![]() |
|
Upasika Kee Nanayon Translated from the
Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu Wheels No: 388 /
389 Copyright © Kandy; Buddhist
Publication Society, (1995) For
free distribution. This work may be republished, reformatted, reprinted
and
redistributed in any medium. However, any such republication and
redistribution
is to be made available to the public on a free and unrestricted basis
and
translations and other derivative works are to be clearly marked as
such. Discernment vs.
Self-Deception
A Difference in the Knowing The Balanced Way The Uses of Equanimity A Glob of Tar When Conventional Truths Collapse The Intricacies of Ignorance Emptiness vs. the Void Opening the Way to the Heart Discernment
vs. Self-Deception It's important
that we discuss the steps of the practice in training the mind, for the
mind
has all sorts of deceptions by which it fools itself. If you aren't
skillful in
investigating and seeing through them, they are very difficult to
overcome even
if you're continually mindful to keep watch over the mind. You have to
make an
effort to focus on contemplating these things at all times. Mindfulness
on its
own won't be able to give rise to any real knowledge. At best, it can
give you
only a little protection against the effects of sensory contact. If you
don't
make a focused contemplation, the mind won't be able to give rise to
any
knowledge within itself at all. This is why you
have to train yourself to be constantly aware all around. When you come
to know
anything for what it really is, there's nothing but letting go, letting
go. On
the beginning level, this means the mind won't give rise to any unwise
or
unprofitable thoughts. It will simply stop to watch, stop to know
within itself
at all times. If there's anything you have to think about, keep your
thoughts
on the themes of inconstancy, stress, and not-self. You have to keep
the mind
thinking and labeling solely in reference to these sorts of themes, for
if your
thinking and labeling are right, you'll come to see things rightly. If
you go
the opposite way, you'll have to think wrongly and label things
wrongly, and
that means you'll have to see things wrongly as well. This is what
keeps the
mind completely hidden from itself. Now, when
thoughts or labels arise in the mind, then if you focus on watching
them
closely you'll see that they're sensations -- sensations of arising and
disbanding, changeable, unreliable, and illusory. If you don't make an
effort
to keep a focused watch on them, you'll fall for the deceptions of
thought-formation.
In other words, the mind gives rise to memories of the past and
fashions issues
dealing with the past, but if you're aware of what's going on in time,
you'll
see that they're all illusory. There's no real truth to them at all.
Even the meanings
the mind gives to good and bad sensory contacts at the moment they
occur: If
you carefully observe and contemplate, you'll see that they're all
deceptive.
There's no real truth to them. But ignorance and delusion latch onto
them all,
and this drives the mind around in circles. In other words, it doesn't
know
what's what -- how these things arise, persist, and disband -- so it
latches onto
them and gets itself deceived on many, many levels. If you don't stop
to focus
and watch, there's no way you can see through these things at all. But if the mind
keeps its balance or stops to watch and know within itself, it can come
to
realize these things for what they are. When it realizes them, it can
let them
go automatically without being attached to anything. This is the
knowledge that
comes with true mindfulness and discernment: It knows and lets go. It
doesn't
cling. No matter what appears -- good or bad, pleasure or pain -- when
the mind
knows, it doesn't cling. When it doesn't cling, there's no
stress or suffering. You have to keep hammering away at
this
point: When it doesn't cling, the mind can stay at normalcy. Empty.
Undisturbed. Quiet and still. But if it doesn't read itself in this
way,
doesn't know itself in this way, it will fall for the deceits of
defilement and
craving. It will fashion up all sorts of complex and complicated things
that it
itself will have a hard time seeing through, for they'll have their
ways of
playing up to the mind to keep it attached to them, all of which is
simply a
matter of the mind's falling for the deceits of the defilements and
cravings
within itself. The fact that it isn't acquainted with itself -- doesn't
know how
mental states arise and disband and take on objects -- means that it
loses
itself in its many, many attachments. There's
nothing as hard to keep watch of as the mind, because it's so accustomed to wrong
views and wrong
opinions. This is what keeps it hidden from itself. But thanks to the
teachings
of the Buddha, we can gain knowledge into the mind, or into
consciousness with
its many layers and intricacies that, when you look into it deeply,
you'll find
to be empty -- empty of any meaning in and of itself. This
is an
emptiness that can appear clearly within consciousness. Even though
it's hidden
and profound, we can see into it by looking inward in a way that's
quiet and
still. The mind stops to watch, to know within itself. As for sensory
contacts -- sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and that sort of thing --
it isn't interested,
because it's intent on looking into consciousness pure and simple, to
see what
arises in there and how it generates issues. Sensations, thoughts,
labels for
pleasure and pain and so forth, are all natural phenomena that change
as soon
as they're sensed -- and they're very refined. If you view them as
being about
this or that matter, you won't be able to know them for what they are.
The more
intricate the meanings you give them, the more lost you become -- lost
in the
whorls of the cycle of rebirth. The cycle of
rebirth and the processes of thought-formation are one and the same
thing. As
a result, we whirl around and around, lost in many, many
levels of thought-formation, not just one. The knowledge that would
read the
heart can't break through to know, for it whirls around and around in
these
very same thought-formations, giving them meanings in terms of this or
that,
and then latching onto them. If it labels them as good, it latches onto
them as
good. If it labels them as bad, it latches onto them as bad. This is
why the
mind stays entirely in the whorls of the cycle of rebirth, the cycle of
thought-formation. For this reason,
to see these things clearly requires the effort to stop and watch, to
stop and
know in an appropriate way, in a way
that's just right. At the same time, you have to use your powers of
observation. That's what will enable
you to read your own consciousness in a special way. Otherwise, if you
latch
onto the issues of thoughts and labels, they'll keep you spinning
around. So
you have to stop and watch, stop and know clearly by focusing down -- focusing
down on the consciousness in charge. That
way your knowledge will become skillful. Ultimately,
you'll see that there's nothing at all -- just the arising and
disbanding
occurring every moment in emptiness. If there's no attachment, there
are no
issues. There's simply the natural phenomenon of arising and
disbanding. But
because we don't see things simply as natural phenomena, we see them as
being
true and latch onto them as our self, good, bad, and all sorts of other
complicated things. This keeps us spinning around without knowing how
to find a
way out, what to let go of -- we don't know. When we don't know, we're
like a
person who wanders into a jungle and doesn't know the way out, doesn't
know
what to do... Actually what we
have to let go of lies right smack in front of us: where the mind
fashions
things and gives them meanings so that it doesn't know the
characteristics of
arising and disbanding, pure and simple. If you can simply keep
watching and
knowing, without any need for meanings, thoughts, imaginings -- simply
watching
the process of these things in and of itself -- there won't be any
issues.
There's just the phenomenon of the present: arising, persisting,
disbanding,
arising, persisting, disbanding... There's no special trick to this,
but you
have to stop and watch, stop and know within yourself every
moment. Don't
let your awareness stream away from awareness to
outside preoccupations. Gather it in so it can know itself clearly --
that
there's nothing in there worth latching onto. It's all a bunch of
deceits. To know just this
much is very useful for seeing the truth inside yourself. You'll see
that
consciousness is empty of any self. When you look at physical
phenomena, you'll
see them as elements, as empty of any self. You'll see mental phenomena
as
empty of any self, as elements of consciousness -- and that if there's
no
attachment, no latching on, there's no suffering or stress... So even if
there's thinking going on in the mind, simply watch it, simply let it
go, and
its cycling will slow down. Fewer and fewer thought-formations will
occur. Even
if the mind doesn't stop completely, it will form fewer and fewer
thoughts.
You'll be able to stop to watch, stop to know more and more. And this
way,
you'll come to see the tricks and deceits of thought-formation, mental
labels,
pleasure and pain, and so on. You'll be able to know that there's
really
nothing inside -- that the reason you were deluded into latching onto
things was
because of ignorance, and that you made yourself suffer right there in
that
very ignorance... So you have to
focus down on one point, one thing. Focusing on many things won't do.
Keep
mindfulness in place: stopping, knowing, seeing. Don't let it run out
after
thoughts and labels. But knowing in this way requires that you make the
effort
to stay focused -- focused on seeing clearly, not just on making the
mind still.
Focus on seeing clearly. Look on in for the sake of seeing clearly...
and
contemplate how to let go. The mind will become empty in line with its
nature
in a way that you'll know exclusively within. What can we do to
see the aggregates -- this mass of suffering and stress -- clearly in a
way that
we can cut attachment for them out of the mind? Why is it that people
studying
to be doctors can know everything in the body -- intestines, liver,
kidneys, and
all -- down to the details, and yet don't develop any dispassion or
disenchantment for it -- why? Why is it that undertakers can spend
their time
with countless corpses and yet not gain any insight at all? This shows
that
this sort of insight is hard to attain. If there's no mindfulness and
discernment to see things clearly for what they are, knowledge is
simply a
passing fancy. It doesn't sink in. The mind keeps latching onto its
attachments. But if the mind
can gain true insight to the point where it can relinquish its
attachments, it
can gain the paths and fruitions leading to nibbana. This shows that there's a difference
in the knowing. It's
not that we have to know all the details like modern-day surgeons. All
we have
to know is that the body is composed of the four physical elements plus
the
elements of space and consciousness. If we really know just this much, we've reached the
paths and their
fruitions, while those who know all the details to the point where they
can
perform surgery don't reach any transcendent attainments at all... So let's analyze
the body into its elements so as to know them thoroughly. If we do,
then when
there are changes in the body and mind there won't be too much
clinging. If we
don't, our attachments will be fixed and strong and will lead to
further states
of being and birth in the future. Now that we have
the opportunity, we should contemplate the body and take it apart for a
good
look so as to get down to the details. Take the five basic meditation
objects --
hair of the head, hair of the body, nails, teeth, skin -- and look at
them
carefully, one at a time. You don't have to take on all five, you know.
Focus
on the hair of the head to see that it belongs to the earth element, to
see
that its roots are soaked in blood and lymph under the skin. It's
unattractive
in terms of its color, its smell, and where it dwells. If you analyze
and
contemplate these things, you won't be deluded into regarding them as your
hair,
your nails, your teeth, your skin. All of these
parts are composed of the earth element mixed in with water, wind, and
fire. If
they were purely earth they wouldn't last, because every part of the
body has
to be composed of all four elements for it to be a body. And then
there's a
mental phenomenon, the mind, in charge. These are things that follow in
line
with nature in every way -- the arising, changing, and disbanding of
physical
and mental phenomena -- but we latch onto them, seeing the body as
ours, the
mental phenomena as us: It's all us and ours. If we don't contemplate
to see
these things for what they are, we'll do nothing but cling to them. This is what
meditation is: seeing things clearly for what they are. It's not a
matter of
switching from topic to topic, for that would simply ensure that you
wouldn't
know a thing. But our inner character, under the sway of ignorance and
delusion, doesn't like examining itself repeatedly. It keeps finding
other
issues to get in the way, so that we think constantly about other
things. This
is why we stay so ignorant and foolish. Then why is it
that we can know other things? Because they fall in line with what
craving
wants. To see things clearly for what they are would be to abandon
craving, so
it finds ways of keeping things hidden. It keeps changing, bringing in
new
things all the time, keeping us fooled all the time, so that we study
and think
about nothing but matters that add to the mind's suffering and stress.
That's
all that craving wants. As for the kind of study that would end the
stress and
suffering in the mind, it's always getting in the way. This is why the
mind is always wanting to shift to new things to know, new things to
fall for.
And this is why it's always becoming attached. So when it doesn't
really know
itself, you have to make a real effort to see the truth that the things
within
it aren't you or yours. Don't let the mind stop short of this
knowledge: Make
this a law within yourself. If the mind doesn't know the truths of
inconstancy,
stress, and not-self within itself, it won't gain release from
suffering. Its
knowledge will simply be worldly knowledge; it will follow a worldly
path. It
won't reach the paths and fruition leading to nibbana. So this is
where the worldly and the transcendent part ways. If you comprehend inconstancy, stress,
and not-self to the
ultimate degree, that's the transcendent. If you don't get down to
their
details, you're still on the worldly level... The Buddha has
many teachings, but this is what they all come down to. The important
principles of the practice -- the four foundations of mindfulness, the
four
Noble Truths -- all come down to these characteristics of inconstancy,
stress,
and not-selfness. If you try to learn too many principles, you'll end
up not
getting any clear knowledge of the truth as it is. If you
focus on knowing
just a little, you'll end up with more true insight than if you try
knowing a
lot of things. It's
through wanting to
know a lot of things that we end up deluded. We wander around in our
deluded
knowledge, thinking and labeling things, but knowledge that's
focused and
specific, when it really knows, is absolute. It keeps hammering away at one point.
There's no need to know a lot of
things, for when you really know one thing, everything converges right
there... In practicing the
Dhamma, if you don't foster a balance between concentration and
discernment,
you'll end up going wild in your thinking. If there's too much work at
discernment, you'll go wild in your thinking. If there's too much
concentration, it just stays still and undisturbed without coming to
any
knowledge either. So you have to keep them in balance. Stillness has to
be
paired with discernment. Don't let there be too much of one or the
other. Try
to get them just right. That's when you'll be able to see things
clearly all
the way through. Otherwise, you'll stay as deluded as ever. You may
want to
gain discernment into too many things -- and as a result, your thinking
goes
wild. The mind goes out of control. Some people keep wondering why
discernment
never arises in their practice, but when it does arise they really go
off on a
tangent. Their thinking goes wild, all out of bounds. So when you
practice, you have to observe in your meditation how you can make the
mind
still. Once it does grow still, it tends to get stuck there. Or it may
grow
empty, without any knowledge of anything: quiet, disengaged, at ease
for a
while, but without any discernment to accompany it. But if you can
get
discernment to accompany your concentration, that's
when you'll really benefit. You'll see things all the way through and
be able
to let them go. If you're too heavy on the side of either discernment
or stillness,
you can't let go. The mind may come to know this or that, but it
latches onto
its knowledge. Then it knows still other things and latches onto them,
too. Or
else it simply stays perfectly quiet and latches onto that. It's not easy to
keep your practice on the Middle Way. If you don't use your powers of
observation, it's especially hard. The mind will keep falling for
things,
sometimes right, sometimes wrong, because it doesn't observe what's
going on.
This isn't the path to letting go. It's a path that's stuck, caught up
on
things. If you don't know what it's stuck and caught up on, you'll
remain
foolish and deluded. So you have to make an effort at focused
contemplation
until you see clearly into inconstancy, stress, and not-self. This
without a
doubt is what will stop every moment of suffering and stress... The sensations of
the mind are subtle and very volatile. Sometimes passion or irritation
can
arise completely independent of sensory contact, simply in line with
the force of
our character. For instance, there are times when the mind is perfectly
normal,
and all of a sudden there's irritation -- or the desire to form
thoughts and get
engrossed in feelings of pain, pleasure, or equanimity. We have to
contemplate
these three kinds of feeling to see that they're inconstant and always
changing, and to see that they are all stressful, so that the mind
won't go and
get engrossed in them. This business of getting engrossed is very
subtle and
hard to detect. It keeps us from knowing what's what because it's
delusion pure
and simple. Being engrossed in feelings of pleasure is something
relatively
easy to detect, but being engrossed in feelings of equanimity: That's
hard to
notice, because the mind is at equanimity in an oblivious way. This
oblivious
equanimity keeps us from seeing anything clearly. So you have to
focus on seeing feelings simply as feelings and pull the mind out of
its state
of being engrossed with equanimity. When there's a feeling of
equanimity as the
mind gathers and settles down, when it's not scattered around, use that
feeling
of equanimity in concentration as the basis for probing in to see
inconstancy,
stress, and not-self -- for this equanimity in concentration at the
fourth level
of absorption (jhana) is the basis for
liberating insight. Simply make sure that you don't get attached to the
absorption. If you get the
mind to grow still in equanimity without focusing on gaining insight,
it's
simply a temporary state of concentration. So you have to focus on
gaining clear
insight either into inconstancy, into stress, or into not-selfness.
That's when
you'll be able to uproot your attachments. If the mind gets into a
state of
oblivious equanimity, it's still carrying fuel inside it. Then as soon
as
there's sensory contact, it flares up into attachment. So we have to
follow the
principles the Buddha laid down: Focus the mind into a state of
absorption and
then focus on gaining clear insight into the three characteristics. The
proper
way to practice is not to let yourself get stuck on this level or that
-- and
no matter what insights you may gain, don't go thinking that you've
gained
Awakening. Keep
looking. Keep focusing in
to see if there are any further changes in the mind and, when there
are, see
the stress in those changes, the not-selfness of those changes. If you
can know
in this way, the mind will rise above feeling, no longer entangled in
this
level or that level -- all of which are simply matters of speculation. The important
thing is that you try to see clearly. Even when the mind is concocting
all
sorts of objects in a real turmoil, focus on seeing all of its objects
as
illusory. Then stay still to watch their disbanding. Get so that it's
clear to
you that there's really nothing to them. They all disband. All that
remains is
the empty mind -- the mind maintaining its balance in normalcy -- and
then focus
in on examining that. There are many
levels to this process of examining the diseases in the mind, not just
one.
Even though you may come up with genuine insights every now and then,
don't
just stop there -- and don't get excited about the fact that you've
come to see
things you never saw before. Just keep contemplating the theme of
inconstancy
in everything, without latching on, and then you'll come to even more
penetrating
insights... So focus on in
until the mind stops, until it reaches the stage of absorption called
purity of
mindfulness and equanimity. See what pure mindfulness is like. As for
the
feeling of equanimity, that's an affair of concentration. It's what the
mindfulness
depends on so that it too can reach equanimity. This is the stage where
we
gather the strength of our awareness in order to come in and know the
mind. Get
the mind centered, at equanimity, and then probe in to contemplate.
That's when
you'll be able to see... An important but
subtle point is that even though we practice, we continue to fall for
pleasant
feelings, because feelings are illusory on many levels. We don't
realize that
they're changeable and unreliable. Instead of offering pleasure, they
offer us
nothing but stress -- yet we're still addicted to them. This business of
feeling is thus a very subtle matter. Please try to contemplate it
carefully --
this business of latching onto feelings of pleasure, pain, or
equanimity. You
have to contemplate so as to see it clearly. And you have to experiment
more
than you may want to with pain. When there are feelings of physical
pain or
mental distress, the mind will struggle because it doesn't like pain.
But when
pain turns to pleasure, the mind likes it and is content with it, so it
keeps
on playing with feeling, even though as we've already said, feeling is
inconstant, stressful, and not really ours. But the mind doesn't see
this. All
it sees are feelings of pleasure, and it wants them. Try looking into
how feeling gives rise to craving. It's because we want pleasant
feeling that
craving whispers -- whispers right there at the feeling. If you observe
carefully, you'll see that this is very important, for this is where
the paths
and fruitions leading to nibbana are
attained, right here at feeling and craving. If we can extinguish the
craving
in feeling, that's nibbana ... In the Solasa
Pa~nha, the
Buddha said that defilement is
like a wide and deep flood, but he then went on to summarize the
practice to
cross it simply as abandoning craving in every action. Now, right here
at
feeling is where we can practice to abandon craving, for the way we
relish the
flavor of feeling has many ramifications. This is where many of us get
deceived, because we don't see feeling as inconstant. We want it to be
constant. We want pleasant feelings to be constant. As for pain, we
don't want
it to be constant, but no matter how much we try to push it away, we
still
latch onto it. This is why we
have to focus on feeling, so that we can abandon craving right there in
the
feeling. If you don't focus here, the other paths you may follow will
simply
proliferate. So bring the practice close to home. When the mind
changes, or
when it gains a sense of stillness or calm that would rank as a feeling
of
pleasure or equanimity, try to see in what ways the pleasure or
equanimity is
inconstant, that it's not you or yours. When you can do this, you'll
stop
relishing that particular feeling. You can stop right there, right
where the
mind relishes the flavor of feeling and gives rise to craving. This is
why the
mind has to be fully aware of itself -- all around, at all times -- in
its
focused contemplation to see feeling as empty of self... This
business of
liking and disliking feelings is a disease hard to detect, because our
intoxication with feelings is so very strong. Even with the sensations
of peace
and emptiness in the mind, we're still infatuated with feeling.
Feelings on the
crude level -- the violent and stressful ones that come with defilement
-- are
easy to detect. But when the mind grows still -- steady, cool, bright,
and so on -- we're still addicted to feeling. We want these feelings of
pleasure or
equanimity. We enjoy them. Even on the level of firm concentration or
meditative
absorption, there's attachment to the feeling... This is the
subtle magnetic pull of craving, which paints and plasters things over.
This
painting and plastering is hard to detect, because craving is always
whispering
inside us, "I want nothing but pleasant feelings." This is very
important, for this virus of craving is what makes us continue to be
reborn... So explore to see
how craving paints and plasters things, how it causes desires to form
-- the
desires to get this or take that -- and what sort of flavor it has that
makes
you so addicted to it, that makes it hard for you to pull away. You
have to
contemplate to see how craving fastens the mind so firmly to feelings
that you
never weary of sensuality or of pleasant feelings, no matter what the
level. If
you don't contemplate so as to see clearly that the mind is stuck right
here at
feeling and craving, it will keep you from gaining release... We're stuck on
feeling like a monkey stuck in a tar trap. They take a glob of tar and
put it
where a monkey will get its hand stuck in it and, in trying to pull
free, the
monkey gets its other hand, both feet, and finally its mouth stuck,
too.
Consider this: Whatever we do, we end up stuck right here at feeling
and
craving. We can't separate them out. We can't wash them off. If we
don't grow
weary of craving, we're like the monkey stuck in the glob of tar,
getting
ourselves more and more trapped all the time. So if we're intent on
freeing
ourselves in the footsteps of the arahants, we have to focus
specifically on feeling
until we can succeed at freeing ourselves from it. Even with painful
feelings,
we have to practice -- for if we're afraid of pain and always try to
change it
to pleasure, we'll end up even more ignorant than before. This is why we
have to be brave in experimenting with pain -- both physical pain and
mental
distress. When it arises in full measure, like a house afire, can we
let go of
it? We have to know both sides of feeling. When it's hot and burning,
how can
we deal with it? When it's cool and refreshing, how can we see through
it? We
have to make an effort to focus on both sides, contemplating until we
know how
to let go. Otherwise, we won't know anything, for all we want is the
cool side,
the cooler the better... and when this is the case, how can we expect
to gain
release from the cycle of rebirth? Nibbana is the extinguishing of craving, and
yet we like to stay
with craving -- so how can we expect to get anywhere at all? We'll stay
right
here in the world, right here with stress and suffering, for craving is
a
sticky sap. If there's no craving, there's nothing: no stress, no
rebirth. But
we have to watch out for it. It's a sticky sap, a glob of tar, a dye
that's
hard to wash out. So don't let yourself get carried
away with feeling. The crucial part of the practice lies here... When
Conventional Truths Collapse In making
yourself quiet, you have to be quiet on all fronts -- quiet in your
deeds, quiet
in your words, quiet in your mind. Only then will you be able to
contemplate
what's going on inside yourself. If you aren't quiet, you'll become
involved in
external affairs and end up having too much to do and too much to say.
This
will keep your awareness or mindfulness from holding steady and firm.
You have
to stop doing, saying, or thinking anything that isn't necessary. That
way your
mindfulness will be able to develop continuously. Don't let yourself
get
involved in too many outside things. In training your
mindfulness to be continuous so that it will enable you to contemplate
yourself, you have to be observant: When there's sensory contact, can
the mind
stay continuously undisturbed and at normalcy? Or does it still run out
into
liking and disliking? Being observant in this way will enable you to
read
yourself, to know yourself. If mindfulness is firmly established, the
mind
won't waver. If it's not yet firm, the mind will waver in the form of
liking
and disliking. You have to be wary of even the slightest wavering.
Don't let
yourself think that the slight waverings are unimportant, or else
they'll become
habitual. Being
uncomplacent means that you have to watch out for the details, the
little
things, the tiny flaws that arise in the mind. If you can do this,
you'll be
able to keep your mind protected -- better than giving all your
attention to the
worthless affairs of the outside world. So really try to be careful.
Don't get
entangled in sensory contact. This is something you have to work at
mastering.
If you focus yourself exclusively in the area of the mind like this,
you'll be
able to contemplate feelings in all their details. You'll be able to
see them
clearly, to let them go. So focus your
practice right at feelings of pleasure, pain, and
neither-pleasure-nor-pain.
Contemplate how to leave them alone, simply as feelings, without
relishing them -- for if you relish feelings, that's craving.
Desires
for this and that will seep in and influence the
mind so that it gets carried away with inner and outer feelings. This
is why
you have to be quiet -- quiet in a way that doesn't let the mind become
attached
to the flavors of feelings, quiet in a way that uproots their influence. The desire for
pleasure is like a virus deep in our character. What we're doing here
is to
make the mind stop taking pleasant feelings into itself and stop
pushing
painful feelings away. Our addiction to taking in pleasant feelings is
what
makes us dislike painful feelings and push them away, so don't let the
mind
love pleasure and resist pain. Let it be undisturbed by both. Give it a
try. If
the mind can let go of feelings so that it's above pleasure, pain, and
neither-pleasure-nor-pain, that means it's not stuck on feeling. And
then try
to observe: How can it stay unaffected
by feelings? This is something you have to work at mastering in order
to
release your grasp on feelings once and for all, so that you won't
latch onto
physical pain or mental distress as being you or yours. If you don't
release your grasp on feeling, you'll stay attached to it, both in its
physical
and in its mental forms. If there's the pleasure of physical ease,
you'll be
attracted to it. As for the purely mental feeling of pleasure, that's
something
you'll really want, you'll really love. And then you'll be attracted to
the
mental perceptions and labels that accompany the pleasure, the
thought-formations and even the consciousness that accompany the
pleasure.
You'll latch onto all of these things as you or yours. So analyze
physical and mental pleasure. Take them apart to contemplate how to let
them
go. Don't fool yourself into relishing them. As for pain, don't push it
away. Let
pain simply be pain, let pleasure simply be pleasure. Let them simply fall into the category
of feelings. Don't
go thinking that you feel pleasure,
that you feel pain. If you can let go
of feeling in this way, you'll be able to gain release from suffering
and
stress because you'll be above and beyond feeling. This way, when aging, illness, and
death come, you won't
latch onto them thinking that you are
aging, that you are ill, that you are dying. You'll be able to release
these things from your
grasp. If you can
contemplate purely in these terms -- that the five aggregates are
inconstant,
stressful, and not-self -- you won't enter into them and latch onto
them as
"me" or "mine." If you don't analyze them in this way,
you'll be trapped in dying. Even your bones, skin, flesh, and so forth
will
become "mine." This is why we're taught to contemplate death -- so
that we can make ourselves aware that death doesn't mean that we
die.
You have to contemplate until you really know this.
Otherwise, you'll stay trapped right there. You must make yourself
sensitive in
a way that sees clearly how your bones, flesh, and skin are empty of
any self.
That way you won't latch onto them. The fact that you still latch onto
them
shows that you haven't really seen into their inconstancy, stress, and
not-selfness. When you see the
bones of animals, they don't have much meaning, but when you see the
bones of
people, your perception labels them: "That's a person's skeleton.
That's a
person's skull." If there are a lot of them, they can really scare you.
When you see the picture of a skeleton or of anything that shows the
inconstancy and not-selfness of the body, and you don't see clear
through it,
you'll get stuck at the level of skeleton and bones. Actually, there
are no bones
at all. They're empty, nothing but elements. You have to penetrate into
the
bones so that they're elements. Otherwise, you'll get stuck at the
level of
skeleton. And since you haven't seen through it, it can make you
distressed and
upset. This shows that you haven't penetrated into the Dhamma. You're
stuck at
the outer shell because you haven't analyzed things into their elements. When days and
nights pass by, they're not the only things that pass by. The body
constantly
decays and falls apart, too. The body decays bit by bit, but we don't
realize
it. Only after it's decayed a lot -- when the hair has gone gray and
the teeth
fall out -- do we realize that it's old. This is knowledge on a crude
and really
blatant level. But as for the gradual decaying that goes on quietly
inside, we
aren't aware of it. As a result, we
cling to the body as being us -- every single part of it. Its eyes are our
eyes,
the sights they see are the things we see, the sensation of seeing is
something we sense. We don't see these things as
elements. Actually,
the element of vision and the element of form make contact. The
awareness of
the contact is the element of consciousness: the mental phenomenon that
senses
sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, and all. This we
don't realize,
which is why we latch onto everything -- eyes, ears, nose, tongue,
body,
intellect -- as being us or ours. Then, when the body decays, we feel
that we are
growing old; when it dies and mental
phenomena stop, we feel that we die. Once you've taken
the elements apart, though, there's nothing. These things lose their
meaning on
their own. They're simply physical and mental elements,
without any illness
or death. If
you don't penetrate into
things this way, you stay deluded and blind. For instance, when we
chant "jara-dhammamhi" -- I am subject to death -- that's
simply to
make us mindful and uncomplacent in the beginning stages of the
practice. When
you reach the stage of insight meditation, though, there's none of
that. All
assumptions, all conventional truths get ripped away. They all
collapse. When
the body is empty of self, what is there to latch onto? Physical
elements,
mental elements, they're already empty of any self. You have to see
this
clearly all the way through. Otherwise, they gather together and form a
being,
both physical and mental, and then you latch onto them as being your
self. Once we see the
world as elements, however, there's no death. And once we can see that
there's
no death, that's when we'll really know. If
we still see that we die, that shows that we haven't yet seen the
Dhamma. We're
still stuck on the outer shell. And when this is the case, what sort of
Dhamma
can we expect to know? You have to penetrate deeper in, to contemplate,
taking
things apart. You're almost at
the end of your lease in this burning house and yet you continue
latching onto
it as your self. It tricks you into feeling fear and love, and when you
fall
for it, what path will you practice? The mind latches onto these things
to fool
itself on many, many levels. You can't see through even these
conventions,
so you grasp hold of them as your self, as a
woman, a man -- and you really turn yourself into these things. If you
can't
contemplate so as to empty yourself of these conventions and
assumptions, your
practice simply circles around in the same old place, and as a result
you can't
find any way out. So you have to
contemplate down through many levels. It's like using a cloth to filter
things.
If you use a coarse weave, you won't catch much of anything. You have
to use a
fine weave to filter down to the deeper levels and penetrate into
the
deeper levels by contemplating over and over again,
through level after level. That's why there are many levels to being
mindful
and discerning, filtering on in to the details. And this is why
examining and becoming fully aware of your own inner character is so
important.
The practice of meditation is nothing but catching sight of
self-deceptions, to
see how they infiltrate into the deepest levels and how even the most
blatant
levels fool us right before our very eyes. If you can't catch sight of
the
deceits and deceptions of the self, your practice won't lead to release
from
suffering. It will simply keep you deluded into thinking that
everything is you
and yours. To practice in
line with the Buddha's teachings is to go against the flow. Every living being, deep
down inside, wants
pleasure on the physical level and then on the higher and more subtle
levels of
feeling, such as the types of concentration that are addicted to
feelings of peace
and respite. This is why you have to investigate into feeling so that
you can
let go of it and thus snuff out craving, through being fully aware of
feeling
as it actually is -- free from any self -- in line with its nature:
unentangled,
uninvolved. This is what snuffs out the virus of craving so that
ultimately it
vanishes without a trace. There are many
layers to self-deception. The more you practice and investigate things,
the
less you feel like claiming to know. Instead, you'll simply see the
harm of
your own many-faceted ignorance and foolishness. Your examination of
the
viruses in the mind gets more and more subtle. Before, you didn't know,
so you
took your views to be knowledge -- because you thought you knew. But
actually
these things aren't real knowledge. They're the type of understanding
that
comes from labels. Still we think they're knowledge and we think we
know.
This in itself is a very intricate self-deception. So you have to
keep watch on these things, to keep contemplating them. Sometimes they
fool us
right before our eyes: That's when it really gets bad, because we don't
know
that we've got ourselves fooled, and instead think we're people who
know. We
can deal thoroughly with this or that topic, but our knowledge is
simply the
memory of labels. We think that labels are discernment, or
thought-formations
are discernment, or the awareness of sensory consciousness is
discernment, and
so we get these things all mixed up. As a result, we become enamored
with all
the bits of knowledge that slip in and fashion the mind -- which are
simply the
illusions within awareness. As for genuine awareness, there's very
little of
it, while deceptive awareness has us surrounded on all sides. We thus have to
contemplate and investigate so as to see through these illusions in
awareness.
This is what will enable us to read the mind. If your awareness goes
out, don't
follow it out. Stop and turn inward instead. Whatever slips in to
fashion the
mind, you have to be wise to it. You can't forbid it, for it's
something
natural, and you shouldn't try to close off the mind too much. Simply
keep
watch on awareness to see how far it will go, how true or false it is,
how it
disbands and then arises again. You have to watch it over and over
again.
Simply watching in this way will enable you to read yourself, to know
cause and
effect within yourself, and to contemplate yourself. This is what will
make
your mindfulness and discernment more and more skillful. If you don't
practice
in this way, the mind will be dark. It may get a little empty, a little
still,
and you'll decide that's plenty good enough. But if you look
at the Buddha's teachings, you'll find that no matter what sort of
correct
knowledge he gained, he was never willing to stop there. He always
said,
"There's more." To begin with, he developed mindfulness and clear
comprehension in every activity, but then he said, "There's more to do,
further to go." As for us, we're always ready to brag. We work at
developing this or that factor for a while and then say we already know
all
about it and don't have to develop it any further. As a result, the
principles
in our awareness go soft because of our boastfulness and
pride. To open the door
so that you can really see inside yourself isn't easy, but it's
something you
can train yourself to do. If you have the mindfulness enabling you to
read
yourself and understand yourself, that cuts through a lot of the issues
right
there. Craving will have a hard time forming. In whatever guise it
arises,
you'll get to read it, to know it, to extinguish it, to let it go. When you get to
do these things, it doesn't mean that you "get" anything, for
actually once the mind is empty, that means it doesn't gain anything at
all.
But to put it into words for those who haven't experienced it: In what
ways is
emptiness empty? Does it mean that everything disappears or is
annihilated?
Actually, you should know that emptiness doesn't mean that the mind is
annihilated. All that's annihilated is clinging and attachment. What
you have
to do is to see what emptiness is like as it actually appears and then
not
latch onto it. The nature of this emptiness is that it's deathless
within you --
this emptiness of self -- and yet the mind can still function, know,
and read
itself. Just don't label it or latch onto it, that's all. There are many
levels to emptiness, many types, but if it's this or that type, then
it's not
genuine emptiness, for it contains the intention trying to know what
type of
emptiness it is, what features it has. This is something you have to
look into
deeply if you really want to know. If it's superficial emptiness -- the
emptiness of the still mind, free from thought-formations about its
objects or
free from the external sense of self -- that's not genuine emptiness.
Genuine
emptiness lies deep, not on the level of mere stillness or
concentration. The
emptiness of the void is something very profound. But because of the
things we've studied and heard, we tend to label the emptiness of the
still
mind as the void -- and so we label things wrongly in that emptiness...
Actually
it's just ordinary stillness. We have to look more deeply in. No matter
what
you've encountered that you've heard about before, don't get excited.
Don't
label it as this or that level of attainment. Otherwise you'll spoil
everything. You reach the level where you should be able to keep your
awareness
steady, but once you label things, it stops right there -- or else goes
all out
of control. This labeling is
attachment in action. It's something very subtle, very refined.
Whatever
appears, it latches on. So you simply have to let the mind be empty
without
labeling it as anything, for the emptiness that lets go of
preoccupations or is
free from the influence of thought-formations is something
you have to look
further into. Don't
label it as this or
that level, for to measure and compare things in this way blocks
everything --
and in particular, knowledge of how the mind changes. So to start out,
simply watch these things, simply be aware. If you get excited, it
ruins
everything. Instead of seeing things clear through, you don't. You stop
there
and don't go any further. For this reason, when you train the mind or
contemplate the mind to the point of gaining clear realizations every
now and
then, regard them as simply things to observe. Once you can read
your mind correctly, you can catch hold of defilements and kill them
off: That's
insight meditation. The mind becomes razor sharp, just as if you have a
sharp
knife that can cut anything clear through. Even if defilements arise
again, you
can dig them up again, cut them off again. It's actually a lot of fun,
this job
of uprooting the defilements in the mind. There's no other work nearly
as much
fun as getting this sense of "I" or self under your thumb, because
you get to see all of its tricks. It's really fun. Whenever it shows
its face
in order to get anything, you just watch it -- to see what it wants and
why it
wants it, to see what inflated claims it makes for itself. This way you
can
cross-examine it and get to the facts. Once you know,
there's nothing to do but let go, to become unentangled and free. Just
think of
how good that can be! This practice of ours is a way of stopping and
preventing
all kinds of things inside ourselves. Whenever defilement rises up to
get
anything, to grab hold of anything, we don't play along. We let go.
Just this
is enough to do away with a lot of stress and suffering, even though
the
defilements feel the heat. When we oppress
the defilements a lot in this way, it gets them hot and feverish, you
know. But
remember, it's the defilements that get
hot and feverish. And remember that the Buddha told us to put the heat
on the
defilements, because if we don't put the heat on them, they put the
heat on us
all the time. So we must be
intent on burning the defilements away, even though they may complain
that
we're mistreating them. We close the door and imprison them. When they
can't go
anywhere, they're sure to complain: "I can't take it! I'm not free to
go
anywhere at all!" So simply watch them: Where do they want to go? What
do
they want to grab hold of? Where? Watch them carefully, and they'll
stop -- stop
going, stop running. It's easy to say no to other things, but saying no
to
yourself, saying no to your defilements, isn't easy at all -- and yet
it doesn't
lie beyond your discernment or capabilities to do it. If you have the
mindfulness and discernment to say no to defilement, it'll stop. Don't
think
that you can't make it stop. You can make
it stop -- simply that you've been foolish enough to give in to it so
quickly
that it's become second nature. So we have to
stop. Once we stop, the defilements can stop, too. Wherever they turn
up, we
can extinguish them. And when this is the case, how can we not
want
to practice? No matter how stubbornly they want
anything, simply watch them. Get acquainted with them, and they won't
stay.
They'll disband. As soon as they disband, you realize exactly how
deceptive
they are. Before, you didn't know. As soon as they urged you to do
anything,
you went along with them. But once you're wise to them, they stop. They
disband. Even though you don't disband them, they disband on their own.
And as
soon as you see their disbanding, the path opens wide before you.
Everything
opens wide in the heart. You can see that there's a way you can
overcome
defilement, you can put an end to defilement, no matter how much it
arises. But
you've got to remember to keep on watching out for it, keep on letting
it go. Thus I ask that
you all make the effort to keep sharpening your tools at all times.
Once your
discernment is sharp on any point, it can let go of that point and
uproot it.
If you look after that state of mind and contemplate how to keep it
going,
you'll be able to keep your tools from growing too easily dull. And now that you
know the basic principles, I ask that you make the effort to the utmost
of your
strength and mindfulness. May you be brave and resilient, so that your
practice
for gaining release from all your sufferings and stress can reap good
results
in every way. |
| Buddhism The Eight Fold Path The Middle Way Vipassana Main |