Change is the focal point for Buddhist
insight -- a fact so well known that it has spawned a familiar sound
bite: "Isn't change what Buddhism is all about?" What's less well known
is that this focus has a frame, that change is neither where insight
begins nor where it ends. Insight begins with a question that evaluates
change in light of the desire for true happiness. It ends with a
happiness that lies beyond change. When this frame is forgotten, people
create their own contexts for the teaching and often assume that the
Buddha was operating within those same contexts. Two of the contexts
commonly attributed to the Buddha at present are these:
Insight
into change teaches us to embrace our experiences
without clinging to them -- to get the most out of them
in the present moment by fully appreciating their
intensity, in full knowledge that we will soon have to
let them go to embrace whatever comes next.
Insight
into change teaches us hope. Because change is built
into the nature of things, nothing is inherently fixed,
not even our own identity. No matter how bad the
situation, anything is possible. We can do whatever we
want to do, create whatever world we want to live in,
and become whatever we want to be.
The first of
these interpretations offers wisdom on how to consume the
pleasures of immediate, personal experience when you'd
rather they not change; the second, on how to produce
change when you want it. Although sometimes presented as
complementary insights, these interpretations contain a
practical conflict: If experiences are so fleeting and
changeable, are they worth the effort needed to produce
them? How can we find genuine hope in the prospect of
positive change if we can't fully rest in the results when
they arrive? Aren't we just setting ourselves up for
disappointment?
Or is this
just one of the unavoidable paradoxes of life? Ancient
folk wisdom from many cultures would suggest so, advising
us that we should approach change with cautious joy and
stoic equanimity: training ourselves to not to get
attached to the results of our actions, and accepting
without question the need to keep on producing fleeting
pleasures as best we can, for the only alternative would
be inaction and despair. This advice, too, is often
attributed to the Buddha.
But the
Buddha was not the sort of person to accept things without
question. His wisdom lay in realizing that the effort that
goes into the production of happiness is worthwhile only
if the processes of change can be skillfully managed to
arrive at a happiness resistant to change. Otherwise,
we're life-long prisoners in a forced-labor camp,
compelled to keep on producing pleasurable experiences to
assuage our hunger, and yet finding them so empty of any
real essence that they can never leave us full.
These
realizations are implicit in the question that, according
to the Buddha, lies at the beginning of insight:
"What, when
I do it, will lead to my long-term well-being and
happiness?"
This is a
heartfelt question, motivated by the desire behind all
conscious action: to attain levels of pleasure worthy of
the effort that goes into them. It springs from the
realization that life requires effort, and that if we
aren't careful whole lifetimes can be lived in vain. This
question, together with the realizations and desires
behind it, provides the context for the Buddha's
perspective on change. If we examine it closely, we find
the seeds for all his insights into the production and
consumption of change.
The first
phrase in the question -- "What, when I do it, will lead
to ...." -- focuses on the issues of production, on the
potential effects of human action. Prior to his Awakening,
the Buddha had left home and gone into the wilderness to
explore precisely this issue: to see how far human action
could go, and whether it could lead to a dimension beyond
the reach of change. His Awakening was confirmation that
it could -- if developed to the appropriate level of
skillfulness. He thus taught that there are four types of
action, corresponding to four levels of skill: three that
produce pleasant, unpleasant, and mixed experiences within
the cycles of space and time; and a fourth that leads
beyond action to a level of happiness transcending the
dimensions of space and time, thus eliminating the need to
produce any further happiness.
Because the
activities of producing and consuming require space and
time, a happiness transcending space and time, by its very
nature, is neither produced nor consumed. Thus, when the
Buddha reached that happiness and stepped outside the
modes of producing and consuming, he was able to turn back
and see exactly how pervasive a role these activities play
in ordinary experience, and how imprisoning they normally
are. He saw that our experience of the present is an
activity -- something fabricated or produced, moment to
moment, from the raw material provided by past actions. We
even fabricate our identity, our sense of who we are. At
the same time, we try to consume any pleasure that can be
found in what we've produced -- although in our desire to
consume pleasure, we often gobble down pain. With every
moment, production and consumption are intertwined: We
consume experiences as we produce them, and produce them
as we consume. The way we consume our pleasures or pains
can produce further pleasures or pains, now and into the
future, depending on how skillful we are.
The three
parts of the latter phrase in the Buddha's question -- "my
/ long-term / well-being and happiness" -- provide
standards for gauging the level of our skill in
approaching true pleasure or happiness. (The Pali word,
here -- sukha -- can be translated as pleasure,
happiness, ease, or bliss.) We apply these standards to
the experiences we consume: if they aren't long-term, then
no matter how pleasant they might be, they aren't true
happiness. If they're not true happiness, there's no
reason to claim them as "mine."
This insight
forms the basis for the Three Characteristics that the
Buddha taught for inducing a sense of dispassion for
normal time- and space-bound experience. Anicca,
the first of the three, is pivotal. Anicca applies
to everything that changes. Often translated as
"impermanent," it's actually the negative of nicca,
which means constant or dependable. Everything that
changes is inconstant. Now, the difference between
"impermanent" and "inconstant" may seem semantic, but it's
crucial to the way anicca functions in the Buddha's
teachings. As the early texts state repeatedly, if
something is anicca then the other two
characteristics automatically follow: it's
dukkha (stressful) and anatta (not-self), i.e.,
not worthy to be claimed as me or mine.
If we
translate anicca as impermanent, the connection
among these Three Characteristics might seem debatable.
But if we translate it as inconstant, and consider the
Three Characteristics in light of the Buddha's original
question, the connection is clear. If you're seeking a
dependable basis for long-term happiness and ease,
anything inconstant is obviously a stressful place to pin
your hopes -- like trying to relax in an unstable chair
whose legs are liable to break at any time. If you
understand that your sense of self is something willed and
fabricated -- that you choose to create it --
there's no compelling reason to keep creating a "me" or
"mine" around any experience that's inconstant and
stressful. You want something better. You don't want to
make that experience the goal of your practice.
So what do
you do with experiences that are inconstant and stressful?
You could treat them as worthless and throw them away, but
that would be wasteful. After all, you went to the trouble
to fabricate them in the first place; and, as it turns
out, the only way you can reach the goal is by utilizing
experiences of just this sort. So you can learn how to use
them as means to the goal; and the role they can play in
serving that purpose is determined by the type of activity
that went into producing them: the type that produces a
pleasure conducive to the goal, or the type that doesn't.
Those that do, the Buddha labeled the "path." These
activities include acts of generosity, acts of virtue, and
the practice of mental absorption, or concentration. Even
though they fall under the Three Characteristics, these
activities produce a sense of pleasure relatively stable
and secure, more deeply gratifying and nourishing than the
act of producing and consuming ordinary sensual pleasures.
So if you're aiming at happiness within the cycles of
change, you should look to generosity, virtue, and mental
absorption to produce that happiness. But if you'd rather
aim for a happiness going beyond change, these same
activities can still help you by fostering the clarity of
mind needed for Awakening. Either way, they're worth
mastering as skills. They're your basic set of tools, so
you want to keep them in good shape and ready to hand.
As for other
pleasures and pains -- such as those involved in sensual
pursuits and in simply having a body and mind -- these can
serve as the objects you fashion with your tools, as raw
materials for the discernment leading to Awakening. By
carefully examining them in light of their Three
Characteristics -- to see exactly how they're
inconstant, stressful, and not-self -- you become less
inclined to keep on producing and consuming them. You see
that your addictive compulsion to fabricate them comes
entirely from the hunger and ignorance embodied in states
of passion, aversion, and delusion. When these
realizations give rise to dispassion both for fabricated
experiences and for the processes of fabrication, you
enter the path of the fourth kind of kamma, leading to the
Deathless.
This path
contains two important turns. The first comes when all
passion and aversion for sensual pleasures and pains has
been abandoned, and your only remaining attachment is to
the pleasure of concentration. At this point, you turn and
examine the pleasure of concentration in terms of the same
Three Characteristics you used to contemplate sensual
experiences. The difficulty here is that you've come to
rely so strongly on the solidity of your concentration
that you'd rather not look for its drawbacks. At the same
time, the inconstancy of a concentrated mind is much more
subtle than that of sensual experiences. But once you
overcome your unwillingness to look for that inconstancy,
the day is sure to come when you detect it. And then the
mind can be inclined to the Deathless.
That's where
the second turn occurs. As the texts point out, when the
mind encounters the Deathless it can treat it as a
mind-object -- a dhamma -- and then produce a
feeling of passion and delight for it. The fabricated
sense of the self that's producing and consuming this
passion and delight thus gets in the way of full
Awakening. So at this point the logic of the Three
Characteristics has to take a new turn. Their original
logic -- "Whatever is inconstant is stressful; whatever is
stressful is not-self" -- leaves open the possibility that
whatever is constant could be (1) easeful and (2) self.
The first possibility is in fact the case: whatever is
constant is easeful; the Deathless is actually the
ultimate ease. But the second possibility isn't a skillful
way of regarding what's constant: if you latch onto what's
constant as self, you're stuck on your attachment. To go
beyond space and time, you have to go beyond fabricating
the producing and consuming self, which is why the
concluding insight of the path is: "All dhammas" --
constant or not -- "are not-self."
When this
insight has done its work in overcoming any passion or
delight for the Deathless, full Awakening occurs. And at
that point, even the path is relinquished, and the
Deathless remains, although no longer as an object of the
mind. It's simply there, radically prior to and separate
from the fabrication of space and time. All consuming and
producing for the sake of your own happiness comes to an
end, for a timeless well-being has been found. And because
all mind-objects are abandoned in this happiness,
questions of constant or inconstant, stress or ease, self
or not-self are no longer an issue.
This, then,
is the context of Buddhist insight into change: an
approach that takes seriously both the potential effects
of human effort and the basic human desire that effort not
go to waste, that change have the potential to lead to a
happiness beyond the reach of change. This insight is
focused on developing the skills that lead to the
production of genuine happiness. It employs the Three
Characteristics -- of inconstancy, stress, and not-self --
not as abstract statements about existence, but as
inducement for mastering those skills and as guidelines
for measuring your progress along the way. When used in
this way, the Three Characteristics lead to a happiness
transcending the Three Characteristics, the activities of
producing and consuming, and space and time as a whole.
When we
understand this context for the Three Characteristics, we
can clearly see the half-truths contained in the insights
on the production and consumption of change that are
commonly misattributed to the Buddha. With regard to
production: Although it may be true that, with enough
patience and persistence, we can produce just about
anything, including an amazing array of self-identities,
from the raw material of the present moment, the question
is: what's worth producing? We've imprisoned
ourselves with our obsession for producing and consuming
changeable pleasures and changeable selves, and yet
there's the possibility of using change to escape from
this prison to the freedom of a happiness transcending
time and space. Do we want to take advantage of that
possibility, or would we rather spend our spare time
blowing bubbles in the sunlight coming through our prison
windows and trying to derive happiness from their swirling
patterns before they burst?
This question
ties in with wisdom on consumption: Getting the most out
of our changing experiences doesn't mean embracing them or
milking them of their intensity. Instead it means learning
to approach the pleasures and pains they offer, not as
fleeting ends in themselves, but as tools for Awakening.
With every moment we're supplied with raw materials --
some of them attractive, some of them not. Instead of
embracing them in delight or throwing them away in
disgust, we can learn how to use them to produce the keys
that will unlock our prison doors.
And as for
the wisdom of non-attachment to the results of our
actions: in the Buddha's context, this notion can make
sense only if we care deeply about the results of our
actions and want to master the processes of cause and
effect that lead to genuine freedom. In other words, we
don't demand childishly that our actions -- skillful or
not -- always result in immediate happiness, that
everything we stick into the lock will automatically
unlatch the door. If what we have done has been unskillful
and led to undesirable results, we want to admit our
mistakes and find out why they were mistakes so
that we can learn how to correct them the next time
around. Only when we have the patience to look objectively
at the results of our actions will we be able to learn, by
studying the keys that don't unlock the doors, how finally
to make the right keys that do.
With this
attitude we can make the most of the processes of change
to develop the skill that releases us from the prison of
endless producing and consuming. With release, we plunge
into the freedom of a happiness so true that it transcends
the terms of the original question that led us there.
There's nothing further we have to do; our sense of "my"
and "mine" is discarded; and even the "long-term," which
implies time, is erased by the timeless. The happiness
remaining lies radically beyond the range of our time- and
space-bound conceptions of happiness. Totally independent
of mind-objects, it's unadulterated and unalterable,
unlimited and pure. As the texts tell us, it even lies
beyond the range of "totality" and "the All."
And that's
what Buddhist practice is all about. |