems particular to that situation. A
knowledge of the basics of Buddhism on the part of the listener was
assumed. Many of the talks will thus seem strange and even daunting to the
lay reader, with their emphasis on conformity and renunciation.
For the lay reader, then, it is essential to bear in mind the
environment within which these talks were given -- the rugged, austere,
poverty-stricken North-East corner of Thailand, birth place of most of
Thailand's great meditation teachers and almost its entire forest monastic
tradition. The people of the North-East are honed by this environment to a
rugged simplicity and gentle patience which make them ideal candidates for
the forest monk's lifestyle. Within this environment, in small halls dimly
lit by paraffin lamps, surrounded by the assembly of monks, Ajahn Chah
gave his teachings.
Exhortations by the master occurred typically at the end of the
fortnightly recitation of the Patimokkha, the monks' code of discipline.
Their content would be decided by the current situation -- slackness in
the practice, confusion about the rules, or just plain "unenlightenment."
In a lifestyle characterized by simplicity and contentment with little,
complacency is an ongoing tendency, so that talks for arousing diligent
effort were a regular occurrence.
The talks themselves are spontaneous reflections and exhortations
rather than systematic teachings as most Westerners would know them. The
listener was required to give full attention in the present moment and to
reflect back on his own practice accordingly, rather than to memorize the
teachings by rote or analyze them in terms of logic. In this way he could
become aware of his own shortcomings and learn how to best put into effect
the skillful means offered by the teacher.
Although meant primarily for a monastic resident -- be one a monk, nun
or novice -- the interested lay reader will no doubt obtain many insights
into Buddhist practice from this book. At the very least there are the
numerous anecdotes of the Venerable Ajahn's own practice which abound
throughout the book; these can be read simply as biographical material or
as instruction for mind training.
From the contents of this book, it will be seen that the training of
the mind is not, as many believe, simply a matter of sitting with the eyes
closed or perfecting a meditation technique, but is, as Ajahn Chah would
say, a great renunciation.
The translator
Dhamma Fighting
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Fight greed, fight aversion, fight delusion... these are the enemy. In
the practice of Buddhism, the path of the Buddha, we fight with Dhamma,
using patient endurance. We fight by resisting our countless moods.
Dhamma and the world are inter-related. Where there is Dhamma there is
the world, where there is the world there is Dhamma. Where there are
defilements there are those who conquer defilements, who do battle with
them. This is called fighting inwardly. To fight outwardly people take
hold of bombs and guns to throw and to shoot; they conquer and are
conquered. Conquering others is the way of the world. In the practice of
Dhamma we don't have to fight others, but instead conquer our own minds,
patiently enduring and resisting all our moods.
When it comes to Dhamma practice we don't harbor resentment and enmity
amongst ourselves, but instead let go of all forms of ill-will in our own
actions and thoughts, freeing ourselves from jealousy, aversion and
resentment. Hatred can only be overcome by not harboring resentment and
bearing grudges.
Hurtful actions and reprisals are different but closely related.
Actions once done are finished with, there's no need to answer with
revenge and hostility. This is called "action" (kamma). "Reprisal"
(vera) means to continue that action further with thoughts of "you
did it to me so I'm going to get you back." There's no end to this. It
brings about the continual seeking of revenge, and so hatred is never
abandoned. As long as we behave like this the chain remains unbroken,
there's no end to it. No matter where we go, the feuding continues.
The Supreme Teacher [1] taught the world, he
had compassion for all worldly beings. But the world nevertheless goes on
like this. The wise should look into this and select those things which
are of true value. The Buddha had trained in the various arts of warfare
as a prince, but he saw that they weren't really useful, they are limited
to the world with its fighting and aggression.
Therefore, in training ourselves as those who have left the world, we
must learn to give up all forms of evil, giving up all those things which
are the cause for enmity. We conquer ourselves, we don't try to conquer
others. We fight, but we fight only the defilements; if there is greed, we
fight that; if there is aversion, we fight that; if there is delusion, we
strive to give it up.
This is called "Dhamma fighting." This warfare of the heart is really
difficult, in fact it's the most difficult thing of all. We become monks
in order to contemplate this, to learn the art of fighting greed, aversion
and delusion. This is our prime responsibility.
This is the inner battle, fighting with defilements. But there are very
few people who fight like this. Most people fight with other things, they
rarely fight defilements. They rarely even see them.
The Buddha taught us to give up all forms of evil and cultivate virtue.
This is the right path. Teaching in this way is like the Buddha picking us
up and placing us at the beginning of the path. Having reached the path,
whether we walk along it or not is up to us. The Buddha's job is finished
right there. He shows the way, that which is right and that which is not
right. This much is enough, the rest is up to us.
Now, having reached the path we still don't know anything, we still
haven't seen anything, so we must learn. To learn we must be prepared to
endure some hardship, just like students in the world. It's difficult
enough to obtain the knowledge and learning necessary for them to pursue
their careers. They have to endure. When they think wrongly or feel averse
or lazy they must force themselves before they can graduate and get a job.
The practice for a monk is similar. If we determine to practice and
contemplate, then we will surely see the way.
Ditthimana is a harmful thing. Ditthi means "view" or
"opinion." All forms of view are called ditthi: seeing good as
evil, seeing evil as good... any way whatsoever that we see things. This
is not the problem. The problem lies with the clinging to those views,
called mana; holding on to those views as if they were the truth.
This leads us to spin around from birth to death, never reaching
completion, just because of that clinging. So the Buddha urged us to let
go of views.
If many people live together, as we do here, they can still practice
comfortably if their views are in harmony. But even two or three monks
would have difficulty if their views were not good or harmonious. When we
humble ourselves and let go of our views, even if there are many of us, we
come together at the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha. [2]
It's not true to say that there will be disharmony just because there
are many of us. Just look at a millipede. A millipede has many legs,
doesn't it? Just looking at it you'd think it would have difficulty
walking, but actually it doesn't. It has its own order and rhythm. In our
practice it's the same. If we practice as the Noble Sangha of the
Buddha practiced, then it's easy. That is, supatipanno -- those who
practice well; ujupatipanno -- those who practice straightly;
ñanapatipanno -- those who practice to transcend suffering, and
samicipatipanno -- those who practice properly. These four qualities,
established within us, will make us true members of Sangha. Even if
we number in the hundreds or thousands, no matter how many we are, we all
travel the same path. We come from different backgrounds, but we are the
same. Even though our views may differ, if we practice correctly there
will be no friction. Just like all the rivers and streams which flow to
the sea... once they enter the sea they all have the same taste and color.
It's the same with people. When they enter the stream of Dhamma, it's the
one Dhamma. Even though they come from different places, they harmonize,
they merge.
But the thinking which causes all the disputes and conflict is
ditthi-mana. Therefore the Buddha taught us to let go of views. Don't
allow mana to cling to those views beyond their relevance.
The Buddha taught the value of constant sati, [3]
recollection. Whether we are standing, walking, sitting or reclining,
wherever we are, we should have this power of recollection. When we have
sati we see ourselves, we see our own minds. We see the "body
within the body," "the mind within the mind." If we don't have sati
we don't know anything, we aren't aware of what is happening.
So sati is very important. With constant sati we will
listen to the Dhamma of the Buddha at all times. This is because "eye
seeing forms" is Dhamma; "ear hearing sounds" is Dhamma; "nose smelling
odors" is Dhamma; "tongue tasting flavors" is Dhamma; "body feeling
sensations" is Dhamma; when impressions arise in the mind, that is Dhamma
also. Therefore one who has constant sati always hears the Buddha's
teaching. The Dhamma is always there. Why? Because of sati, because
we are aware.
Sati is recollection, sampajañña is self-awareness. This
awareness is the actual Buddho, the Buddha. When there is sati-sampajañña,
understanding will follow. We know what is going on. When the eye sees
forms: is this proper or improper? When the ear hears sound: is this the
appropriate or inappropriate? Is it harmful? Is it wrong, is it right? And
so on like this with everything. If we understand we hear the Dhamma all
the time.
So let us all understand that right now we are learning in the midst of
Dhamma. Whether we go forward or step back, we meet the Dhamma -- it's all
Dhamma if we have sati? Even seeing the animals running around in
the forest we can reflect, seeing that all animals are the same as us.
They run away from suffering and chase after happiness, just as people do.
Whatever they don't like they avoid; they are afraid of dying, just like
people. If we reflect on this, we see that all beings in the world, people
as well, are the same in their various instincts. Thinking like this is
called "bhavana," [4] seeing according
to the truth, that all beings are companions in birth, old age, sickness
and death. Animals are the same as human beings and human beings are the
same as animals. If we really see things the way they are our mind will
give up attachment to them.
Therefore it is said we must have sati. If we have sati
we will see the state of our own mind. Whatever we are thinking or feeling
we must know it. This knowing is called Buddho, the Buddha, the one
who knows... who knows thoroughly, who knows clearly and completely. When
the mind knows completely we find the right practice.
So the straight way to practice is to have mindfulness, sati. If
you are without sati for five minutes you are crazy for five
minutes, heedless for five minutes. whenever you are lacking in sati
you are crazy. Sati is essential. To have sati is to know
yourself, to know the condition of your mind and your life. This is to
have understanding and discernment, to listen to the Dhamma at all times.
After leaving the teacher's discourse, you still hear the Dhamma, because
the Dhamma is everywhere.
So therefore, all of you, be sure to practice every day. Whether lazy
or diligent, practice just the same. Practice of the Dhamma is not done by
following your moods. If you practice following your moods then it's not
Dhamma. Don't discriminate between day and night, whether the mind is
peaceful or not... just practice.
It's like a child who is learning to write. At first he doesn't write
nicely -- big, long loops and squiggles -- he writes like a child. After a
while the writing improves through practice. Practicing the Dhamma is like
this. At first you are awkward... sometimes calm, sometimes not, you don't
really know what's what. Some people get discouraged. Don't slacken off!
You must persevere with the practice. Live with effort, just like the
schoolboy: as he gets older he writes better and better. From writing
badly he grows to write beautifully, all because of the practice from
childhood.
Our practice is like this. Try to have recollection at all times:
standing, walking, sitting or reclining. When we perform our various
duties smoothly and well, we feel peace of mind. When there is peace of
mind in our work it's easy to have peaceful meditation, they go hand in
hand. So make an effort. You should all make an effort to follow the
practice. This is training.
Understanding Vinaya
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This practice of ours is not easy. We may know some things but there is
still much that we don't know. For example, when we hear teachings such as
"know the body, then know the mind within the body"; or "know the mind,
then know the mind within the mind." If we haven't yet practiced these
things, then we hear them we may feel baffled. The Vinaya [5]
is like this. In the past I used to be a teacher, [6]
but I was only a "small teacher," not a big one. Why do I say a "small
teacher"? Because I didn't practice. I taught the Vinaya but I
didn't practice it. This I call a small teacher, an inferior teacher. I
say an "inferior teacher" because when it came to the practice I was
deficient. For the most part my practice was a long way off the theory,
just as if I hadn't learned the Vinaya at all.
However, I would like to state that in practical terms it's impossible
to know the Vinaya completely, because some things, whether we know
them or not, are still offenses. This is tricky. And yet it is stressed
that if we do not yet understand any particular training rule or teaching,
we must study that rule with enthusiasm and respect. If we don't know,
then we should make an effort to learn. If we don't make an effort, that
is in itself an offense.
For example, if you doubt... suppose there is a woman and, not knowing
whether she is a woman or a man, you touch her. [7]
You're not sure, but still go ahead and touch... that's still wrong. I
used to wonder why that should be wrong, but when I considered the
practice, I realized that a meditator must have sati, he must be
circumspect. Whether talking, touching or holding things, he must first
thoroughly consider. The error in this case is that there is no sati,
or insufficient sati, or a lack of concern at that time.
Take another example: it's only eleven o'clock in the morning but at
the time the sky is cloudy, we can't see the sun, and we have no clock.
Now suppose we estimate that it's probably afternoon... we really feel
that it's afternoon... and yet we proceed to eat something. We start
eating and then the clouds part and we see from the position of the sun
that it's only just past eleven. This is still an offense. [8]
I used to wonder, "Eh? It's not yet past mid-day, why is this an offense?"
An offense is incurred here because of negligence, carelessness, we
don't thoroughly consider. There is a lack of restraint. If there is doubt
and we act on the doubt, there is a dukkata [9]
offense just for acting in the face of the doubt. We think that it is
afternoon when in fact it isn't. The act of eating is not wrong in itself,
but there is an offense here because we are careless and negligent. If it
really is afternoon but we think it isn't, then it's the heavier
pacittiya offense. If we act with doubt, whether the action is wrong
or not, we still incur an offense. If the action is not wrong in itself it
is the lesser offense; if it is wrong then the heavier offense is
incurred. Therefore the Vinaya can get quite bewildering.
At one time I went to see Venerable Ajahn Mun. [10]
At that time I had just begun to practice. I had read the Pubbasikkha
[11] and could understand that fairly well.
Then I went on to read the Visuddhimagga, where the author writes
of the Silanidesa (Book of Precepts), Samadhinidesa (Book of
Mind-Training) and Paññanidesa (Book of Understanding)... I felt my
head was going to burst! After reading that, I felt that it was beyond the
ability of a human being to practice. But then I reflected that the Buddha
would not teach something that is impossible to practice. He wouldn't
teach it and he wouldn't declare it, because those things would be useful
neither to himself nor to others. The Silanidesa is extremely
meticulous, the Samadhinidesa more so, and the Paññanidesa
even more so! I sat and thought, "Well, I can't go any further. There's no
way ahead." It was as if I'd reached a dead-end.
At this stage I was struggling with my practice... I was stuck. It so
happened that I had a chance to go and see Venerable Ajahn Mun, so I asked
him: "Venerable Ajahn, what am I to do? I've just begun to practice but I
still don't know the right way. I have so many doubts I can't find any
foundation at all in the practice."
He asked, "What's the problem?"
"In the course of my practice I picked up the Visuddhimagga and
read it, but it seems impossible to put into practice. The contents of the
Silanidesa, Samadhinidesa and Paññanidesa seem to be
completely impractical. I don't think there is anybody in the world who
could do it, it's so detailed and meticulous. To memorize every single
rule would be impossible, it's beyond me."
He said to me: "Venerable... there's a lot, it's true, but it's really
only a little. If we were to take account of every training rule in the
Silanidesa that would be difficult... true... But actually, what we
call the Silanidesa has evolved from the human mind. If we train
this mind to have a sense of shame and a fear of wrong-doing, we will then
be restrained, we will be cautious...
"This will condition us to be content with little, with few wishes,
because we can't possibly look after a lot. When this happens our sati
becomes stronger. We will be able to maintain sati at all times.
Wherever we are we will make the effort to maintain thorough sati.
Caution will be developed. Whatever you doubt don't say it, don't act on
it. If there's anything you don't understand, ask the teacher. Trying to
practice every single training rule would indeed be burdensome, but we
should examine whether we are prepared to admit our faults or not. Do we
accept them?"
This teaching is very important. It's not so much that we must know
every single training rule, if we know how to train our own minds.
"All that stuff that you've been reading arises from the mind. If you
still haven't trained your mind to have sensitivity and clarity you will
be doubting all the time. You should try to bring the teachings of the
Buddha into your mind. Be composed in mind. Whatever arises that you
doubt, just give it up. If you don't really know for sure then don't say
it or do it. For instance, if you wonder, "Is this wrong or not?" -- that
is, you're not really sure -- then don't say it, don't act on it, don't
discard your restraint."
As I sat and listened, I reflected that this teaching conformed with
the eight ways for measuring the true teaching of the Buddha: Any teaching
that speaks of the diminishing of defilements; which leads out of
suffering; which speaks of renunciation (of sensual pleasures); of
contentment with little; of humility and disinterest in rank and status;
of aloofness and seclusion; of diligent effort; of being easy to
maintain... these eight qualities are characteristics of the true
Dhamma-vinaya, the teaching of the Buddha. anything in contradiction
to these is not.
"If we are genuinely sincere we will have a sense of shame and a fear
of wrongdoing. We will know that if there is doubt in our mind we will not
act on it nor speak on it. The Silanidesa is only words. For
example, hiri-ottappa [12] in the
books is one thing, but in our minds it is another."
Studying the Vinaya with Venerable Ajahn Mun I learned many
things. As I sat and listened, understanding arose.
So, when it comes to the Vinaya I've studied considerably. Some
days during the Rains Retreat I would study from six o'clock in the
evening through till dawn. I understand it sufficiently. All the factors
of apatti [13] which are covered in
the Pubbasikkha I wrote down in a notebook and kept in my bag. I
really put effort into it, but in later times I gradually let go. It was
too much. I didn't know which was the essence and which was the trimming,
I had just taken all of it. When I understood more fully I let it drop off
because it was too heavy. I just put my attention into my own mind and
gradually did away with the texts.
However, when I teach the monks here I still take the Pubbasikkha
as my standard. For many years here at Wat Ba Pong it was I myself who
read it to the assembly. In those days I would ascend the Dhamma-seat and
go on until at least eleven o'clock or midnight, some days even one or two
o'clock in the morning. We were interested. And we trained. After
listening to the Vinaya reading we would go and consider what we'd
heard. You can't really understand the Vinaya just by listening to
it. Having listened to it you must examine it and delve into it further.
Even though I studied these things for many years my knowledge was
still not complete, because there were so many ambiguities in the texts.
Now that it's been such a long time since I looked at the books, my memory
of the various training rules has faded somewhat, but within my mind there
is no deficiency. There is a standard there. There is no doubt, there is
understanding. I put away the books and concentrated on developing my own
mind. I don't have doubts about any of the training rules. The mind has an
appreciation of virtue, it won't dare do anything wrong, whether in public
or in private. I do not kill animals, even small ones. If someone were to
ask me to intentionally kill an ant or a termite, to squash one with my
hand, for instance, I couldn't do it, even if they were to offer me
thousands of baht to do so. Even one ant or termite! The ant's life
would have greater value to me.
However, it may be that I may cause one to die, such as when something
crawls up my leg and I brush it off. Maybe it dies, but when I look into
my mind there is no feeling of guilt. There is no wavering or doubt. Why?
Because there was no intention. Silam vadami bhikkhave cetanaham:
"Intention is the essence of moral training." Looking at it in this way I
see that there was no intentional killing. Sometimes while walking I may
step on an insect and kill it. In the past, before I really understood, I
would really suffer over things like that. I would think I had committed
an offense.
"What? There was no intention." "There was no intention, but I wasn't
being careful enough!" I would go on like this, fretting and worrying.
So this Vinaya is something which can be disturb practicers of
Dhamma, but it also has its value, in keeping with what the teachers say
-- "Whatever training rules you don't yet know you should learn. If you
don't know you should question those who do." They really stress this.
Now if we don't know the training rules, we won't be aware of our
transgressions against them. Take, for example, a Venerable Thera of the
past, Ajahn Pow of Wat Kow Wong Got in Lopburi Province. One day a certain
Maha, [14] a disciple of his, was
sitting with him, when some women came up and asked,
"Luang Por! We want to invite you to go with us on an excursion, will
you go?"
Luang Por Pow didn't answer. The Maha sitting near him thought
that Venerable Ajahn Pow hadn't heard, so he said,
"Luang Por, Luang Por! Did you hear? These women invited you to go for
a trip."
He said, "I heard."
The women asked again, "Luang Por, are you going or not?"
He just sat there without answering, and so nothing came of the
invitation. When they had gone, the Maha said,
"Luang Por, why didn't you answer those women?"
He said, "Oh, Maha, don't you know this rule? Those people who
were here just now were all women. If women invite you to travel with them
you should not consent. If they make the arrangements themselves that's
fine. If I want to go I can, because I didn't take part in making the
arrangements."
"The Maha sat and thought, "Oh, I've really made a fool of
myself."
The Vinaya states that to make an arrangement, and then travel
together with, women, even though it isn't as a couple, is a pacittiya
offense.
Take another case. Lay people would bring money to offer Venerable
Ajahn Pow on a tray. He would extend his receiving cloth, [15]
holding it at one end. But when they brought the tray forward to lay it on
the cloth he would retract his hand from the cloth. Then he would simply
abandon the money where it lay. He knew it was there, but he would take no
interest in it, just get up and walk away, because in the Vinaya it
is said that if one doesn't consent to the money it isn't necessary to
forbid laypeople from offering it. If he had desire for it, he would have
to say, "Householder, this is not allowable for a monk." He would have to
tell them. If you have desire for it, you must forbid them from offering
that which is unallowable. However, if you really have no desire for it,
it isn't necessary. You just leave it there and go.
Although the Ajahn and his disciples lived together for many years,
still some of his disciples didn't understand Ajahn Pow's practice. This
is a poor state of affairs. As for myself, I looked into and contemplated
many of Venerable Ajahn Pow's subtler points of practice.
The Vinaya can even cause some people to disrobe. When they
study it all the doubts come up. It goes right back into the past... "my
ordination, was it proper? [16] Was my
preceptor pure? None of the monks who sat in on my ordination knew
anything about the Vinaya, were they sitting at the proper
distance? Was the chanting correct?" The doubts come rolling on... "The
hall I ordained in, was it proper? It was so small..." They doubt
everything and fall into hell.
So until you know how to ground your mind it's really difficult. You
have to be very cool, you can't just jump into things. But to be so cool
that you don't bother to look into things is wrong also. I was so confused
I almost disrobed because I saw so many faults within my own practice and
that of some of my teachers. I was on fire and couldn't sleep because of
those doubts.
The more I doubted, the more I meditated, the more I practiced.
Wherever doubt arose I practiced right at that point. Wisdom arose. Things
began to change. It's hard to describe the change that took place. The
mind changed until there was no more doubt. I don't know how it changed,
if I were to tell someone they probably wouldn't understand.
So I reflected on the teaching Paccattam veditabbo viññuhi --
the wise must know for themselves. It must be a knowing that arises
through direct experience. Studying the Dhamma-vinaya is certainly
correct but if it's just the study it's still lacking. If you really get
down to the practice you begin to doubt everything. Before I started to
practice I wasn't interested in the minor offenses, but when I started
practicing, even the dukkata offenses became as important as the
parajika offenses. Before, the dukkata offenses seemed like
nothing, just a trifle. That's how I saw them. In the evening you could
confess them and they would be done with. Then you could transgress them
again. This sort of confession is impure, because you don't stop, you
don't decide to change. There is no restraint, you simply do it again and
again. There is no perception of the truth, no letting go.
Actually, in terms of ultimate truth, it's not necessary to go through
the routine of confessing offenses. If we see that our mind is pure and
there is no trace of doubt, then those offenses drop off right there. That
we are not yet pure is because we still doubt, we still waver. We are not
really pure so we can't let go. We don't see ourselves, this is the point.
This Vinaya of ours is like a fence to guard us from making
mistakes, so it's something we need to be scrupulous with.
If you don't see the true value of the Vinaya for yourself it's
difficult. Many years before I came to Wat Ba Pong I decided I would give
up money. For the greater part of a Rains Retreat I had thought about it.
In the end I grabbed my wallet and walked over to a certain Maha
who was living with me at the time, setting the wallet down in front of
him.
"Here, Maha, take this money. From today onwards, as long as I'm
a monk, I will not receive or hold money. You can be my witness."
"You keep it, Venerable, you may need it for your studies"... The
Venerable Maha wasn't keen to take the money, he was embarrassed...
"Why do you want to throw away all this money?"
"You don't have to worry about me. I've made my decision. I decided
last night."
From the day he took that money it was as if a gap had opened between
us. We could no longer understand each other. He's still my witness to
this very day. Ever since that day I haven't used money or engaged in any
buying or selling. I've been restrained in every way with money. I was
constantly wary of wrongdoing, even though I hadn't done anything wrong.
Inwardly I maintained the meditation practice. I no longer needed wealth,
I saw it as a poison. Whether you give poison to a human being, a dog or
anything else, it invariably causes death or suffering. If we see clearly
like this we will be constantly on our guard not to take that "poison."
When we clearly see the harm in it, it's not difficult to give up.
Regarding food and meals brought as offerings, if I doubted them I
wouldn't accept them. No matter how delicious or refined the food might
be, I wouldn't eat it. Take a simple example, like raw pickled fish.
Suppose you are living in a forest and you go on almsround and receive
only rice and some pickled fish wrapped in leaves. When you return to your
dwelling and open the packet you find that it's raw pickled fish... just
throw it away! [17] Eating plain rice is
better than transgressing the precepts. It has to be like this before you
can say you really understand, then the Vinaya becomes simpler.
If other monks wanted to give me requisites, such as bowl, razor or
whatever, I wouldn't accept, unless I knew them as fellow practicers with
a similar standard of Vinaya. Why not? How can you trust someone
who is unrestrained? They can do all sorts of things. Unrestrained monks
don't see the value of the Vinaya, so it's possible that they could
have obtained those things in improper ways. I was as scrupulous as this.
As a result, some of my fellow monks would look askance at me..."He
doesn't socialize, he won't mix..." I was unmoved: "Sure, we can mix when
we die. When it comes to death we are all in the same boat," I thought. I
lived with endurance. I was one who spoke little. If others criticized my
practice I was unmoved. Why? Because even if I explained to them they
wouldn't understand. They knew nothing about practice. Like those times
when I would be invited to a funeral ceremony and somebody would say,
"...Don't listen to him! Just put the money in his bag and don't say
anything about it... don't let him know." [18]
I would say, "Hey, do you think I'm dead or something? Just because one
calls alcohol perfume doesn't make it become perfume, you know. But you
people, when you want to drink alcohol you call it perfume, then go ahead
and drink. You must be crazy!".
The Vinaya, then, can be difficult. You have to be content with
little, aloof. You must see, and see right. Once, when I was traveling
through Saraburi, my group went to stay in a village temple for a while.
The Abbot there had about the same seniority as myself. In the morning, we
would all go on almsround together, then come back to the monastery and
put down our bowls. Presently the laypeople would bring dishes of food
into the hall and set them down. Then the monks would go and pick them up,
open them and lay them in a line to be formally offered. One monk would
put his hand on the dish at the other end. And that was it! With that the
monks would bring them over and distribute them to be eaten.
About five monks were traveling with me at the time, but not one of us
would touch that food. On almsround all we received was plain rice, so we
sat with them and ate plain rice, none of us would dare eat the food from
those dishes.
This went on for quite a few days, until I began to sense that the
Abbot was disturbed by our behavior. One of his monks had probably gone to
him and said, "Those visiting monks won't eat any of the food. I don't
know what they're up to."
I had to stay there for a few days more, so I went to the Abbot to
explain.
I said, "Venerable Sir, may I have a moment please? At this time I have
some business which means I must call on your hospitality for some days,
but in doing so I'm afraid there may be one or two things which you and
your fellow monks find puzzling: namely, concerning our not eating the
food which has been offered by the laypeople. I'd like to clarify this
with you, sir. It's really nothing, it's just that I've learned to
practice like this... that is, the receiving of the offerings, sir. When
the lay people lay the food down and then the monks go and open the
dishes, sort them out and then have them formally offered... this is
wrong. It's a dukkata offense. Specifically, to handle or touch
food which hasn't yet been formally offered into a monk's hands, "ruins"
that food. According to the Vinaya, any monk who eats that food
incurs an offense.
"It's simply this one point, sir. It's not that I'm criticizing
anybody, or that I'm trying to force you or your monks to stop practicing
like this... not at all. I just wanted to let you know of my good
intentions, because it will be necessary for me to stay here for a few
more days.
He lifted his hands in añjali, [19]
"Sadhu! Excellent! I've never yet seen a monk who keeps the minor
rules in Saraburi. there aren't any to be found these days. If there still
are such monks they must live outside of Saraburi. May I commend you. I
have no objections at all, that's very good."
The next morning when we came back from almsround not one of the monks
would go near those dishes. The laypeople themselves sorted them out and
offered them, because they were afraid the monks wouldn't eat. From that
day onwards the monks and novices there seemed really on edge, so I tried
to explain things to them, to put their minds at rest. I think they were
afraid of us, they just went into their rooms and closed themselves in in
silence.
For two or three days I tried to make them feel at ease because they
were so ashamed, I really had nothing against them. I didn't say things
like "There's not enough food," or "bring 'this' or 'that' food." Why not?
Because I had fasted before, sometimes for seven or eight days. Here I had
plain rice, I knew I wouldn't die. Where I got my strength from was the
practice, from having studied and practiced accordingly.
I took the Buddha as my example. Wherever I went, whatever others did,
I wouldn't involve myself. I devoted myself solely to the practice,
because I cared for myself, I cared for the practice.
Those who don't keep the Vinaya or practice meditation and those
who do practice can't live together, they must go separate ways. I didn't
understand this myself in the past. As a teacher I taught others but I
didn't practice. This is really bad. When I looked deeply into it, my
practice and my knowledge were as far apart as earth and sky.
Therefore, those who want to go and set up meditation centers in the
forest... don't do it. If you don't yet really know, don't bother trying,
you'll only make a mess of it. Some monks think that going to live in the
forest they will find peace, but they still don't understand the
essentials of practice. They cut grass for themselves, [20]
do everything themselves... Those who really know the practice aren't
interested in places like this, they won't prosper. Doing it like that
won't lead to progress. No matter how peaceful the forest may be you can't
progress if you do it wrong.
They see the forest monks living in the forest and go to live in the
forest like them, but it's not the same. The robes are not the same,
eating habits are not the same, everything is different. Namely, they
don't train themselves, they don't practice. The place is wasted, it
doesn't really work. If it does work, it does so only as a venue for
showing off or publicizing, just like a medicine show. It goes no further
than that. Those who have only practiced a little and then go to teach
others are not yet ripe, they don't really understand. In a short time
they give up and it falls apart. It just brings trouble.
So we must study somewhat, look at the Navakovada, [21]
what does it say? Study it, memorize it, until you understand. From time
to time ask your teacher concerning the finer points, he will explain
them. Study like this until you really understand the Vinaya.
Maintaining the Standard
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Today we are meeting together as we do every year after the annual
Dhamma examinations. [22] At this time all of
you should reflect on the importance of carrying out the various duties of
the monastery, those toward the preceptor and those toward the teachers.
These are what hold us together as a single group, enabling us to live in
harmony and concord. They are also what lead us to have respect for each
other, which in turn benefits the community.
In all communities, from the time of the Buddha till the present, no
matter what form they may take, if the residents have no mutual respect
they cannot succeed. Whether they be secular communities or monastic ones,
if they lack mutual respect they have no solidarity. If there is no mutual
respect, negligence sets in and the practice eventually degenerates.
Our community of Dhamma practicers has lived here for about twenty five
years now, steadily growing, but it could deteriorate. We must understand
this point. But if we are all heedful, have mutual respect and continue to
maintain the standards of practice, I feel that our harmony will be firm.
Our practice as a group will be a source of growth for Buddhism for a long
time to come.
Now in regard to the study and the practice, they are a pair. Buddhism
has grown and flourished until the present time because of the study going
hand in hand with practice. If we simply learn the scriptures in a
heedless way negligence sets in... For example, in the first year here we
had seven monks for the Rains Retreat. At that time, I thought to myself,
"Whenever monks start studying for Dhamma Examinations the practice seems
to degenerate." Considering this, I tried to determine the cause, so I
began to teach the monks who were there for the Rains Retreat -- all seven
of them. I taught for about forty days, from after the meal till six in
the evening, every day. The monks went for the exams and it turned out
there was a good result in that respect, all seven of them passed.
That much was good, but there was a certain complication regarding
those who were lacking in circumspection. To study, it is necessary to do
a lot of reciting and repeating. Those who are unrestrained and unreserved
tend to grow lax with the meditation practice and spend all their time
studying, repeating and memorizing. This causes them to throw out their
old abiding, their standards of practice. And this happens very often.
So it was when they had finished their studies and taken their exams I
could see a change in the behavior of the monks. There was no walking
meditation, only a little sitting, and an increase in socializing. There
was less restraint and composure.
Actually, in our practice, when you do walking meditation, you should
really determine to walk; when sitting in meditation, you should
concentrate on doing just that. Whether you are standing, walking, sitting
or lying down, you should strive to be composed. But when people do a lot
of study, their minds are full of words, they get high on the books and
forget themselves. They get lost in externals. Now this is so only for
those who don't have wisdom, who are unrestrained and don't have steady
sati. For these people studying can be a cause for decline. When such
people are engaged in study they don't do any sitting or walking
meditation and become less and less restrained. Their minds become more
and more distracted. Aimless chatter, lack of restraint and socializing
become the order of the day. This is the cause for the decline of the
practice. It's not because of the study in itself, but because certain
people don't make the effort, they forget themselves.
Actually the scriptures are pointers along the path of practice. If we
really understand the practice, then reading or studying are both further
aspects of meditation. But if we study and then forget ourselves it gives
rise to a lot of talking and fruitless activity. People throw out the
meditation practice and soon want to disrobe. Most of those who study and
fail soon disrobe. It's not that the study is not good, or that the
practice is not right. It's that people fail to examine themselves.
Seeing this, in the second rains retreat I stopped teaching the
scriptures. Many years later more and more young men came to become monks.
Some of them knew nothing about the Dhamma-Vinaya and were ignorant of the
texts, so I decided to rectify the situation, asking those senior monks
who had already studied to teach, and they have taught up until the
present time. This is how we came to have studying here.
However, every year when the exams are finished, I ask all the monks to
re-establish their practice. All those scriptures which aren't directly
concerned with the practice, put them away in the cupboards. Re-establish
yourselves, go back to the regular standards. Re-establish the communal
practices such as coming together for the daily chanting. This is our
standard. Do it even if only to resist your own laziness and aversion.
This encourages diligence.
Don't discard your basic practices: eating little, speaking little,
sleeping little; restraint and composure; aloofness; regular walking and
sitting meditation; meeting together regularly at the appropriate times.
Please make an effort with these, every one of you. Don't let this
excellent opportunity go to waste. Do the practice. You have this chance
to practice here because you live under the guidance of the teacher. He
protects you on one level, so you should all devote yourselves to the
practice. You've done walking meditation before, now also you should sit.
In the past you've chanted together in the mornings and evenings, and now
also you should make the effort. These are your specific duties, please
apply yourselves to them.
Those who simply "kill time" in the robes don't have any strength, you
know. The ones who are floundering, homesick, confused... do you see them?
These are the ones who don't put their minds into the practice. They don't
have any work to do. We can't just lie around here. Being a Buddhist monk
or novice you live and eat well, you shouldn't take it for granted.
Kamasukhallikanuyogo [23] is a danger.
Make an effort to find your own practice. Whatever is faulty, work to
rectify, don't get lost in externals.
One who has zeal never misses walking and sitting meditation, never
lets up in the maintenance of restraint and composure. Just observe the
monks here. Whoever, having finished the meal and any business there may
be, having hung out his robes, walks meditation -- and when we walk past
his kuti [24] we see the walking path
a well-worn trail, and we see it often -- this monk is not bored with the
practice. This is one who has effort, who has zeal.
If all of you devote yourselves like this to the practice, then not
many problems will arise. If you don't abide with the practice, the
walking and sitting meditation, there's nothing more than just traveling
around. Not liking it here you go traveling over there; not liking it
there you come touring back here. That's all there is to it, following
your noses everywhere. These people don't persevere, it's good enough. You
don't have to do a lot of traveling around, just stay here and develop the
practice, learn it in detail. Traveling round can wait till later, it's
not difficult. Make an effort, all of you.
Prosperity and decline hinge on this. If you really want to do things
properly, then study and practice in proportion; use both of them
together. It's like the body and the mind. If the mind is at ease and the
body free of disease and healthy, then the mind becomes composed. If the
mind is confused, even if the body is strong there will be difficulty, let
alone when the body experiences discomfort.
The study of meditation is the study of cultivation and relinquishment.
What I mean by study here is: whenever the mind experiences a sensation,
do we still cling to it? Do we still create problems around it? Do we
still experience enjoyment or aversion over it? To put it simply: Do we
still get lost in our thoughts? Yes, we do. If we don't like something we
react with aversion; if we do like it we react with pleasure, the mind
becomes defiled and stained. If this is the case then we must see that we
still have faults, we are still imperfect, we still have work to do. There
must be more relinquishing and more persistent cultivation. This is what I
mean by studying. If we get stuck on anything, we recognize that we are
stuck. We know what state we're in, and we work to correct ourselves.
Living with the teacher or apart from the teacher should be the same.
Some people are afraid. They're afraid that if they don't walk meditation
the teacher will upbraid or scold them. This is good in a way, but in the
true practice you don't need to be afraid of others, just be wary of
faults arising within your own actions, speech or thoughts. When you see
faults in your actions, speech or thoughts you must guard yourselves.
Attano jodayattanam -- "you must exhort yourself," don't leave it to
others to do. We must quickly improve ourselves, know ourselves. This is
called "studying," cultivating and relinquishing. Look into this till you
see it clearly.
Living in this way we rely on endurance, persevering in face of all
defilements. Although this is good, it is still on the level of
"practicing the Dhamma without having seen it." If we have practiced the
Dhamma and seen it, then whatever is wrong we will have already given up,
whatever is useful we will have cultivated. Seeing this within ourselves,
we experience a sense of well-being. No matter what others say, we know
our own mind, we are not moved. We can be at peace anywhere.
Now the younger monks and novices who have just begun to practice may
think that the senior Ajahn doesn't seem to do much walking or sitting
meditation. Don't imitate him in this. You should emulate, but not
imitate. To emulate is one thing, to imitate another. The fact is that the
senior Ajahn dwells within his own particular contented abiding. Even
though he doesn't seem to practice externally, he practices inwardly.
Whatever is in his mind cannot be seen by the eye. The practice of
Buddhism is the practice of the mind. Even though the practice may not be
apparent in his actions or speech, the mind is a different matter.
Thus, a teacher who has practiced for a long time, who is proficient in
the practice, may seem to let go of his actions and speech, but he guards
his mind. He is composed. Seeing only his outer actions you may try to
imitate him, letting go and saying whatever you want to say, but it's not
the same thing. You're not in the same league. Think about this.
There's a real difference, you are acting from different places.
Although the Ajahn seems to simply sit around, he is not being careless.
He lives with things but it is not confused by them. We can't see this,
whatever is in his mind is invisible to us. Don't judge simply by external
appearances, the mind is the important thing. When we speak, our minds
follow that speech. Whatever actions we do, our minds follow, but one who
has practiced already may do or say things which his mind doesn't follow,
because it adheres to Dhamma and Vinaya. For example, sometimes the Ajahn
may be severe with his disciples, his speech may appear to be rough and
careless, his actions may seem coarse. Seeing this, all we can see are his
bodily and verbal actions, but the mind which adheres to Dhamma and Vinaya
can't be seen. Adhere to the Buddha's instruction: "Don't be heedless."
"Heedfulness is the way to the Deathless. Heedfulness is death." Consider
this. Whatever others do is not important, just don't be heedless, this is
the important thing.
All I have been saying here is simply to warn you that now, having
completed the exams, you have a chance to travel around and do many
things. May you all constantly remember yourselves as practicers of the
Dhamma; a practicer must be collected, restrained and circumspect.
Consider the teaching which says "Bhikkhu: one who seeks alms." If we
define it this way our practice takes on one form... very coarse. If we
understand this word the way the Buddha defined it, as one who sees the
danger of samsara, [25] this is much
more profound.
One who sees the danger of samsara is one who sees the faults,
the liability of this world. In this world there is so much danger, but
most people don't see it, they see the pleasure and happiness of the
world. Now the Buddha says that a bhikkhu is one who sees the danger of
samsara. What is samsara? The suffering of samsara is
overwhelming, it's intolerable. Happiness is also samsara. The
Buddha taught us not to cling to them. If we don't see the danger of
samsara, then when there is happiness we cling to the happiness and
forget suffering. We are ignorant of it, like a child who doesn't know
fire.
If we understand Dhamma practice in this way..."Bhikkhu: one who sees
the danger of samsara"...if we have this understanding, walking,
sitting or lying down, wherever we may be, we will feel dispassion. We
reflect on ourselves, heedfulness is there. Even sitting at ease, we feel
this way. Whatever we do we see this danger, so we are in a very different
state. This practice is called being "one who sees the danger of
samsara."
One who sees the danger of samsara lives within samsara
and yet doesn't. That is, he understands concepts and he understands their
transcendence. Whatever such a person says is not like ordinary people.
Whatever he does is not the same, whatever he thinks is not the same. His
behavior is much wiser.
Therefore it is said: "Emulate but don't imitate." There are two ways
-- emulation and imitation. One who is foolish will grab on to everything.
You mustn't do that! Don't forget yourselves.
As for me, this year my body is not so well. Some things I will leave
to the other monks and novices to help take care of. Perhaps I will take a
rest. From time immemorial it's been this way, and in the world it's the
same: as long as the father and mother are still alive, the children are
well and prosperous. When the parents die, the children separate. Having
been rich they become poor. This is usually how it is, even in the lay
life, and one can see it here as well. For example, while the Ajahn is
still alive everybody is well and prosperous. As soon as he passes away
decline begins to set in immediately. Why is this? Because while the
teacher is still alive people become complacent and forget themselves.
They don't really make an effort with the study and the practice. As in
lay life, while the mother and father are still alive, the children just
leave everything up to them. They lean on their parents and don't know how
to look after themselves. When the parents die they become paupers. In the
monkhood it's the same. If the Ajahn goes away or dies, the monks tend to
socialize, break up into groups and drift into decline, almost every time.
Why is this? It's because they forget themselves. Living off the merits
of the teacher everything runs smoothly. When the teacher passes away, the
disciples tend to split up. Their views clash. Those who think wrongly
live in one place, those who think rightly live in another. Those who feel
uncomfortable leave their old associates and set up new places and start
new lineages with their own groups of disciples. This is how it goes. In
the present it's the same. This is because we are at fault. While the
teacher is still alive we are at fault, we live heedlessly. We don't take
up the standards of practice taught by the Ajahn and establish them within
our own hearts. We don't really follow in his footsteps.
Even in the Buddha's time it was the same, remember the scriptures?
That old monk, what was his name...? Subhadda Bhikkhu! When Venerable Maha
Kassapa was returning from Pava he asked an ascetic on the way, "Is the
Lord Buddha faring well?" The ascetic answered: "The Lord Buddha entered
Parinibbana seven days ago."
Those monks who were still unenlightened were grief-stricken, crying
and wailing. Those who had attained the Dhamma reflected to themselves,
"Ah, the Buddha has passed away. He has journeyed on." But those who were
still thick with defilements, such as Venerable Subhadda, said:
"What are you all crying for? The Buddha has passed away. That's good!
Now we can live at ease. When the Buddha was still alive he was always
bothering us with some rule or other, we couldn't do this or say that. Now
the Buddha has passed away, that's fine! We can do whatever we want, say
what we want... Why should you cry?"
It's been so from way back then till the present day.
However that may be, even though it's impossible to preserve
entirely... Suppose we had a glass and we took care to preserve it. Each
time we used it we cleaned it and put it away in a safe place. Being very
careful with that glass we can use it for a long time, and then when we've
finished with it others can also use it. Now, using glasses carelessly and
breaking them every day, and using one glass for ten years before it
breaks -- which is better?
Our practice is like this. For instance, if out of all of us living
here, practicing steadily, only ten of you practice well, then Wat Ba Pong
will prosper. Just as in the villages: in the village of one hundred
houses, even if there are only fifty good people that village will
prosper. Actually to find even ten would be difficult. Or take a monastery
like this one here: it is hard to find even five or six monks who have
real commitment, who really do the practice.
In any case, we don't have any responsibilities now, other than to
practice well. Think about it, what do we own here? We don't have wealth,
possessions, and families any more. Even food we take only once a day.
We've given up many things already, even better things than these. As
monks and novices we give up everything. We own nothing. All those things
people really enjoy have been discarded by us. Going forth as a Buddhist
monk is in order to practice. Why then should we hanker for other things,
indulging in greed, aversion or delusion? To occupy our hearts with other
things is no longer appropriate.
Consider: why have we gone forth? Why are we practicing? We have gone
forth to practice. If we don't practice then we just lie around. If we
don't practice, then we are worse off than lay people, we don't have any
function. If we don't perform any function or accept our responsibilities
it's a waste of the samana's [26]
life. It contradicts the aims of a samana.
If this is the case then we are heedless. Being heedless is like being
dead. Ask yourself, will you have time to practice when you die?
Constantly ask yourself, "When will I die?" If we contemplate in this way
our mind will be alert every second, heedfulness will always be present.
When there is no heedlessness, sati -- recollection of what is what
-- will automatically follow. Wisdom will be clear, seeing all the things
clearly as they are. Recollection guards the mind, knowing the arising of
sensations at all times, day and night. that is to have sati. To
have sati is to be composed. To be composed is to be heedful. If
one is heedful then one is practicing rightly. This is our specific
responsibility.
So today I would like to present this to you all. If in the future you
leave here for one of the branch monasteries or anywhere else, don't
forget yourselves. The fact is you are still not perfect, still not
completed. You still have a lot of work to do, many responsibilities to
shoulder. Namely, the practices of cultivation and relinquishment. Be
concerned about this, every one of you. Whether you live at this monastery
or a branch monastery, preserve the standards of practice. Nowadays there
are many of us, many branch temples. All the branch monasteries owe their
origination to Wat Ba Pong. We could say that the branch monasteries. So,
especially the teachers, monks and novices of Wat Ba Pong should try to
set the example, to be the guide for all the other branch monasteries,
continuing to be diligent in the practices and responsibilities of a
samana.
Right Practice -- Steady Practice
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Wat Wana Potiyahn [27] here is certainly
very peaceful, but this is meaningless if our minds are not calm. All
places are peaceful. That some may seem distracting is because of our
minds. However, a quiet place can help to become calm, by giving one the
opportunity to train and thus harmonize with its calm.
You should all bear in mind that this practice is difficult. To train
other things is not so difficult, it's easy, but the human mind is hard to
train. The Lord Buddha trained his mind. The mind is the important thing.
Everything within this body-mind system comes together at the mind. The
eyes, ears, nose, tongue and body all receive sensations and send them
into the mind, which is the supervisor of all the other sense organs.
Therefore it is important to train the mind. If the mind is well trained
all problems come to an end. If there are still problems it's because the
mind still doubts, it doesn't know in accordance with the truth. That is
why there are problems.
So recognize that all of you have come fully prepared for practicing
Dhamma. Whether standing, walking, sitting or reclining, the tools you
need with which to practice are well-provided, wherever you are. They are
there, just like the Dhamma. The Dhamma is something which abounds
everywhere. Right here, on land or in water... wherever... the Dhamma is
always there. The Dhamma is perfect and complete, but it's our practice
that's not yet complete.
The Lord, Fully Enlightened Buddha taught a means by which all of us
may practice and come to know this Dhamma. It isn't a big thing, only a
small thing, but it's right. For example, look at hair. If we know even
one strand of hair, then we know every strand, both our own and also that
of others. We know that they are all simply "hair." By knowing one strand
of hair we know it all.
Or consider people. If we see the true nature of conditions within
ourselves then we know all the other people in the world also, because all
people are the same. Dhamma is like this. It's a small thing and yet it's
big. That is, to see the truth of one condition is to see the truth of
them all. When we know the truth as it is all problems come to an end.
Nevertheless, the training is difficult. Why is it difficult? It's
difficult because of wanting, tanha. If you don't "want" then you
don't practice. But if you practice out of desire you won't see the Dhamma.
Think about it, all of you. If you don't want to practice you can't
practice. You must first want to practice in order to actually do the
practice. Whether stepping forward or stepping back you meet desire. This
is why the cultivators of the past have said that this practice is
something that's extremely difficult to do.
You don't see Dhamma because of desire. Sometimes desire is very
strong, you want to see the Dhamma immediately, but the Dhamma is not your
mind -- your mind is not yet Dhamma. The Dhamma is one thing and the mind
is another. It's not that whatever you like is Dhamma and whatever you
don't like isn't. That's not the way it goes.
Actually this mind of ours is simply a condition of Nature, like a tree
in the forest. If you want a plank or a beam it must come from the tree,
but the tree is still only a tree. It's not yet a beam or a plank. Before
it can really be of use to us we must take that tree and saw it into beams
or planks. It's the same tree but it becomes transformed into something
else. Intrinsically it's just a tree, a condition of Nature. But in its
raw state it isn't yet of much use to those who need timber. Our mind is
like this. It is a condition of Nature. As such it perceives thoughts, it
discriminates into beautiful and ugly and so on.
This mind of ours must be further trained. We can't just let it be.
It's a condition of Nature... train it to realize that it's a condition of
Nature. Improve on Nature so that it's appropriate to our needs, which is
Dhamma. Dhamma is something which must be practiced and brought within.
If you don't practice you won't know. Frankly speaking, you won't know
the Dhamma by just reading it or studying it. Or if you do know it your
knowledge is still defective. For example, this spittoon here. Everybody
knows it's a spittoon but they don't fully know the spittoon. Why don't
they fully know it? If I called this spittoon a saucepan, what would you
say? Suppose that every time I asked for it I said, "Please bring that
saucepan over here," that would confuse you. Why so? Because you don't
fully know the spittoon. If you did there would be no problem. You would
simply pick up that object and hand it to me, because actually there isn't
any spittoon. Do you understand? It's a spittoon due to convention. This
convention is accepted all over the country, so it's spittoon. But there
isn't any real "spittoon." If somebody wants to call it a saucepan it can
be a saucepan. It can be whatever you call it. This is called "concept."
If we fully know the spittoon, even if somebody calls it a saucepan
there's no problem. Whatever others may call it we are unperturbed because
we are not blind to its true nature. This is one who knows Dhamma.
Now let's come back to ourselves. Suppose somebody said, "You're
crazy!", or, "You're stupid," for example. Even though it may not be true,
you wouldn't feel so good. Everything becomes difficult because of our
ambitions to have and to achieve. Because of these desires to get and to
be, because we don't know according to the truth, we have no contentment.
If we know the Dhamma, are enlightened to the Dhamma, greed, aversion and
delusion will disappear. When we understand the way things are there is
nothing for them to rest on.
Why is the practice so difficult and arduous? Because of desires. As
soon as we sit down to meditate we want to become peaceful. If we didn't
want to find peace we wouldn't sit, we wouldn't practice. As soon as we
sit down we want peace to be right there, but wanting the mind to be calm
makes for confusion, and we feel restless. This is how it goes. So the
Buddha says, "Don't speak out of desire, don't sit out of desire, don't
walk out of desire,... Whatever you do, don't do it with desire." Desire
means wanting. If you don't want to do something you won't do it. If our
practice reaches this point we can get quite discouraged. How can we
practice? As soon as we sit down there is desire in the mind.
It's because of this that the body and mind are difficult to observe.
If they are not the self nor belonging to self then who do they belong to?
It's difficult to resolve these things, we must rely on wisdom. The Buddha
says we must practice with "letting go," isn't it? If we let go then we
just don't practice, right?... Because we've let go.
Suppose we went to buy some coconuts in the market, and while we were
carrying them back someone asked:
"What did you buy those coconuts for?"
"I bought them to eat."
"Are you going to eat the shells as well?"
"No."
"I don't believe you. If you're not going to eat the shells then why
did you buy them also?"
Well what do you say? How are you going to answer their question? We
practice with desire. If we didn't have desire we wouldn't practice.
Practicing with desire is tanha. Contemplating in this way can give
rise to wisdom, you know. For example, those coconuts: Are you going to
eat the shells as well? Of course not. Then why do you take them? Because
the time hasn't yet come for you to throw them away. They're useful for
wrapping up the coconut in. If, after eating the coconut, you throw the
shells away, there is no problem.
Our practice is like this. The Buddha said, "Don't act on desire, don't
speak from desire, don't eat with desire." Standing, walking, sitting or
reclining... whatever... don't do it with desire. This means to do it with
detachment. It's just like buying the coconuts from the market. We're not
going to eat the shells but it's not yet time to throw them away. We keep
them first. This is how the practice is. Concept and Transcendence [28]
are co-existent, just like a coconut. The flesh, the husk and the shell
are all together. When we buy it we buy the whole lot. If somebody wants
to accuse us of eating coconut shells that's their business, we know what
we're doing.
Wisdom is something each of us find for oneself. To see it we must go
neither fast nor slow. What should we do? Go to where there is neither
fast nor slow. Going fast or going slow are not the way.
But we're all impatient, we're in a hurry. As soon as we begin we want
to rush to the end, we don't want to be left behind. We want to succeed.
When it comes to fixing their minds for meditation some people go too
far... They light the incense, prostrate and make a vow, "As long as this
incense is not yet completely burnt I will not rise from my sitting, even
if I collapse or die, no matter what... I'll die sitting" Having made
their vow they start their sitting. As soon as they start to sit Mara's [29]
hordes come rushing at them from all sides. They've only sat for an
instant and already they think the incense must be finished. They open
their eyes for a peek..."Oh, There's still ages left!"
They grit their teeth and sit some more, feeling hot, flustered,
agitated and confused... Reaching the breaking point they think, "it must
be finished by now."... Have another peek..."Oh, no! It's not even
half-way yet!"
Two or three times and it's still not finished, so they just give up,
pack it in and sit there hating themselves. "I'm so stupid, I'm so
hopeless!" They sit and hate themselves, feeling like a hopeless case.
This just gives rise to frustration and hindrances. This is called the
hindrance of ill-will. They can't blame others so they blame themselves.
And why is this? It's all because of wanting.
Actually it isn't necessary to go through all that. To concentrate
means to concentrate with detachment, not to concentrate yourself into
knots.
But maybe we read the scriptures, about the life of the Buddha, how he
sat under the Bodhi tree and determined to himself,
"As long as I have still not attained Supreme Enlightenment I will not
rise from this place, even if my blood dries up."
Reading this in the books you may think of trying it yourself. You'll
do it like the Buddha. But you haven't considered that your car is only a
small one. The Buddha's car was a really big one, he could take it all in
one go. With only your tiny, little car, how can you possibly take it all
at once? It's a different story altogether.
Why do we think like that? Because we're too extreme. Sometimes we go
too low, sometimes we go too high. The point of balance is so hard to
find.
Now I'm only speaking from experience. In the past my practice was like
this. Practicing in order to get beyond wanting... if we don't want, can
we practice? I was stuck here. But to practice with wanting is suffering.
I didn't know what to do, I was baffled. Then I realized that the practice
which is steady is the important thing. One must practice consistently.
They call this the practice that is "consistent in all postures." Keep
refining the practice, don't let it become a disaster. Practice is one
thing, disaster is another.[30] Most people
usually create disaster. When they feel lazy they don't bother to
practice, they only practice when they feel energetic. This is how I
tended to be.
All of you ask yourselves now, is this right? To practice when you feel
like it, not when you don't: is that in accordance with the Dhamma? Is it
straight? Is it in line with the Teaching? This is what makes practice
inconsistent.
Whether you feel like it or not you should practice just the same: this
is how the Buddha taught. Most people wait till they're in the mood before
practicing, when they don't feel like it they don't bother. This is as far
as they go. This is called "disaster," it's not practice. In the true
practice, whether you are happy or depressed you practice; whether it's
easy or difficult you practice; whether it's hot or cold you practice.
It's straight like this. In the real practice, whether standing, walking,
sitting or reclining you must have the intention to continue the practice
steadily, making your sati consistent in all postures.
At first thought it seems as if you should stand for as long as you
walk, walk for as long as you sit, sit for as long as you lie down... I've
tried it but I couldn't do it. If a meditator were to make his standing,
walking, sitting and lying down all equal, how many days could he keep it
up for? Stand for five minutes, sit for five minutes, lie down for five
minutes... I couldn't do it for very long. So I sat down and thought about
it some more. "What does it all mean? People in this world can't practice
like this!"
Then I realized..."Oh, that's not right, it can't be right because it's
impossible to do. Standing, walking, sitting, reclining... make them all
consistent. To make the postures consistent the way they explain it in the
books is impossible."
But it is possible to do this: The mind... just consider the mind. To
have sati, recollection, sampajañña, self awareness and
pañña, all-round wisdom... this you can do. This is something that's
really worth practicing. This means that while standing we have sati,
while walking we have sati, while sitting we have sati, and
while reclining we have sati, -- consistently. This is possible. We
put awareness into our standing, walking, sitting, lying down -- into all
postures.
When the mind has been trained like this it will constantly recollect
Buddho, Buddho, Buddho... which is knowing. Knowing what? Knowing what is
right and what is wrong at all times. Yes, this is possible. This is
getting down to the real practice. That is, whether standing, walking,
sitting or lying down there is continuous sati.
Then you should understand those conditions which should be given up
and those which should be cultivated. You know happiness, you know
unhappiness. When you know happiness and unhappiness your mind will settle
at the point which is free of happiness and unhappiness. Happiness is the
loose path, kamasukhallikanuyogo. Unhappiness is the tight path,
attakilamathanuyogo. [31] If we know
these two extremes, we pull it back. We know when the mind is inclining
towards happiness or unhappiness and we pull it back, we don't allow it to
lean over. We have this sort of awareness, we adhere to the One Path, the
single Dhamma. We adhere to the awareness, not allowing the mind to follow
its inclinations.
But in your practice it doesn't tend to be like that, does it? You
follow your inclinations. If you follow your inclinations it's easy, isn't
it? But this is the ease which causes suffering, like someone who can't be
bothered working. He takes it easy, but when the time comes to eat he
hasn't got anything. This is how it goes.
So I've contended with many aspects of the Buddha's teaching in the
past, but I couldn't really beat him. Nowadays I accept it. I accept that
the many teachings of the Buddha are straight down the line, so I've taken
those teachings and used them to train both myself and others.
The practice which is important is patipada. What is patipada?
It is simply all our various activities, standing, walking, sitting,
reclining and everything else. This is the patipada of the body.
Now the patipada of the mind: how many times in the course of today
have you felt low? How many times have you felt high? Have there been any
noticeable feelings? We must know ourselves like this. Having seen those
feelings can we let go? Whatever we can't yet let go of we must work with.
When we see that we can't yet let go of some particular feeling we must
take it and examine it with wisdom. Reason it out. Work with it. This is
practice. For example when you are feeling zealous, practice, and then
when you feel lazy, try to continue the practice. If you can't continue at
"full speed" then at least do half as much. Don't just waste the day away
by being lazy and not practicing. Doing that will lead to disaster, it's
not the way of a cultivator.
Now I've heard some people say, "Oh, this year I was really in a bad
way."
"How come?"
"I was sick all year. I couldn't practice at all."
Oh! If they don't practice when death is near when will they ever
practice? If they're feeling well do you think they'll practice? No, they
only get lost in happiness. If they're suffering they still don't
practice, they get lost in that. I don't know when people think they're
going to practice! They can only see that they're sick, in pain, almost
dead from fever... that's right, bring it on heavy, that's where the
practice is. When people are feeling happy it just goes to their heads and
they get vain and conceited.
We must cultivate our practice. What this means is that whether you are
happy or unhappy you must practice just the same. If you are feeling well
you should practice, and if you are feeling sick you should also practice.
Those who think, "This year I couldn't practice at all, I was sick the
whole time"... if these people are feeling well, they just walk around
singing songs. This is wrong thinking, not right thinking. This is why the
cultivators of the past have all maintained the steady training of the
heart. If things are to go wrong, just let them be with the body, not in
mind.
There was a time in my practice, after I had been practicing about five
years, when I felt that living with others was a hindrance. I would sit in
my kuti and try to meditate and people would keep coming by for a
chat and disturbing me. I ran off to live by myself. I thought I couldn't
practice with those people bothering me. I was fed up, so I went to live
in a small, deserted monastery in the forest, near a small village. I
stayed there alone, speaking to no-one -- because there was nobody else to
speak to.
After I'd been there about fifteen days the thought arose, "Hmm. It
would be good to have a novice or pa-kow [32]
here with me. He could help me out with some small jobs." I knew it would
come up, and sure enough, there it was!
"Hey! You're a real character! You say you're fed up with your friends,
fed up with your fellow monks and novices, and now you want a novice.
What's this?"
"No," it says, "I want a good novice."
"There! Where are all the good people, can you find any? Where are you
going to find a good person? In the whole monastery there were only
no-good people. You must have been the only good person, to have run away
like this!"
...You have to follow it up like this, follow up the tracks of your
thoughts until you see...
"Hmm. This is the important one. Where is there a good person to be
found? There aren't any good people, you must find goodness anywhere else,
you must look within yourself. If you are good in yourself then wherever
you go will be good. Whether others criticize or praise you, you are still
good. If you aren't good, then when others criticize you, you get angry,
and when they praise you, you get pleased.
At that time I reflected on this and have found it to be true from that
day up until the present. Goodness must be found within. As soon as I saw
this, that feeling of wanting to run away disappeared. In later times,
whenever I had that desire arise I let it go. Whenever it arose I was
aware of it and kept my awareness on that. Thus I had a solid foundation.
Wherever I lived, whether people condemned me or whatever they would say,
I would reflect that the point is not whether they were good or bad. Good
or evil must be seen within ourselves. However other people are, that's
their concern.
Don't go thinking, "Oh, today is too hot," or, "Today is too cold," or,
"Today is...". Whatever the day is like that's just the way it is. Really
you are simply blaming the weather for your own laziness. We must see the
Dhamma within ourselves, then there is a surer kind of peace.
So for all of you who have come to practice here, even though it's only
for a few days, still many things will arise. Many things may be arising
which you're not even aware of. There is some right thinking, some wrong
thinking... many, many things. So I say this practice is difficult.
Even though some of you may experience some peace when you sit in
meditation, don't be in a hurry to congratulate yourselves. Likewise, if
there is some confusion, don't blame yourselves. If things seem to be
good, don't delight in them, and if they're not good don't be averse to
them. Just look at it all, look at what you have. Just look, don't bother
judging. If it's good don't hold fast to it; if it's bad, don't cling to
it. Good and bad can both bite, so don't hold fast to them.
The practice is simply to sit, sit and watch it all. Good moods and bad
moods come and go as is their nature. Don't only praise your mind or only
condemn it, know the right time for these things. When it's time for
congratulations then congratulate it, but just a little, don't overdo it.
Just like teaching a child, sometimes you may have to spank it a little.
In our practice sometimes we may have to punish ourselves, but don't
punish yourself all the time. If you punish yourself all the time in a
while you'll just give yourself a good time and take it easy either.
That's not the way to practice. We practice according to the Middle Way.
What is the Middle Way? This Middle Way is difficult to follow, you can't
rely on your moods and desires.
Don't think that only sitting with the eyes closed is practice. If you
do think this way then quickly change your thinking! Steady practice is
having the attitude of practice while standing, walking, sitting and lying
down. When coming out of sitting meditation, reflect that you're simply
changing postures. If you reflect in this way you will have peace.
Wherever you are you will have this attitude of practice with you
constantly, you will have a steady awareness within yourself.
Those of you who, having finished their evening sitting, simply indulge
in their moods, spending the whole day letting the mind wander where it
wants, will find that the next evening when sitting meditation all they
get is the "backwash" from the day's aimless thinking. There is no
foundation of calm because they have let it go cold all day. If you
practice like this your mind gets gradually further and further from the
practice. When I ask some of my disciples, "How is your meditation
going?". They say, "Oh, it's all gone now." You see? They can keep it up
for a month or two but in a year or two it's all finished.
Why is this? It's because they don't take this essential point into
their practice. When they've finished sitting they let go of their
samadhi. They start to sit for shorter and shorter periods, till they
reach the point where as soon as they start to sit they want to finish.
Eventually they don't even sit. It's the same with bowing to the
Buddha-image. At first they make the effort to prostrate every night
before going to sleep, but after a while their minds begin to stray. Soon
they don't bother to prostrate at all, they just nod, till eventually it's
all gone. They throw out the practice completely.
Therefore, understand the importance of sati, practice
constantly. Right practice is steady practice. Whether standing, walking,
sitting or reclining the practice must continue. This means that practice,
meditation, is done in the mind, not in the body. If our mind has zeal, is
conscientious and ardent, then there will be awareness. The mind is the
important thing. The mind is that which supervises everything we do.
When we understand properly then we practice properly. When we practice
properly we don't go astray. Even if we only do a little that is still all
right. For example, when you finish sitting in meditation, remind
yourselves that you are not actually finishing meditation, you are simply
changing postures. Your mind is still composed. Whether standing, walking,
sitting or reclining you have sati with you. If you have this kind
of awareness you can maintain your internal practice. In the evening when
you sit again the practice continues uninterrupted. Your effort is
unbroken, allowing the mind to attain calm.
This is called steady practice. Whether we are talking or doing other
things we should try to make the practice continuous. If our mind has
recollection and self-awareness continuously, our practice will naturally
develop, it will gradually come together. The mind will find peace,
because it will know what is right and what is wrong. It will see what is
happening within us and realize peace.
If we are to develop sila (moral restraint), or samadhi
(firmness of mind) we must first have pañña (wisdom). Some people
think that they'll develop moral restraint one year, samadhi the
next year and the year after that they'll develop wisdom. They think these
three things are separate. They think that this year they will develop,
but if the mind is not firm (samadhi), how can they do it? If there
is no understanding, (pañña) how can they do it? Without samadhi
or pañña, sila will be sloppy.
In fact these three come together at the same point. When we have
sila we have samadhi, when we have samadhi we have
pañña. They are all one, like a mango. Whether it's small or fully
grown, it's still a mango. When it's ripe it's still the same mango. If we
think in simple terms like this we can see it more easily. We don't have
to learn a lot of things, just to know these things, to know our practice.
When it comes to meditation some people don't get what they want, so
they just give up, saying they don't yet have the merit to practice
meditation. They can do bad things, they have that sort of talent, but
they don't have the talent to do good. They throw it in, saying they don't
have a good enough foundation. This is the way people are, they side with
their defilements.
Now that you have this chance to practice, please understand that
whether you find it difficult or easy to develop samadhi is
entirely up to you, not the samadhi. If it is difficult, it is
because you are practicing wrongly. In our practice we must have "Right
View" (sammaditthi). If our view is right then everything else is
right: Right View, Right Intention, Right Speech, Right Action, Right
Livelihood, Right Effort, Right Recollection, Right Concentration -- the
Eightfold Path. When there is Right View all the other factors will follow
on.
Whatever happens, don't let your mind stray off the track. Look within
yourself and you will see clearly. For the best practice, as I see it, it
isn't necessary to read many books. Take all the books and lock them away.
Just read your own mind. You have all been burying yourselves in books
from the time you entered school. I think that now you have this
opportunity and have the time, take the books, put them in a cupboard and
lock the door. Just read your mind.
Whenever something arises within the mind, whether you like it or not,
whether it seems right or wrong, just cut it off with, "this is not a sure
thing." Whatever arises just cut it down, "not sure, not sure." With just
this single ax you can cut it all down. It's all "not sure."
For the duration of this next month that you will be staying in this
forest monastery, you should make a lot of headway. You will see the
truth. This "not sure" is really an important one. This one develops
wisdom. The more you look the more you will see "not sure"-ness. After
you've cut something off with "not sure" it may come circling round and
pop up again. Yes, it's truly "not sure." Whatever pops up just stick this
one label on it all..."not sure." You stick the sign on .."not sure"...
and in a while, when its turn comes, it crops up again..."Ah, not sure."
Dig here! Not sure. You will see this same old one who's been fooling you
month in, month out, year in, year out, from the day you were born.
There's only this one who's been fooling you all along. See this and
realize the way things are.
When your practice reaches this point you won't cling to sensations,
because they are all uncertain. Have you ever noticed? Maybe you see a
clock and think, "Oh, this is nice." Buy it and see... in not many days
you're bored with it already. "This pen is really beautiful," so you take
the trouble to buy one. In not many months you tire of it again. This is
how it is. Where is there any certainty?
If we see all these things as uncertain then their value fades away.
All things become insignificant. Why should we hold on to things that have
no value? We keep them only as we might keep an old rag to wipe our feet
with. We see all sensations as equal in value because they all have the
same nature.
When we understand sensations we understand the world. The world is
sensations and sensations are the world. If we aren't fooled by sensations
we aren't fooled by the world. If we aren't fooled by the world we aren't
fooled by sensations.
The mind which sees this will have a firm foundation of wisdom. Such a
mind will not have many problems. Any problems it does have it can solve.
When there are no more problems there are no more doubts. Peace arises in
their stead. This is called "Practice." If we really practice it must be
like this.
Samma Samadhi -- Detachment Within Activity
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Take a look at the example of the Buddha. Both in his own practice and
in his methods for teaching the disciples he was exemplary. The Buddha
taught the standards of practice as skillful means for getting rid of
conceit, he couldn't do the practice for us. having heard that teaching we
must further teach ourselves, practice for ourselves. The results will
arise here, not at the teaching.
The Buddha's teaching can only enable us to get an initial
understanding of the Dhamma, but the Dhamma is not yet within our hearts.
Why not? Because we haven't yet practiced, we haven't yet taught
ourselves. The Dhamma arises at the practice. If you know it, you know it
through the practice. If you doubt it, you doubt it at the practice.
Teachings from the Masters may be true, but simply listening to Dhamma is
not yet enough to enable us to realize it. The teaching simply points out
the way to realize. To realize the Dhamma we must take that teaching and
bring it into our hearts. That part which is for the body we apply to the
body, that part which is for the speech we apply to the speech, and that
part which is for the mind we apply to the mind. This means that after
hearing the teaching we must further teach ourselves to know that Dhamma,
to be that Dhamma.
The Buddha said that those who simply believe others are not truly
wise. A wise person practices until he is one with the Dhamma, until he
can have confidence in himself, independent of others.
On one occasion, while Venerable Sariputta was sitting, listening
respectfully at his feet as the Buddha expounded the Dhamma, the Buddha
turned to him and asked,
"Sariputta, do you believe this teaching?"
Venerable Sariputta replied, "No, I don't yet believe it."
Now this is a good illustration. Venerable Sariputta listened, and he
took note. When he said he didn't yet believe he wasn't being careless, he
was speaking the truth. He simply took note of that teaching, because he
had not yet developed his own understanding of it, so he told the Buddha
that he didn't yet believe -- because he really didn't believe. These
words almost sound as if Venerable Sariputta was being rude, but actually
he wasn't. He spoke the truth, and the Buddha praised him for it.
"Good, good, Sariputta. A wise person doesn't readily believe, he
should consider first before believing."
Conviction in a belief can take various forms. One form reasons
according to Dhamma, while another form is contrary to the Dhamma. This
second way is heedless, it is a foolhardy understanding, micchaditthi,
wrong view. One doesn't listen to anybody else.
Take the example of Dighanakha the Brahman. This Brahman only believed
himself, he wouldn't believe others. At one time when the Buddha was
resting at Rajagaha, Dighanakha went to listen to his teaching. Or you
might say that Dighanakha went to teach the Buddha because he was intent
on expounding his own views...
"I am of the view that nothing suits me."
This was his view. The Buddha listened to Dighanakha's view and then
answered,
"Brahman, this view of yours doesn't suit you either."
When the Buddha had answered in this way, Dighanakha was stumped. He
didn't know what to say. The Buddha explained in many ways, till the
Brahman understood. He stopped to reflect and saw...
"Hmm, this view of mine isn't right."
On hearing the Buddha's answer the Brahman abandoned his conceited
views and immediately saw the truth. He changed right then and there,
turning right around, just as one would invert one's hand. He praised the
teaching of the Buddha thus:
"Listening to the Blessed One's teaching, my mind was illumined, just
as one living in darkness might perceive light. My mind is like an
overturned basin which has been uprighted, like a man who has been lost
and finds the way."
Now at that time a certain knowledge arose within his mind, within that
mind which had been uprighted. Wrong view vanished and right view took its
place. Darkness disappeared and light arose.
The Buddha declared that the Brahman Dighanakha was one who had opened
the Dhamma Eye. Previously Dighanakha clung to his own views and had no
intention of changing them. But when he heard the Buddha's teaching his
mind saw the truth, he saw that his clinging to those views was wrong.
When the right understanding arose he was able to perceive his previous
understanding as mistaken, so he compared his experience with a person
living in darkness who had found light. This is how it is. At that time
the Brahman Dighanakha transcended his wrong view.
Now we must change in this way. Before we can give up defilements we
must change our perspective. We must begin to practice rightly and
practice well. Previously we didn't practice rightly or well, and yet we
thought we were right and good just the same. When we really look into the
matter we upright ourselves, just like turning over one's hand. This means
that the "One Who Knows," or wisdom, arises in the mind, so that it is
able to see things anew. A new kind of awareness arises.
Therefore cultivators must practice to develop this knowing, which we
call Buddho, the One Who Knows, in their minds. Originally the one who
knows is not there, our knowledge is not clear, true or complete. This
knowledge is therefore too weak to train the mind. But then the mind
changes, or inverts, as a result of this awareness, called wisdom or
insight, which exceeds our previous awareness. That previous "one who
knows" did not yet know fully and so was unable to bring us to our
objective.
The Buddha therefore taught to look within, opanayiko. Look
within, don't look outwards. Or if you look outwards then look within, to
see the cause and effect therein. Look for the truth in all things,
because external objects and internal objects are always affecting each
other. Our practice is to develop a certain type of awareness until it
becomes stronger than our previous awareness. This causes wisdom and
insight to arise within the mind, enabling us to clearly know the workings
of the mind, the language of the mind and the ways and means of all the
defilements.
The Buddha, when he first left his home in search of liberation, was
probably not really sure what to do, much like us. He tried many ways to
develop his wisdom. He looked for teachers, such as Udaka Ramaputta, going
there to practice meditation... right leg on left leg, right hand on left
hand... body erect... eyes closed... letting go of everything... until he
was able to attain a high level of absorption samadhi. [33]
But when he came out of that samadhi his old thinking came up and
he would attach to it just as before. Seeing this, he knew that wisdom had
not yet arisen. His understanding had not yet penetrated to the truth, it
was still incomplete, still lacking. Seeing this he nonetheless gained
some understanding -- that this was not yet the summation of practice --
but he left that place to look for a new teacher.
When the Buddha left his old teacher he didn't condemn him, he did as
does the bee which takes nectar from the flower without damaging the
petals.
The Buddha then proceeded on to study with Alara Kalama and attained an
even higher state of samadhi, but when he came out of that state
Bimba and Rahula [34] came back into his
thoughts again, the old memories and feelings came up again. He still had
lust and desire. Reflecting inward he saw that he still hadn't reached his
goal, so he left that teacher also. He listened to his teachers and did
his best to follow their teachings. He continually surveyed the results of
his practice, he didn't simply do things and then discard them for
something else.
Even when it came to ascetic practices, after he had tried them he
realized that starving until one is almost skeleton is simply a matter for
the body. The body doesn't know anything. practicing in that way was like
executing an innocent person while ignoring the real thief.
When the Buddha really looked into the matter he saw that practice is
not a concern of the body, it is a concern of the mind.
Attakilamathanuyogo (self-mortification) -- the Buddha had tried it
and found that it was limited to the body. In fact, all Buddhas are
enlightened in mind.
Whether in regard to the body or to the mind, just throw them all
together as Transient, Imperfect and Ownerless -- aniccam,
dukkham and anatta. They are simply conditions of Nature. They
arise depending on supporting factors, exist for a while and then cease.
When there are appropriate conditions they arise again; having arisen they
exist for a while, then cease once more. These things are not a "self," a
"being," an "us" or a "them." There's nobody there, simply feelings.
Happiness has no intrinsic self, suffering has no intrinsic self. No self
can be found, there are simply elements of Nature which arise, exist and
cease. They go through this constant cycle of change.
All beings, including humans, tend to see the arising as themselves,
the existence as themselves, and the cessation as themselves. Thus they
cling to everything. They don't want things to be the way they are, they
don't want them to be otherwise. For instance, having arisen they don't
want things to cease; having experienced happiness, they don't want
suffering. If suffering does arise they want it to go away as quickly as
possible, but even better if it doesn't arise at all. This is because they
see this body and mind as themselves, or belonging to themselves, and so
they demand those things to follow their wishes.
This sort of thinking is like building a dam or a dike without making
an outlet to let the water through. The result is that the dam bursts. And
so it is with this kind of thinking. The Buddha saw that thinking in this
way is the cause of suffering. Seeing this cause, the Buddha gave it up.
This is the Noble Truth of the Cause of Suffering. The Truths of
Suffering, its Cause, its Cessation and the Way leading to that
Cessation... people are stuck right here. If people are to overcome their
doubts it's right at this point. Seeing that these things are simply
rupa and nama, or corporeality and mentality, it becomes
obvious that they are not a being, a person, an "us," or a "them." They
simply follow the laws of Nature.
Our practice is to know things in this way. We don't have the power to
really control these things, we aren't really their owners. Trying to
control them causes suffering, because they aren't really ours to control.
Neither body nor mind are self or others. If we know this as it really is
then we see clearly. We see the truth, we are at one with it. It's like
seeing a lump of red hot iron which has been heated in a furnace. It's hot
all over. Whether we touch it on top, the bottom or the sides it's hot. No
matter where we touch it, it's hot. This is how you should see things.
Mostly when we start to practice we want to attain, to achieve, to know
and to see, but we don't yet know what it is we're going to achieve or
know. There was once a disciple of mine whose practice was plagued with
confusion and doubts. But he kept practicing, and I kept instructing him,
till he began to find some peace. But when he eventually became a bit calm
he got caught up in his doubts again, saying, "What do I do next?" There!
the confusion arises again. He says he wants peace but when he gets it, he
doesn't want it, he asks what he should do next!
So in this practice we must do everything with detachment. How are we
to detach? We detach by seeing things clearly. Know the characteristics of
the body and mind as they are. We meditate in order to find peace, but in
doing so we see that which is not peaceful. This is because movement is
the nature of the mind.
When practicing samadhi we fix our attention on the in and
out-breaths at the nose tip or the upper lip. This "lifting" the mind to
fix it is called vitakka, or "lifting up." When we have thus
"lifted" the mind and are fixed on an object, this is called vicara,
the contemplation of the breath at the nose tip. This quality of vicara
will naturally mingle with other mental sensations, and we may think that
our mind is not still, that it won't calm down, but actually this is
simply the workings of vicara as it mingles with those sensations.
Now if this goes too far in the wrong direction, our mind will lose its
collectedness, so then we must set up the mind afresh, lifting it up to
the object of concentration with vitakka. As soon as we have thus
established our attention vicara takes over, mingling with the
various mental sensations.
Now when we see this happening, our lack of understanding may lead us
to wonder: "Why has my mind wandered? I wanted it to be still, why isn't
it still?" This is practicing with attachment.
Actually the mind is simply following its nature, but we go and add on
to that activity by wanting the mind to be still and thinking "Why isn't
it still?" Aversion arises and so we add that on to everything else,
increasing our doubts, increasing our suffering and increasing our
confusion. So if there is vicara, reflecting on the various
happenings within the mind in this way, we should wisely consider..."Ah,
the mind is simply like this." There, that's the One Who Knows talking,
telling you to see things as they are. The mind is simply like this. We
let it go at that and the mind becomes peaceful. When it's no longer
centered we bring up vitakka once more, and shortly there is clam
again. Vitakka and vicara work together like this. We use
vicara to contemplate the various sensations which arise. When
vicara becomes gradually more scattered we once again "lift" our
attention with vitakka.
The important thing here is that our practice at this point must be
done with detachment. Seeing the process of vicara interacting with
the mental sensations we may think that the mind is confused and become
averse to this process. This is the cause right here. We aren't happy
simply because we want the mind to be still. This is the cause -- wrong
view. If we correct our view just a little, seeing this activity as simply
the nature of mind, just this is enough to subdue the confusion. This is
called letting go.
Now, if we don't attach, if we practice with "letting go"... detachment
within activity and activity within detachment... if we learn to practice
like this, then vicara will naturally tend to have less to work
with. If our mind ceases to be disturbed, then vicara will incline
to contemplating Dhamma, because if we don't contemplate Dhamma the mind
returns to distraction.
So there is vitakka then vicara, vitakka then
vicara, vitakka then vicara and so on, until vicara
becomes gradually more subtle. At first vicara goes all over the
place. When we understand this as simply the natural activity of the mind,
it won't bother us unless we attach to it. It's like flowing water. If we
get obsessed with it, asking "Why does it flow?" then naturally we suffer.
If we understand that the water simply flows because that's its nature
then there's no suffering. Vicara is like this. There is vitakka,
then vicara, interacting with mental sensations. We can take these
sensations as our object of meditation, calming the mind by noting those
sensations.
If we know the nature of the mind like this then we let go, just like
letting the water flow by. Vicara becomes more and more subtle.
Perhaps the mind inclines to contemplating the body, or death for
instance, or some other theme of Dhamma. When the theme of contemplation
is right there will arise a feeling of well-being. What is that
well-being? It is piti (rapture). Piti, well-being, arises.
It may manifest as goose-pimples, coolness or lightness. The mind is
enrapt. This is called piti. There are also pleasures, sukha,
the coming and going of various sensations; and the state of
ekaggatarammana, or one-pointedness.
Now if we talk in terms of the first stage of concentration it must be
like this: vitakka, vicara, piti, sukha, ekaggata. So what is the
second stage like? As the mind becomes progressively more subtle,
vitakka and vicara become comparatively coarser, so that they
are discarded, leaving only piti, sukha, and ekaggata. This is
something that the mind does of itself, we don't have to conjecture about
it, just to know things as they are.
As the mind becomes more refined, piti is eventually thrown off,
leaving only sukha and ekaggata, and so we take note of
that. Where does piti go to? It doesn't go anywhere, it's just that
the mind becomes increasingly more subtle so that it throws off those
qualities that are too coarse for it. Whatever's too coarse it throws out,
and it keeps throwing off like this until it reaches the peak of subtlety,
known in the books as the Fourth Jhana, the highest level of
absorption. Here the mind has progressively discarded whatever becomes too
coarse for it, until there remain only ekaggata and upekkha,
equanimity. There's nothing further, this is the limit.
When the mind is developing the stages of samadhi it must
proceed in this way, but please let us understand the basics of practice.
We want to make the mind still but it won't be still. This is practicing
out of desire, but we don't realize it. We have the desire for calm. The
mind is already disturbed and then we further disturb things by wanting to
make it calm. This very wanting is the cause. We don't see that this
wanting to calm the mind is tanha (craving). It's just like
increasing the burden. The more we desire calm the more disturbed the mind
becomes, until we just give up. We end up fighting all the time, sitting
and struggling with ourselves.
Why is this? Because we don't reflect back on how we have set up the
mind. Know that the conditions of mind are simply the way they are.
Whatever arises, just observe it. It is simply the nature of the mind, it
isn't harmful unless we don't understand its nature. It's not dangerous if
we see its activity for what it is. So we practice with vitakka and
vicara until the mind begins to settle down and become less
forceful. When sensations arise we contemplate them, we mingle with them
and come to know them.
However, usually we tend to start fighting with them, because right
from the beginning we're determined to calm the mind. As soon as we sit
the thoughts come to bother us. As soon as we set up our meditation object
our attention wanders, the mind wanders off after all the thoughts,
thinking that those thoughts have come to disturb us, but actually the
problem arises right here, from the very wanting.
If we see that the mind is simply behaving according to its nature,
that it naturally comes and goes like this, and if we don't get
over-interested in it, we can understand its ways as much the same as a
child. Children don't know any better, they may say all kinds of things.
If we understand them we just let them talk, children naturally talk like
that. When we let go like this there is no obsession with the child. We
can talk to our guests undisturbed, while the child chatters and plays
around. The mind is like this. It's not harmful unless we grab on to it
and get obsessed over it. That's the real cause of trouble.
When piti arises one feels an indescribable pleasure, which only
those who experience can appreciate. Sukha (pleasure) arises, and
there is also the quality of one-pointedness. There are vitakka, vicara,
piti, sukha and ekaggata. These five qualities all converge at the one
place. Even though they are different qualities they are all collected in
the one place, and we can see them all there, just like seeing many
different kinds of fruit in the one bowl. Vitakka, vicara, piti, sukha
and ekaggata -- we can see them all in the one mind, all five
qualities. If one were to ask, "How is there vitakka, how is there
vicara, how are there piti and sukha?..." it would be
difficult to answer, but when they converge in the mind we will see how it
is for ourselves.
At this point our practice becomes somewhat special. We must have
recollection and self-awareness and not lose ourselves. Know things for
what they are. These are stages of meditation, the potential of the mind.
Don't doubt anything with regard to the practice. Even if you sink into
the earth or fly into the air, or even "die" while sitting, don't doubt
it. Whatever the qualities of the mind are, just stay with the knowing.
This is our foundation: to have sati, recollection, and
sampajañña, self-awareness, whether standing, walking, sitting, or
reclining. Whatever arises, just leave it be, don't cling to it. Be it
like or dislike, happiness or suffering, doubt or certainty, contemplate
with vicara and gauge the results of those qualities. Don't try to
label everything, just know it. See that all the things that arise in the
mind are simply sensations. They are transient. They arise, exist and
cease. That's all there is to them, they have no self or being, they are
neither "us" nor "them." They are not worthy of clinging to, any of them.
When we see all rupa and nama [35]
in this way with wisdom, then we will see the old tracks. We will see the
transience of the mind, the transience of the body, the transience of
happiness, suffering, love and hate. They are all impermanent. Seeing
this, the mind becomes weary; weary of the body and mind, weary of the
things that arise and cease and are transient. When the mind becomes
disenchanted it will look for a way out of all those things. It no longer
wants to be stuck in things, it sees the inadequacy of this world and the
inadequacy of birth.
When the mind sees like this, wherever we go, we see aniccam
(Transience), dukkham (Imperfection) and anatta (Ownerlessness).
There's nothing left to hold on to. Whether we go to sit at the foot of a
tree, on a mountain top or into a valley, we can hear the Buddha's
teaching. All trees will seem as one, all beings will be as one, there's
nothing special about any of them. They arise, exist for a while, age and
then die, all of them.
We thus see the world more clearly, seeing this body and mind more
clearly. They are clearer in the light of Transience, clearer in the light
of Imperfection and clearer in the light of Ownerlessness. If people hold
fast to things they suffer. This is how suffering arises. If we see that
body and mind are simply the way they are, no suffering arises, because we
don't hold fast to them. Wherever we go we will have wisdom. Even seeing a
tree we can consider it with wisdom. Seeing grass and the various insects
will be food for reflection.
When it all comes down to it they all fall into the same boat. They are
all Dhamma, they are invariably transient. This is the truth, this is the
true Dhamma, this is certain. How is it certain? it is certain in that the
world is that way and can never be otherwise. There's nothing more to it
than this. If we can see in this way then we have finished our journey.
In Buddhism, with regard to view, it is said that to feel that we are
more foolish than others is not right: to feel that we are equal to others
is not right; and to feel that we better than others is not right...
because there isn't any "we." This is how it is, we must uproot conceit.
This is called lokavidu -- knowing the world clearly as it is.
If we thus see the truth, the mind will know itself completely and will
sever the cause of suffering. When there is no longer any cause, the
results cannot arise. This is the way our practice should proceed.
The basics which we need to develop are: firstly, to be upright and
honest; secondly, to be wary of wrong-doing; thirdly, to have the
attribute of humility within one's heart, to be aloof and content with
little. If we are content with little in regards to speech and in all
other things, we will see ourselves, we won't be drawn into distractions.
The mind will have a foundation of sila, samadhi, and
pañña.
Therefore cultivators of the path should not be careless. Even if you
are right don't be careless. And if you are wrong, don't be careless. If
things are going well or you're feeling happy, don't be careless. Why do I
say "don't be careless"? Because all of these things are uncertain. Note
them as such. If you get peaceful just leave the peace be. You may really
want to indulge in it but you should simply know the truth of it, the same
as for unpleasant qualities.
This practice of the mind is up to each individual. The teacher only
explains the way to train the mind, because that mind is within each
individual. We know what's in there, nobody else can know our mind as well
as we can. The practice requires this kind of honesty. Do it properly,
don't do it half-heartedly. When I say "do it properly," does that mean
you have to exhaust yourselves? No, you don't have to exhaust yourselves,
because the practice is done in the mind. If you know this then you will
know the practice. You don't need a whole lot. Just use the standards of
practice to reflect on yourself inwardly.
Now the Rains Retreat is half way over. For most people it's normal to
let the practice slacken off after a while. They aren't consistent from
beginning to end. This shows that their practice is not yet mature. For
instance, having determined a particular practice at the beginning of the
retreat, whatever it may be, then we must fulfill that resolution. For
these three months make the practice consistent. You must all try.
Whatever you have determined to practice, consider that and reflect
whether the practice has slackened off. If so, make an effort to
re-establish it. Keep shaping up the practice, just the same as when we
practice meditation on the breath. As the breath goes in and out the mind
gets distracted. Then re-establish your attention on the breath. When your
attention wanders off again bring it back once more. This is the same. In
regard to both the body and the mind the practice proceeds like this.
Please make an effort with it.
The Flood of Sensuality
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Kamogha... the flood of sensuality: sunk in sights, in sounds, in
smells, in tastes, in bodily sensations. Sunk because we only look at
externals, we don't look inwardly. People don't look at themselves, they
only look at others. They can see everybody else but they can't see
themselves. It's not such a difficult thing to do, but it's just that
people don't really try.
For example, look at a beautiful woman. What does that do to you? As
soon as you see the face you see everything else. Do you see it? Just look
within your mind. What is it like to see a woman? As soon as the eyes see
just a little bit the mind sees all the rest. Why is it so fast?
It's because you are sunk in the "water." You are sunk, you think about
it, fantasize about it, are stuck in it. It's just like being a slave...
somebody else has control over you. When they tell you to sit you've got
to sit, when they tell you to walk you've got to walk... you can't disobey
them because you're their slave. Being enslaved by the senses is the same.
No matter how hard you try you can't seem to shake it off. And if you
expect others to do it for you, you really get into trouble. You must
shake it off for yourself.
Therefore the Buddha left the practice of Dhamma, the transcendence of
suffering, up to us. Take nibbana [36]
for example. The Buddha was thoroughly enlightened, so why didn't he
describe nibbana in detail? Why did he only say that we should
practice and find out for ourselves. Why is that? Shouldn't he have
explained what nibbana is like?
"The Buddha practiced, developing the perfections over countless world
ages for the sake of all sentient beings, so why didn't he point out
nibbana so that they all could see it and go there too?" Some people
think like this. "If the Buddha really knew he would tell us. Why should
he keep anything hidden?"
Actually this sort of thinking is wrong. We can't see the truth in that
way. We must practice, we must cultivate, in order to see. The Buddha only
pointed out the way to develop wisdom, that's all. He said that we
ourselves must practice. Whoever practices will reach the goal.
But that path which the Buddha taught goes against our habits. To be
frugal, to be restrained... we don't really like these things, so we say,
"Show us the way, show us the way to nibbana, so that those who
like it easy like us can go there too." It's the same with wisdom. The
Buddha can't show you wisdom, it's not something that can be simply handed
around. The Buddha can show the way to develop wisdom, but whether you
develop much or only a little depends on the individual. Merit and
accumulated virtues of people naturally differ.
Just look at a material object, such as the wooden lions in front of
the hall here. People come and look at them and can't seem to agree: one
person says, "Oh, how beautiful," while another says, "How revolting!"
It's the one lion, both beautiful and ugly. Just this is enough to know
how things are.
Therefore the realization of Dhamma is sometimes slow, sometimes fast.
The Buddha and his disciples were all alike in that they had to practice
for themselves, but even so they still relied on teachers to advise them
and give them techniques in the practice.
Now, when we listen to Dhamma we may want to listen until all our
doubts are cleared up, but they'll never be cleared up simply by
listening. Doubt is not overcome simply by listening or thinking, we must
first clean out the mind. To clean out the mind means to revise our
practice. No matter how long we were to listen to the teacher talk about
the truth we couldn't know or see that truth just from listening. If we
did it would be only through guesswork or conjecture.
However, even though simply listening to the Dhamma may not lead to
realization, it is beneficial. There were, in the Buddha's time, those who
realized the Dhamma, even realizing the highest realization -- arahantship,
while listening to a discourse. But those people were already highly
developed, their minds already understood to some extent. It's like a
football. When a football is pumped up with air it expands. Now the air in
that football is all pushing to get out, but there's no hole for it to do
so. As soon as a needle punctures the football the air comes bursting out.
This is the same. The minds of those disciples who were enlightened
while listening to the Dhamma were like this. As long as there was no
catalyst to cause the reaction this "pressure" was within them, like the
football. The mind was not yet free because of this very small thing
concealing the truth. As soon as they heard the Dhamma and it hit the
right spot, wisdom arose. They immediately understood, immediately let go
and realized the true Dhamma. That's how it was. It was easy. The mind
uprighted itself. It changed, or turned, from one view to another. You
could say it was far, or you could say it was very near.
This is something we must do for ourselves. The Buddha was only able to
give techniques on how to develop wisdom, and so with the teachers these
days. They give Dhamma talks, they talk about the truth, but still we
can't make that truth our own. Why not? There's a "film" obscuring it. You
could say that we are sunk, sunk in the water. Kamogha -- the
"flood" of sensuality. Bhavogha -- the "flood" of becoming.
"Becoming" (bhava) means "the sphere of birth." Sensual desire
is born at sights, sounds, tastes, smells, feelings and thoughts,
identifying with these things. The mind holds fast and is stuck to
sensuality.
Some cultivators get bored, fed up, tired of the practice and lazy. You
don't have to look very far, just look at how people can't seem to keep
the Dhamma in mind, and yet if they get scolded they'll hold on to it for
ages. They may get scolded at the beginning of the Rains, and even after
the Rains Retreat has ended they still haven't forgotten it. Their whole
lives they still won't forget it if it goes down deep enough.
But when it comes to the Buddha's teaching, telling us to be moderate,
to be restrained, to practice conscientiously... why don't people take
these things to their hearts? Why do they keep forgetting these things?
You don't have to look very far, just look at our practice here. For
example, establishing standards such as: after the meal while washing your
bowls, don't chatter! Even this much seems to be beyond people. Even
though we know that chattering is not particularly useful and binds us to
sensuality... people still like talking. Pretty soon they start to
disagree and eventually get into arguments and squabbles. There's nothing
more to it than this.
Now this isn't anything subtle or refined, it's pretty basic, and yet
people don't seem to really make much effort with it. They say they want
to see the Dhamma, but they want to see it on their own terms, they don't
want to follow the path of practice. That's as far as they go. All these
standards of practice are skillful means for penetrating to and seeing the
Dhamma, but people don't practice accordingly.
To say "real practice" or "ardent practice" doesn't necessarily mean
you have to expend a whole lot of energy -- just put some effort into the
mind, making some effort with all the feelings that arise, especially
those which are steeped in sensuality. These are our enemies.
But people can't seem to do it. Every year, as the end of the Rains
Retreat approaches, it gets worse and worse. Some of the monks have
reached the limit of their endurance, the "end of their tether." The
closer we get to the end of the Rains the worse they get, they have no
consistency in their practice. I speak about this every year and yet
people can't seem to remember it. We establish a certain standard and in
not even a year it's fallen apart. Almost finished the Retreat and it
starts -- the chatter, the socializing and everything else. It all goes to
pieces. This is how it tends to be.
Those who are really interested in the practice should consider why
this is so. It's because people don't see the adverse results of these
things.
When we are accepted into the Buddhist monkhood we live simply. And yet
some of them disrobe to go to the front, where the bullets fly past them
every day -- they prefer it like that. They really want to go. Danger
surrounds them on all sides and yet they're prepared to go. Why don't they
see the danger? They're prepared to die by the gun but nobody wants to die
developing virtue. Just seeing this is enough... it's because they're
slaves, nothing else. See this much and you know what it's all about.
People don't see the danger.
This is really amazing, isn't it? You'd think they could see it but
they can't. If they can't see it even then, then there's no way they can
get out. They're determined to whirl around in samsara. This is how
things are. Just talking about simple things like this we can begin to
understand.
If you were to ask them, "Why were you born?" They'd probably have a
lot of trouble answering, because they can't see it. They're sunk in the
world of the senses and sunk in becoming (bhava). [37]
Bhava is the sphere of birth, our birthplace. To put it simply,
where are beings born from? Bhava is the preliminary condition for
birth. Wherever birth takes place, that's bhava.
For example, suppose we had an orchard of apple trees that we were
particularly fond of. That's a bhava for us if we don't reflect
with wisdom. How so? Suppose our orchard contained a hundred or a thousand
apple trees... it doesn't really matter what kind of trees they are, just
so long as we consider them to be "our own" trees... then we are going to
be "born" as a "worm" in every single one of those trees. We bore into
every one, even though our human body is still back there in the house, we
send out "tentacles" into every one of those trees.
Now, how do we know that it's a bhava? It's a bhava
(sphere of existence) because of our clinging to the idea that those trees
are our own, that that orchard is our own. If someone were to take an ax
and cut one of the trees down, the owner over there in the house "dies"
along with the tree. He gets furious, and has to go and set things right,
to fight and maybe even kill over it. That quarreling is the "birth." The
"sphere of birth" is the orchard of trees that we cling to as our own. We
are "born" right at the point where we consider them to be our own, born
from that bhava. Even if we had a thousand apple trees, if someone
were to cut down just one it'd be like cutting the owner down.
Whatever we cling to we are born right there, we exist right there. We
are born as soon as we "know." This is knowing through not-knowing: we
know that someone has cut down one of our trees. But we don't know that
those trees are not really ours. This is called "knowing through
not-knowing." We are bound to be born into that bhava.
Vatta the wheel of conditioned existence, operates like this.
People cling to bhava, they depend on bhava. If they cherish
bhava, this is birth . And if they fall into suffering over that
same thing, this is also a birth. As long as we can't let go we are stuck
in the rut of samsara, spinning around like a wheel. Look into
this, contemplate it. Whatever we cling to as being us or ours, that is a
place for birth.
There must be a bhava, a sphere of birth, before birth can take
place. Therefore the Buddha said, whatever you have, don't "have" it. Let
it be there but don't make it yours. You must understand this "having" and
"not having," know the truth of them, don't flounder in suffering.
The place that we were born from; you want to go back there and be born
again, don't you? All of you monks and novices, do you know where you were
born from? You want to go back there, don't you? Right there, look into
this. All of you getting ready. The nearer we get to the end of the
retreat the more you start preparing to go back and be born there.
Really, you'd think that people could appreciate what it would be like,
living in a person's belly. How uncomfortable would that be? Just look,
merely staying in your kuti for one day is enough. Shut all the
doors and windows and you're suffocating already. How would it be to lie
in a person's belly for nine or ten months? Think about it.
People don't see the liability of things. Ask them why they are living,
or why they are born, and they have no idea. Do you still want to get back
in there? Why? It should be obvious but you don't see it. Why can't you
see it? What are you stuck on, what are you holding onto? Think it out for
yourself.
It's because there is a cause for becoming and birth. Just take a look
at the preserved baby in the main hall, have you seen it? Isn't anybody
alarmed by it? No, no-one's alarmed by it. A baby lying in its mother's
belly is just like that preserved baby. And yet you want to make more of
those things, and even want to get back and soak in there yourself. Why
don't you see the danger of it and the benefit of the practice?
You see? That's bhava. The root is right there, it revolves
around that. The Buddha taught to contemplate this point. People think
about it but still don't see. They're all getting ready to go back there
again. they know that it wouldn't be very comfortable in there, to put
their necks in the noose is really uncomfortable, they still want to lay
their heads in there. Why don't they understand this? This is where wisdom
comes in, where we must contemplate.
When I talk like this people say, "If that's the case then everybody
would have to become monks... and then how would the world be able to
function?" You'll never get everybody to become monks, so don't worry. The
world is here because of deluded beings, so this is no trifling matter.
I first became a novice at the age of nine. I started practicing from
way back then. But in those days I didn't really know what it was all
about. I found out when I became a monk. Once I became a monk I became so
wary. The sensual pleasures people indulged in didn't seem like so much
fun to me. I saw the suffering in them. It was like seeing a delicious
banana which I knew was very sweet but which I also knew to be poisoned.
No matter how sweet or tempting it was, if I ate it I would die. I
considered in this way every time... every time I wanted to "eat a banana"
I would see the "poison" steeped inside, and so eventually I could
withdraw my interest from those things. Now at this age, such things are
not at all tempting.
Some people don't see the "poison'; some see it but still want to try
their luck. "If your hand is wounded don't touch poison, it may seep into
the wound."
I used to consider trying it out as well. When I had lived as a monk
for five or six years, I thought of the Buddha. He practiced for five or
six years and was finished, but I was still interested in the worldly
life, so I thought of going back to it: "Maybe I should go and "build the
world" for a while, I would gain some experience and learning. Even the
Buddha had his son, Rahula. Maybe I'm being too strict?..."
I sat and considered this for some time, until I realized: "Yes, well,
that's all very fine, but I'm just afraid that this 'Buddha' won't be like
the last one," a voice in me said, "I'm afraid this 'Buddha' will just
sink into the mud, not like the last one." And so I resisted those worldly
thoughts.
From my sixth or seventh rains retreat up until the twentieth, I really
had to put up a fight. These days I seem to have run out of bullets, I've
been shooting for a long time. I'm just afraid that you younger monks and
novices have still got so much ammunition, you may just want to go and try
out your guns. Before you do, consider carefully first.
Speaking of sensual desire, it's hard to give up. It's really difficult
to see it as it is. We must use skillful means. Consider sensual pleasures
as like eating meat which gets stuck in your teeth. Before you finish the
meal you have to find a toothpick to pry it out. When the meat comes out
you feel some relief for a while, maybe you even think that you won't eat
any more meat. But when you see it again you can't resist it. You eat some
more and then it gets stuck again. When it gets stuck you have to pick it
out again, which gives some relief once more, until you eat some more
meat... That's all there is to it. Sensual pleasures are just like this,
no better than this. When the meat gets stuck in your teeth there's
discomfort. You take a toothpick and pick it out and experience some
relief. There's nothing more to it than this sensual desire... The
pressure builds up and up until you let a little bit out... Oh! That's all
there is to it. I don't know what all the fuss is about.
I didn't learn these things from anybody else, they occurred to me in
the course of my practice. I would sit in meditation and reflect on
sensual pleasure as being like a red ants' nest. [38]
Someone takes a piece of wood and pokes the nest until the ants come
running out, crawling down the wood and into their faces, biting their
eyes and ears. And yet they still don't see the difficulty they are in.
However it's not beyond our ability. In the teaching of the Buddha it
is said that if we've seen the harm of something, no matter how good it
may seem to be, we know that it's harmful. Whatever we haven't yet seen
the harm of, we just think it's good. If we haven't yet seen the harm of
anything we can't get out of it.
Have you noticed? No matter how dirty it may be people like it. This
kind of "work" isn't clean but you don't even have to pay people to do it,
they'll gladly volunteer. With other kinds of dirty work, even if you pay
a good wage people won't do it, but this kind of work they submit
themselves to gladly, you don't even have to pay them. It's not that it's
clean work, either, it's dirty work. Yet why do people like it? How can
you say that people are intelligent when they behave like this? Think
about it.
Have you ever noticed the dogs in the monastery ground here? There are
packs of them. They run around biting each other, some of them even
getting maimed. In another month or so they'll be at it. As soon as one of
the smaller ones gets into the pack the bigger ones are at him... out he
comes yelping, dragging his leg behind him. But when the pack runs on he
hobbles on after it. He's only a little one, but he thinks he'll get his
chance one day. They bite his leg for him and that's all he gets for his
trouble. For the whole of the mating season he may not even get one
chance. You can see this for yourself in the monastery here.
These dogs when they run around howling in packs... I figure if they
were humans they'd be singing songs! They think it's such great fun
they're singing songs, but they don't have a clue what it is that makes
them do it, they just blindly follow their instincts.
Think about this carefully. If you really want to practice you should
understand your feelings. For example, among the monks, novices or
laypeople, who should you socialize with? If you associate with people who
talk a lot they induce you to talk a lot also. Your own share is already
enough, theirs is even more... put them together and they explode!
People like to socialize with those who chatter a lot and talk of
frivolous things. They can sit and listen to that for hours. When it comes
to listening to Dhamma, talking about practice, there isn't much of it to
be heard. Like when giving a Dhamma talk: As soon as I start off..."Namo
Tassa Bhagavato' [39]... they're all sleepy
already. They don't take in the talk at all. When I reach the "Evam" they
all open their eyes and wake up. Every time there's a Dhamma talk people
fall asleep. How are they going to get any benefit from it?
Real Dhamma cultivators will come away from a talk feeling inspired and
uplifted, they learn something. Every six or seven days the teacher gives
another talk, constantly boosting the practice.
This is your chance, now that you are ordained. There's only this one
chance, so take a close look. Look at things and consider which path you
will choose. You are independent now. Where are you going to go from here?
You are standing at the crossroads between the worldly way and the Dhamma
way. Which way will you choose? You can take either way, this is the time
to decide. The choice is yours to make. If you are to be liberated it is
at this point.
In the Dead of Night...
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Take a look at your fear... One day, as it was nearing nightfall, there
was nothing else for it... If I tried to reason with myself I'd never go,
so I grabbed a pa-kow and just went.
"If it's time for it to die then let it die. If my mind is going to be
so stubborn and stupid then let it die"... that's how I thought to myself.
Actually in my heart I didn't really want to go but I forced myself to.
When it comes to things like this, if you wait till everything's just
right you'll end up never going. When would you ever train yourself? So I
just went.
I'd never stayed in a charnel ground before. When I got there, words
can't describe the way I felt. The pa-kow wanted to camp right next
to me but I wouldn't have it. I made him stay far away. Really I wanted
him to stay close to keep me company but I wouldn't have it. I made him
move away, otherwise I'd have counted on him for support.
"If it's going to be so afraid then let it die tonight."
I was afraid, but I dared. It's not that I wasn't afraid, but I had
courage. In the end you have to die anyway.
Well, just as it was getting dark I had my chance, in they came
carrying a corpse. Just my luck! I couldn't even feel my feet touch the
ground, I wanted to get out of there so badly. They wanted me to do some
funeral chants but I wouldn't get involved, I just walked away. In a few
minutes, after they'd gone, I just walked back and found that they had
buried the corpse right next to my spot, making the bamboo used for
carrying it into a bed for me to stay on.
So now what was I do? It's not that the village was nearby, either, a
good two or three kilometers away.
"Well, if I'm going to die, I'm going to die"... If you've never dared
to do it you'll never know what it's like. It's really an experience.
As it got darker and darker I wondered where there was to run to in the
middle of that charnel ground.
"Oh, let it die. One is born to this life only to die, anyway."
As soon as the sun sank the night told me to get inside my glot.
[40] I didn't want to do any walking
meditation, I only wanted to get into my net. Whenever I tried to walk
towards the grave it was as if something was pulling me back from behind,
to stop me from walking. It was as if my feelings of fear and courage were
having a tug-of-war with me. But I did it. This is the way you must train
yourself.
When it was dark I got into my mosquito net. It felt as if I had a
seven-tiered wall all around me. Seeing my trusty alms bowl there beside
me was like seeing an old friend. Even a bowl can be a friend sometimes!
Its presence beside me was comforting. I had a bowl for a friend at least.
I sat in my net watching over the body all night. I didn't lie down or
even doze off, I just sat quietly. I couldn't be sleepy even if I wanted
to, I was so scared. Yes, I was scared, and yet I did it. I sat through
the night.
Now who would have the guts to practice like this? Try it and see. When
it comes to experiences like this who would dare to go and stay in a
charnel ground? If you don't actually do it you don't get the results, you
don't really practice. This time I really practiced.
When day broke I felt, "Oh! I've survived!" I was so glad, I just
wanted to have daytime, no night time at all. I wanted to kill off the
night and leave only daylight. I felt so good, I had survived. I thought,
"Oh, there's nothing to it, it's just my own fear, that's all."
After almsround and eating the meal I felt good, the sunshine came out,
making me feel warm and cozy. I had a rest and walked a while. I thought,
"This evening I should have some good, quiet meditation, because I've
already been through it all last night. There's probably nothing more to
it."
Then, later in the afternoon, wouldn't you know it? In comes another
one, a big one this time. [41] They brought
the corpse in and cremated it right beside my spot, right in front of my
glot. This was even worse than last night!
"Well, that's good," I thought, "bringing in this corpse to burn here
is going to help my practice."
But still I wouldn't go and do any rites for them, I waited for them to
leave first before taking a look.
Burning that body for me to sit and watch over all night, I can't tell
you how it was. Words can't describe it. Nothing I could say could convey
the fear I felt. In the dead of night, remember. The fire from the burning
corpse flickered red and green and the flames pattered softly. I wanted to
do walking meditation in front of the body but could hardly bring myself
to do it. Eventually I got into my net. The stench from the burning flesh
lingered all through the night.
And this was before things really started to happen... As the flames
flickered softly I turned my back on the fire.
I forgot about sleep, I couldn't even think of it, my eyes were fixed
rigid with fear. And there was nobody to turn to, there was only me. I had
to rely on myself. I could think of nowhere to go, there was nowhere to
run to in that pitch black night.
"Well, I'll sit and die here. I'm not moving from this spot."
Here, talking of the ordinary mind, would it want to do this? Would it
take you to such a situation? If you tried to reason it out you'd never
go. Who would want to do such a thing? If you didn't have strong faith in
the teaching of the Buddha you'd never do it.
Now, about 10 p.m., I was sitting with my back to the fire. I don't
know what it was, but there came a sound of shuffling from the fire behind
me. Had the coffin just collapsed? Or maybe a dog was getting the corpse?
But no, it sounded more like a buffalo walking steadily around.
"Oh, never min..."
But then it started walking towards me, just like a person!
It walked up behind me, the footsteps heavy, like a buffalo's, and yet
not... The leaves crunched under the footsteps as it made its way round to
the front. Well, I could only prepare for the worst, where else was there
to go? But it didn't really come up to me, it just circled around in front
and then went off in the direction of the pa-kow. Then all was
quiet. I don't know what it was, but my fear made me think of many
possibilities.
It must have been about half-an-hour later, I think, when the footsteps
started coming back from the direction of the pa-kow. Just like a
person! It came right up to me, this time, heading for me as if to run me
over! I closed my eyes and refused to open them.
"I'll die with my eyes closed."
It got closer and closer until it stopped dead in front of me and just
stood stock still. I felt as if it were waving burnt hands back and forth
in front of my closed eyes. Oh! This was really it! I threw out
everything, forgot all about Buddho, Dhammo and Sangho. I forgot
everything else, there was only the fear in me, stacked in full to the
brim. My thoughts couldn't go anywhere else, there was only fear. From the
day I was born I had never experienced such fear. Buddho and Dhammo had
disappeared, I don't know where. There was only fear welling up inside my
chest until it felt like a tightly-stretched drumskin.
"Well, I'll just leave it as it is, there's nothing else to do."
I sat as if I wasn't even touching the ground and simply noted what was
going on. The fear was so great that it filled me, like a jar completely
filled with water. If you pour water until the jar is completely full, and
then pour some more, the jar will overflow. Likewise, the fear built up so
much within me that it reached its peak and began to overflow.
"What am I so afraid of anyway?" a voice inside me asked.
"I'm afraid of death," another voice answered.
"Well, then, where is this thing 'death'? Why all the panic? Look where
death abides. Where is death?"
"Why, death is within me!"
"If death is within you, then where are you going to run to escape it?
If you run away you die, if you stay here you die. Wherever you go it goes
with you because death lies within you, there's nowhere you can run to.
Whether you are afraid or not you die just the same, there's nowhere to
escape death."
As soon as I had thought this, my perception seemed to change right
around. All the fear completely disappeared as easily as turning over
one's own hand. It was truly amazing. So much fear and yet it could
disappear just like that! Non-fear arose in its place. Now my mind rose
higher and higher until I felt as if I was in the clouds.
As soon as I had conquered the fear, rain began to fall. I don't know
what sort of rain it was, the wind was so strong. But I wasn't afraid of
dying now. I wasn't afraid that the branches of the trees might come
crashing down on me. I paid it no mind. The rain thundered down like a
hot-season torrent, really heavy. By the time the rain had stopped
everything was soaking wet.
I sat unmoving.
So what did I do next, soaking wet as I was? I cried! The tears flowed
down my cheeks. I cried as I thought to myself,
"Why am I sitting here like some sort of orphan or abandoned child,
sitting, soaking in the rain like a man who owns nothing, like an exile?"
And then I thought further, "All those people sitting comfortably in
their homes right now probably don't even suspect that there is a monk
sitting, soaking in the rain all night like this. What's the point of it
all?" Thinking like this I began to feel so thoroughly sorry for myself
that the tears came gushing out.
"They're not good things anyway, these tears, let them flow right on
out until they're all gone."
This was how I practiced.
Now I don't know how I can describe the things that followed. I sat...
sat and listened. After conquering my feelings I just sat and watched as
all manner of things arose in me, so many things that were possible to
know but impossible to describe. And I thought of the Buddha's words...Paccattam
veditabbo viññuhi [42]-- "the wise will
know for themselves."
That I had endured such suffering and sat through the rain like this...
who was there to experience it with me? Only I could know what it was
like. There was so much fear and yet the fear disappeared. Who else could
witness this? The people in their homes in the town couldn't know what it
was like, only I could see it. It was a personal experience. Even if I
were to tell others they wouldn't really know, it was something for each
individual to experience for himself. The more I contemplated this the
clearer it became. I became stronger and stronger, my conviction become
firmer and firmer, until daybreak.
When I opened my eyes at dawn, everything was yellow. I had been
wanting to urinate during the night but the feeling had eventually
stopped. When I got up from my sitting in the morning everywhere I looked
was yellow, just like the early morning sunlight on some days. When I went
to urinate there was blood in the urine!
"Eh? Is my gut torn or something?" I got a bit of fright..."Maybe it's
really torn inside there."
"Well, so what? If it's torn it's torn, who is there to blame?" a voice
told me straight away. "If it's torn it's torn, if I die I die. I was only
sitting here, I wasn't doing any harm. If it's going to burst, let it
burst," the voice said.
My mind was as if arguing or fighting with itself. One voice would come
from one side, saying, "Hey, this is dangerous!" Another voice would
counter it, challenge it and over-rule it.
My urine was stained with blood.
"Hmm. Where am I going to find medicine?"
"I'm not going to bother with that stuff. A monk can't cut plants for
medicine anyway. If I die, I die, so what? What else is there to do? If I
die while practicing like this then I'm ready. if I were to die doing
something bad that's no good, but to die practicing like this I'm
prepared."
Don't follow your moods. Train yourself. The practice involves putting
your very life at stake. You must have cried at least two or three times.
That's right, that's the practice. If you're sleepy and want to lie down
then don't let it sleep. Make the sleepiness go away before you lie down.
But look at you all, you don't know how to practice.
Sometimes, when you come back from almsround and you're contemplating
the food before eating, you can't settle down, your mind is like a mad
dog. The saliva flows, you're so hungry. Sometimes you may not even bother
to contemplate, you just dig in. That's a disaster. If the mind won't calm
down and be patient then just push your bowl away and don't eat. Train
yourself, drill yourself, that's practice. Don't just keep on following
your mind. Push your bowl away, get up and leave, don't allow yourself to
eat. If it really wants to eat so much and acts so stubborn then don't let
it eat. The saliva will stop flowing. If the defilements know that they
won't get anything to eat they'll get scared. They won't dare bother you
next day, they'll be afraid they won't get anything to eat. Try it out if
you don't believe me.
People don't trust the practice, they don't dare to really do it.
They're afraid they'll go hungry, afraid they'll die. If you don't try it
out you won't know what it's about. Most of us don't dare to do it, don't
dare to try it out, we're afraid.
When it comes to eating and the like I've suffered over them for a long
time now so I know what they're about. And that's only a minor thing as
well. So this practice is not something one can study easily.
Consider: What is the most important thing of all? There's nothing
else, just death. Death is the most important thing in the world.
Consider, practice, inquire... If you don't have clothing you won't die.
If you don't have betel nut to chew or cigarettes to smoke you still won't
die. But if you don't have rice or water, then you will die. I see only
these two things as being essential in this world. You need rice and water
to nourish the body. So I wasn't interested in anything else, I just
contented myself with whatever was offered. As long as I had rice and
water it was enough to practice with, I was content.
Is that enough for you? All those other things are extras, whether you
get them or not doesn't matter, the only really important things are rice
and water.
"If I live like this can I survive?" I asked myself, "There's enough to
get by on all right. I can probably get at least rice on almsround in just
about any village, a mouthful from each house. Water is usually available.
Just these two are enough..." I didn't aim to be particularly rich.
In regards to the practice, right and wrong are usually co-existent.
You must dare to do it, dare to practice. If you've never been to a
charnel ground you should train yourself to go. If you can't go at night
then go during the day. Then train yourself to go later and later until
you can go at dusk and stay there. Then you will see the effects of the
practice, then you will understand.
This mind has been deluded now for who knows how many lifetimes.
Whatever we don't like or love we want to avoid, we just indulge in our
fears. And then we say we're practicing. This can't be called "practice."
If it's real practice you'll even risk your life. If you've really made up
your mind to practice why would you take an interest in petty
concerns?..."I only got a little, you got a lot." "You quarreled with me
so I'm quarreling with you..." I had none of these thoughts because I
wasn't looking for such things. Whatever others did was their business.
Going to other monasteries I didn't get involved in such things. However
high or low others practiced I wouldn't take any interest, I just looked
after my own business. And so I dared to practice, and the practice gave
rise to wisdom and insight.
If your practice has really hit the spot then you really practice. Day
or night you practice. At night, when it's quiet, I'd sit in meditation,
then come down to walk, alternating back and forth like this at least two
or three times a night. Walk, then sit, then walk some more... I wasn't
bored, I enjoyed it.
Sometimes it'd be raining softly and I'd think of the times I used to
work the rice paddies. My pants would still be wet from the day before but
I'd have to get up before dawn and put them on again. Then I'd have to go
down to below the house to get the buffalo out of its pen. All I could see
of the buffalo would be covered in buffalo shit. Then the buffalo's tail
would be sore with athlete's foot and I'd walk along thinking, "Why is
life so miserable?" And now here I was walking meditation... what was a
little bit of rain to me? Thinking like this I encouraged myself in the
practice.
If the practice has entered the stream then there's nothing to compare
with it. There's no suffering like the suffering of a Dhamma cultivator
and there's no happiness like the happiness of one either. There's no zeal
to compare with the zeal of the cultivator and there's no laziness to
compare with them either. Practicers of the Dhamma are tops. That's why I
say if you really practice it's a sight to see.
But most of us just talk about practice without having done it or
reached it. Our practice is like the man whose roof is leaking on one side
so he sleeps on the other side of the house. When the sunshine comes in on
that side he rolls over to the other side, all the time thinking, "When
will I ever get a decent house like everyone else?" If the whole roof
leaks then he just gets up and leaves. This is not the way to do things,
but that's how most people are.
This mind of ours, these defilements... if you follow them they'll
cause trouble. The more you follow them the more the practice degenerates.
With the real practice sometimes you even amaze yourself with your zeal.
Whether other people practice or not, don't take any interest, simply do
your own practice consistently. Whoever comes or goes it doesn't matter,
just do the practice. You must look at yourself before it can be called
"practice." When you really practice there are no conflicts in your mind,
there is only Dhamma.
Wherever you are still inept, wherever you are still lacking, that's
where you must apply yourself. If you haven't yet cracked it don't give
up. Having finished with one thing you get stuck on another, so persist
with it until you crack it, don't let up. Don't be content until it's
finished. Put all your attention on that point. While sitting, lying down
or walking, watch right there.
It's just like a farmer who hasn't yet finished his fields. Every year
he plants rice but this year he still hasn't gotten it finished, so his
mind is stuck on that, he can't rest content. His work is still
unfinished. Even when he's with friends he can't relax, he's all the time
nagged by his unfinished business. Or like a mother who leaves her baby
upstairs in the house while she goes to feed the animals below: she's
always got her baby in mind, lest it should fall from the house. Even
though she may do other things, her baby is never far from her thoughts.
It's just the same for us and our practice -- we never forget it. Even
though we may do other things our practice is never far from our thoughts,
it's constantly with us, day and night. It has to be like this if you are
really going to make progress.
In the beginning you must rely on a teacher to instruct and advise you.
When you understand, then practice. When the teacher has instructed you
follow the instructions. If you understand the practice it's no longer
necessary for the teacher to teach you, just do the work yourselves.
Whenever heedlessness or unwholesome qualities arise know for yourself,
teach yourself. Do the practice yourself. The mind is the one who knows,
the witness. The mind knows for itself if you are still very deluded or
only a little deluded. Wherever you are still faulty try to practice right
at that point, apply yourself to it.
Practice is like that. It's almost like being crazy, or you could even
say you are crazy. When you really practice you are crazy, you "flip." You
have distorted perception and then you adjust your perception. If you
don't adjust it, it's going to be just as troublesome and just as wretched
as before.
So there's a lot of suffering in the practice, but if you don't know
your own suffering you won't understand the Noble Truth of Suffering. To
understand suffering, to kill it off, you first have to encounter it. If
you want to shoot a bird but don't go out and find it how will you ever to
shoot it? Suffering, suffering... the Buddha taught about suffering: The
suffering of birth, the suffering you won't see suffering. If you don't
understand suffering you won't be able to get rid of suffering.
Now people don't want to see suffering, they don't want to experience
it. If they suffer here they run over there. You see? They're simply
dragging their suffering around with them, they never kill it. They don't
contemplate or investigate it. If they feel suffering here they run over
there; if it arises there they run back here. They try to run away from
suffering physically. As long as you are still ignorant, wherever you go
you'll find suffering. Even if you boarded an airplane to get away from
it, it would board the plane with you. If you dived under the water it
would dive in with you, because suffering lies within us. But we don't
know that. If it lies within us where can we run to escape it?
People have suffering in one place so they go somewhere else. When
suffering arises there they run off again. They think they're running away
from suffering but they're not, suffering goes with them. They carry
suffering around without knowing it. If we don't know the cause of
suffering then we can't know the cessation of suffering, there's no way we
can escape it.
You must look into this intently until you're beyond doubt. You must
dare to practice. Don't shirk it, either in a group or alone. If others
are lazy it doesn't matter. Whoever does a lot of walking meditation, a
lot of practice... I guarantee results. If you really practice
consistently, whether others come or go or whatever, one rains retreat is
enough. Do it like I've been telling you here. Listen to the teacher's
words, don't quibble, don't be stubborn. Whatever he tells you to do go
right ahead and do it. You needn't be timid of the practice, knowledge
will surely arise from it.
Practice is also patipada. What is patipada? Practice
evenly, consistently. Don't practice like Old Reverend Peh. One Rains
Retreat he determined to stop talking. He stopped talking all right but
then he started writing notes..."Tomorrow please toast me some rice." He
wanted to eat toasted rice! He stopped talking but ended up writing so
many notes that he was even more scattered than before. One minute he'd
write one thing, the next another, what a farce!
I don't know why he bothered determining not to talk. He didn't know
what practice is.
Actually our practice is to be content with little, to just be natural.
Don't worry whether you feel lazy or diligent. Don't even say "I'm
diligent" or "I'm lazy." Most people practice only when they feel
diligent, if they feel lazy they don't bother. This is how people usually
are. But monks shouldn't think like that. If you are diligent you
practice, when you are lazy you still practice. Don't bother with other
things, cut them off, throw them out, train yourself. Practice
consistently, whether day or night, this year, next year, whatever the
time... don't pay attention to thoughts of diligence or laziness, don't
worry whether it's hot or cold, just do it. This is called
sammapatipada -- Right Practice.
Some people really apply themselves to the practice for six or seven
days, then, when they don't get the results they wanted, give it up and
revert completely, indulging in chatter, socializing and whatever. Then
they remember the practice and go at it for another six or seven days,
then give it up again... It's like the way some people work. At first they
throw themselves into it... then, when they stop, they don't even bother
picking up their tools, they just walk off and leave them there. Later on,
when the soil has all caked up, they remember their work and do a bit
more, only to leave it again.
Doing things this way you'll never get a decent garden or paddy. Our
practice is the same. If you think this patipada is unimportant you
won't get anywhere with the practice. Sammapatipada is
unquestionably important. Do it constantly. Don't listen to your moods. So
what if your mood is good or not? The Buddha didn't bother with those
things. He had experienced all the good things and bad things, the right
things and wrong things. That was his practice. Taking only what you like
and discarding whatever you don't like isn't practice, it's disaster.
Wherever you go you will never be satisfied, wherever you stay there will
be suffering.
Practicing like this is like the Brahmans making their sacrifices. Why
do they do it? Because they want something in exchange. Some of us
practice like this. Why do we practice? Because we seek re-birth, another
state of being, we want to attain something. If we don't get what we want
then we don't want to practice, just like the Brahmans making their
sacrifices. They do so because of desire.
The Buddha didn't teach like that. The cultivation of the practice is
for giving up, for letting go, for stopping, for uprooting. You don't do
it for re-birth into any particular state.
There was once a Thera who had initially gone forth into the Mahanikai
sect. But he found it not strict enough so he took Dhammayuttika
ordination. [43] Then he started practicing.
Sometimes he would fast for fifteen days, then when he ate he'd eat only
leaves and grass. He thought that eating animals was bad kamma,
that it would be better to eat leaves and grass.
After a while..."Hmm. Being a monk is not so good, it's inconvenient.
It's hard to maintain my vegetarian practice as a monk. Maybe I'll disrobe
and become a pa-kow." So he disrobed and became a pa-kow so that he
could gather the leaves and grass for himself and dig for roots and yams.
He carried on like that for a while till in the end he didn't know what he
should be doing. He gave it all up. He gave up being a monk, gave up being
a pa-kow, gave up everything. These days I don't know what he's
doing. Maybe he's dead, I don't know. This is because he couldn't find
anything to suit his mind. He didn't realize that he was simply following
defilements. The defilements were leading him on but he didn't know it.
"Did the Buddha disrobe and become a pa-kow? How did the Buddha
practice? What did he do?" He didn't consider this. Did the Buddha go and
eat leaves and grass like a cow? Sure, if you want to eat like that go
ahead, if that's all you can manage, but don't go round criticizing
others. Whatever standard of practice you find suitable then persevere
with that. "Don't gouge or carve too much or you won't have a decent
handle." [44] You'll be left with nothing and
in the end just give up.
Some people are like this. When it comes to walking meditation they
really go at it for fifteen days or so. They don't even bother eating,
just walk. Then when they finish that they just lie around and sleep. They
don't bother considering carefully before they start to practice. In the
end nothing suits them. Being a monk doesn't suit them, being a pa-kow
doesn't suit them... so they end up with nothing.
People like this don't know practice, they don't look into the reasons
for practicing. Think about what you're practicing for. They teach this
practice for throwing off. The mind wants to love this person and hate
that person... these things may arise but don't take them for real. So
what are we practicing for? Simply so that we can give up these very
things. Even if you attain peace, throw out the peace. If knowledge
arises, throw out the knowledge. If you know then you know, but if you
take that knowing to be your own then you think you know something. Then
you think you are better than others. After a while you can't live
anywhere, wherever you live problems arise. If you practice wrongly it's
just as if you didn't practice at all.
Practice according to your capacity. Do you sleep a lot? Then try going
against the grain. Do you eat a lot? Then try eating less. Take as much
practice as you need, using sila, samadhi and pañña
as your basis. Then throw in the dhutanga practices also. These
dhutanga [45] practices are for digging
into the defilements. You may find the basic practices still not enough to
really uproot the defilements, so you have to incorporate the dhutanga
practices as well.
These dhutanga practices are really useful. Some people can't
kill off the defilements with basic sila and samadhi, they
have to bring in the dhutanga practices to help out. The
dhutanga practices cut off many things. Living at the foot of a
tree... Living at the foot of a tree isn't against the precepts. But if
you determine the dhutanga practice of living in a charnel ground
and then don't do it, that's wrong. Try it out. What's like to live in a
charnel ground? Is it the same as living in a group?
DHU-TAN-GA: This translates as "the practices which are hard to
do." These are the practices of the Noble Ones. Whoever wants to be a
Noble One must use the dhutanga practices to cut the defilements.
It's difficult to observe them and it's hard to find people with the
commitment to practice them, because they go against the grain.
Such as with robes; they say to limit your robes to the basic three
robes; to maintain yourself on almsfood; to eat only in the bowl; to eat
only what you get on almsround, if anyone brings food to offer afterwards
you don't accept it.
Keeping this last practice in central Thailand is easy, the food is
quite adequate, because there they put a lot of food in your bowl. But
when you come to the Northeast here this dhutanga takes on subtle
nuances -- here you get plain rice! In these parts the tradition is to put
only plain rice in the almsbowl. In central Thailand they give rice and
other foods also, but around these parts you get only plain rice. This
dhutanga practice becomes really ascetic. You eat only plain rice,
whatever is brought to offer afterwards you don't accept. Then there is
eating once a day, at one sitting, from only one bowl -- when you've
finished eating you get up from your seat and don't eat again that day.
These are called dhutanga practices. Now who will practice them?
It's hard these days to find people with enough commitment to practice
them because they are demanding, but that is why they are so beneficial.
What people call practice these days is not really practice. If you
really practice it's no easy matter. Most people don't dare to really
practice, don't dare to really go against the grain. They don't want to do
anything which runs contrary to their feelings. People don't want to
resist the defilements, they don't want to dig at them or get rid of them.
In our practice they say not to follow your own moods. Consider: we
have been fooled for countless lifetimes already into believing that the
mind is our own. Actually it isn't, it's just an impostor. It drags us
into greed, drags us into aversion, drags us into delusion, drags us into
theft, plunder, desire and hatred. These things aren't ours. Just ask
yourself right now: do you want to be good? Everybody wants to be good.
Now doing all these things, is that good? There! People commit malicious
acts and yet they want to be good. That's why I say these things are
tricksters, that's all they are.
The Buddha didn't want us to follow this mind, he wanted us to train
it. If it goes one way then take cover another way. When it goes over
there then take cover back here. To put it simply: whatever the mind
wants, don't let it have it. It's as if we've been friends for years but
we finally reach a point where our ideas are no longer the same. We split
up and go our separate ways. We no longer understand each other, in fact
we even argue, so we break up. That's right, don't follow your own mind.
Whoever follows his own mind, follows its likes and desires and everything
else, that person hasn't yet practiced at all.
This is why I say that what people call practice is not really
practice... it's disaster. if you don't stop and take a look, don't try
the practice, you won't see, you won't attain the Dhamma. To put it
straight, in our practice you have to commit your very life. It's not that
it isn't difficult, this practice, it has to entail some suffering.
Especially in the first year or two, there's a lot of suffering. The young
monks and novices really have a hard time.
I've had a lot of difficulties in the past, especially with food. What
can you expect? Becoming a monk at twenty when you are just getting into
your food and sleep... some days I would sit alone and just dream of food.
I'd want to eat bananas in syrup, or papaya salad, and my saliva would
start to run. This is part of the training. All these things are not easy.
This business of food and eating can lead one into a lot of bad kamma.
Take someone who's just growing up, just getting into his food and sleep,
and constrain him in these robes and his feelings run amok. It's like
damming a flowing torrent, sometimes the dam just breaks. If it survives
that's fine, but if not it just collapses.
My meditation in the first year was nothing else, just food. I was so
restless... Sometimes I would sit there and it was almost as if I was
actually popping bananas into my mouth. I could almost feel myself
breaking the bananas into pieces and putting them in my mouth. And this is
all part of the practice.
So don't be afraid of it. We've all been deluded for countless
lifetimes now so coming to train ourselves, to correct ourselves, is no
easy matter. But if it's difficult it's worth doing. Why should we bother
with easy things? So those things that are difficult, anybody can do the
easy things. We should train ourselves to do that which is difficult.
It must have been the same for Buddha. If he had just worried about his
family and relatives, his wealth and his past sensual pleasures, he'd
never have become the Buddha. These aren't trifling matters, either,
they're just what most people are looking for. So going forth at an early
age and giving up these things is just like dying. And yet some people
come up and say, "Oh, it's easy for you, Luang Por. You never had a wife
and children to worry about, so it's easier for you!" I say, "Don't get
too close to me when you say that or you'll get a clout over the head!"...
as if I didn't have a heart or something!
When it comes to people it's no trifling matter. It's what life is all
about. So we Dhamma practicers should earnestly get into the practice,
really dare to do it. Don't believe others, just listen to the Buddha's
teaching. Establish peace in your hearts. In time you will understand.
Practice, reflect, contemplate, and the fruits of the practice will be
there. The cause and the result are proportional.
Don't give in to your moods. In the beginning even finding the right
amount of sleep is difficult. You may determine to sleep a certain time
but can't manage it. You must train yourself. Whatever time you decide to
get up, then get up as soon as it comes round. Sometimes you can do it,
but sometimes as soon as you awake you say to yourself "get up!" and it
won't budge! You may have to say to yourself, "One... Two... if I reach
the count three and still don't get up may I fall into hell!" You have to
teach yourself like this. When you get to three you'll get up immediately,
you'll be afraid of falling into hell.
You must train yourself, you can't dispense with the training. You must
train yourself from all angles. Don't just lean on your teacher, your
friends or the group all the time or you'll never become wise. It's not
necessary to hear so much instruction, just hear the teaching once or
twice and then do it.
The well trained mind won't dare cause trouble, even in private. In the
mind of the adept there is no such thing as "private" or "in public." All
Noble Ones have confidence in their own hearts. We should be like this.
Some people become monks simply to find an easy life. Where does ease
come from? What is its cause? All ease has to be preceded by suffering. In
all things it's the same: you must work before you get rice. In all things
you must first experience difficulty. Some people become monks in order to
rest and take it easy, they say they just want to sit around and rest
awhile. If you don't study the books do you expect to be able to read and
write? It can't be done.
This is why most people who have studied a lot and become monks never
get anywhere. Their knowledge is of a different kind, on a different path.
They don't train themselves, they don't look at their minds. They only
stir up their minds with confusion, seeking things which are not conducive
to calm and restraint. The knowledge of the Buddha is not worldly
knowledge, it is supramundane knowledge, a different way altogether.
This is why whoever goes forth into the Buddhist monkhood must give up
whatever level or status or position they have held previously. Even when
a king goes forth he must relinquish his previous status, he doesn't bring
that worldly stuff into the monkhood with him to throw his weight around
with. He doesn't bring his wealth, status, knowledge or power into the
monkhood with him. The practice concerns giving up, letting go, uprooting,
stopping. You must understand this in order to make the practice work.
If you are sick and don't treat the illness with medicine do you think
the illness will cure itself? Wherever you are afraid you should go.
Wherever there is a cemetery or charnel ground which is particularly
fearsome, go there. Put on your robes, go there and contemplate, Anicca
vata sankhara... [46] Stand and walk
meditation there, look inward and see where your fear lies. It will be all
too obvious. Understand the truth of all conditioned things. Stay there
and watch until dusk falls and it gets darker and darker, until you are
even able to stay there all night.
The Buddha said, "Whoever sees the Dhamma sees the Tathagata.
Whoever sees the Tathagata sees Nibbana." If we don't follow
his example how will we see the Dhamma? If we don't see the Dhamma how
will we know the Buddha? If we don't see the Buddha how will we know the
qualities of the Buddha? Only if we practice in the footsteps of the
Buddha will we know that what the Buddha taught is utterly certain, that
the Buddha's teaching is the supreme truth.
Sense Contact -- the Fount of Wisdom
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All of us have made up our minds to become bhikkhus and
samaneras [47] in the Buddhist
Dispensation in order to find peace. Now what is true peace? True peace,
the Buddha said, is not very far away, it lies right here within us, but
we tend to continually overlook it. People have their ideas about finding
peace but still tend to experience confusion and agitation, they still
tend to be unsure and haven't yet found fulfillment in their practice.
They haven't yet reached the goal. It's as if we have left our home to
travel to many different places. Whether we get into a car or board a
boat, no matter where we go, we still haven't reached our home. As long as
we still haven't reached home we don't feel content, we still have some
unfinished business to take care of. This is because our journey is not
yet finished, we haven't reached our destination. We travel all over the
place in search of liberation.
All of you bhikkhus and samaneras here want peace, every
one of you. Even myself, when I was younger, searched all over for peace.
Wherever I went I couldn't be satisfied. Going into forests or visiting
various teachers, listening to Dhamma talks, I could find no satisfaction.
Why is this?
We look for peace in peaceful places, where there won't be sights, or
sounds, or odors, or flavors... thinking that living quietly like this is
the way to find contentment, that herein lies peace.
But actually, if we live very quietly in places where nothing arises,
can wisdom arise? Would we be aware of anything? Think about it. If our
eye didn't see sights, what would that be like? If the nose didn't
experience smells, what would that be like? If the tongue didn't
experience flavors what would that be like? If the body didn't experience
feelings at all, what would that be like? To be like that would be like
being a blind and deaf man, one whose nose and tongue had fallen off and
who was completely numb with paralysis. Would there be anything there? And
yet people tend to think that if they went somewhere where nothing
happened they would find peace. Well, I've thought like that myself, I
once thought that way...
When I was a young monk just starting to practice, I'd sit in
meditation and sounds would disturb me, I'd think to myself, "What can I
do to make my mind peaceful?" So I took some beeswax and stuffed my ears
with it so that I couldn't hear anything. All that remained was a humming
sound. I thought that would be peaceful, but no, all that thinking and
confusion didn't arise at the ears after all. It arose at the mind. That
is the place to search for peace.
To put it another way, no matter where you go to stay, you don't want
to do anything because it interferes with your practice. You don't want to
sweep the grounds or do any work, you just want to be still and find peace
that way. The teacher asks you to help out with the chores or any of the
daily duties but you don't put your heart into it because you feel it is
only an external concern.
I've often brought up the example of one of my disciples who was really
eager to "let go" and find peace. I taught about "letting go" and he
accordingly understood that to let go of everything would indeed be
peaceful. Actually right from the day he had come to stay here he didn't
want to do anything. Even when the wind blew half the roof off his kuti
he wasn't interested. He said that that was just an external thing. So he
didn't bother fixing it up. When the sunlight and rain streamed in from
one side he'd move over to the other side. That wasn't any business of
his. His business was to make his mind peaceful. That other stuff was a
distraction, he wouldn't get involved. That was how he saw it.
One day I was walking past and saw the collapsed roof.
"Eh? Whose kuti is this?"
Someone told me whose it was, and I thought, "Hmm. Strange..." So I had
a talk with him, explaining many things, such as the duties in regard to
our dwellings, the senasanavatta. "We must have a dwelling place,
and we must look after it. "Letting go" isn't like this, it doesn't mean
shirking our responsibilities. That's the action of a fool. The rain comes
in on one side so you move over to the other side, then the sunshine comes
out and you move back to that side. Why is that? Why don't you bother to
let go there?" I gave him a long discourse on this; then when I'd
finished, he said,
"Oh, Luang Por, sometimes you teach me to cling and sometimes you teach
me to let go. I don't know what you want me to do. Even when my roof
collapses and I let go to this extent, still you say it's not right. And
yet you teach me to let go! I don't know what more you can expect of
me..."
You see? People are like this. They can be as stupid as this.
Are there visual objects within the eye? If there are no external
visual objects would our eyes see anything? Are their sounds within our
ears if external sounds don't make contact? If there are no smells outside
would we experience them. Where are the causes? Think about what the
Buddha said: All dhammas [48] arise
because of causes. If we didn't have ears would we experience sounds? If
we had no eyes would we be able to see sights? Eyes, ears, nose, tongue,
body and mind -- these are the causes. It is said that all dhammas
arise because of conditions, when they cease it's because the causal
conditions have ceased. For resulting conditions to arise, the causal
conditions must first arise.
If we think that peace lies where there are no sensations would wisdom
arise? Would there be causal and resultant conditions? Would we have
anything to practice with? If we blame the sounds, then where there are
sounds we can't be peaceful. We think that place is no good. Wherever
there are sights we say that's not peaceful. If that's the case then to
find peace we'd have to be one whose senses have all died, blind, and
deaf. I thought about this...
"Hmm. This is strange. Suffering arises because of eyes, ears, nose,
tongue, body and mind. So should we be blind? If we didn't see anything at
all maybe that would be better. One would have no defilements arising if
one were blind, or deaf. Is this the way it is?"...
But, thinking about it, it wall all wrong. If that was the case then
blind and deaf people would be enlightened. They would all be accomplished
if defilements arose at the eyes and ears. There are the causal
conditions. Where things arise, at the cause, that's where we must stop
them. Where the cause arises, that's where we must contemplate.
Actually, the sense bases of the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and mind
are all things which can facilitate the arising of wisdom, if we know them
as they are. If we don't really know them we must deny them, saying we
don't want to see sights, hear sounds, and so on, because they disturb us.
If we cut off the causal conditions what are we going to contemplate?
Think about it. Where would there be any cause and effect? This is wrong
thinking on our part.
This is why we are taught to be restrained. Restraint is sila.
There is the sila of sense restraint: eyes, ears, nose, tongue,
body and mind: these are our sila, and they are our samadhi.
Reflect on the story Sariputta. At the time before he became a bhikkhu
he saw Assaji Thera going on almsround. Seeing him, Sariputta thought,
"This monk is most unusual. He walks neither too fast nor too slow, his
robes are neatly worn, his bearing is restrained." Sariputta was inspired
by him and so approached Venerable Assaji, paid his respects and asked
him,
"Excuse me, sir, who are you?"
"I am a samana."
"Who is your teacher?"
"Venerable Gotama is my teacher."
"What does Venerable Gotama teach?"
"He teaches that all things arise because of conditions.
When they cease it's because the causal conditions have ceased."
When asked about the Dhamma by Sariputta, Assaji explained only in
brief, he talked about cause and effect. Dhammas arise because of causes.
The cause arises first and then the result. When the result is to cease
the cause must first cease. That's all he said, but it was enough for
Sariputta. [49]
Now this was a cause for the arising of Dhamma. At that time Sariputta
had eyes, he had ears, he had a nose, a tongue, a body and a mind. All his
faculties were intact. If he didn't have his faculties would there have
been sufficient causes for wisdom to arise for him? Would he have been
aware of anything? But most of us are afraid of contact. Either that or we
like to have contact but we develop no wisdom from it: instead we
repeatedly indulge through eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind,
delighting in and getting lost in sense objects. This is how it is. These
sense bases can entice us into delight and indulgence or they can lead to
knowledge and wisdom.
They have both harm and benefit, depending on our wisdom.
So now let us understand that, having gone forth and come to practice,
we should take everything as practice. Even the bad things. We should know
them all. Why? So that we may know the truth. When we talk of practice we
don't simply mean those things that are good and pleasing to us. That's
not how it is. In this world some things are to our liking, some are not.
These things all exist in this world, nowhere else. Usually whatever we
like we want, even with fellow monks and novices. Whatever monk or novice
we don't like we don't want to associate with, we only want to be with
those we like. You see? This is choosing according to our likes. Whatever
we don't like we don't want to see or know about.
Actually the Buddha wanted us to experience these things. Lokavidu
-- look at this world and know it clearly. If we don't know the truth of
the world clearly then we can't go anywhere. Living in the world we must
understand the world. The Noble Ones of the past, including the Buddha,
all lived with these things, they lived in this world, among deluded
people. They attained the truth right in this very world, nowhere else.
They didn't run off to some other world to find the truth. But they had
wisdom. They restrained their senses, but the practice is to look into all
these things and know them as they are.
Therefore the Buddha taught us to know the sense bases, our points of
contact. The eye contacts forms and sends them "in" to become sights. The
ears make contact with sounds, the nose makes contact with odors, the
tongue makes contact with tastes, the body makes contact with tactile
sensations, and so awareness arises. Where awareness arises is where we
should look and see things as they are. If we don;t know these things as
they really are we will either fall in love with them or hate them. Where
these sensations arise is where we can become enlightened, where wisdom
can arise.
But sometimes we don't want things to be like that. The Buddha taught
restraint, but restraint doesn't mean we don't see anything, hear
anything, smell, taste, feel or think anything. That's not what it means.
If practicers don't understand this then as soon as they see or hear
anything they cower and run away. They don't deal with things. They run
away, thinking that by so doing those things will eventually lose their
power over them, that they will eventually transcend them. But they won't.
They won't transcend anything like that. If they run away not knowing the
truth of them, later on the same stuff will pop up to be dealt with again.
For example, those practicers who are never content, be they in
monasteries, forests, or mountains. They wander on "dhutanga
pilgrimage" looking at this, that and the other, thinking they'll find
contentment that way. They go, and then they come back... didn't see
anything. They try going to a mountain top..."Ah! This is the spot, now
I'm right." They feel at peace for a few days and then get tired of it.
"Oh, well, off to the seaside." "Ah, here it's nice and cool. This'll do
me fine." After a while they get tired of the seaside as well... Tired of
the forests, tired of the mountains, tired of the seaside, tired of
everything. This is not being tired of things in the right sense, [50]
as Right View, it's simply boredom, a kind of Wrong View. Their view is
not in accordance with the way things are.
When they get back to the monastery..."Now, what will I do? I've been
all over and come back with nothing." So they throw away their bowls and
disrobe. Why do they disrobe? Because they haven't got any grip on the
practice, they don't see anything; go to the north and don't see anything;
go to the seaside, to the mountains, into the forests and still don't see
anything. So it's all finished... they "die." This is how it goes. It's
because they're continually running away from things. Wisdom doesn't
arise.
Now take another example. Suppose there is one monk who determines to
stay with things, not to run away. He looks after himself. He knows
himself and also knows those who come to stay with him. He's continually
dealing with problems. For example, the Abbot. If one is an Abbot of a
monastery there are constant problems to deal with, there's a constant
stream of things that demand attention. Why so? Because people are always
asking questions. The questions never end, so you must be constantly on
the alert. You are constantly solving problems, your own as well as other
people's. That is, you must be constantly awake. Before you can doze off
they wake you up again with another problem. So this causes you to
contemplate and understand things. You become skillful: skillful in regard
to yourself and skillful in regard to others. Skillful in many, many ways.
This skill arises from contact, from confronting and dealing with
things, from not running away. We don't run away physically but we "run
away" in mind, using our wisdom. We understand with wisdom right here, we
don't run away from anything.
This is a source of wisdom. One must work, must associate with other
things. For instance, living in a big monastery like this we must all help
out to look after the things here. Looking at it in one way you could say
that it's all defilement. Living with lots of monks and novices, with many
laypeople coming and going, many defilements may arise. Yes, I admit...
but we must live like this for the development of wisdom and the
abandonment of foolishness. Which way are we to go? Are we going to live
in order to get rid of foolishness or to increase our foolishness?
We must contemplate. Whenever eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body or mind
make contact we should be collected and circumspect. When suffering
arises, who is suffering? Why did this suffering arise? The Abbot of a
monastery has to supervise many disciples. Now that may be suffering. We
must know suffering when it arises. Know suffering. If we are afraid of
suffering and don't want to face it, where are we going to do battle with
it? If suffering arises and we don't know it, how are we going to deal
with it? This is of utmost importance -- we must know suffering.
Escaping from suffering means knowing the way out of suffering, it
doesn't mean running away from wherever suffering arises. By doing that
you just carry your suffering with you. When suffering arises again
somewhere else you'll have to run away again. This is not transcending
suffering, it's not knowing suffering.
If you want to understand suffering you must look into the situation at
hand. The teachings say that wherever a problem arises it must be settled
right there. Where suffering lies is right where non-suffering will arise,
it ceases at the place where it arises. If suffering arises you must
contemplate right there, you don't have to run away. You should settle the
issue right there. One who runs away from suffering out of fear is the
most foolish person of all. He will simply increases his stupidity
endlessly.
We must understand: suffering is none other than the First Noble Truth,
isn't that so? Are you going to look on it as something bad? Dukkha
sacca, samudaya sacca, nirodha sacca, magga sacca... [51]
Running away from these things isn't practicing according to the true
Dhamma. When will you ever see the Truth of Suffering? If we keep running
away from suffering we will never know it. Suffering is something we
should recognize -- if you don't observe it when will you ever recognize
it? Not being content here you run over there, when discontent arises
there you run off again. You are always running. If that's the way you
practice you'll be racing with the Devil all over the country!
The Buddha taught us to "run away" using wisdom. For instance: suppose
you had stepped on a thorn or splinter and it got embedded in your foot.
As you walk it occasionally hurts, occasionally not. Sometimes you may
step on a stone or a stump and it really hurts, so you feel around your
foot. But not finding anything you shrug it off and walk on a bit more.
Eventually you step on something else, and the pain arises again.
Now this happens many times. What is the cause of that pain? The cause
is that splinter or thorn embedded in your foot. The pain is constantly
near. Whenever the pain arises you may take a look and feel around a bit,
but, not seeing the splinter, you let it go. After a while it hurts again
so you take another look.
When suffering arises you must note it, don't just shrug it off.
Whenever the pain arises..."Hmm... that splinter is still there." Whenever
the pain arises there arises also the thought that that splinter has got
to go. If you don't take it out there will only be more pain later on. The
pain keeps recurring again and again, until the desire to take out that
thorn is constantly with you. In the end it reaches a point where you make
up your mind once and for all to get out that thorn -- because it hurts!
Now our effort in the practice must be like this. Wherever it hurts,
wherever there's friction, we must investigate. Confront the problem, head
on. Take that thorn out of your foot, just pull it out. Wherever your mind
gets stuck you must take note. As you look into it you will know it, see
it and experience it as it is.
But our practice must be unwavering and persistent. They call it
viriyarambha -- putting forth constant effort. Whenever an unpleasant
feeling arises in your foot, for example, you must remind yourself to get
out that thorn, don't give up your resolve. Likewise, when suffering
arises in our hearts we must have the unwavering resolve to try to uproot
the defilements, to give them up. This resolve is constantly there,
unremitting. Eventually the defilements will fall into our hands where we
can finish them off.
So in regard to happiness and suffering, what are we to do? If we
didn't have these things what could we use as a cause to precipitate
wisdom? If there is no cause how will the effect arise? All dhammas arise
because of causes. When the result ceases it's because the cause has
ceased. This is how it is, but most of us don't really understand. People
only want to run away from suffering. This sort of knowledge is short of
the mark. Actually we need to know this very world that we are living in,
we don't have to run away anywhere. You should have the attitude that to
stay is fine... and to go is fine. Think about this carefully.
Where do happiness and suffering lie? Whatever we don't hold fast to,
cling to or fix on to, as if it weren't there. Suffering doesn't arise.
Suffering arises from existence (bhava). If there is existence then
there is birth. Upadana -- clinging or attachment -- this is the
pre-requisite which creates suffering. Wherever suffering arises look into
it. Don't look too far away, look right into the present moment. Look at
your own mind and body. When suffering arises..."Why is there suffering?"
Look right now. When happiness arises, what is the cause of that
happiness? Look right there. Wherever these things arise be aware. Both
happiness and suffering arise from clinging.
The cultivators of old saw their minds in this way. There is only
arising and ceasing. There is no abiding entity. They contemplated from
all angles and saw that there was nothing much to this mind, nothing is
stable. There is only arising and ceasing, ceasing and arising, nothing is
of any lasting substance. While walking or sitting they saw things in this
way. Wherever they looked there was only suffering, that's all. It's just
like a big iron ball which has just been blasted in a furnace. It's hot
all over. If you touch the top it's hot, touch the sides and they're hot
-- it's hot all over. There isn't any place on it which is cool.
Now if we don't consider these things we know nothing about them. We
must see clearly. Don't get "born" into things, don't fall into birth.
Know the workings of birth. Such thoughts as, "Oh, I can't stand that
person, he does everything wrongly," will no longer arise. Or, "I really
like so and so...", these things don't arise. There remain merely the
conventional worldly standards of like and dislike, but one's speech is
one way, one's mind another. They are separate things. We must use the
conventions of the world to communicate with each other, but inwardly we
must be empty. The mind is above those things. We must bring the mind to
transcendence like this. This is the abiding of the Noble Ones. We must
all aim for this and practice accordingly. Don't get caught up in doubts.
Before I started to practice, I thought to myself, "The Buddhist
religion is here, available for all, and yet why do only some people
practice while others don't? Or if they do practice, they do so only for a
short while then give up. Or again those who don't give it up still don't
knuckle down and do the practice? Why is this?" So I resolved to myself,
"Okay... I'll give up this body and mind for this lifetime and try to
follow the teaching of the Buddha down to the last detail. I'll reach
understanding in this very lifetime... because if I don't I'll still be
sunk in suffering. I'll let go of everything else and make a determined
effort, no matter how much difficulty or suffering I have to endure, I'll
persevere. If I don't do it I'll just keep on doubting."
Thinking like this I got down to practice. No matter how much
happiness, suffering or difficulty I had to endure I would do it. I looked
on my whole life as if it was only one day and a night. I gave it up.
"I'll follow the teaching of the Buddha, I'll follow the Dhamma to
understanding -- Why is this world of delusion so wretched?" I wanted to
know, I wanted to master the Teaching, so I turned to the practice of
Dhamma.
How much of the worldly life do we monastics renounce? If we have gone
forth for good then it means we renounce it all, there's nothing we don't
renounce. All the things of the world that people enjoy are cast off:
sights, sounds, smells, tastes and feelings... we throw them all away. And
yet we experience them. So Dhamma practicers must be content with little
and remain detached. Whether in regard to speech, in eating or whatever,
we must be easily satisfied: eat simply, sleep simply, live simply. Just
like they say, "an ordinary person," one who lives simply. The more you
practice the more you will be able to take satisfaction in your practice.
You will see into your own heart.
The Dhamma is paccattam, you must know it for yourself. To know
for yourself means to practice for yourself. You can depend on a teacher
only fifty percent of the way. Even the teaching I have given you today is
completely useless in itself, even if it is worth hearing. But if you were
to believe it all just because I said so you wouldn't be using the
teaching properly.
If you believed me completely then you'd be foolish. To hear the
teaching, see its benefit, put it into practice for yourself, see it
within yourself, do it yourself... this is much more useful. You will then
know the taste of Dhamma for yourself.
This is why the Buddha didn't talk about the fruits of the practice in
much detail, because it's something one can't convey in words. It would be
like trying to describe different colors to a person blind from birth,
"Oh, it's so white," or "it's bright yellow," for instance. You couldn't
convey those colors to them. You could try but it wouldn't serve much
purpose.
The Buddha brings it back down to the individual -- see clearly for
yourself. If you see clearly for yourself you will have clear proof within
yourself. Whether standing, walking, sitting or reclining you will be free
of doubt. Even if someone were to say, "Your practice isn't right, it's
all wrong," still you would be unmoved, because you have your own proof.
A practicer of the Dhamma must be like this wherever he goes. Others
can't tell you, you must know for yourself. Sammaditthi, Right
View, must be there. The practice must be like this for every one of us.
To do the real practice like this for even one month out of five or ten
rains retreats would be rare.
Our sense organs must be constantly working. Know content and
discontent, be aware of like and dislike. Know appearance and know
transcendence. The Apparent and the Transcendent must be realized
simultaneously. Good and evil must be seen as co-existent, arising
together. This is the fruit of the Dhamma practice.
So whatever is useful to yourself and to others, whatever practice
benefits both yourself and others, is called "following the Buddha." I've
talked about this often. The things which should be done, people seem to
neglect. For example, the work in the monastery, the standards of practice
and so on. I've talked about them often and yet people don't seem to put
their hearts into it. Some don't know, some are lazy and can't be
bothered, some are simply scattered and confused.
But that's a cause for wisdom to arise. If we go to places where none
of these things arise, what would we see? Take food, for instance. If food
doesn't have any taste is it delicious? If a person is deaf will he hear
anything? If you don't perceive anything will you have anything to
contemplate? If there are no problems will there be anything to solve?
Think of the practice in this way.
Once I went to live up north. At that time I was living with many
monks, all of them elderly but newly ordained, with only two or three
rains retreat. At the time I had ten rains. Living with those old monks I
decided to perform the various duties -- receiving their bowls, washing
their robes, emptying their spittoons and so on. I didn't think in terms
of doing it for any particular individual, I simply maintained my
practice. If others didn't do the duties I'd do them myself. I saw it as a
good opportunity for me to gain merit. It made me feel good and gave me a
sense of satisfaction.
On the uposatha [52] days I knew
the required duties. I'd go and clean out the uposatha hall and set
out water for washing and drinking. The others didn't know anything about
the duties, they just watched. I didn't criticize them, because they
didn't know. I did the duties myself, and having done them I felt pleased
with myself, I had inspiration and a lot of energy in my practice.
Whenever I could do something in the monastery, whether in my own
kuti or others," if it was dirty, I'd clean up. I didn't do it for
anyone in particular, I didn't do it to impress anyone, I simply did it to
maintain a good practice. Cleaning a kuti or dwelling place is just
like cleaning rubbish out of your own mind.
Now this is something all of you should bear in mind. You don't have to
worry about harmony, it will automatically be there. Live together with
Dhamma, with peace and restraint, train your mind to be like this and no
problems will arise. If there is heavy work to be done everybody helps out
and in no long time the work is done, it gets taken care of quite easily.
That's the best way.
I have come across some other types, though... although I used it as an
opportunity to grow. For instance, living in a big monastery, the monks
and novices may agree among themselves to wash robes on a certain day. I'd
go and boil up the jackfruit wood. [53] Now
there'd be some monks who'd wait for someone else to boil up the jackfruit
wood and then come along and wash their robes, take them back to their
kutis, hang them out and then take a nap. They didn't have to set up
the fire, didn't have to clean up afterwards... they thought they were on
a good thing, that they were being clever. This is the height of
stupidity. These people are just increasing their own stupidity because
they don't do anything, they leave all the work up to others. They wait
till everything is ready then come along and make use of it, it's easy for
them. This is just adding to one's foolishness. Those actions serve no
useful purpose whatsoever to them.
Some people think foolishly like this. They shirk the required duties
and think that this is being clever, but it is actually very foolish. If
we have that sort of attitude we won't last.
Therefore, whether speaking, eating or doing anything whatsoever,
reflect on yourself. You may want to live comfortably, eat comfortably,
sleep comfortably and so on, but you can't. What have we come here for? If
we regularly reflect on this we will be heedful, we won't forget, we will
be constantly alert. Being alert like this you will put forth effort in
all postures. If you don't put forth effort things go quite differently...
Sitting, you sit like you're in the town, walking, you walk like you're in
the town... you just want to go and play around in the town with the
laypeople.
If there is no effort in the practice the mind will tend in that
direction. You don't oppose and resist your mind, you just allow it to
waft along the wind of your moods. This is called following one's moods.
Like a child, if we indulge all its wants will it be a good child? If the
parents indulge all their child's wishes is that good? Even if they do
indulge it somewhat at first, by the time it can speak they may start to
occasionally spank it because they're afraid it'll end up stupid. The
training of our mind must be like this. You have to know yourself and how
to train yourself. If you don't know how to train your own mind, waiting
around expecting someone else to train it for you, you'll end up in
trouble.
So don't think that you can't practice in this place. Practice has no
limits. Whether standing, walking, sitting or lying down, you can always
practice. Even while sweeping the monastery grounds or seeing a beam of
sunlight, you can realize the Dhamma. But you must have sati at hand. Why
so? Because you can realize the Dhamma at any time at all, in any place,
if you ardently meditate.
Don't be heedless. Be watchful, be alert. While walking on almsround
there are all sorts of feelings arising, and it's all good Dhamma. When
you get back to the monastery and are eating your food there's plenty of
good Dhamma for you to look into. If you have constant effort all these
things will be objects for contemplation, there will be wisdom, you will
see the dhamma. This is called dhamma-vicaya, reflecting on Dhamma.
It's one of the enlightenment factors. [54]
If there is sati, recollection, there will be dhamma-vicaya
as a result. These are factors of enlightenment. If we have recollection
then we won't simply take it easy, there will also be inquiry into Dhamma.
These things become factors for realizing the Dhamma.
If we have reached this stage then our practice will know neither day
or night, it will continue on regardless of the time of day. There will be
nothing to taint the practice, or if there is we will immediately know it.
Let there be dhamma-vicaya within our minds constantly, looking
into Dhamma. If our practice has entered the flow the mind will tend to be
like this. It won't go off after other things..."I think I'll go for a
trip over there, or perhaps this other place... over in that province
should be interesting..." That's the way of the world. Not long and the
practice will die.
So resolve yourselves. It's not just by sitting with your eyes closed
that you develop wisdom. Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind are
constantly with us, so be constantly alert. Study constantly. Seeing trees
or animals can all be occasions for study. Bring it all inwards. See
clearly within your own heart. If some sensation makes impact on the
heart, witness it clearly for yourself, don't simply disregard it.
Take a simple comparison: baking bricks. have you ever seen a
brick-baking oven? They build the fire up about two or three feet in front
of the oven, then the smoke all gets drawn into it. Looking at this
illustration you can more clearly understand the practice. Making a brick
kiln in the right way you have to make the fire so that all the smoke gets
drawn inside, none is left over. All the heat goes into the oven, and the
job gets done quickly.
We Dhamma practicers should experience things in this way. all our
feelings will be drawn inwards to be turned into Right View. Seeing
sights, hearing sounds, smelling odors, tasting flavors and so on, the
mind draws them all inward to be converted into Right View. Those feelings
thus become experiences which give rise to wisdom.
"Not Sure!" -- The Standard of the Noble Ones
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There was once a western monk, a student of mine. Whenever he saw Thai
monks and novices disrobing he would say, "Oh, what a shame! Why do they
do that? Why do so many of the Thai monks and novices disrobe?" He was
shocked. He would get saddened at the disrobing of the Thai monks and
novices, because he had only just come into contact with Buddhism. He was
inspired, he was resolute. Going forth as a monk was the only thing to do,
he thought he'd never disrobe. Whoever disrobed was a fool. He'd see the
Thais taking on the robes at the beginning of the Rains Retreat as monks
and novices and then disrobing at the end of it..."Oh, how sad! I feel so
sorry for those Thai monks and novices. How could they do such a thing?"
Well, as time went by some of the western monks began to disrobe, so he
came to see it as something not so important after all. At first, when he
had just begun to practice, he was excited about it. He thought that it
was really important thing, to become a monk. He thought it would be easy.
When people are inspired it all seems to be so right and good. There's
nothing there to gauge their feelings by, so they go ahead and decide for
themselves. But they don't really know what practice is. Those who do know
will have a thoroughly firm foundation within their hearts -- but even so
they don't need to advertise it.
As for myself, when I was first ordained I didn't actually do much
practice, but I had a lot of faith. I don't know why, maybe it was there
from birth. The monks and novices who went forth together with me, come
the end of the Rains, all disrobed. I thought to myself, "Eh? What is it
with these people?" However, I didn't dare say anything to them because I
wasn't yet sure of my own feelings, I was too stirred up. But within me I
felt that they were all foolish. "It's difficult to go forth, easy to
disrobe. These guys don't have much merit, they think that the way of the
world is more useful than the way of Dhamma." I thought like this but I
didn't say anything, I just watched my own mind.
I'd see the monks who'd gone forth with me disrobing one after the
other. Sometimes they'd dress up and come back to the monastery to show
off. I'd see them and think they were crazy, but they thought they looked
snappy. When you disrobe you have to do this and that... I'd think to
myself that that way of thinking was wrong. I wouldn't say it, though,
because I myself was still an uncertain quantity. I still wasn't sure how
long my faith would last.
When my friends had all disrobed I dropped all concern, there was
nobody left to concern myself with. I picked up the Patimokkha [55]
and got stuck into learning that. There was nobody left to distract me and
waste my time, so I put my heart into the practice. Still I didn't say
anything because I felt that to practice all one's life, maybe seventy,
eighty or even ninety years, and to keep up a persistent effort, without
slackening up or losing one's resolve, seemed like an extremely difficult
thing to do.
Those who went forth would go forth, those who disrobed would disrobe.
I'd just watch it all. I didn't concern myself whether they stayed or
went. I'd watch my friends leave, but the feeling I had within me was that
these people didn't see clearly. That western monk probably thought like
that. he'd see people become monks for only one Rains Retreat, and get
upset.
Later on he reached a stage we call... bored; bored with the Holy Life.
He let go of the practice and eventually disrobed.
"Why are you disrobing? Before, when you saw the Thai monks disrobing
you'd say, 'Oh, what a shame! How sad, how pitiful.' Now, when you
yourself want to disrobe, why don't you feel sorry now?"
He didn't answer. He just grinned sheepishly.
When it comes to the training of the mind it isn't easy to find a good
standard if you haven't yet developed a "witness" within yourself. In most
external matters we can rely on others for feedback, there are standards
and precedents. But when it comes to using the Dhamma as a standard... do
we have the Dhamma yet? Are we thinking rightly or not? And even if it's
right, do we know how to let go of rightness or are we still clinging to
it?
You must contemplate until you reach the point where you let go, this
is the important thing... until you reach the point where there isn't
anything left, where there is neither good nor bad. You throw it off. This
means you throw out everything. If it's all gone then there's no
remainder; if there's some remainder then it's not all gone.
So in regard to this training of the mind, sometimes we may say it's
easy. it's easy to say, but it's hard to do, very hard. It's hard in that
it doesn't conform to our desires. Sometimes it seems almost as if the
angels [56] were helping us out. Everything
goes right, whatever we think or say seems to be just right. Then we go
and attach to that rightness and before long we go wrong and it all turns
bad. This is where it's difficult. We don't have a standard to gauge
things by.
People who have a lot of faith, who are endowed with confidence and
belief but are lacking in wisdom, may be very good at samadhi but
they may not have much insight. They see only one side of everything, and
simply follow that. They don't reflect. This is blind faith. In Buddhism
we call this Saddha adhimokkha, blind faith. They have faith all
right but it's not born of wisdom. But they don't see this at the time,
they believe they have wisdom, so they don't see where they are wrong.
Therefore they teach about the Five Powers (Bala): Saddha,
viriya, sati, samadhi, pañña. Saddha is
conviction; viriya is diligent effort; sati is recollection;
samadhi is fixedness of mind; pañña is all-embracing
knowledge. Don't say that pañña is simply knowledge -- pañña
is all-embracing, consummate knowledge.
The wise have given these five steps to us so that we can link them,
firstly as an object of study, then as a gauge to compare to the state of
our practice as it is. For example, saddha, conviction. Do we have
conviction, have we developed it yet? Viriya: do we have diligent
effort or not? Is our effort right or is it wrong? We must consider this.
Everybody has some sort of effort, but does our effort contain wisdom or
not?
Sati is the same. Even a cat has sati. When it sees a
mouse, sati is there. The cat's eyes stare fixedly at the mouse.
This is the sati of a cat. Everybody has sati, animals have
it, delinquents have it, sages have it.
Samadhi, fixedness of mind -- everybody has this as well. A cat
has it when its mind is fixed on grabbing the mouse and eating it. It has
fixed intent. That sati of the cat's is sati of a sort;
samadhi, fixed intent on what it is doing, is also there. Pañña,
knowledge, like that of human beings. It knows as an animal knows, it has
enough knowledge to catch mice for food.
These five things are called powers. Have these Five Powers arisen from
Right View, sammaditthi, or not? Saddha, viriya,
sati, samadhi, pañña -- have these arisen from Right
View? What is Right View? What is our standard for gauging Right View? We
must clearly understand this.
Right View is the understanding that all these things are uncertain.
Therefore the Buddha and all the Noble Ones don't hold fast to them. They
hold, but not fast. They don't let that holding become an identity. The
holding which doesn't lead to becoming is that which isn't tainted with
desire. Without seeking to become this or that there is simply the
practice itself. When you hold on to a particular thing is there
enjoyment, or is there displeasure? If there is pleasure, do you hold on
to that pleasure? If there is dislike, do you hold on to that dislike?
Some views can be used as principles for gauging our practice more
accurately. Such as knowing such views as that one is better than others,
or equal to others, or more foolish than others, as all wrong views. We
may feel these things but we also know them with wisdom, that they simply
arise and cease. Seeing that we are better than others is not right;
seeing that we are equal to others is not right; seeing that we are
inferior to others is not right.
The right view is the one that cuts through all of this. So where do we
go to? If we think we are better than others, pride arises. It's there but
we don't see it. If we think we are equal to others, we fail to show
respect and humility at the proper times. If we think we are inferior to
others we get depressed, thinking we are inferior, born under a bad sign
and so on. We are still clinging to the Five Khandhas, [57]
it's all simply becoming and birth.
This is one standard for gauging ourselves by. Another one is: if we
encounter a pleasant experience we feel happy, if we encounter a bad
experience we are unhappy. Are we able to look at both the things we like
and the things we dislike as having equal value? Measure yourself against
this standard. In our everyday lives, in the various experiences we
encounter, if we hear something which we like, does our mood change? If we
encounter an experience which isn't to our liking, does our mood change?
Or is the mind unmoved? Looking right here we have a gauge.
Just know yourself, this is your witness. Don't make decisions on the
strength of your desires. Desires can puff us up into thinking we are
something which we're not. We must be very circumspect.
There are so many angles and aspects to consider, but the right way is
not to follow your desires, but the Truth. We should know both the good
and the bad, and when we know them to let go of them. If we don't let go
we are still there, we still "exist," we still "have." If we still "are"
then there is a remainder, there are becoming and birth in store.
Therefore the Buddha said to judge only yourself, don't judge others,
no matter how good or evil they may be. The Buddha merely points out the
way, saying "The truth is like this." Now, is our mind like that or not?
For instance, suppose a monk took some things belonging to another
monk, then that other monk accused him, "You stole my things." "I didn't
steal them, I only took them." So we ask a third monk to adjudicate. How
should he decide? He would have to ask the offending monk to appear before
the convened Sangha. "Yes, I took it, but I didn't steal it." Or in regard
to other rules, such as parajika or sanghadisesa offenses:
"Yes, I did it, but I didn't have intention." How can you believe that?
It's tricky. If you can't believe it, all you can do is leave the onus
with the doer, it rests on him.
But you should know that we can't hide the things that arise in our
minds. You can't cover them up, either the wrongs or the good actions.
Whether actions are good or evil, you can't dismiss them simply by
ignoring them, because these things tend to reveal themselves. They
conceal themselves, they reveal themselves, they exist in and of
themselves. They are all automatic. This is how things work.
Don't try to guess at or speculate about these things. As long as there
is still avijja (unknowing) they are not finished with. The Chief
Privy Councilor once asked me, "Luang Por, is the mind of an anagami
[58] pure yet?"
"It's partly pure."
"Eh? An anagami has given up sensual desire, how is his mind not
yet pure?"
"He may have let go of sensual desire, but there is still something
remaining, isn't there? There is still avijja. If there is still
something left then there is still something left. It's like the bhikkhus'
alms bowls. There are "a large-size large bowl; a medium-sized large bowl,
a small-sized large bowl; then a large-sized medium bowl, a medium-sized
medium bowl, a small-sized medium bowl; then there are a large-sized small
bowl, a medium-sized small bowl and a small-sized small bowl... No matter
how small it is there is still a bowl there, right? That's how it is with
this...sotapanna, sakadagami, anagami... they have all given up
certain defilements, but only to their respective levels. Whatever still
remains, those Noble Ones don't see. If they could they would all be
arahants. They still can't see all. Avijja is that which
doesn't see. If the mind of the anagami was completely straightened
out he wouldn't be an anagami, he would be fully accomplished. But
there is still something remaining.
"Is his mind purified?"
"Well, it is somewhat, but not 100%."
How else could I answer? He said that later on he would come and
question me about it further. He can look into it, the standard is there.
Don't be careless. Be alert. The Lord Buddha exhorted us to be alert.
In regards to this training of the heart, I've had my moments of
temptation too, you know. I've often been tempted to try many things but
they've always seemed like they're going astray of the path. It's really
just a sort of swaggering in one's mind, a sort of conceit. Ditthi,
views, and mana, pride, are there. It's hard enough just to be
aware of these two things.
There was once a man who wanted to become a monk here. He carried in
his robes, determined to become a monk in memory of his late mother. He
came into the monastery, laid down his robes, and without so much as
paying respects to the monks, started walking meditation right in front of
the main hall... back and forth, back and forth, like he was really going
to show his stuff.
I thought, "Oh, so there are people around like this, too!" This is
called saddha adhimokkha -- blind faith. He must have determined to
get enlightened before sundown or something, he thought it would be so
easy. He didn't look at anybody else, just put his head down and walked as
if his life depended on it. I just let him carry on, but I thought, "Oh,
man, you think it's that easy or something?" In the end I don't know how
long he stayed, I don't even think he ordained.
As soon as the mind thinks of something we send it out, send it out
every time. We don't realize that it's simply the habitual proliferation
of the mind. It disguises itself as wisdom and waffles off into minute
detail. This mental proliferation seems very clever, if we didn't know we
would mistake it for wisdom. But when it comes to the crunch it's not the
real thing. When suffering arises where is that so-called wisdom then? Is
it of any use? It's only proliferation after all.
So stay with the Buddha. As I've said before many times, in our
practice we must turn inwards and find the Buddha. Where is the Buddha?
The Buddha is still alive to this very day, go in and find him. Where is
he? At aniccam, go in and find him there, go and bow to him:
aniccam, uncertainty. You can stop right there for starters.
If the mind tries to tell you, "I'm a sotapanna now," go and bow
to the sotapanna. He'll tell you himself, "It's all uncertain." If
you meet a sakadagami go and pay respects to him. When he sees you
he'll simply say "Not a sure thing!" If there is an anagami go and
bow to him. He'll tell you only one thing..."Uncertain." If you meet even
an arahant, go and bow to him, he'll tell you even more firmly,
"It's all even more uncertain!" You'll hear the words of the Noble
Ones..."Everything is uncertain, don't cling to anything."
Don't just look at the Buddha like a simpleton. Don't cling to things,
holding fast to them without letting go. Look at things as functions of
the Apparent and then send them on to Transcendence. That's how you must
be. There must be Appearance and there must be Transcendence.
So I say "Go to the Buddha." Where is the Buddha? The Buddha is the
Dhamma. All the teachings in this world can be contained in this one
teaching: aniccam. Think about it. I've searched for over forty
years as a monk and this is all I could find. That and patient endurance.
This is how to approach the Buddha's teaching... aniccam: it's all
uncertain.
No matter how sure the mind wants to be, just tell it "Not sure!."
Whenever the mind wants to grab on to something as a sure thing, just say,
"It's not sure, it's transient." Just ram it down with this. Using the
Dhamma of the Buddha it all comes down to this. It's not that it's merely
a momentary phenomenon. Whether standing, walking, sitting or lying down,
you see everything in that way. Whether liking arises or dislike arises
you see it all in the same way. This is getting close to the Buddha, close
to the Dhamma.
Now I feel that this is more valuable way to practice. All my practice
from the early days up to the present time has been like this. I didn't
actually rely on the scriptures, but then I didn't disregard them either.
I didn't rely on a teacher but then I didn't exactly "go it alone." My
practice was all "neither this nor that."
Frankly it's a matter of "finishing off," that is, practicing to the
finish by taking up the practice and then seeing it to completion, seeing
the Apparent and also the Transcendent.
I've already spoken of this, but some of you may be interested to hear
it again: if you practice consistently and consider things thoroughly, you
will eventually reach this point... At first you hurry to go forward,
hurry to come back, and hurry to stop. You continue to practice like this
until you reach the point where it seems that going forward is not it,
coming back is not it, and stopping is not it either! It's finished. This
is the finish. Don't expect anything more than this, it finishes right
here. Khinasavo -- one who is completed. He doesn't go forward,
doesn't retreat and doesn't stop. There's no stopping, no going forward
and no coming back. It's finished. Consider this, realize it clearly in
your own mind. Right there you will find that there is really nothing at
all.
Whether this is old or new to you depends on you, on your wisdom and
discernment. One who has no wisdom or discernment won't be able to figure
it out. Just take a look at trees, like mango or jackfruit trees. If they
grow up in a clump, one tree may get bigger first and then the others will
bend away, growing outwards from that bigger one. Why does this happen?
Who tells them to do that? This is Nature. Nature contains both the good
and the bad, the right and the wrong. It can either incline to the right
or incline to the wrong. If we plant any kind of trees at all close
together, the trees which mature later will branch away from the bigger
tree. How does this happen? Who determines it thus? This is Nature, or
Dhamma.
Likewise, tanha, desire, leads us to suffering. Now, if we
contemplate it, it will lead us out of desire, we will outgrow tanha.
By investigating tanha we will shake it up, making it gradually
lighter and lighter until it's all gone. The same as the trees: does
anybody order them to grow the way they do? They can't talk or move around
and yet they know how to grow away from obstacles. Wherever it's cramped
and crowded and growing will be difficult, they bend outwards.
Right here is Dhamma, we don't have to look at a whole lot. One who is
astute will see the Dhamma in this. Trees by nature don't know anything,
they act on natural laws, yet they do know enough to grow away from
danger, to incline towards a suitable place.
Reflective people are like this. We go forth into the homeless life
because we want to transcend suffering. What is it that make us suffer? If
we follow the trail inwards we will find out. That which we like and that
which we don't like are suffering. If they are suffering then don't go so
close to them. Do you want to fall in love with conditions or hate
them?... they're all uncertain. When we incline towards the Buddha all
this comes to an end. Don't forget this. And patient endurance. Just these
two are enough. If you have this sort of understanding this is very good.
Actually in my own practice I didn't have a teacher to give as much
teachings as all of you get from me. I didn't have many teachers. I
ordained in an ordinary village temple and lived in village temples for
quite a few years. In my mind I conceived the desire to practice, I wanted
to be proficient, I wanted to train. There wasn't anybody giving any
teaching in those monasteries but the inspiration to practice arose. I
traveled and I looked around. I had ears so I listened, I had eyes so I
looked. Whatever I heard people say, I'd tell myself, "Not sure." Whatever
I saw, I told myself, "Not sure," or when the tongue contacted sweet,
sour, salty, pleasant or unpleasant flavors, or feelings of comfort or
pain arose in the body, I'd tell myself, "This is not a sure thing"! And
so I lived with Dhamma.
In truth it's all uncertain, but our desires want things to be certain.
what can we do? We must be patient. The most important thing is khanti,
patient endurance. Don't throw out the Buddha, what I call "uncertainty"
-- don't throw that away.
Sometimes I'd go to see old religious sites with ancient monastic
buildings, designed by architects, built by craftsmen. In some places they
would be cracked. Maybe one of my friends would remark, "Such a shame,
isn't it? It's cracked." I'd answer, "If that weren't the case then
there'd be no such thing as the Buddha, there'd be no Dhamma. It's cracked
like this because it's perfectly in line with the Buddha's teaching."
Really down inside I was also sad to see those buildings cracked but I'd
throw off my sentimentality and try to say something which would be of use
to my friends, and to myself. Even though I also felt that it was a pity,
still I tended towards the Dhamma.
"If it wasn't cracked like that there wouldn't be any Buddha!"
I'd say it really heavy for the benefit of my friends... or perhaps
they weren't listening, but still I was listening.
This is a way of considering things which is very, very useful. For
instance, say someone were to rush in and say, "Luang Por! Do you know
what so and so just said about you?" or, "He said such and such about
you..." Maybe you even start to rage. As soon as you hear words of
criticism you start getting these moods every step of the way. As soon as
we hear words like this we may start getting ready to retaliate, but on
looking into the truth of the matter we may find that... no, they had said
something else after all.
And so it's another case of "uncertainty." So why should we rush in and
believe things? Why should we put our trust so much in what others say?
Whatever we hear we should take note, be patient, look into the matter
carefully... stay straight.
It's not that whatever pops into our heads we write it all down as some
sort of truth. Any speech which ignores uncertainty is not the speech of a
sage. Remember this. As for being wise, we are no longer practicing.
Whatever we see or hear, be it pleasant or sorrowful, just say "This is
not sure!" Say it heavy to yourself, hold it all down with this. Don't
build those things up into major issues, just keep them all down to this
one. This point is the important one. This is the point where defilements
die. Practicers shouldn't dismiss it.
If you disregard this point you can expect only suffering, expect only
mistakes. If you don't make this a foundation for your practice you are
going to go wrong... but then you will come right again later on, because
this principle is a really good one.
Actually the real Dhamma, the gist of what I have been saying today,
isn't so mysterious. Whatever you experience is simply form, simply
feeling, simply perception, simply volition, and simply consciousness.
There are only these basic qualities, where is there any certainty within
them?
If we come to understand the true nature of things like this, lust,
infatuation and attachment fade away. why do they fade away? Because we
understand, we know. We shift from ignorance to understanding.
Understanding is born from ignorance, knowing is born from unknowing,
purity is born from defilement. It works like this.
Not discarding aniccam, the Buddha -- This is what it means to
say that the Buddha is still alive. To stay that the Buddha has passed
into Nibbana is not necessarily true. In a more profound sense the
Buddha is still alive. It's much like how we define the word "bhikkhu."
If we define it as "one who asks," [59] the
meaning is very broad. We can define it this way, but to use this
definition too much is not so good -- we don't know when to stop asking!
If we were to define this word in a more profound way we would say: "Bhikkhu
-- one who sees the danger of Samsara."
Isn't this more profound? It doesn't go in the same direction as the
previous definition, it runs much deeper. The practice of Dhamma is like
this. If you don't fully understand it, it becomes something else again.
It becomes priceless, it becomes a source of peace.
When we have sati we are close to the Dhamma. If we have sati
we will see aniccam, the transience of all things. We will see the
Buddha and transcend the suffering of samsara, if not now then
sometime in the future.
If we throw away the attribute of the Noble Ones, the Buddha or the
Dhamma, our practice will become barren and fruitless. We must maintain
our practice constantly, whether we are working or sitting or simply lying
down. When the eye sees form, the ear hears sound, the nose smells an
odor, the tongue tastes a flavor or the body experiences sensation... in
all things, don't throw away the Buddha, don't stray from the Buddha.
This is to be one who has come close to the Buddha, who reveres the
Buddha constantly. We have ceremonies for revering the Buddha, such as
chanting in the morning Araham Samma Sambuddho Bhagava... This is
one way of revering the Buddha but it's not revering the Buddha in such a
profound way as I've described here. It's the same as with that word "bhikkhu."
If we define it as "one who asks" then they keep on asking... because it's
defined like that. To define it in the best way we should say "Bhikkhu
-- one who sees the danger of samsara."
Now revering the Buddha is the same. Revering the Buddha by merely
reciting Pali phrases as a ceremony in the mornings and evenings is
comparable to defining the word "bhikkhu" as "one who asks." If we
incline towards annicam, dukkham and anatta [60]
whenever the eye sees form, the ear hears sound, the nose smells an odor,
the tongue tastes a flavor, the body experiences sensation or the mind
cognizes mental impressions, at all times, this is comparable to defining
the word "bhikkhu" as "one who sees the danger of samsara." It's so
much more profound, cuts through so many things. If we understand this
teaching we will grow in wisdom and understanding.
This is called patipada. Develop this attitude in the practice
and you will be on the right path. If you think and reflect in this way,
even though you may be far from your teacher you will still be close to
him. If you live close to the teacher physically but your mind has not yet
met him you will spend your time either looking for his faults or
adulating him. If he does something which suits you, you say he's no good
-- and that's as far as your practice goes. You won't achieve anything by
wasting your time looking at someone else. But if you understand this
teaching you can become a Noble One in the present moment.
That's why this year [61] I've distanced
myself from my disciples, both old and new, and not given much teaching:
so that you can all look into things for yourselves as much as possible.
For the newer monks I've already laid down the schedule and rules of the
monastery, such as: "don't talk too much." Don't transgress the existing
standards, the path to realization, fruition and nibbana. Anyone who
transgresses these standards is not a real practicer, not one who has with
a pure intention to practice. What can such a person ever hope to see?
Even if he slept near me every day he wouldn't see me. Even if he slept
near the Buddha he wouldn't see the Buddha, if he didn't practice.
So knowing the Dhamma or seeing the Dhamma depends on practice. Have
confidence, purify your own heart. If all the monks in this monastery put
awareness into their respective minds we wouldn't have to reprimand or
praise anybody. We wouldn't have to be suspicious of or favor anybody. If
anger or dislike arise just leave them at the mind, but see them clearly!
Keep on looking at those things. As long as there is still something
there it means we still have to dig and grind away right there. Some say
"I can't cut it, I can't do it," -- if we start saying things like this
there will only be a bunch of punks here, because nobody cuts at their own
defilements.
You must try. If you can't yet cut it, dig in deeper. Dig at the
defilements, uproot them. Dig them out even if they seem hard and fast.
The Dhamma is not something to be reached by following your desires. Your
mind may be one way, the truth another. You must watch up front and keep a
lookout behind as well. That's why I say, "It's all uncertain, all
transient."
This truth of uncertainty, this short and simple truth, at the same
time so profound and faultless, people tend to ignore. They tend to see
things differently. Don't cling to goodness, don't cling to badness. These
are attributes of the world. We are practicing to be free of the world, so
bring these things to an end. The Buddha taught to lay them down, to give
them up, because they only cause suffering.
Transcendence
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When the group of five ascetics [62]
abandoned the Buddha, he saw it as a stroke of luck, because he would be
able to continue his practice unhindered. With the five ascetics living
with him, things weren't so peaceful, he had responsibilities. And now the
five ascetics had abandoned him because they felt that he had slackened
his practice and reverted to indulgence. Previously he had been intent on
his ascetic practices and self-mortification. In regards to eating,
sleeping and so on, he had tormented himself severely, but it came to a
point where, looking into it honestly, he saw that such practices just
weren't working. It was simply a matter of views, practicing out of pride
and clinging. He had mistaken worldly values and mistaken himself for the
truth.
For example if one decides to throw oneself into ascetic practices with
the intention of gaining praise -- this kind of practice is all
"world-inspired," practicing for adulation and fame. Practicing with this
kind of intention is called "mistaking worldly ways for truth."
Another way to practice is "to mistake one's own views for truth." You
only believe yourself, in your own practice. No matter what others say you
stick to your own preferences. You don't carefully consider the practice.
this is called "mistaking oneself for truth."
Whether you take the world or take yourself to be truth, it's all
simply blind attachment. The Buddha saw this, and saw that there was no
"adhering to the Dhamma," practicing for the truth. So his practice had
been fruitless, he still hadn't given up defilements.
Then he turned around and reconsidered all the work he had put into
practice right from the beginning in terms of results. What were the
results of all that practice? Looking deeply into it he saw that it just
wasn't right. It was full of conceit, and full of the world. There was no
dhamma, no insight into anatta (not self) no emptiness or letting
go. There may have been letting go of a kind, but it was the kind that
still hadn't let go.
Looking carefully at the situation, the Buddha saw that even if he were
to explain these things to the five ascetics they wouldn't be able to
understand. It wasn't something he could easily convey to them, because
those ascetics were still firmly entrenched in the old way of practice and
seeing things. The Buddha saw that you could practice like that until your
dying day, maybe even starve to death, and achieve nothing, because such
practice is inspired by worldly values and by pride.
Considering deeply, he saw the right practice, samma patipada:
the mind is the mind, the body is the body. The body isn't desire or
defilement. Even if you were to destroy the body you wouldn't destroy
defilements. That's not their source. Even fasting and going without sleep
until the body was a shrivelled-up wraith wouldn't exhaust the
defilements. But the belief that defilements could be dispelled in that
way, the teaching of self-mortification, was deeply ingrained into the
five ascetics.
The Buddha then began to take more food, eating as normal, practicing
in a more natural way. When the five ascetics saw the change in the
Buddha's practice they figured that he had given up and reverted to
sensual indulgence. One person's understanding was shifting to a higher
level, transcending appearances, while the other saw that that person's
view was sliding downwards, reverting to comfort. Self-mortification was
deeply ingrained into the minds of the five ascetics because the Buddha
had previously taught and practiced like that. Now he saw the fault in it.
By seeing the fault in it clearly, he was able to let it go.
When the five ascetics saw the Buddha doing this they left him, feeling
that he was practicing wrongly and that they would no longer follow him.
Just as birds abandon a tree which no longer offers sufficient shade, or
fish leave a pool of water that is too small, too dirty or not cool, just
so did the five ascetics abandon the Buddha.
So now the Buddha concentrated on contemplating the Dhamma. He ate more
comfortably and lived more naturally. He let the mind be simply the mind,
the body simply the body. He didn't force his practice in excess, just
enough to loosen the grip of greed, aversion, and delusion. Previously he
had walked the two extremes: kamasukhallikanuyogo -- if happiness
or love arose he would be aroused and attach to them. He would identify
with them and wouldn't let go. If he encountered pleasantness he would
stick to that, if he encountered suffering he would stick to that. These
two extremes he called kamasukhallikanuyogo and
attakilamathanuyogo.
The Buddha had been stuck on conditions. He saw clearly that these two
ways are not the way for a samana. Clinging to happiness, clinging
to suffering: a samana is not like this. To cling to those things
is not the way. Clinging to those things he was stuck in the views of self
and the world. If he were to flounder in these two ways he would never
become one who clearly knew the world. He would be constantly running from
one extreme to the other. Now the Buddha fixed his attention on the mind
itself and concerned himself with training that.
All facets of nature proceed according to their supporting conditions,
they aren't any problem in themselves. For instance, illnesses in the
body. The body experiences pain, sickness, fever and colds and so on.
These all naturally occur. Actually people worry about their bodies too
much. That they worry about and cling to their bodies so much is because
of wrong view, they can't let go.
Look at this hall here. We build the hall and say it's ours, but
lizards come and live here, rats and geckoes come and live here, and we
are always driving them away, because we see that the hall belongs to us,
not the rats and lizards.
It's the same with illnesses in the body. We take this body to be our
home, something that really belongs to us. If we happen to get a headache
or stomach-ache we get upset, we don't want the pain and suffering. These
legs are "our legs," we don't want them to hurt, these arms are "our
arms," we don't want anything to go wrong with it. We've got to cure all
pains and illnesses at all costs.
This is where we are fooled and stray from the truth. We are simply
visitors to this body. Just like this hall here, it's not really ours. We
are simply temporary tenants, like the rats, lizards and geckoes... but we
don't know this. This body is the same. Actually the Buddha taught that
there is no abiding self within this body but we go and grasp on to it as
being our self, as really being "us" and "them." When the body changes we
don't want it to do so. No matter how much we are told we don't
understand. If I say it straight you get even more fooled. "This isn't
yourself," I say, and you go even more astray, you get even more confused
and your practice just reinforces the self.
So most people don't really see the self. One who sees the self is one
who sees that "this is neither the self nor belonging to self." He sees
the self as it is in Nature. Seeing the self through the power of clinging
is not real seeing. Clinging interferes with the whole business. It's not
easy to realize this body as it is because upadana clings fast to
it all.
Therefore it is said that we must investigate to clearly know with
wisdom. This means to investigate the sankhara [63]
according to their true nature. Use wisdom. To know the true nature of
sankhara is wisdom. If you don't know the true nature of sankhara
you are at odds with them, always resisting them. Now, it is better to let
go of the sankhara or to try to oppose or resist them. And yet we
plead with them to comply with our wishes. We look for all sorts of means
to organize them or "make a deal" with them. If the body gets sick and is
in pain we don't want it to be, so we look for various Suttas to chant,
such as Bojjhango, the Dhammacakkappavattana-sutta, the
Anattalakkhanasutta and so on. We don't want the body to be in pain,
we want to protect it, control it. These Suttas become some form of
mystical ceremony, getting us even more entangled in clinging. This is
because they chant them in order to ward off illness, to prolong life and
so on. Actually the Buddha gave us these teachings in order to see clearly
but we end up chanting them to increase our delusion. Rupam aniccam,
vedana anicca, sañña anicca, sankhara anicca,
viññanam aniccam... [64] We don't chant
these words for increasing our delusion. They are recollections to help us
know the truth of the body, so that we can let it go and give up our
longing.
This is called chanting to cut things down, but we tend to chant in
order to extend them all, or if we feel they're too long we try chanting
to shorten them, to force nature to conform to our wishes. It's all
delusion. All the people sitting there in the hall are deluded, every one
of them. The ones chanting are deluded, the ones listening are deluded,
they're all deluded! All they can think is "How can we avoid suffering?"
Where are they ever going to practice?
Whenever illnesses arise, those who know see nothing strange about it.
Getting born into this world entails experiencing illness. However, even
the Buddha and the Noble Ones, contracting illness in the course of
things, would also, in the course of things, treat it with medicine. For
them it was simply a matter of correcting the elements. They didn't
blindly cling to the body or grasp at mystic ceremonies and such. They
treated illnesses with Right View, they didn't treat them with delusion.
"If it heals, it heals, if it doesn't then it doesn't" -- that's how they
saw things.
They say that nowadays Buddhism in Thailand is thriving, but it looks
to me like it's sunk almost as far as it can go. The Dhamma Halls are full
of attentive ears, but they're attending wrongly. Even the senior members
of the community are like this, so everybody just leads each other into
more delusion.
One who sees this will know that the true practice is almost opposite
from where most people are going, the two sides can barely understand each
other. How are those people going to transcend suffering? They have chants
for realizing the truth but they turn around and use them to increase
their delusion. They turn their backs on the right path. One goes
eastward, the other goes west -- how are they ever going to meet? They're
not even close to each other.
If you have looked into this you will see that this is the case. Most
people are lost. But how can you tell them? Everything has become rites
and rituals and mystic ceremonies. they chant but they chant with
foolishness, they don't chant with wisdom. They study, but they study with
foolishness, not with wisdom. They know, but they know foolishly, not with
wisdom. So they end up going with foolishness, living with foolishness,
knowing with foolishness. That's how it is. And teaching... all they do
these days is teach people to be stupid. They say they're teaching people
to be clever, giving them knowledge, but when you look at it in terms of
truth, you see that they're really teaching people to go astray and grasp
at deceptions.
The real foundation of the teaching is in order to see atta, the
self, as being empty, having no fixed identity. It's void of intrinsic
being. But people come to the study of Dhamma to increase their self-view,
so they don't want to experience suffering or difficulty. They want
everything to be cozy. They may want to transcend suffering, but if there
is still a self how can they ever do so?
Just consider... Suppose we came to possess a very expensive object.
The minute that thing comes into our possession our mind changes..."Now,
where can I keep it? If I leave it there somebody might steal it"... We
worry ourselves into a state, trying to find a place to keep it. And when
did the mind change? It changed the minute we obtained that object --
suffering arose right then. No matter where we leave that object we can't
relax, so we're left with trouble. Whether sitting, walking, or lying
down, we are lost in worry.
This is suffering. And when did it arise? It arose as soon as we
understood that we had obtained something, that's where the suffering
lies. Before we had that object there was no suffering. It hadn't yet
arisen because there wasn't yet an object for it to cling to.
Atta, the self, is the same. if we think in terms of "my self,"
then everything around us becomes "mine." Confusion follows. Why so? The
cause of it all is that there is a self, we don't peel off the apparent in
order to see the Transcendent. You see, the self is only an appearance.
You have to peel away the appearances in order to see the heart of the
matter, which is Transcendence. Upturn the apparent to find the
Transcendent.
You could compare it to unthreshed rice. Can unthreshed rice be eaten?
Sure it can, but you must thresh it first. Get rid of the husks and you
will find the grain inside.
Now if we don't thresh the husks we won't find the grain. Like a dog
sleeping on the pile of unthreshed grain. Its stomach is rumbling "jork-jork-jork,"
but all it can do is lie there, thinking "Where can I get something to
eat?" When it's hungry it bounds off the pile of rice grain and runs off
looking for scraps of food. Even though it's sleeping right in top of a
pile of food it knows nothing of it. Why? It can't see the rice. Dogs
can't eat unthreshed rice. The food is there but the dog can't eat it.
We may have learning but if we don't practice accordingly we still
don't really know, just as oblivious as the dog sleeping on the pile of
rice grain. It's sleeping on a pile of food but it knows nothing of it.
When it gets hungry it's got to jump off and go trotting around elsewhere
for food. It's a shame, isn't it?
Now this is the same: there is rice grain but what is hiding it? The
husk hides the grain, so the dog can't eat it. And there is the
Transcendent. What hides it? The Apparent conceals the Transcendent,
making people simply "sit on top of the pile of rice, unable to eat it,"
unable to practice, unable to see the Transcendent. And so they simply get
stuck in appearances time and again. If you are stuck in appearances
suffering is in store, you will be beset by becoming, birth, old age,
sickness and death.
So there isn't anything else blocking people off, they are blocked
right here. People who study the Dhamma without penetrating to its true
meaning are just like the dog on the pile of unthreshed rice who doesn't
know the rice. He might even starve and still find nothing to eat. A dog
can't eat unthreshed rice, it doesn't even know there is food there. After
a long time without food it may even die... on top of that pile of rice!
People are like this. No matter how much we study the Dhamma of the Buddha
we won't see it if we don't practice. If we don't see it then we don't
know it.
Don't go thinking that by learning a lot and knowing a lot you'll know
the Buddha Dhamma. That's like saying you've seen everything there is to
see just because you've got eyes, or that you've got ears. You may see but
you don't see fully. You see only with the "outer eye," not with the
"inner eye'; you hear with the "outer ear," not with the "inner ear."
If you upturn the apparent and reveal the Transcendent you will reach
the truth and see clearly. You will uproot the Apparent and uproot
clinging.
But this is like some sort of sweet fruit: even though the fruit is
sweet we must rely on contact with and experience of that fruit before we
will know what the taste is like. Now that fruit, even though no-one
tastes it, is sweet all the same. But nobody knows of it. The Dhamma of
the Buddha is like this. Even though it's the truth it isn't true for
those who don't really know it. No matter how excellent or fine it may be
it is worthless to them.
So why do people grab after suffering? Who in this world wants to
inflict suffering on themselves? No-one, of course. Nobody wants suffering
and yet people keep creating the causes of suffering, just as if they were
wandering around looking for suffering. Within their hearts people are
looking for happiness, they don't want suffering. Then why is it that this
mind of ours creates so much suffering? Just seeing this much is enough.
We don't like suffering and yet why do we create suffering for ourselves?
It's easy to see... it can only be because we don't know suffering, don't
know the end of suffering. That's why people behave the way they do. How
could they not suffer when they continue to behave in this way?
These people have micchaditthi [65]
but they don't see that it's micchaditthi. Whatever we say, believe
in or do which results in suffering is all wrong view. If it wasn't
wrong view it wouldn't result in suffering. We couldn't cling to
suffering, nor to happiness or to any condition at all. We would leave
things be their natural way, like a flowing stream of water. We don't have
to dam it up, just let it flow along its natural course.
The flow of Dhamma is like this, but the flow of the ignorant mind
tries to resist the Dhamma in the form of wrong view. And yet it flies off
everywhere else, seeing wrong view, that is, suffering is there because of
wrong view -- this people don't see. This is worth looking into. Whenever
we have wrong view we will experience suffering. If we don't experience it
in the present it will manifest later on.
People go astray right here. What is blocking them off? The Apparent
blocks off the Transcendent, preventing people from seeing things clearly.
People study, they learn, they practice, but they practice with ignorance,
just like a person who's lost his bearings. He walks to the west but
thinks he's walking east, or walks to the north thinking he's walking
south. This is how far people have gone astray. This kind of practice is
really only the dregs of practice, in fact it's a disaster. It's disaster
because they turn around and go in the opposite direction, they fall from
the objective of true Dhamma practice.
This state of affairs causes suffering and yet people think that doing
this, memorizing that, studying such-and-such will be a cause for the
cessation of suffering. Just like a person who wants a lot of things. He
tries to amass as much as possible, thinking if he gets enough his
suffering will abate. This is how people think, but their thinking is
astray of the true path, just like one person going northward, another
going southward, and yet believing they're going the same way.
Most people are still stuck in the mass of suffering, still wandering
in samsara, just because they think like this. If illness or pain
arise, all they can do is wonder how they can get rid of it. They want it
to stop as fast as possible, they've got to cure it all costs. They don't
consider that this is the normal way of sankhara. Nobody thinks
like this. The body changes and people can't endure it, they can't accept
it, they've got to get rid of it at all costs. However, in the end they
can't win, they can't beat the truth. It all collapses. This is something
people don't want to look at, they continually reinforce their wrong view.
Practicing to realize the Dhamma is the most excellent of things. Why
did the Buddha develop all the Perfections? [66]
So that he could realize this and enable others to see the Dhamma, know
the Dhamma, practice the Dhamma and be the Dhamma -- so that they could
let go and not be burdened.
"Don't cling to things." Or to put it another way: "Hold, but don't
hold fast." This is also right. If we see something we pick it up..."Oh,
it's this"... then we lay it down. We see something else, pick it up...
one holds, but not fast. Hold it just long enough to consider it, to know
it, then to let it go. If you hold without letting go, carry without
laying down the burden, then you are going to be heavy. If you pick
something up and carry it for a while, then when it gets heavy you should
lay it down, throw it off. Don't make suffering for yourself.
This we should know as the cause of suffering. If we know the cause of
suffering, suffering cannot arise. For either happiness or suffering to
arise there must be the atta, the self. There must be the "I" and
"mine," there must be this appearance. If when all these things arise the
mind goes straight to the Transcendent, it removes the appearances. It
removes the delight, the aversion and the clinging from those things. Just
as when something that we value gets lost... when we find it again our
worries disappear.
Even before we see that object our worries may be relieved. At first we
think it's lost and suffer over it, but there comes a day when we suddenly
remember, "Oh, that's right! I put it over there, now I remember!" As soon
as we remember this, as soon as we see the truth, even if we haven't laid
eyes on that object, we feel happy. This is called "seeing within," seeing
with the mind's eye, not seeing with the outer eye. If we see with the
mind's eye then even though we haven't laid eyes on that object we are
already relieved.
This is the same, When we cultivate Dhamma practice and attain the
Dhamma, see the Dhamma, then whenever we encounter a problem we solve the
problem instantly, right then and there. It disappears completely, laid
down, released.
Now the Buddha wanted us to contact the Dhamma, but people only contact
the words, the books and the scriptures. This is contacting that which is
about Dhamma, not contacting the actual Dhamma as taught by our
Great Teacher. How can people say they are practicing well and properly?
They are a long way off.
The Buddha was known as lokavidu, having clearly realized the
world. Right now we see the world all right, but not clearly. The more we
know the darker the world becomes, because our knowledge is murky, it's
not clear knowledge. It's faulty. This is called "knowing through
darkness," lacking in light and radiance.
People are only stuck here but it's no trifling matter. It's important.
Most people want goodness and happiness but they just don't know what the
causes for that goodness and happiness are. Whatever it may be, if we
haven't yet seen the harm of it we can't give it up. No matter how bad it
may be, we still can't give it up if we haven't truly seen the harm of it.
However, if we really see the harm of something beyond a doubt then we can
let it go. As soon as we see the harm of something, and the benefit of
giving it up, there's an immediate change.
Why is it we are still unattained, still cannot let go? It's because we
still don't see the harm clearly, our knowledge is faulty, it's dark.
that's why we can't let go. If we knew clearly like the Lord Buddha or the
arahant disciples we would surely let go, our problems would dissolve
completely with no difficulty at all.
When your ears hear sound, then let them do their job. When your eyes
perform their function with forms, then let them do so. When your nose
works with smells, let it do its job. When your body experiences
sensations, then let it perform its natural functions where will problems
arise? There are no problems.
In the same way, all those things which belong to the Apparent, leave
them with the Apparent. And acknowledge that which is the Transcendent.
Simply be the "One Who Knows," knowing without fixation, knowing and
letting things be their natural way. All things are just as they are.
All our belongings, does anybody really own them? Does our father own
them, or our mother, or our relatives? Nobody really gets anything. That's
why the Buddha said to let all those things be, let them go. Know them
clearly. Know then by holding, but not fast. Use things in a way that is
beneficial, not in a harmful way by holding fast to them until suffering
arises.
To know Dhamma you must know in this way. That is, to know in such a
way as to transcend suffering. This sort of knowledge is important.
Knowing about how to make things, to use tools, knowing all the various
sciences of the world and so on, all have their place, but they are not
the supreme knowledge. The Dhamma must be known as I've explained it here.
You don't have to know a whole lot, just this much is enough for the
Dhamma practicer -- to know and then let go.
It's not that you have to die before you can transcend suffering, you
know. You transcend suffering in this very life because you know how to
solve problems. You know the apparent, you know the Transcendent. Do it in
this lifetime, while you are here practicing. You won't find it anywhere
else. Don't cling to things. Hold, but don't cling.
You may wonder, "Why does the Ajahn keep saying this?" How could I
teach otherwise, how could I say otherwise, when the truth is just as I've
said it? Even though it's the truth don't hold fast to even that! If you
cling to it blindly it becomes a falsehood. Like a dog... try grabbing its
leg. If you don't let go the dog will spin around and bite you. Just try
it out. All animals behave like this. If you don't let go it's got no
choice but to bite. The Apparent is the same. We live in accordance with
conventions, they are here for our convenience in this life, but they are
not things to be clung to so hard that they cause suffering. Just let
things pass.
Whenever we feel that we are definitely right, so much so that we
refuse to open up to anything or anybody else, right there we are wrong.
It becomes wrong view. When suffering arises, where does it arise from?
The cause is wrong view, the fruit of that being suffering. If it was
right view it wouldn't cause suffering.
So I say, "Allow space, don't cling to things." "Right" is just another
supposition, just let it pass. "Wrong" is another apparent condition, just
let it be that. If you feel you are right and yet others contend the
issue, don't argue, just let it go. As soon as you know, let go. This is
the straight way.
Usually it's not like this. People don't often give in to each other.
That's why some people, even Dhamma practicers who still don't know
themselves, may say things that are utter foolishness and yet think
they're being wise. They may say something that's so stupid that others
can't even bear to listen and yet they think they are being cleverer than
others. Other people can't even listen to it and yet they think they are
smart, that they are right. They are simply advertising their own
stupidity.
That's why the wise say, "Whatever speech disregards aniccam is
not the speech of a wise person, it's the speech of a fool. It's deluded
speech. it's the speech of one who doesn't know that suffering is going to
arise right there." For example, suppose you had decided to go to Bangkok
tomorrow and someone were to ask, "Are you going to Bangkok tomorrow?"
"I hope to go to Bangkok. If there are no obstacles I'll probably go."
This is called speaking with the Dhamma in mind, speaking with aniccam
in mind, taking into account the truth, the transient, uncertain nature of
the world. You don't say, "Yes, I'm definitely going tomorrow." If it
turns out you don't go what are you going to do, send news to all the
people who told you were going to? You'd be just talking non-sense.
There's still much more to it, the practice of Dhamma becomes more and
more refined. But if you don't see it you may think you are speaking right
even when you are speaking wrongly and straying from the true nature of
things with every word. And yet you may think you are speaking the truth.
To put it simply: anything that we say or do that causes suffering to
arise should be known as micchaditthi. It's delusion and
foolishness.
Most practicers don't reflect in this way. Whatever they like they
think is right and they just go on believing themselves. For instance,
they may receive some gift or title, be it an object, rank or even words
of praise, and they think it's good. They take it as some sort of
permanent condition. So they get puffed up with pride and conceit, they
don't consider, "Who am I? Where is this so-called "goodness"? Where did
it come from? Do others have the same things?"
The Buddha taught that we should conduct ourselves normally. If we
don't dig in, chew over and look into this point it means it's still sunk
within us. It means these conditions are still buried within our hearts --
we are still sunk in wealth, rank and praise. So we become someone else
because of them. We think we are better than before, that we are something
special and so all sorts of confusion arises.
Actually, in truth there isn't anything to human beings. Whatever we
may be it's only in the realm of appearances. If we take away the apparent
and see the Transcendent we see that there isn't anything there. There are
simply the universal characteristics -- birth in the beginning, change in
the middle and cessation in the end. This is all there is. If we see that
all things are like this then no problems arise. If we understand this we
will have contentment and peace.
Where trouble arises is when we think like the five ascetic disciples
of the Buddha. They followed the instruction of their teacher, but when he
changed his practice they couldn't understand what he thought or knew.
They decided that the Buddha had given up his practice and reverted to
indulgence. If we were in that position we'd probably think the same thing
and there'd be no way to correct it. Holding on to the old ways, thinking
in the lower way, yet believing it's higher. We'd see the Buddha and think
he'd given up the practice and reverted to indulgence, just like he'd
given up the practice and reverted to indulgence, just like those Five
Ascetics: consider how many years they had been practicing at that time,
and yet they still went astray, they still weren't proficient.
So I say to practice and also to look at the results of your practice.
Especially where you refuse to follow, where there is friction. Where
there is no friction, there is no problem, things flow. If there is
friction, they don't flow, you set up a self and things become solid, like
a mass of clinging. There is no give and take.
Most monks and cultivators tend to be like this. However they've
thought in the past they continue to think. They refuse to change, they
don't reflect. They think they are right so they can't be wrong, but
actually "wrongness" is buried within "rightness," even though most people
don't know that. How is it so? "This is right"... but if someone else says
it's not right you won't give in, you've got to argue. What is this?
Ditthi mana... Ditthi means views, mana is the
attachment to those views. If we attach even to what is right, refusing to
concede to anybody, then it becomes wrong. To cling fast to rightness is
simply the arising of self, there is no letting go.
This is a point which gives people a lot of trouble, except for those
Dhamma practicers who know that this matter, this point, is a very
important one. they will take not of it. If it arises while they're
speaking, clinging comes racing on to the scene. Maybe it will linger for
some time, perhaps one or two days, three or four months, a year or two.
This is for the slow ones, that is. For the quick response is instant...
they just let go. Clinging arises and immediately there is letting go,
they force the mind to let go right then and there.
You must see these two functions operating. Here there is clinging. Now
who is the one who resists that clinging? Whenever you experience a mental
impression you should observe these two functions operating. There is
clinging, and there is one who prohibits the clinging. Now just watch
these two things. Maybe you will cling for a long time before you let go.
Reflecting and constantly practicing like this, clinging gets lighter,
becomes less and less. Right view increases as wrong view gradually wanes.
Clinging decreases, non-clinging arises. This is the way it is for
everybody. That's why I say to consider this point. Learn to solve
problems in the present moment.
Notes
![[go to top]](../images/scrollup.gif)
1. That is, the Buddha. [Go back]
2. The Triple Gem: The Buddha, the
Dhamma, His teaching, and the Sangha, the Monastic Order, or
those who have realized the Dhamma. [Go back]
3. Sati: Usually translated into English as
mindfulness, recollection is the more accurate translation of the Thai
words, "ra-luk dai." [Go back]
4. Bhavana -- means "development" or
"cultivation"; but is usually used to refer to cittabhavana,
mind-development, or pañña-bhavana, wisdom-development, or
contemplation. [Go back]
5. "Vinaya" is a generic name given to the code
of discipline of the Buddhist Monastic Order, the rules of the monkhood. "Vinaya"
literally means "leading out," because maintenance of these rules "leads
out" of unskillful actions, and, by extension, unskillful states of mind;
in addition it can be said to "lead out" of the household life, and, by
extension, attachment to the world. [Go back]
6. This refers to the Venerable Ajahn's early
years in the monkhood, before he had begun to practice in earnest. [Go
back]
7. The second sanghadisesa offense,
which deals with touching a woman with lustful intentions. [Go
back]
8. Referring to pacittiya offense No. 36, for
eating food outside of the allowed time -- dawn till noon. [Go
back]
9. Dukkata -- offenses of "wrong-doing,"
the lightest class of offenses in the Vinaya, of which there are a
great number; parajika -- offenses of defeat, of which there are
four, are the most serious, involving expulsion from the Bhikkhu-Sangha. [Go
back]
10. Venerable Ajahn Mun Bhuridatto, probably
the most renowned and highly respected Meditation Master from the forest
tradition in Thailand. He had many disciples who have been teachers in
their own right, of whom Ajahn Chah is one. Venerable Ajahn Mun died in
1949. [Go back]
11. Pubbasikkha Vannana -- "The Elementary
Training" -- a Thai Commentary on Dhamma-Vinaya based on the Pali
Commentaries; the Visuddhimagga -- "Path to Purity" -- Acariya
Buddhagosa's exhaustive commentary on Dhamma-Vinaya. [Go
back]
12. Hiri -- sense of shame; Ottappa
-- fear of wrong-doing. Hiri and ottappa are positive states
of mind which lay a foundation for clear conscience and moral integrity.
Their arising is based on a respect for oneself and for others. Restraint
is natural because of a clear perception of cause and effect. [Go
back]
13. Apatti: the name to the offenses of
various classes for a Buddhist monk. [Go back]
14. Maha: a title given to monks who
have studied Pali and completed up to the fourth year or higher. [Go
back]
15. A "receiving cloth" is a cloth used by
Thai monks for receiving things from women, from whom they do not receive
things directly. That Venerable Ajahn Pow lifted his hand from the
receiving cloth indicated that he was not actually receiving the money. [Go
back]
16. There are very precise and detailed
regulations governing the ordination procedure which, if not adhered to,
may render the ordination invalid. [Go back]
17. The Vinaya forbids bhikkhus from
eating raw meat or fish. [Go back]
18. Although it is an offense for monks to
accept money, there are many who do. Some may accept it while appearing
not to, which is probably how the laypeople in this instance saw the
Venerable Ajahn's refusal to accept money, by thinking that he actually
would accept it if they didn't overtly offer it to him, but just slipped
it into his bag. [Go back]
19. Añjali -- The traditional way of
making greeting or showing respect, as with an Indian Namaste or
the Thai wai. Sadhu -- "It is well" -- a way of showing
appreciation or agreement. [Go back]
20. Another transgression of the precepts, a
pacittiya offense. [Go back]
21. Navakovada -- A simplified synopsis
of elementary Dhamma-Vinaya. [Go back]
22. Many monks undertake written examinations
of their scriptural knowledge, sometimes -- as Ajahn Chah points out -- to
the detriment of their application of the teachings in daily life. [Go
back]
23. Indulgence in sense pleasures, indulgence
in comfort. [Go back]
24. Kuti -- a bhikkhu's dwelling place,
a hut. [Go back]
25. The cycle of conditioned existence, the
world of delusion. [Go back]
26. Samana: a religious seeker living a
renunciant life. Originating from the Sanskrit term for "one who strives,"
the word signifies someone who has made a profound commitment to spiritual
practice. [Go back]
27. One of the many branch monasteries of
Ajahn Chah's main monastery, Wat Ba Pong. [Go back]
28. Concept (sammutti) refers to
supposed or provisional reality, while transcendence (vimutti)
refers to the liberation from attachment to or delusion within it. [Go
back]
29. Mara: the Buddhist personification of
evil, the Tempter, that force which opposes any attempts to develop
goodness and virtue. [Go back]
30. The play on words here between the Thai
"phadtibut" (practice) and "wibut" (disaster) is lost in the
English. [Go back]
31. These are the two extremes pointed out as
wrong paths by the Buddha in his First Discourse. They are normally
rendered as "Indulgence in sense pleasures" and "Self mortification." [Go
back]
32. "Pa-kow: an eight-precept
postulant, who often lives with bhikkhus and, in addition to his own
meditation practice, also helps them with certain services which bhikkhus
are forbidden by the Vinaya from doing. [Go back]
33. The level of nothingness, one of the
"formless absorptions," sometimes called the seventh "jhana," or
absorption. [Go back]
34. Bimba, or Princess Yasodhara, the Buddha's
former wife; Rahula, his son. [Go back]
35. Rupa -- material or physical
objects; nama -- immaterial or mental objects -- the physical and
mental constituents of being. [Go back]
36. Nibbana -- the state of liberation
from all conditioned states. [Go back]
37. The Thai word for bhava -- "pop"
-- would have been a familiar term to Ajahn Chah's audience. It is
generally understood to mean "Sphere of rebirth." Ajahn Chah's usage of
the word here is somewhat unconventional, emphasizing a more practical
application of the term. [Go back]
38. Both the red ants and their eggs are used
for food in North East Thailand, so that such raids on their nests were
not so unusual. [Go back]
39. The first line of the traditional Pali
words of homage to the Buddha, recited before giving a formal Dhamma talk.
Evam is the traditional Pali word for ending a talk. [Go
back]
40. Glot -- the Thai "dhutanga"
or forest-dwelling monks' large umbrella from which, suspended from a
tree, they hang a mosquito net in which to stay while in the forest. [Go
back]
41. The body on the first night had been that
of a child. [Go back]
42. The last line of the traditional Pali
lines listing the qualities of the Dhamma. [Go back]
43. Mahanikai and Dhammayuttika are the two
sects of Theravada sangha in Thailand. [Go back]
44. A Thai expression meaning, "Don't overdo
it." [Go back]
45. Thirteen practices allowed by the Buddha
over and above the general disciplinary code, for those who which to
practice more ascetically. [Go back]
46. Part of a Pali verse, traditionally
recited at funeral ceremonies. The meaning of the full verse if, "Alas,
transient are all compounded things/Having arisen, they cease/Being born,
they die/The cessation of all compounding is true happiness." [Go
back]
47. Novices. [Go back]
48. The word dhamma can be used in
different ways. In this talk, the Venerable Ajahn refers to Dhamma
-- the teachings of the Buddha; to dhammas -- "things"; and to
Dhamma -- the experience of transcendent "Truth." [Go
back]
49. At that time Sariputta had his first
insight into the Dhamma, attaining sotapatti, or "stream-entry." [Go
back]
50. That is, nibbida, disinterest in
the lures of the sensual world. [Go back]
51. The Truth of Suffering, the Truth of its
Cause, the Truth of its Cessation and the Truth of the Way (leading to the
cessation of suffering): The Four Noble Truths. [Go back]
52. Observance days, held roughly every
fortnight, on which monks confess their offenses and recite the
disciplinary precepts, the Patimokkha. [Go back]
53. The heartwood from the jackfruit tree is
boiled down and the resulting color used both to dye and to wash the robes
of the forest monks. [Go back]
54. Bojjjhanga -- the Seven Factors of
Enlightenment: sati, recollection; dhamma-vicaya, inquiry
into dhammas; viriya, effort; piti, joy; passadhi,
peace; samadhi, concentration; and upekkha, equanimity. [Go
back]
55. The central body of the monastic code,
which is recited fortnightly in the Pali language. [Go back]
56. Devaputta Mara -- the Mara, or Tempter,
which appears in a seemingly benevolent form. [Go back]
57. The Five Khandhas: Form (rupa),
feeling (vedana), perception (sañña), conceptualization or
mental formations (sankhara) and sense-consciousness (viññana).
These comprise the psycho-physical experience known as the "self." [Go
back]
58. Anagami (nonreturner): The third
"level" of enlightenment, which is reached on the abandonment of the five
"lower fetters" (of a total of ten) which bind the mind to worldly
existence. The first two "levels" are sotapanna ("stream-enterer")
and sakadagami ("once-returner"), the last being araham
("worthy or accomplished one"). [Go back]
59. That is, one who lives dependent on the
generosity of others. [Go back]
60. Transience, Imperfection, and
Ownerlessness. [Go back]
61. 2522 of the Buddhist Era, or 1979 CE. [Go
back]
62. The pañcavaggiya, or "group of
five," who followed the Buddha-to-be (Bodhisatta) when he was cultivating
ascetic practices, and who left him when he renounced them for the Middle
Way, shortly after which the Bodhisatta attained Supreme Enlightenment. [Go
back]
63. Sankhara: conditioned phenomena.
The Thai usage of this term usually refers specifically to the body,
though sankhara also refers to mental phenomena. [Go
back]
64. Form is impermanent, feeling is
impermanent, perception is impermament, volition is impermanent,
consciousness is impermanent. [Go back]
65. micchaditthi: Wrong-view. [Go
back]
66. The ten paramita (perfections):
generosity, morality, renunciation, wisdom, effort, patience,
truthfulness, resolution, goodwill and equanimity. [Go back]
Source:
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/thai/chah/heartfood.html
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