A: I have a lot of worries
and stress. I try to meditate in order to relax, but it is no use.
Thynn: In this fast-moving world,
meditation is regarded as an instant remedy for life's ills. If you look
upon meditation as merely a tranquilizer, you are underestimating its true
value. Yes, relaxation does occur through meditation, but that is only
one of its many results. Meditation in Buddhism is neither an instant cure
nor just a stress-relieving measure.
Meditation in Buddhism means cultivation
of the mind in order to achieve insight wisdom or pañña,
ultimately leading to liberation or nibbana.
D: Nibbana aside, I want to meditate,
but I cannot find the time.
When you speak of meditation, you may think
of the type of meditation that is popular these days, the sitting form
of meditation. But that form is merely an aid, a support to develop a mental
discipline of mindfulness and equanimity. The form should not be mistaken
for the path.
The popular notion is that you need to
set aside a special time or place to meditate. In actuality, if meditation
is to help you acquire peace of mind as you function in your life, then
it must be a dynamic activity, part and parcel of your daily experience.
Meditation is here and now, moment-to-moment, amid the ups and downs of
life, amid conflicts, disappointments and heartaches -- amid success and
stress. If you want to understand and resolve anger, desires, attachments
and all the myriad emotions and conflicts, need you go somewhere else to
find the solution? If your house was on fire, you wouldn't go somewhere
else to put out the fire, would you?
If you really want to understand your mind,
you must watch it while it is angry, while it desires, while it is in conflict.
You must pay attention to the mind as the one-thousand-and-one thoughts
and emotions rise and fall. The moment you pay attention to your emotions,
you will find that they lose their strength and eventually die out. However,
when you are inattentive, you find that these emotions go on and on. Only
after the anger has subsided are you aware that you have been angry. By
then, either you have made some unwanted mistakes or you have ended up
emotionally drained.
R: How do you handle these emotions?
I know that when I am angry I want to shout and throw things. Should I
control these emotions or express them?
The natural inclination is to try to control
the emotions. But when they are kept under a lid, they try to escape. They
either rush out with a bang or they leak out as sickness or neuroses.
R: What should I do? Do I let my emotions
go wild?
Certainly not. That is exactly what we
don't want to do. That is another extreme -- to release your emotions impulsively.
The important thing is neither control nor non-control. In either situation
you are working up your desire to control. Neither situation is tenable.
So long as this desire occupies your mind, your mind is not free to see
anger as it is. Hence another paradox arises: the more you want to be free
of the anger, the more you are not free of it.
To understand the mind, you have to watch
and pay attention with an uncluttered, silent mind. When your mind is chattering
away, all the time asking questions, then it lacks the capacity to look.
It is too busy asking questions, answering, asking.
Try to experience watching yourself in
silence. That silence is the silence of the mind free from discriminations,
free from likes and dislikes, free from clinging.
Thoughts and emotions by themselves are
just momentary and possess no life of their own. By clinging to them, you
prolong their stay.
Only when your mind is free from clinging
and rejecting can it see anger as anger, desire as desire. As soon as you
"see," your mental process is fully preoccupied with "seeing," and in that
split second anger dies a natural death. This seeing, or insight, called
panna, arises as a spontaneous awareness that can be neither practiced
nor trained. This awareness brings new insight into life, new clarity and
new spontaneity in action.
So, you see, meditation need not be separate
from life and its daily ups and downs. If you are to experience peace in
this everyday world, you need to watch, understand and deal with your anger,
desire and ignorance as they occur. Only when you cease to be involved
with your emotions can the peaceful nature of your mind emerge. This peace-nature
enables you to live every moment of your life completely. With this newfound
understanding and awareness, you can live as a complete individual with
greater sensitivity. You will come to view life with new and fresh perceptions.
Strangely enough, what you saw as problems before are problems no more.
Staying with the Moment
R: You say I can meditate in daily life
by cultivating sati (paying attention) in my mind. But I find that very
difficult; my mind is too distracted.
Thynn: That is not unusual. You
see, to focus on your mind as you function in everyday life, you need to
turn your mind inside out. Indeed, your mind must be strong and focused
in order to be mindful of itself. So naturally it is difficult to focus
on your mind if you are agitated or distracted.
R: How can I start then?
Try being mindful of whatever you are doing
at the moment -- walking, sitting, bathing, cleaning, looking at a flower.
You can do this at any time and in any place. As you train your mind to
focus, you will find you are less distracted. Later, as you go on, you
can be mindful of your thoughts and emotions as they arise.
Suppose you are driving. You have to pay
attention to the driving, don't you? Your mind has to be there at the time
and place of driving, concentrating on the road, watching the other drivers.
You cannot afford to be distracted too much by other thoughts. It is something
like meditation on the task at hand. But often we do not carry out other
tasks in this concentrated way.
D: Why not?
Probably because they are less dangerous
than driving. But you can apply the same principle to other activities.
Suppose you are eating. If your mind is distracted, you may not even be
aware of tasting the food, let alone enjoying it. Only when you focus on
eating can you really enjoy the food.
The same is true even in passive activities.
Suppose you are sitting on a bus. Try simply to be where you are, rather
than letting your mind wander. Train your mind to focus on your surroundings.
Be aware of the other people on the bus, how fast the bus is going, and
where it is going. This is a very good way to start meditation. Simply
be where you are rather than letting your mind roam.
P: I have tried being mindful of the
moment. But it is strenuous and I get all tangled up.
For goodness sakes, staying with the moment
is only a figure of speech. It is not a commandment to be followed rigidly.
This is not a proficiency test. You must understand this from the outset;
otherwise you will be tied up in knots trying too hard every second of
the day.
If you become too involved with staying
in the moment, you lose the art of living -- of free flowing.
You must realize that staying with the
moment is just a means to break the mind's old habits. Usually the mind
flitters between thoughts and feelings about the past, present and future.
Staying with the moment is just a way to train the mind to cease flitting.
It is not important that you be with the
moment every single moment of the day. What is important is that you learn
to get out of the constant mental run-around and to be more focused and
grounded.
Once you break the habit of the roaming
mind, you will find you are more centered and more with the present moment.
SD: What do we gain from this?
That is a very pertinent question. Of course,
you will have better concentration, but you can achieve concentration without
learning the art of meditation. Many activities -- golf, chess, reading
-- enhance concentration.
SD: What is the difference between those
activities and moment-to-moment meditation?
If you look into the process involved in
those activities, you will see an element of desire -- the desire to achieve
perfection, to win a game, to feel good, whatever. You are motivated by
desire. Also, there is an end to the activity and so to the concentration.
Concentration is also very important in meditation, but it is not everything.
If we simply concentrate, we will not get any further benefit.
To meditate, it is crucial to be mindful
without desire, without aversion, without likes and dislikes, and without
goals.
If you can be mindful without judgments
and without likes and dislikes, then you are practicing with an inner silence
or equanimity, called upekkha in Pali.
This is true in both formal sitting meditation
and in the informal, unstructured meditation we are discussing now. Two
elements are involved: staying with the moment and viewing everything without
likes and dislikes.
R: Oh, it's not that easy. We have to
do more than just notice our surroundings.
No, it's not easy. That's why it's better
to start slowly by focusing on a particular moment. You may not be good
at it all at once. But you will find that this practice of staying with
the moment facilitates the inner silence. If you concentrate on the moment,
and if your concentration is good, then no stray thoughts will enter your
mind. As you practice, not only will you be more focused, but you will
also become more alert and sensitive to what is happening around you. When
your mindfulness is strong, then you can direct your attention inward to
your mind, your emotions or your thoughts.
SD: So just being mindful is not enough?
That's right. Being mindful is not sufficient.
It is only a means. What is crucial is incorporating equanimity or upekkha
into your mindfulness.
SD: Will upekkha lead to inner silence?
Yes, the only way that will lead the mind
to silence is upekkha. Upekkha is not just a product of meditation training.
It is itself a tool in meditation. When you become proficient at looking
with equanimity at your own mind, your thoughts and your emotions, then
this upekkha approach will also spill over into other areas of life. You
will begin to listen, look, feel and relate to everything with upekkha.
Just mindfulness and concentration do not
constitute meditation; equanimity must be a constant ingredient.
SD: Doesn't upekkha mean detachment?
Sometimes it is translated as detachment,
but that translation is very inadequate. You have to understand that upekkha
transcends both detachment and attachment. When you are detached, you may
also become indifferent if you are not careful. This indifference can lead
to dissociation and subtle rejection. Upekkha transcends not only non-attachment,
but also rejection. The mind is very tricky and has many nuances you have
to be aware of.
The full essence of upekkha is to go beyond
attachment and detachment, beyond likes and dislikes, to relate to things
as they are.
So it is crucial that you begin your mindfulness
right from the start on the basis of upekkha, the nondualistic, the Middle
Way. When you can view the world and your own mind or yourself with upekkha,
then you are already on the right path of meditation.
Staying with More Moments
P: Sometimes it's a luxury to be mindful
of a task with undivided attention. I only get frustrated if I try to be
mindful of a task when my young children demand my attention. It seems
like the only thing to do is to redirect my attention to the children and
do the task on automatic pilot.
Thynn: I like your phrase "automatic
pilot"! Again, I have to emphasize that being mindful is only a means to
practice focusing. Don't compete with yourself. What you choose to pay
attention to is entirely circumstantial. If the children need you, focus
on them.
The only guideline is to avoid rigid conditioning.
This does not mean that if you are cooking
vegetables, you must be absolutely mindful of the color and smell of the
vegetables and ignore the children's questions. If you did that, you'd
be clinging to the cooking.
P: Oh, so that's why I feel frustration?
Yes, because you are clinging. Once again,
you must understand that upekkha should be in every act. If you can view
cooking with upekkha, then you won't have a problem letting go of mindfulness
on the cooking and you can redirect your attention to the child. Sometimes
you can cook -- on automatic pilot, as you say -- and answer the child.
Other times, if the child has a pressing need, you might find it better
to stop cooking and really devote all your attention to the child. There
are no set rules.
You can become attached to
your mindfulness of the moment just as you can become attached to anything
else.
This is very subtle, but understand from the
outset that you can be bound by your own mindfulness!
P: If things are very hectic I cannot
even redirect my attention to another activity, but find I have to just
live in the chaos.
Well, letting go of the mindfulness can
be appropriate. But we must also talk about living in the chaos. How do
you deal with the chaos?
P: Sometimes I become involved in the
chaos and get carried away by it.
Yes, if your mindfulness is not strong
enough you can easily be drawn into the chaos. The mindfulness I am talking
about is the mindfulness of your own mind. If you are not aware of your
thoughts and your feelings about the chaos, you can easily slip into interacting
in the situation, reacting to the chaos. Before you know what's happening,
you are already storming through the chaos, thus creating more chaos.
If you are mindful of your own feelings
as you notice the chaos, you can choose how to act in the situation.
Instead of being only aware of the outside
chaos, stop and look directly into yourself and see what is there.
D: But that's not easy.
Of course not. But you have to start somewhere.
As long as you are not silent inside, you will always be on a roller coaster
ride with the outside chaos.
To look into yourself directly is to come
back to your own source and to reach an inner equilibrium and silence.
It is only from this inner equilibrium that you can view the outer chaos
objectively.
When this happens you can see the chaos
as chaos, as only a circumstantial situation. You'll see the cause behind
the chaos and you can act accordingly. In short, when you penetrate to
the heart of the chaos, you will spontaneously resolve it in the best way
for the circumstances. This is what is called penetrating insight wisdom,
or panna.
P: Do you mean we should be passive
in a chaotic conflict?
No. Again, there is nothing rigid about
it. One situation may require a firm hand that cuts right through to the
heart of the matter. If you are acting with awareness it will be the right
action. Another situation might require that you become quiet and not generate
more confusion. If you stop and look, you will know what to do in each
situation. If you view both the chaos and your mind with upekkha, you will
know what to do and will not be bothered by the chaos.
P: If we stop to look, how can we react
to others in the right way? We wouldn't have time to think of what to do.
This is the most difficult part to explain.
We are so used to functioning with the intellect that it seems quite impossible
to function in any given situation without conceptualizing. You see, here
we are talking about insight or panna. It's a paradox: insight does not
arise unless the conceptualizing stops altogether. In a chaotic situation
insight can arise only when we stop conceptualizing about the chaos. Mindfulness
of our own mind will in fact stop the conceptualizing that our minds normally
go through. When the mindfulness is strong enough and there is total silence
in the mind, then insight will spontaneously arise as to how best to deal
with the situation at hand.
D: I have another question. I find I
can stop being emotional, right in the middle of a difficult interaction,
but then I don't know where to go from there. Since I am studying Buddhism
and learning to practice the Buddhist way, I feel I should react with more
compassion. But I may not feel compassionate. Because I don't know how
to go on, I go back to my old conditioning of either resentment or aggressiveness.
My dear, this is only a phase in your own
progress. You have come this far. It is possible to go further. Look into
the process involved in your mind right in the midst of reacting. When
you are able to stop in your tracks, you are already doing quite well.
It is only when you start intellectualizing
again that you get into trouble. If you have the notion that as a practicing
Buddhist you should be compassionate, then you are setting up an image
of yourself. As soon as that thought is allowed to come into your mind,
you are not free. At that moment your mind is filled with the desire to
fulfill your own image as a practicing Buddhist.
When the mind is not free,
there is no chance for true compassion to arise.
It is as simple as that. Only when you free
yourself of preconceived perceptions of yourself can spontaneous compassion
arise. When you are free of concepts, you will act spontaneously and compassionately
as well as creatively.
Meditation in Action
D: You say we can work on meditation in
our everyday lives. What is the best way to start?
Thynn: Generally speaking, your
mind is caught up with the external world and you react to the world in
an automatic and habitual manner. When you are preoccupied with the external
world, you grossly neglect your mind. The most crucial thing is to realize
that you have to redirect this external focus of attention inward, toward
your own mind. In other words, learn to be attentive to your mind in the
context of daily living -- as you eat, work, tend the children, cook, clean,
whatever.
R: Do you mean I have to take note of
everything that comes into my mind? That would be incredibly difficult.
Suppose I'm driving. How can I notice my mind and still pay attention to
the road?
That's a very relevant question. It's impossible
to take note of your mind all of the time. You would tie yourself up in
knots and run off the road. Instead of going to an extreme, begin by concentrating
on one particular emotion in yourself. Choose the emotion that bothers
you the most, or the one that is most prominent in you. For example, if
you tend to be a temperamental kind of person, start by watching your anger.
If you are easily hurt, then work with your mood swings. Pay attention
to whichever emotion is most noticeable and troublesome to you.
For many people, anger is a good starting
point because it is easily noticed and dissolves faster than most other
emotions. Once you begin to watch your anger, you will make an interesting
discovery. You will find that as soon as you know you are angry, your anger
will melt away by itself. It is very important that you watch without likes
or dislikes. The more you are able to look at your own anger without making
judgments, without being critical, the more easily the anger will dissipate.
You may find in the beginning that you
notice your anger only when it is about to end. That is not important.
The important thing is to decide that you want to focus on your anger.
Gradually the watching will become more and more natural. Before long you
will notice, suddenly, in the midst of a fit of anger, that your anger
drops away without warning. You will find yourself just being aware and
no longer entangled in the anger.
A: Can that really happen?
Of course. You see, when you make an effort
to turn your attention inward, you are reconditioning yourself. Before
this, you were only looking outward. Now you are conditioning yourself
anew to look inward some of the time. This looking inward can become habitual;
it becomes a kind of conditioning in which your mind automatically focuses
on itself at all times. In the beginning this may not be frequent, but
don't be discouraged. As time goes on, you will be surprised to find you
are aware of your anger sooner than before.
This awareness, when it becomes stronger,
will spill over to other emotions. You might find yourself watching your
desire. In that watching, the desire will resolve and you will be left
only with the awareness. Or you may watch sadness. Sadness is slower to
arise and resolve than some other emotions. The most difficult emotion
to watch is depression. But that too can be done with stronger mindfulness.
As you get into the swing of it, you will
find your awareness becoming sharper. At the same time, the episodes of
anger will get shorter and less frequent. As the intensity of anger lessens,
you will find you are grappling less and less with your emotions. In the
end, you will be surprised to find that you can be friends with your emotions
as never before.
R: What do you mean? I can't imagine
ever being comfortable with anger.
Because you are no longer struggling with
your emotions, you can learn to look at them without judging, clinging
or rejecting them. They are no longer threatening to you. You learn to
relate to your emotions more naturally, like a witness. Even when you are
faced with conflicts and filled with emotions, you can be equanimous with
them. As you become more stable, you can deal with conflicts without losing
your emotional balance.
D: If my awareness becomes more and
more sensitive, is it possible for my mind to know anger as soon as it
arises?
Certainly. You see, as your mindfulness
becomes stronger and more alert, your mind becomes more aware of its own
workings. When mindfulness is complete and dynamic, then you know anger
as soon as it arises; as soon as you know it, it begins to dissolve.
D: I have tried watching my anger and
I can even see it die down for a moment, but it comes back again and again.
Why?
In the initial stages, when mindfulness
is still weak and incomplete, anger may die for a moment as you watch.
Then, the mind may revert back to its old, habitual angry state. The old
conditioning is still strong and you have yet to master the art of mindfulness.
You are so used to intellectualizing about the cause of anger -- who's
to blame, why the conflict escalated, and so on. In fact, this is the mind
going back to its treadmill of reacting in the old ways.
You yourself restart the old cycle of creating
the anger, thinking about the anger, reacting according to the anger. Here
you have anger-intellectualizing- reacting in a vicious cycle.
The purpose of learning to pay attention
to anger with a silent mind is to break this cycle of anger and the intellectualization
on anger.
The only logical solution is to stop intellectualizing
the conflict and simply watch your own mind in the midst of confusion.
R: Do you mean I should just stop thinking
in such a situation and do nothing but watch my mind?
That's exactly what I mean.
SD: Suppose I find it difficult to focus
on anger. What should I do?
If that is the case, then focus on milder
emotions like aversion and desiring. The same thing will happen when you
do that. As soon as you are aware of aversion, you will find its intensity
decreases; and when your mindfulness becomes strong, the aversion or desiring
will resolve. As you proceed and build up your mindfulness, you will find
you are able to go on to stronger emotions like anger, craving and greed.
SD: What about problem solving? How
can I work my way through complicated situations in which anger and judgment
interfere with mindfulness?
It is the same in complicated situations.
Let's be very clear -- be mindful and watch without judgment. The mindfulness
itself trains one towards a pure and simple mind, devoid of judgment and
discrimination. To be mindful is a transcending act -- transcending anger,
transcending judgment. So, if you master the art of mindfulness, you will
no longer react with anger or judgment, because paying attention is itself
a transcending act.
M: What about other people? How can
I react to others? I still need to react to get out of a conflict situation.
That is exactly the point. Most often you
are just reacting rather than acting. You are reacting in the ways you
have been conditioned. The way to stop reacting is to break that conditioning.
Stop rationalizing. Stop the thinking mind
and train it to experience itself by watching itself.
When the mind stops its roller-coaster
thinking, it sees the entire situation as it is. This is crucial. The seeing,
the awareness, is total.
You have to start with yourself. Make the
decision to watch the mind and then see the process. Although you start
with yourself, the actual seeing encompasses the total situation. You stop
seeing yourself in isolation and see yourself instead in the context of
the whole situation.
Then, there is no longer an
outside or inside. You are part of the whole. "You" now, are not as important
as "you" used to be.
Before, you saw your situation and your own
importance and you needed to guard your identity, to control the situation.
Now, when you see no division between yourself and others, when you are
no more or no less important than others, only now are you able to grasp
the whole situation, as it is, with clarity. Now you see very clearly where
the problem lies, and instead of reacting, you simply act.
D: Can you give us an example from everyday
life?
Would one of you like to give an example?
P: Let's say my young child is crying
because I won't allow him to have something he wants. If I stop to look,
I see my own annoyance and frustration. I even feel anger, because I cannot
reason with the child. The moment I see that anger, it dissolves -- and
rather than responding to my son in anger, I am able to be understanding,
yet firm, towards him. It's strange, because suddenly I know how to deal
with the problem. I don't get involved in his anger and frustrations, or
my own. He seems to pick up on this and he becomes calmer too.
Yes, that's it. At that moment of seeing
your anger, you transcend your own feelings of anger and frustration. You
become centered. You no longer generate conflict, and because you are calmer,
naturally the child responds.
More often than not, your actions are so
complete that the conflict will not continue; you no longer generate reasons
for continuing the conflict. This complete, non-generating action in Buddhism
is called right action, or samma kammanta in Pali. This right action is
what I mean by meditation in action. By so doing, you are already on the
Noble Eightfold Path.
Letting Go and Picking
Up
J: Why is "letting go" so important in
Buddhism?
Thynn: The term "letting go" has
become a catchword in Buddhist circles. It is true that "letting go" is
crucial for arriving at self-realization of inner freedom, but you have
to understand how to let go.
J: What are we supposed to let go of?
Let go of your clinging. Let go of the
motivating desire behind whatever you're doing. It may be a desire to succeed,
to be perfect, to control others or to glorify yourself. It doesn't matter
what it is specifically; what matters is the desire behind your act. It
is easy to mistake the act for the desire.
To let go is to let go of clinging
to desire, not to let go of the act.
We have been talking about stopping and looking
at emotions. Try to stop and look at an act; see if you can identify the
desire propelling it. When you see the desire, you can also detect the
clinging to the desire. When you see the clinging, you see it resolve and
you spontaneously let go.
R: There are so many things in life
I don't want to renounce or let go of.
Of course not. We don't let go for the
sake of letting go. There is a parable about a Zen master who was approached
by a pupil. The pupil asked, "I have nothing in my mind now; what shall
I do next?" "Pick it up," replied the master. This is an excellent example
of the negation that comes with proper understanding, as opposed to pure
nihilism.
If we are bound to the concept of letting
go, then we are not free. When we are not free, understanding -- panna
-- does not arise. But if we truly see the clinging to desire and let go
of it, our act becomes a pure act, without any attendant tensions or frustrations.
When the act is pure and simple, we can accomplish more with less stress.
At that point, you are "picking up" just as you are "letting go."
D: Why is letting go so difficult? I
can watch my other emotions like anger and hatred, but it is much harder
to see desire and clinging.
That's because desire and clinging precede
anger and hatred. In any fit of emotion -- and our mental formations occur
so very fast -- we can only identify gross emotions like anger and hatred.
Desire and clinging are much more subtle, so it takes stronger samadhi
to be able to see them.
You have been conditioned since you were
very young to relate everything to yourself. As soon as you learn to recognize
people and things, you're taught how to relate these to the "I" and "mine"--
my mom, my dad, my toy, etc. As you grow up you're taught how to relate
ideas and concepts to yourself. You have to learn that so that you can
function properly in society.
But at the same time, this process slowly
and unconsciously creates a concept of selfhood, and you build up your
ego. This buildup is strengthened by the values of society. You learn to
compete, to achieve, to accumulate knowledge, wealth and power. In other
words, you are trained to possess and to cling.
By the time you are grown up, the concept
of ego-self has become so real that it is difficult to tell what is illusion
and what is reality. It is difficult to realize that "I" and "mine" are
temporary, relative and changeable. The same is true of all that is related
to "I" and "mine." Not understanding that "I" and "mine" are temporary,
you struggle to keep them permanent; you cling to them. This desire to
try to keep everything permanent is what makes it so difficult to learn
to let go.
M: I have trouble accepting the Buddhist
idea of self as an illusion.
You have become so used to functioning
with the "I" and "mine," so used to thinking your "self" is real, that
it is naturally difficult to understand the Buddhist way of thinking. The
"I" and "mine," being illusions themselves, survive only by clinging to
illusions of their own making. They cling to all kinds of mental possessions
-- be they power, wealth, status or whatever -- which are themselves conceptual
creations of the mind with no substantial reality. In short, they are also
illusions.
R: If "I" is an illusion and not reality,
how can "I" get rid of the "I"?
How can you get rid of something that never
was?
M: I feel that if I let go of "I" and
"mine," I would lose my identity. How can I exist if I let go of everything?
Won't I become cold and unfeeling? It sounds scary, like living in a vacuum.
You have to understand that what you lose
is merely an illusion. It never was. You empty the mind of illusion about
self. Just let go of the illusion.
In fact, you are not losing anything. You
just remove an imaginary screen before your eyes. In the process you gain
wisdom, or panna. From this wisdom unfold the four virtues of unconditional
love, compassion, sympathetic joy and equanimity. These virtues manifest
themselves as concern, humanness and sensitivity to others. When you have
panna you can fully experience the beauty and warmth that is within all
human relationships.
That is why letting go is not losing your
illusory ego. You are actually uncovering a great treasure.
Peace-Mind
If you just stopped thinking for a while and
sat back to reflect on your own mind, you would be surprised to realize
that you are at peace. Even if you agree with me, you might argue that
this peace is only temporary. So be it. But let us look into this peaceful
tranquil state, temporary or otherwise, since it is already with us --
without our having to make any effort at all at being peaceful.
You were born with this peace-nature of
the mind; otherwise you would not be what you are, would you? You did not
run around meditating to bring about this peace to yourself: you did not
learn from someone or some book to make possible this peaceful state in
yourself. In other words, "you" had nothing to do with it. Peace is a natural
mind-state in every one of us. Peace has been there since the day we were
born and it is going to be there till the day we die. It is our greatest
gift; so why do we think we have no peace of mind?
Experiencing peace is like looking at our
hands. Usually, we see only the fingers -- not the spaces in between. In
a similar manner, when we look at the mind, we are aware of the active
states, such as our running thoughts and the one-thousand-and-one feelings
that are associated with them, but we tend to overlook the intervals of
peace between them. If one were to be unhappy or sad every minute of the
twenty-four-hour day, what would happen to us? I guess we would all be
in the mad house!
Then why is it that we supposedly
never are at peace? It is simply because we never allow ourselves to be
so.
We enjoy battling with ourselves and our emotions
so much that the battle becomes second nature to us. And we complain that
we have no peace of mind.
Why don't we leave aside all these complicated
ideas for a while and simply contemplate this peaceful nature of ours --
since we are fortunate enough to have it -- instead of frantically trying
to find peace of mind someplace else? How can we find something elsewhere,
when it is already in ourselves? Probably that is the reason why we often
do not find it.
We do not have to do anything to have this
peace, do we? Mind is by itself peaceful.
But we do need to do something
to our minds in order to be angry or sad.
Imagine yourself enjoying a moment of quiet.
Suddenly something disturbs your enjoyment. You start up at once, annoyed
or angry at the disturbance. Why? Because you dislike the interruption.
Your mind "acts." It dislikes. It sets up thoughts of dislike, followed
by annoyance, anger and a whole series of reactions.
Thought moments are extremely fast, so
you don't notice the moment of the mind setting up thoughts of dislike.
We generally think that the outside situation is what is responsible for
our annoyance. But even during the most durable and miserable experiences
of our lives, we find moments when our minds are distracted from the cause
of misery and we are relatively free from the devastating emotional state.
Once we set our minds back on the event, the unpleasant feelings come rushing
in again immediately. When these emotions subside, what happens to them?
We seem to take it for granted that they end up or phase out somewhere
outside of us. But if they had their origin in the mind, they must surely
end in the mind. If they had their origin in a peaceful state, then they
would surely end in that peaceful state also. It is only logical.
Let us contemplate this peaceful state.
We recognize it before emotions have set in and also after they have disappeared.
What about the in-between times? Is peace destroyed during the time that
we have been angry or sad? We are so used to implying that this or that
destroys our peace of mind that we have come to assume that peace of mind
is a contrived state that can be arrived at or deleted at will.
But this is not the case. Peace and tranquillity
are part and parcel of our own mental makeup. If they are destroyed during
emotional upheavals, our minds might as well be destroyed too. Peace is
the essence of our own innate nature and can never be destroyed.
Peace is with us every single moment of
our life, but we do not recognize it. This is because we are ignorant about
peace -- most of the time we are too preoccupied with the external world
and our own running thoughts and emotions to be aware of it. We have lost
touch with our inner selves, with what is the best in us. We frantically
try to find the answer outside when all the time peace is sitting there,
silently waiting until we come home to it.
Non-Peace
If we agree that have innate peace, what do
you think gives us non-peace? From the standpoint of peace of mind, thoughts
by themselves are neither good nor bad. It is only when the concepts of
"I" and "mine" arise that the mind is thrown into conflict. Likes and dislikes
quickly follow these concepts of self. This where the real trouble begins.
A thought by itself is okay. Let's say
you've lost your keys. It happens. The problem begins when you start judging
the fact that you misplaced your keys. "I dislike it when I lose my keys....
I like it so much better when I have my keys and I can continue my busy
schedule." You might go on with your thinking: "Why am I so careless? It
must have been because the children were rowdy." Then you might put your
thoughts into words: "Look what you made me do -- I was so busy with you
that I lost my keys." You might put those thoughts and emotions into physical
actions by rushing around looking for the lost keys.
All this commotion stems from your reaction
to a couple of misplaced keys. Let's go back to what prompted the commotion.
When you had the thought, "I lost my keys," you weren't able to let go
of that thought. Instead, you immediately jumped into likes and dislikes.
Feeling, conflicts and frustrations are born from this dichotomy of likes
and dislikes. You allowed yourself to be swept away by your judgments,
your feelings, your frustrations.
But let's look at the thoughts for a moment.
They arise, and by their own accord they fall away. That is, unless we
cling to them. If we allow thoughts to continue their normal span, they
will naturally fall away. All thoughts are subject to the universal law
of impermanence, anicca.
For those of you who are familiar with
Buddhism, you know this law of change. You accept it in many aspects of
your lives. But can you apply it to the most important area of all -- your
mind? Can you watch thoughts and emotions as they arise in your mind? Can
you allow them to naturally fade away, without clinging to them? Or do
you indulge in letting the "I" grasp onto a thought, an emotion?
By their nature, thoughts are transient,
unless the "I" interferes and refuses to let them go. By clinging to thoughts
and emotions, the "I" prolongs the emotion-span -- on and on. It is the
"I" which insists on clinging to thoughts and emotions that creates non-peace.
Peace has nothing to do with the "I." It
is not "my" peace. As long as you think you own peace -- as long as you
think, "I like my peace" -- then you will not experience peace.
A friend of mine, a spiritual educator,
came up with a metaphor that may help explain the process. Let's take the
phrase, "I like peace." If we eliminate the "I," then we are left with
"like peace." If we go further and eliminate the "like," then all that
remains is peace. Peace is something that can be felt but not owned. Peace
can be experienced when we eliminate our ideas of likes and dislikes about
peace.
P: It sounds as though we can do something
to realize this state of peace ... that we can purposely eliminate concepts
of "I" and likes and dislikes.
Thynn: No, this example is just
a metaphor. Realization of peace does not come with "doing" anything with
your mind, nor does it come with "not-doing." "Doing" and "not-doing" are
just more concepts to cling to. Right? When you can let go of your ideas
of how to obtain peace, of what to do and not do, then your mind is silent
and you can experience peace. As long as your mind is rushing back and
forth between likes and dislikes, then your mind is too busy to experience
peace. When the mind calms and is silent, then you can realize its innate
peaceful nature.
Meditation on Peace-Mind
Many have asked how to go about finding inner
peace. Once you have recognized that peace is not an induced state,
but an innate-natural state, that is exactly where you begin. There
is absolutely nothing to do but look within yourself and recognize peace
this very moment. When you recognize peace in your mind, you have in fact
already experienced peace.
If you do recognize your own peaceful moments
at times, then you are already started. Never mind if this recognition
is very brief. You can make this peace-moment the base from which to investigate
your own mind. This can be the focal point from which to launch your investigation.
And surprisingly, you will find this is also the home base to which you
return.
You may find that it is not easy to come
back to this peace-moment. That is not important. It is more important
to decide that you want to pay attention to your own mind. We are so conditioned
to looking outward that our minds have fallen into a kind of mental groove.
It is difficult to rise up and leave that groove because it is easy and
comfortable there. To turn outward attention inward is difficult unless
one has the "will" to do it.
In your initial attempts to see peace-moments,
they may be very infrequent and brief, but that is all right. It may even
be that the more you try, the more difficult seeing peace or peace-moments
becomes. If that is the case, just let go. Very often the awareness of
peace-moments is unforeseen; it comes when you least expect it.
You may ask whether there is a specific
method to "see" these peace-moments. And I would say no -- not beyond the
"will" to pay attention to the mind. Paying attention requires no particular
time or place. It goes on while you go about the daily business of living,
playing, doing the one-thousand-and-one chores of what is called life.
There is nothing to do beyond this. There is just something specifically
you should not do and that is to let opinions, judgments and discrimination
crowd your mind. The mind watching itself needs to be whole so that it
can pay complete attention.
When you start discriminate, your mind
becomes preoccupied with making judgments. Your mind ceases to be free.
Then you cannot see or experience the peace within yourself.
In order to understand how things move
in space, you must be able to see the whole panorama of space as well as
the objects in it. Without space, objects cannot have motion. Objects may
be affected, but the space will never be affected. The objects may disintegrate
in space, but the space remains.
Your home base -- the peace-nature of the
mind -- is just like physical space outside your body. Within you is the
space of consciousness where thoughts and emotions move about. As with
the outside space, it is because of this space- mind that thoughts and
feelings can arise freely and also cease freely. If your mind is already
crammed, there is no room for anything to arise in it.
If you can "see" this space clearly in
yourself, you also see what is rising and falling more clearly. At first,
you may notice only the falling -- because it is more obvious. You will
find yourself less involved with your own emotions and thus more at your
home base. And the more you are at your home base, the more at peace you
will be with yourself and with the world.
You may not have found perfect peace as
yet, but at least you will find a breathing space in yourself, a respite.
This is the time you learn to be friends with your own mind and your emotions.
You will find that you no longer wrestle with them as before. The beautiful
part is that you will find yourself loosening up inside. This loosening
up may not appear important to you, but actually this first step is always
the most important. When you are not in a tightly bound, self-inflicted
tangle, you can look at yourself more objectively.
Never mind, if you do not see the rising.
There is time for everything. Even when you "see" the falling away, you
will notice a change. You will already experience peace. Keep on "experiencing"
this peace as you would experience a good cup of coffee or a scoop of ice
cream. After a while, you will find that you can "experience" your emotions
without getting involved in them. Since you are more at home base, you
will find that your feelings are in and of themselves fleeting.
For example, you may be surprised to find
that feelings do not stay for a long time without your own invitation and
your clinging to them. You will also see that they are part of the natural
phenomena of the mind. In Buddhism, all phenomena are impermanent, are
not of the self, and are themselves the basis of suffering.
Becoming aware of your feelings in this
way is like discovering a new friend. When you realize that thse transient
feelings have no power of their own, they cease to threaten you. This realization
gives you a positive feeling, because you are no longer overwhelmed.
As you find out more about yourself in
this way, you will also find that you reside more and more in your own
peace home base. You will also realize this peace has always been there.
It is just that you were so engrossed in trying to get rid of your frustrations
that you had neither the time nor the skill to see this peace that is already
there. In fact, peace-mind has been there all along for you to rediscover.
The path to inner peace is quite simple.
You complicate it by thinking that the method should be difficult. You
are conditioned to achieving this, accomplishing that. Your mind is in
perpetual motion. Of course, you must earn a living, feed your family,
make friends, take your children to school. That is the business of living.
But if you perpetuate this frantic mode as the mode of your search for
peace, you won't find peace.
What we are concerned with is slowing down
... so you can understand yourself, and experience what is already there.
When you are already at the home base, do you need to do anything to stay
there?
You need only to wake up and
realize you have always been home.
We must be aware that this kind of meditation
is a way of investigating and understanding ourselves, of awakening to
our actual state of mind, to all the mental formations that arise and fall.
It is an entrance to ourselves. We will discover the bad things as well
as the good, but in the end the investigation will pay off. For now we
can find an opportunity to discover our own wondrous inner depths and draw
upon the essence of what is the best in us.
Silent Mind
J: I still don't understand how we can
make the mind silent.
Thynn: You must realize that you
cannot make the mind silent. The more you try to silence the mind purposefully,
the more you tie yourself up in knots. The more you try to quiet your mind,
the more you propel it into activity. If you try to vanquish your mind,
you'll find that the action of subduing is itself disquieting. You see,
a mind that is already unquiet cannot deal with a nonquiet mind. This vicious
cycle perpetuates a continuous state of frenzy.
M: What do you mean by silent mind?
If there is no action in the mind, aren't we paralyzed? How can we function?
A silent mind is not a dead or static mind.
A mind is dead or static when it is dulled with ignorance of oneself. In
Buddhism, this ignorance is called avijja. Self-conceit, anger, greed and
confusion cloud the mind. The mind may be active with greed, hatred and
anger, but that mind is dead to the world and to others. Totally wrapped
up in its own confusions, that mind is insensitive to the needs of others.
This is a true paralysis of the mind, which renders it unable to open up
to others. A truly silent mind, on the other hand, is alert and sensitive
to its surroundings. This is because a silent mind is devoid of judging,
clinging or rejecting. The silent mind is free from hatred, anger, jealousy,
confusion and conflict.
J: It sounds so beautiful! How can we
achieve this silent mind?
The mind is silent when it transcends the
duality of liking and disliking. Generally we perceive the world through
a conceptual framework based on a dualistic way of thinking. As soon as
we perceive something, we judge it. Let's say we judge that it is good.
As soon as we judge something as being good, then anything opposing it
automatically becomes bad. We constantly divide our conceptual world in
this polarized manner; we set up good and evil, beauty and ugliness, right
and wrong, according to our own standards.
M: But we have to discriminate in order
to function in everyday life. I'm not going to eat a rotten apple. It would
make me sick. I have to judge this apple rotten, that one ripe and good
to eat.
Of course you need to make judgments to
function in this world. You need to recognize a good apple from a bad one.
This is rational, not emotional, judgment. But usually we don't stop at
making rational judgments. We go on to impose our emotional judgment of
likes and dislikes onto our perceptions. We dislike a rotten apple, don't
we? Therefore, we cling to our dislike of it.
Suppose someone offers you a rotten apple.
How would you feel?
M: I would be annoyed.
Yes. And if they gave you a big beautiful
apple?
M: I'd be delighted.
Do you see how your emotions are built
up around your own likes and dislikes? When you find something that appeals
to you -- an idea, a person or a thing -- then you want to cling to it,
to possess that idea, person or thing. You become caught up in the duality
of beauty versus ugliness, good versus evil, on and on.
Let's go back to your big, beautiful apple.
Suppose someone snatches your beautiful apple away?
M: I'd be very annoyed.
There you see. Where's the problem?
M: Oh, you mean the apple is not the
problem, but we are?
Exactly. Apple is just apple, good or rotten.
You can take it or leave it. You can make a rational judgment about it.
But our problem is that we make emotional judgments instead. This is what
we need to be clear about.
When we make emotional judgments, we set
up ripples in our minds. These ripples cause larger ripples and soon a
storm is brewing. This storm disturbs the mind. In all this we lose touch
with the silence in the mind, the peace within. It is only when we can
calm these ripples that the mind can reside in its own silence, its own
equanimous state. When the mind can rest in its own stillness it can see
things as they are. I call this silent mind, "peace- mind."
If we don't allow the mind to be silent,
we make emotional judgments and then we get into trouble. Here is where
the battle starts, within ourselves and outside of ourselves.
J: Oh, I see. We cling to what we judge
to be good, right or beautiful, and reject its opposite.
Yes, you've got it.
J: But how do we break out of this duality?
Remember, duality is a creation of our
conceptual minds. We love to cling to what we have created. The duality
we create becomes a personal possession. "I" want to hold onto "my" idea
of right, "my" idea of beauty, "my" idea of good. Our minds become rigid,
and we end up looking at the world through narrow blinders.
J: How can we free ourselves from this
fixation?
By being mindful. When you are mindful
of yourself judging in that moment, the judging will stop. Once you stop
judging, "seeing things as they are" will follow naturally. Eventually,
you will become more equanimous; your mind will stop and look instead of
running around in circles. When the mind is busy judging, clinging and
rejecting, it has no space for anything else. Only when you stop discriminating
can you see things as they are, and not as you think they are or want them
to be. This is the only way to transcend the duality of likes and dislikes.
Once we transcend duality, once we break
through the boundaries of our own conceptual framework, then the world
appears expanded. It's no longer limited by our tunnel vision. When the
bondage is broken, then whatever has been dammed up within us all these
years has a chance to emerge. Love -- and along with it, compassion, sympathetic
joy and equanimity -- come forth and bring sensitivity to others.
In the past, our energy was sapped by conflict,
frustration, anger, rejection, etc. This conflict was exhausting. Now free
from conflict, we can redirect ourselves toward harmonious living and meaningful
relationships with others. Only then does life become worth living, because
now we can experience fully each moment in its freshness. We can also see
our relationships with others in a totally new light. Now we can truly
live in harmony.
Four Noble Truths in
Daily Life
Thynn: The Four Noble Truths are the
cornerstone of Buddhism. Understanding them helps us in daily life. The
First Noble Truth is dukkha, or suffering. The Second Noble Truth is samudaya,
or craving. The Third Noble Truth is nirodha, or cessation of suffering.
The Fourth Noble Truth is magga, the Eightfold Noble Path, leading to cessation
of suffering.
M: When I hear the First Noble Truth,
that life is suffering, I think Buddhism is a pessimistic, negative philosophy.
Yes, some people misunderstand it that
way. But this is because the teaching has not been fully understood. When
dukkha is translated as suffering, it is understood as gross physical suffering.
But in truth, dukkha can be experienced on many levels; the actual meaning
of dukkha encompasses the whole range of human experience from very subtle
dissatisfaction to gross misery. Dukkha is the inescapable fact of old
age, illness and death. It is being separated from what one likes, enduring
what one dislikes.
At the most profound level dukkha is the
failure to understand the insubstantiality of all things. Everything is
insubstantial; nothing is concrete, nothing is tangible. To be ignorant
of or go against the natural state of impermanence is itself suffering.
Buddhism seems negative only if one looks
at the First Noble Truth in isolation. But if you look at the Four Noble
Truths collectively, you will find that they are positive, because the
three other noble truths show the way out of suffering.
M: But how do we incorporate the Four
Noble Truths into daily life?
Thynn: That is not difficult. To
begin with, you have to see dukkha in its entirety before you can see your
way out of it. You don't have to be in physical or mental agony to understand
dukkha. It is everywhere around you. Right now, how do you feel about the
pounding noise next door?
[Noisy construction work was going on at
a neighbor's house.]
M: I feel irritated because I want to
have a peaceful experience and listen to you and learn what you are talking
about. In fact, I'm trying to eliminate the noise from my consciousness,
but I can't.
Because that is not the way to solve the
problem.
M: The noise annoys me and I want to
stop it. I have a craving for the workers to stop.
Well then, you have already set up a desire
that the noise should stop. How did the desire arise? It arose from your
dissatisfaction with the current situation. In other words, you desire
a peaceful circumstance right now. Since you can't have it, you are annoyed.
There is already aversion in your mind.
Suppose you were in the midst of doing
something that was very important to you. Then this aversion might flare
up into overt anger, hatred or even violence. Aversion is already a stressful
state. Anger, hatred and violence bring on even greater stress and suffering,
both to oneself and to others. These are the truths that we have to face
in every moment of our daily lives. But we are not aware of this aversion
and suffering. We blame our dukkha on someone or something else.
This lack of awareness is called avijja,
or ignorance -- that is, ignorance about the Four Noble Truths. This ignorance
is described as an unawakened state. If you wake up to your own state of
mind, right now, you will see what is happening there.
Can you look into your own mind this very
moment and see what is happening there?
M: See what?
What happens to the annoyance.
M: When I become aware of the annoyance,
it sort of lessens.
As soon as you become aware of the annoyance,
the aversion fades away. It resolves in the mind.
M: Yeah, a little bit.
Is it still there?
M: You mean the annoyance? It's much
less. It is still there but it is much less now. [laughter] I see. So it's
not a question of putting the irritation out of your mind. It is a question
of accepting the fact that your mind is irritated and annoyed.
You are right. The issue is not the noise.
It is your reaction to the noise. You have to deal with yourself first
before you deal with the noise. Now, what are you going to do about it?
M: That's my next question. We have
a number of choices. We can move away from the noise. We can ask the workers
to stop hammering. We can continue to sit here and try to maintain our
awareness of the noise in order to minimize the irritation.
You have to be clear. Is it the awareness
of the noise or the awareness of your own state of mind?
M: Awareness of my own state of mind
regarding it.
Right. There are many situations in life
when you will not be able to eliminate external factors. We cannot eliminate
or control most of the external factors in our lives, but we can do something
about ourselves. You begin with yourself. Since you are born with a free
will, it is absolutely up to you what you want to do with yourself.
M: Are you saying that since I cannot
make the noise go away, I can just choose to accept it?
You must understand the difference between
accepting things blindly and accepting them intelligently. Acceptance can
be complete only when you harbor no judgments.
Now let's go back to the Four Noble Truths.
Your dissatisfaction with the noisy circumstances is the First Noble Truth
of Suffering -- dukkha. Your desire or craving for peace is the Second
Noble Truth -- samudaya -- which is the cause of dukkha. Now as soon as
you look within yourself and resolve the annoyance, you are free from the
cycle of desire-aversion-desire. Aren't you ? Now look into yourself again.
M: The annoyance is already gone! It
is amazing that you had to bring the noise back again into my awareness.
Let's look at what we've been going through.
You have seen that it is possible to break the cycle of suffering by merely
looking into your own state of mind. This in actual fact is mindfulness
of the mind, which is the basis of satipatthana meditation in Buddhism.
Do you see now how practicing mindfulness
can lead to the end of suffering?
M: No, not yet. How does mindfulness
relate to the acceptance of the noise?
The acceptance is the result of mindfulness.
The act of mindfulness is a transcending act. It transcends likes and dislikes,
and purifies our vision. We see things as they are. When we see or hear
things as they really are, acceptance comes naturally.
M: You are aware of the noise. You get
rid of the clinging to silence and you accept the noise. You accept that
the noise will be part of the experience.
There is not even "you" there. There is
just acceptance.
M: Aahh.
The acceptance comes from the freedom of
the mind in the moment. As soon as the cycle is broken, you no longer feel
annoyed. When your mind frees itself emotionally from the noise, it assumes
a state of equanimity and acceptance.
M: You're not expecting it to stop and
you're not expecting it to get louder.
That's right. You are free of any conceptualizing
regarding the noise. You arrive at a point where you can just hear it as
it is. With that hearing of the noise as it is, acceptance is already part
of the situation. You can't force yourself to accept it. That's why I am
very careful using these words. When you say, "I accept," that usually
means...
M: I am in control.
Yes, that's right and that doesn't really
solve the problem. The kind of acceptance we are talking about is a natural
spontaneous absorbing of the environment, being one with it.
M: Oh, I see. There ceases to be a division
between the noise and my experience of the noise. So there is nothing to
accept or be annoyed about.
Right. Now let us go back to your experience
right this minute. Are you still irritated by the noise?
M: Not anymore. I'm completely free
of it. You mentioned mindfulness being the foundation of meditation. How
does that work?
Yes. Mindfulness of one's own mind at any
moment is part of the practice of satipatthana. In this particular instance,
your own mindfulness of annoyance is contemplation of the First Noble
Truth -- dukkha. Your mindfulness of the desire for peace and of clinging
to silence, which is the cause of dukkha, is contemplation of the Second
Noble Truth -- samudaya. The moment that you become free of the annoyance
is nirodha -- the Third Noble Truth. In this case, the cessation
of suffering is momentary, so it can be called tadanga nirodha.
M: And the Fourth Noble Truth?
When you practice mindfulness you are in
fact practicing magga, the Noble Eightfold Path. You are making
the right effort, called samma vayama, to be mindful, called samma sati,
of your annoyance. As a result, your mind becomes collected, which is called
samma samadhi. When you transcend your dislike of the noise and your irritation
ceases, at that moment you are able to regard the sound as it is. This
is called samma ditthi or right view. It is samma sankappa, right thinking,
when you are not expecting it to get louder. You are able to verbalize
the situation with proper insight, called samma vaca. Now do you still
feel like running away from the noise?
M: Not anymore. At first I did. I might
have said or done something nasty if I had had the chance.
But you didn't and that is samma kammanta,
right action.
M: You mean no action in this context
is right action?
Yes. So you can see how by practicing mindfulness
with equanimity in daily life, one is already applying the Four Noble Truths
and integrating the Noble Eightfold Path as living meditation.
Unity of the Noble Eightfold
Path
In Buddhism, the Noble Eightfold Path is the
guide to the attainment of liberation. If it is to be understood and incorporated
into our daily lives, it must be viewed in terms of unity of mind, speech
and action. The Path can be explored in such great detail that one could
get lost in digressions. To avoid that, we take a practical, accurate and
holistic view of the Path. We look at it in terms of wisdom, ethical conduct
and concentration, or -- in Pali -- panna, sila and samadhi.
Wisdom (Panna)
1. Right understanding (samma
ditthi)
2. Right thinking (samma sankappa)
Ethical Conduct (Sila)
3. Right speech (samma vaca)
4. Right action (samma kammanta)
5. Right livelihood (samma ajiva)
Concentration (Samadhi)
6. Right effort (samma vayama)
7. Right mindfulness (samma sati)
8. Right collectedness (samma samadhi)
Even these three aspects of the Path, although
identified separately for clarification, are not separate. In actual practice,
with proper understanding, sila, samadhi and panna are assimilated in each
moment, in every thought, word or deed.
Take, for instance, sila, or ethical conduct.
How does one refrain from wrong speech and action? First of all, what is
right speech and wrong speech? Are they not relative to time, place and
person? Is there such a thing as absolute right and absolute wrong? We
can go on and on without coming to a definite conclusion, and by so doing
we veer away from ourselves -- that is, from our minds.
The purpose of sila is to refrain from
hurting others by way of harmful speech and action -- but how much restraint
we can impose on ourselves at all times? We react to our environment in
such a habitual way that we may already have hurt others before we realize
what has happened in the mind. This is because we are conditioned to neglect
our own minds in our daily life. Our attention is almost always directed
outward. This preoccupation with the outer world is what we have to transcend.
Although we are dealing with verbal and
physical acts, all of these originate from the mind itself. The actions
of the mind, speech and body occur in such rapid succession that there
seems to be no interval in between. As soon as a thought has arisen, we
find ourselves speaking or doing something. We find that we cannot control
speech and bodily behavior fast enough to refrain from harmful speech and
action. But sati (mindfulness) on the mind renders it alert to its own
actions of speech and body.
How do we redirect our attention to our
own mind? This was the Buddha's purpose in laying out the path of mindfulness.
The objective of cultivation of the mind is to learn to break the habitual
preoccupation with the external world so that we become more aware of what
is happening in us, in our own minds, as we go on in life. As soon as mindfulness,
samma sati, occurs, we find that the mind acts no more; it stops like a
witness to watch the inner state. When this watching becomes a constant
habit, second nature, the cycle of reacting mindlessly to the environment
is broken. In this moment of breakthrough, "seeing" or "awareness" occurs:
crystal-clear perception of things as they are, of people, situations and
things properly in perspective, free of discriminations, likes and dislikes.
From this new insight thre follows right thinking, right speech and right
action, relative and appropriate to each specific circumstance and instance.
Then the question of what is absolutely right or absolutely wrong no longer
arises.
Thus, in terms of the Noble Eightfold Path,
as soon as we pay attention to our mind, there is already samma vayama
(effort) and samma sati (mindfulness). When samma sati is full and complete,
the mind enters instantaneously into khanika samadhi (momentary concentration),
which brings forth panna (wisdom). Wisdom sees things in the right perspective,
samma ditthi. Wisdom brings samma sankappa (right thought); and thereby
samma vaca (right speech), samma kammanta (right action) and samma ajiva
(right livelihood.)
Hence it is possible in every conscious
moment that sila, samadhi and panna are all three incorporated in our daily
business of living -- while we eat, work, play and struggle. In short,
our life itself becomes the Noble Eightfold Path.
MS: You have translated samma samadhi
as "one-pointedness of mind" or "right concentration." Isn't, textually
speaking, samma samadhi an absorption in the four jhanas? One-pointedness
of mind can be right- or wrong-pointedness of mind and, therefore, may
not fit the true understanding of samma samadhi. This distinction becomes
important when we talk about meditation and concentration in daily life.
Thynn: Well, samma samadhi is generally
translated as one-pointedness of mind or right concentration. But when
it is expounded in detail it is described in two categories: jhanic absorption
as in samatha meditation, and khanika samadhi (momentary concentration)
as in vipassana meditation of the dry- visioned (sukkha-vipassaka) path
of daily life.* Thus I personally think it should not be translated as
absorption in the four jhanas only. In this I am following the commentarial
rather than the canonical tradition.
You are correct, though, that one-pointedness
of mind can be of the right or wrong kin, because the power of the concentrated
mind is enormous and can be directed toward harmful activities if not governed
by wisdom. This is exactly why the Path sould be understood and practiced
in a holistic manner. If you take meditation out of the context of the
Noble Eightfold Path, without morality or the pursuit of wisdom (panna),
then naturally it cannot be called samma samadhi. In the case of meditation
in daily life, what is important is the arising of wisdom (panna) as a
sequel of mindfulness in the moment as a preventive to harmful thoughts,
words, action or livelihood.
A traditional elaboration of the Noble
Eightfold Path is given at the end of this book.
Dynamics of Meditation
M: What really scares me about meditation
is the idea of becoming completely without thought, completely mindless.
Thynn: Let me clarify your usage
of "mindless" and "completely without thought." Mindless in your context
would mean that the mind is totally absent, without any consciousness,
a vacuum. This is not possible. Without consciousness we would be dead.
"Completely without thought" means consciousness exists, but no thoughts
are present. This is possible in meditation, but only under certain conditions.
In some forms of sitting meditation it is possible to reach a state where
the mind is absolutely quiet, one-pointed and absorbed in itself. This
is called jhanic samadhi. In this meditative state, the person cannot function.
M: I don't think I could be completely
without thought. It sounds like I would become like a zombie.
It is only a temporary state, which one
comes out of. But we have been talking about another way of meditating,
a way that sidesteps the problems of jhanic samadhi. If you practice mindfulness
in everyday life as you have experienced just now, you do not go through
absorptive states.
M: It sounds like daily-life meditation
is a more active process than I had thought. How does the mindfulness process
relate to this kind of meditation?
Let's be clear. The process is active whether
one is in formal meditation or in a daily-life situation. In the sitting
practice, although the body is stationary, the mind is actively watching;
it is mindful of the body or the mind. Meditation is a mental discipline
that ultimately leads the mind to a purified state.
M: In daily-life meditation, is the
mind actively watching itself through a state of no thought?
Yes. When your mindfulness is at its peak,
you can experience states where thoughts fall away. But the no-thought
state lasts for only a split second. You experience a heightened awareness
that is one-pointed as well as absolutely quiet. This momentary one-pointedness
of the mind is called khanika samadhi. Although it is not as prolonged
as the samadhi states in sitting meditation, khanika samadhi has the same
intensity and quality. In khanika samadhi, thoughts fall away and the mind
arrives at its purest state.
M: If thoughts fall away, does it mean
that no "I" exists in that moment?
Yes, but only momentarily.
M: If no "I" exists in that moment,
what does exist? What happens in that moment of no thought?
When split-second samadhi occurs, in that
moment there is no thought, but only an absolutely pure and heightened
consciousness. It is at that moment that panna or insight awareness arises.
The person experiences pure vision, ditthi visuddhi. In Pali, ditthi means
view and visuddhi means purity. So, it means pure vision.
Although this experience may be brief,
it is timeless and infinite; it is a moment of transformation. It is the
moment when the "I" and "mine" resolve. After that moment of no thought,
pure vision is followed by thought, but the thoughts, emotions and actions
are not in the old habitual routine. In the moment of an absolutely still
and quiet mind, pure vision (panna or insight), love and compassion arise
from our inner depths. Subsequent thoughts and actions are tempered with
love and compassion.
You see, meditation does not make you into
an inert, unthinking, unfeeling person, my dear. In fact, meditation brings
out the best in you -- love, warmth and sensitivity to all beings.
The practice of mindfulness, whether within
the sitting meditation or in this daily-life meditation, is an active,
ongoing process. In the sitting practice, although the body is stationary,
the mind is actively watching and mindful of the body or the mind. Likewise,
in meditation in daily life, the mind is actively watching itself regardless
of posture and time. The mental discipline involved in each form is what
is most crucial and ultimately leads the mind to its purified state. It
is not the postures that lead to enlightenment, though postures are useful
in helping the mind to quiet itself. If you understand this clearly, you
can meditate anywhere and anytime.
Inner Retreat
L: I've just finished a retreat at a meditation
center and I am having some difficulty adjusting to the outside world.
It was so tranquil in the center that I find it very difficult to cope
with the sights and sounds and all the confusion outside. How can one cope
with the transition?
Thynn: Your experience is not unusual.
Many people find themselves in the same kind of situation when they first
leave a meditation center. In the retreat, conditions for peace and quiet
are established, and meditation can be practiced without disturbance. While
you are in the retreat, you become temporarily conditioned to these quiet
circumstances. So when you come out, you find the bombardment of the sights
and sounds difficult to handle.
L: How can one better cope with the
transition?
Let's look at how your mind functions inside
and outside the retreat. When you were in the retreat, you were practicing
mindfulness intensively. Your mindfulness was in a very high gear. When
you came out, you probably left the mindfulness behind, didn't you?
L: Ha! I actually did.
There you are! As soon as you left the
retreat, you changed gear. You let your mindfulness go and you were back
to your old unmindful state. When you are suddenly faced with the confusion
in the outside world, you find it difficult to handle. The difficulty arises
because you separate meditation from daily experience. Actually, the mindfulness
you have learned in the retreat should equip you better to face the outside
world.
L: How's that?
Well, first you must overcome the impression
that mindfulness can only be practiced in the retreat and at a particular
time and place. This conditioning renders it difficult for anyone to bridge
the gap between the retreat and the outside world. In the retreat, you
have learned to be mindful sitting cross- legged with your eyes closed.
Now that you are out of the retreat you can practice the same kind of mindfulness,
but you have got to be able to do it with your eyes open, while you deal
with a myriad of problems and bombardments.
L: Isn't that difficult?
Nothing is too difficult if you know how.
Probably the first thing you learned in the meditation retreat was how
to be in the present moment. You can also practice that outside. You can
be mindful of everything you do -- cooking, washing up, bathing, driving,
walking. You can be mindful of just about anything.
Not only that, but in the retreat you invariably
learn to watch your mind like a witness, without likes and dislikes. In
daily life you can watch your mind like a witness in the same way. You
can watch your aversions to sights and sounds as they come to you. Let
them come and let them go. Be equanimous to your feelings about the outside
world, and your equanimity will overflow to the outside world itself as
well.
As you are witness to your own reactions
to the outside world, you will also become a witness to the sights and
sounds, and not be so disturbed by them. When you become quite good at
this, you will actually be living with an inner retreat whatever your circumstances,
whether quiet or not. All the world may go round and round, but your inner
world will be still and you will find you won't need a separate time and
place to meditate.
L: What about setting up a time to practice
at home in the course of the day?
It is fine to do that if you can be equanimous
about that set period of practice. You see, what happens with most people
is that they become dependent on that meditative practice and find they
cannot function the whole day properly if they do not have the chance to
sit and meditate in the morning.
L: Why is that?
It is a form of conditioning like everything
else. It is like being addicted to the morning cup of coffee or tea. You
can become addicted to meditation also. Although this is definitely not
a bad conditioning per se, there are many subtleties that one must be aware
of in meditation. The mind is very tricky, and one must always be aware
of how the mind can be trapped.
L: Then what does one do in such circumstances?
The most important thing is to develop
equanimity toward your own practice. It may be the most difficult thing
to do because, like everything else, one becomes attached to the meditative
practices. We learn to be equanimous with other things, but forget to be
so with our own practice.
L: If we can be equanimous with our
practice, will it be possible to set aside a time for meditation and yet
maintain an equilibrium through out the day?
That will be possible if you can be equanimous
and at the same time mindful outside the practice session. Then you can
be good at meditating, both in and out of the set period.
[0. Contents]
[1. Introduction] [2.
Freedom to begin] [3. Living Meditation]
[4. Reflection on Meditation] [5.
Creative Living] [6. Appendix]