Reading the Natural Mind (Part 2)
Theory and Practice
So we continue this practice until we have a feeling for it.
After a time, depending on our own particular tendencies and abilities, a new
kind of understanding arises. This we call investigation of Dhamma
(dhammavicaya), and this is how the seven factors of enlightenment arise in the
mind. Investigation of Dhamma is one of them. The others are: mindfulness,
energy, rapture, tranquillity, concentration (samādhi) and equanimity.
If we have studied about the seven factors of enlightenment,
then we’ll know what the books say, but we won’t have seen the real factors of
enlightenment. The real factors of enlightenment arise in the mind. Thus the
Buddha came to give us all the various teachings. All the enlightened ones have
taught the way out of suffering and their recorded teachings we call the
theoretical teachings. This theory originally came from the practice, but it
has become merely book learning or words.
The real factors of enlightenment have disappeared because
we don’t know them within ourselves, we don’t see them within our own minds. If
they arise they arise out of practice. If they arise out of practice, then they
are factors leading to enlightenment of the Dhamma, and we can use their arising
as an indication that our practice is correct. If we are not practicing
rightly, such things will not appear.
If we practice in the right way, we can see Dhamma. So we
say to keep on practicing, feeling your way gradually and continually
investigating. Don’t think that what you are looking for can be found anywhere
other than right here.
One of my senior disciples had been learning Pāḷi at a study
temple before he came here. He hadn’t been very successful with his studies so
he thought that, since monks who practice meditation are able to see and
understand everything just by sitting, he would come and try this way. He came
here to Wat Pah Pong with the intention of sitting in meditation so that he
would be able to translate Pāḷi scriptures. He had this kind of understanding
about practice. So I explained to him about our way. He had misunderstood
completely. He had thought it an easy matter just to sit and make everything
clear.
If we talk about understanding Dhamma then both study monks
and practice monks use the same words. But the actual understanding which comes
from studying theory and that which comes from practicing Dhamma is not quite
the same. It may seem to be the same, but one is more profound. One is deeper
than the other. The kind of understanding which comes from practice leads to
surrender, to giving up. Until there is complete surrender we persevere – we
persist in our contemplation. If desires or anger and dislike arise in our
mind, we aren’t indifferent to them. We don’t just leave them, but rather take
them and investigate to see how and from where they arise. If such moods are
already in our mind, then we contemplate and see how they work against us. We
see them clearly and understand the difficulties we cause ourselves by
believing and following them. This kind of understanding is not found anywhere
other than in our own pure mind.
It’s because of this that those who study theory and those
who practice meditation misunderstand each other. Usually those who emphasize
study say things like this, ‘Monks who only practice meditation just follow their
own opinions. They have no basis in the Teaching.’ Actually, in one sense,
these two ways of study and practice are exactly the same thing. It can help us
to understand if we think of it like the front and back of our hand. If we put
our hand out, it seems as if the back of the hand has disappeared. Actually the
back of our hand hasn’t disappeared, it’s just hidden underneath. When we say
that we can’t see it, it doesn’t mean that it has disappeared completely, it
just means that it’s hidden underneath. When we turn our hand over, the same
thing happens to the palm of the hand. It doesn’t go anywhere, it’s merely
hidden underneath.
We should keep this in mind when we consider practice. If we
think that it has ‘disappeared’, we’ll go off to study, hoping to get results.
But it doesn’t matter how much you study about Dhamma, you’ll never understand,
because you won’t know in accordance with truth. If we do understand the real
nature of Dhamma, then it becomes letting go. This is surrender – removing
attachment (upādāna), not clinging anymore, or, if there still is clinging, it
becomes less and less. There is this kind of difference between the two ways of
study and practice.
When we talk about study, we can understand it like this:
our eye is a subject of study, our ear is a subject of study – everything is a
subject of study. We can know that form is like this and like that, but we
attach to form and don’t know the way out. We can distinguish sounds, but then
we attach to them. Forms, sounds, smells, tastes, bodily feelings and mental
impressions are all like a snare to entrap all beings.
To investigate these things is our way of practicing Dhamma.
When some feeling arises, we turn to our understanding to appreciate it. If we
are knowledgeable regarding theory, we will immediately turn to that and see
how such and such a thing happens like this and then becomes that … and so on.
If we haven’t learned theory in this way, then we have just the natural state
of our mind to work with. This is our Dhamma. If we have wisdom then we’ll be
able to examine this natural mind of ours and use this as our subject of study.
It’s exactly the same thing. Our natural mind is theory. The Buddha said to
take whatever thoughts and feelings arise and investigate them. Use the reality
of our natural mind as our theory. We rely on this reality.
Insight Meditation
If you have faith it doesn’t matter whether you have studied
theory or not. If our believing mind leads us to develop practice, if it leads
us to constantly develop energy and patience, then study doesn’t matter. We
have mindfulness as a foundation for our practice. We are mindful in all bodily
postures, whether sitting, standing, walking or lying. And if there is mindfulness
there will be clear comprehension to accompany it. Mindfulness and clear
comprehension will arise together. They may arise so rapidly, however, that we
can’t tell them apart. But, when there is mindfulness, there will also be clear
comprehension.
When our mind is firm and stable, mindfulness will arise
quickly and easily and this is also where we have wisdom. Sometimes, though,
wisdom is insufficient or doesn’t arise at the right time. There may be
mindfulness and clear comprehension, but these alone are not enough to control the
situation. Generally, if mindfulness and clear comprehension are a foundation
of mind, then wisdom will be there to assist. However, we must constantly
develop this wisdom through the practice of insight meditation. This means that
whatever arises in the mind can be the object of mindfulness and clear
comprehension. But we must see according to anicca, dukkha, anattā.
Impermanence (anicca) is the basis. Dukkha refers to the quality of
unsatisfactoriness, and anattā says that it is without individual entity. We
see that it’s simply a sensation that has arisen, that it has no self, no
entity and that it disappears of its own accord. Just that! Someone who is
deluded, someone who doesn’t have wisdom, will miss this occasion, he won’t be
able to use these things to his advantage.
If wisdom is present then mindfulness and clear
comprehension will be right there with it. However, at this initial stage the
wisdom may not be perfectly clear. Thus mindfulness and clear comprehension
aren’t able to catch every object, but wisdom comes to help. It can see what
quality of mindfulness is there and what kind of sensation has arisen. Or, in
its most general aspect, whatever mindfulness there is or whatever sensation there
is, it’s all Dhamma.
The Buddha took the practice of insight meditation as his
foundation. He saw that this mindfulness and clear comprehension were both
uncertain and unstable. Anything that’s unstable, and which we want to have
stable, causes us to suffer. We want things to be according to our own desires,
but we suffer because things just aren’t that way. This is the influence of an
unclean mind, the influence of a mind which is lacking wisdom.
When we practice we tend to become caught up in wanting it
easy, wanting it to be the way we like it. We don’t have to go very far to
understand such an attitude. Merely look at this body! Is it ever really the
way we want it? One minute we like it to be one way and the next minute we like
it to be another way. Have we ever really had it the way we liked? The nature
of our bodies and minds is exactly the same in this regard. It simply is the
way it is.
This point in our practice can be easily missed. Usually, if
whatever we feel doesn’t agree with us, we throw out; whatever doesn’t please
us, we throw out. We don’t stop to think whether the way we like and dislike
things is really the correct way or not. We merely think that the things we
find disagreeable must be wrong, and those which we find agreeable must be
right.
This is where craving comes from. When we receive stimuli by
way of eye, ear, nose, tongue, body or mind, a feeling of liking or disliking
arises. This shows that the mind is full of attachment. So the Buddha gave us
this teaching of impermanence. He gave us a way to contemplate things. If we
cling to something which isn’t permanent, we’ll experience suffering. There’s
no reason why we should want to have these things in accordance with our likes
and dislikes. It isn’t possible for us to make things be that way. We don’t
have that kind of authority or power. Regardless of how we may like things to
be, everything is already the way it is. Wanting like this is not the way out
of suffering.
Here we can see how the mind which is deluded understands in
one way, and the mind which is not deluded understands in another way. When the
mind with wisdom receives some sensation, for example, it sees it as something
not to be clung to or identified with. This is what indicates wisdom. If there
isn’t any wisdom we merely follow our stupidity. This stupidity is not seeing
impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self. That which we like we see as
good and right. That which we don’t like we see as not good. We can’t arrive at
Dhamma this way – wisdom cannot arise. If we can see this, then wisdom arises.
The Buddha firmly established the practice of insight
meditation in his mind and used it to investigate all the various mental
impressions. Whatever arose in his mind he investigated like this: even though
we like it, it’s uncertain. It’s suffering, because these things which are
constantly rising and falling don’t follow the influence of our minds. All
these things are not a being or a self, they don’t belong to us. The Buddha
taught us to see them just as they are. We stand on this principle in our
practice.
We understand then, that we aren’t able to just bring about
various moods as we wish. Both good moods and bad moods are going to come up.
Some of them are helpful and some of them are not. If we don’t understand
correctly regarding these things, we won’t be able to judge correctly. Rather,
we will go running after craving – running off following our desire.
Sometimes we feel happy and sometimes we feel sad, but this
is natural. Sometimes we’ll feel pleased and at other times disappointed. What
we like we hold as good, and what we don’t like we hold as bad. In this way we
separate ourselves further and further from Dhamma. When this happens, we
aren’t able to understand or recognize Dhamma, and thus we become confused.
Desires increase because our minds have nothing but delusion.
This is how we talk about the mind. It isn’t necessary to go
far away from ourselves to find understanding. We simply see that these states
of mind aren’t permanent. We see that they are unsatisfactory and that they aren’t
a permanent self. If we continue to develop our practice in this way, we call
it the practice of insight meditation. We say that it is recognizing the
contents of our mind and in this way we develop wisdom.
(The Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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