Living with the Cobra
This short talk is for the benefit of a new disciple who
will soon be returning to London. May it serve to help you understand the
teaching that you have studied here at Wat Pah Pong. Most simply, this is the
practice to be free of suffering in the cycle of birth and death.
In order to do this practice, remember to regard all the
various activities of mind, all those you like and all those you dislike, in
the same way as you would regard a cobra. The cobra is an extremely poisonous snake,
poisonous enough to cause death if it should bite us. And so it is with our
moods also; the moods that we like are poisonous, the moods that we dislike are
also poisonous. They prevent our minds from being free and hinder our
understanding of the truth as it was taught by the Buddha.
Thus it is necessary to try to maintain our mindfulness
throughout the day and night. Whatever you may be doing, be it standing,
sitting, lying down, speaking or whatever, you should do with mindfulness. When
you are able to establish this mindfulness, you’ll find that there will arise
clear comprehension associated with it, and these two conditions will bring
about wisdom. Thus mindfulness, clear comprehension and wisdom will work
together, and you’ll be like one who is awake both day and night.
These teachings left to us by the Buddha are not teachings
to be just listened to, or simply absorbed on an intellectual level. They are
teachings that through practice can be made to arise and be known in our
hearts. Wherever we go, whatever we do, we should have these teachings. And
what we mean by ‘to have these teachings’ or ‘to have the truth,’ is that,
whatever we do or say, we do and say with wisdom. When we think and
contemplate, we do so with wisdom. We say that one who has mindfulness and
clear comprehension combined in this way with wisdom, is one who is close to
the Buddha.
When you leave here, you should practice bringing everything
back to your own mind. Look at your mind with this mindfulness and clear
comprehension and develop this wisdom. With these three conditions there will
arise a ‘letting go’. You’ll know the constant arising and passing away of all
phenomena.
You should know that that which is arising and passing away
is only the activity of mind. When something arises, it passes away and is
followed by further arising and passing away. In the Way of Dhamma we call this
arising and passing away ‘birth and death’; and this is everything – this is
all there is! When suffering has arisen, it passes away, and, when it has
passed away, suffering arises again. There’s just suffering arising and passing
away. When you see this much, you’ll be able to know constantly this arising
and passing away. When your knowing is constant, you’ll see that this is really
all there is. Everything is just birth and death. It’s not as if there is
anything that carries on. There’s just this arising and passing away as it is –
that’s all.
This kind of seeing will give rise to a tranquil feeling of
dispassion towards the world. Such a feeling arises when we see that actually
there is nothing worth wanting; there is only arising and passing away, a being
born followed by a dying. This is when the mind arrives at ‘letting go’,
letting everything go according to its own nature. Things arise and pass away
in our mind, and we know. When happiness arises, we know; when dissatisfaction
arises, we know. And this ‘knowing happiness’ means that we don’t identify with
it as being ours. Likewise with dissatisfaction and unhappiness, we don’t identify
with them as being ours. When we no longer identify with and cling to happiness
and suffering, we are simply left with the natural way of things.
So we say that mental activity is like the deadly poisonous
cobra. If we don’t interfere with a cobra, it simply goes its own way. Even
though it may be extremely poisonous, we are not affected by it; we don’t go
near it or take hold of it, and it doesn’t bite us. The cobra does what is
natural for a cobra to do. That’s the way it is. If you are clever you will
leave it alone. Let be that which is not good – let it be according to its own
nature. Also let be that which is good. Let your liking and your disliking be –
the same way that you don’t interfere with the cobra.
So, one who is intelligent will have this kind of attitude
towards the various moods that arise in the mind. When goodness arises, we let
it be good, but we know also. We understand its nature. So, too, we let be the
not-good, we let it be according to its nature. We don’t take hold of it because
we don’t want anything. We don’t want evil, neither do we want good. We want
neither heaviness nor lightness, happiness nor suffering. When, in this way,
our wanting is at an end, peace is firmly established.
When we have this kind of peace established in our minds, we
can depend on it. This peace, we say, has arisen out of confusion. Confusion
has ended. The Buddha called the attainment of final enlightenment an
‘extinguishing’, in the same way that fire is extinguished. We extinguish fire
at the place at which it appears. Wherever it is hot, that’s where we can make
it cool. And so it is with enlightenment. Nibbāna is found in saṃsāra.
Enlightenment and delusion exist in the same place, just as do hot and cold.
It’s hot where it was cold and cold where it was hot. When heat arises, the
coolness disappears, and when there is coolness, there’s no more heat. In this
way Nibbāna and saṃsāra are the same.
We are told to put an end to saṃsāra, which means to stop
the everturning cycle of confusion. This putting an end to confusion is
extinguishing the fire. When external fire is extinguished there is coolness.
When the internal fires of sensual craving, aversion and delusion are put out,
this is coolness also.
This is the nature of enlightenment; it’s the extinguishing
of fire, the cooling of that which was hot. This is peace. This is the end of
saṃsāra, the cycle of birth and death. When you arrive at enlightenment, this
is how it is. It’s an ending of the ever-turning and ever-changing, an ending
of greed, aversion and delusion in our minds. We talk about it in terms of
happiness because this is how worldly people understand the ideal to be, but in
reality it has gone beyond. It is beyond both happiness and suffering. It’s
perfect peace.
So as you go you should take this teaching which I have
given you and contemplate it carefully. Your stay here hasn’t been easy and I
have had little opportunity to give you instruction, but in this time you have
been able to study the real meaning of our practice. May this practice lead you
to happiness; may it help you grow in truth. May you be freed from the
suffering of birth and death.
(The Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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