The Fountain of Wisdom (Part 2)
So in regard to happiness and suffering, what are we to do?
If we didn’t have these things what could we use as a cause to precipitate
wisdom? If there is no cause how will the effect arise? All dhammas arise
because of causes. When the result ceases it’s because the cause has ceased.
This is how it is, but most of us don’t really understand. People only want to
run away from suffering. This sort of knowledge is short of the mark. Actually
we need to know this very world that we are living in, we don’t have to run
away anywhere. You should have the attitude that to stay is fine, and to go is
fine. Think about this carefully.
Where do happiness and suffering lie? If we don’t hold fast
to, cling to or fix on to anything, as if it weren’t there – suffering doesn’t
arise. Suffering arises from existence (bhava). If there is existence, then
there is birth. Upādāna – clinging or attachment – this is the pre-requisite
which creates suffering. Wherever suffering arises look into it. Don’t look too
far away, look right into the present moment. Look at your own mind and body.
When suffering arises ask, why is there suffering? Look right now. When
happiness arises ask, what is the cause of that happiness? Look right there.
Wherever these things arise be aware. Both happiness and suffering arise from
clinging.
The cultivators of old saw their minds in this way. There is
only arising and ceasing. There is no abiding entity. They contemplated from
all angles and saw that there was nothing much to this mind, they saw nothing
is stable. There is only arising and ceasing, ceasing and arising, nothing is
of any lasting substance. While walking or sitting they saw things in this way.
Wherever they looked there was only suffering, that’s all. It’s just like a big
iron ball which has just been blasted in a furnace. It’s hot all over. If you
touch the top it’s hot, touch the sides and they’re hot – it’s hot all over.
There isn’t any place on it which is cool.
Now if we don’t consider these things we won’t know anything
about them. We must see clearly. Don’t get ‘born’ into things, don’t fall into
birth. Know the workings of birth. Such thoughts as, ‘Oh, I can’t stand that
person, he does everything wrong,’ will no longer arise. Or, ‘I really like so
and so.’ These things don’t arise. There remains merely the conventional
worldly standards of like and dislike, but one’s speech is one way, one’s mind
another. They are separate things. We must use the conventions of the world to
communicate with each other, but inwardly we must be empty. The mind is above
those things. We must bring the mind to transcendence like this. This is the
abiding of the Noble Ones. We must all aim for this and practice accordingly.
Don’t get caught up in doubts.
Before I started to practice, I thought to myself, ‘The
Buddhist religion is here, available for all, and yet why do only some people
practice while others don’t? Or if they do practice, they do so only for a
short while and then give up. Or again those who don’t give it up still don’t
knuckle down and do the practice. Why is this?’ So I resolved to myself, ‘Okay,
I’ll give up this body and mind for this lifetime and try to follow the
teaching of the Buddha down to the last detail. I’ll reach understanding in
this very lifetime, because if I don’t I’ll still be sunk in suffering. I’ll
let go of everything else and make a determined effort, no matter how much
difficulty or suffering I have to endure, I’ll persevere. If I don’t do it I’ll
just keep on doubting.’
Thinking like this I got down to practice. No matter how
much happiness, suffering or difficulty I had to endure I would do it. I looked
on my whole life as if it was only one day and a night. I gave it up. ‘I’ll
follow the teaching of the Buddha, I’ll follow the Dhamma to understanding –
why is this world of delusion so wretched?’ I wanted to know, I wanted to
master the teaching, so I turned to the practice of Dhamma.
How much of the worldly life do we monastics renounce? If we
have gone forth for good then it means we renounce it all, there’s nothing we
don’t renounce. All the things of the world that people enjoy are cast off:
sights, sounds, smells, tastes and feelings – we throw them all away. And yet
we experience them. So Dhamma practitioners must be content with little and
remain detached. Whether in regard to speech, eating or whatever, we must be
easily satisfied: eat simply, sleep simply, live simply. Just like they say,
‘an ordinary person’ is one who lives simply. The more you practice the more
you will be able to take satisfaction in your practice. You will see into your
own heart.
The Dhamma is paccattaṃ, you must know it for yourself. To
know for yourself means to practice for yourself. You can depend on a teacher
only fifty percent of the way. Even the teaching I have given you today is
completely useless in itself, even if it is worth hearing. But if you were to
believe it all just because I said so, you wouldn’t be using the teaching
properly.
If you believed me completely you’d be foolish. To hear the
teaching, see its benefit, put it into practice for yourself, see it within
yourself, do it yourself – this is much more useful. You will then know the
taste of Dhamma for yourself.
This is why the Buddha didn’t talk about the fruits of the
practice in much detail, because it’s something one can’t convey in words. It
would be like trying to describe different colours to a person blind from
birth, ‘Oh, it’s so white,’ or ‘It’s bright yellow,’ for instance. You couldn’t
convey those colours to them. You could try but it wouldn’t serve much purpose.
The Buddha brings it back down to the individual – see
clearly for yourself. If you see clearly for yourself you will have clear proof
within yourself. Whether standing, walking, sitting or reclining you will be
free of doubt. Even if someone were to say, ‘Your practice isn’t right, it’s
all wrong,’ still you would be unmoved, because you have your own proof.
A practitioner of the Dhamma must be like this wherever he
goes. Others can’t tell you, you must know for yourself. Sammā-diṭṭhi must be
there. The practice must be like this for every one of us. To do the real
practice like this for even one month out of five or ten Rains Retreats would
be rare.
Our sense organs must be constantly working. Know content
and discontent, be aware of like and dislike. Know appearance and know
transcendence. The apparent and the transcendent must be realized
simultaneously. Good and evil must be seen as coexistent, arising together.
This is the fruit of the Dhamma practice.
So whatever is useful to yourself and to others, whatever
practice benefits both yourself and others, is called ‘following the Buddha’.
I’ve talked about this often. The things which should be done, people seem to
neglect. For example, the work in the monastery, the standards of practice and
so on. I’ve talked about them often and yet people don’t seem to put their
hearts into it. Some don’t know, some are lazy and can’t be bothered, some are
simply scattered and confused.
But that’s a cause for wisdom to arise. If we go to places
where none of these things arise, what would we see? Take food, for instance.
If food doesn’t have any taste, is it delicious? If a person is deaf, will he
hear anything? If you don’t perceive anything, will you have anything to contemplate?
If there are no problems, will there be anything to solve? Think of the
practice in this way.
Once I went to live up north. At that time I was living with
many monks, all of them elderly but newly ordained, with only two or three
Rains Retreats. At the time I had ten Rains. Living with those old monks I
decided to perform the various duties – receiving their bowls, washing their
robes, emptying their spittoons and so on. I didn’t think in terms of doing it
for any particular individual, I simply maintained my practice. If others
didn’t do the duties I’d do them myself. I saw it as a good opportunity for me
to gain merit. It made me feel good and gave me a sense of satisfaction.
On the uposatha days I knew the required duties. I’d go and
clean out the uposatha hall and set out water for washing and drinking. The
others didn’t know anything about the duties, they just watched. I didn’t
criticize them, because they didn’t know. I did the duties myself, and having
done them I felt pleased with myself, I had inspiration and a lot of energy in
my practice.
Whenever I could do something in the monastery, whether in
my own kuṭī or in others’, if it was dirty, I’d clean up. I didn’t do it for
anyone in particular, I didn’t do it to impress anyone, I simply did it to
maintain a good practice. Cleaning a kuṭī or dwelling place is just like
cleaning rubbish out of your own mind.
Now this is something all of you should bear in mind. You
don’t have to worry about harmony, it will automatically be there. Live
together with Dhamma, with peace and restraint, train your mind to be like this
and no problems will arise. If there is heavy work to be done, everybody helps
out and in no time the work is done, it gets taken care of quite easily. That’s
the best way.
I have come across some other types, though – I used it as
an opportunity to grow. For instance, living in a big monastery, the monks and
novices may agree among themselves to wash robes on a certain day. I’d go and
boil up the jackfruit wood. Now there’d be some monks who’d wait for someone
else to boil up the jackfruit wood and then come along and wash their robes,
take them back to their kuṭīs, hang them out and then take a nap. They didn’t
have to set up the fire, didn’t have to clean up afterwards. They thought they
were onto a good thing, that they were being clever. This is the height of
stupidity. These people are just increasing their own stupidity because they
don’t do anything, they leave all the work up to others. They wait till
everything is ready then come along and make use of it, it’s easy for them.
This is just adding to one’s foolishness. Those actions serve no useful purpose
whatsoever to them.
Some people think foolishly like this. They shirk the
required duties and think that this is being clever, but it is actually very
foolish. If we have that sort of attitude we won’t last.
Therefore, whether speaking, eating or doing anything
whatsoever, reflect on yourself. You may want to live comfortably, eat
comfortably, sleep comfortably and so on, but you can’t. What have we come here
for? If we regularly reflect on this we will be heedful, we won’t forget, we
will be constantly alert. Being alert like this you will put forth effort in
all postures. If you don’t put forth effort, things go quite differently.
Sitting, you sit like you’re in the town, walking, you walk like you’re in the
town. You just want to go and play around in the town with the laypeople.
If there is no effort in the practice the mind will tend in
that direction. You don’t oppose and resist your mind, you just allow it to
waft along the wind of your moods. This is called following one’s moods. Like a
child, if he indulges all his wants will he be a good child? If the parents
indulge all their child’s wishes is that good? Even if they do indulge him
somewhat at first, by the time he can speak they may start to occasionally
spank him because they’re afraid he’ll end up stupid. The training of our mind
must be like this. You have to know yourself and know how to train yourself. If
you don’t know how to train your own mind, waiting around expecting someone
else to train it for you, you’ll end up in trouble.
So don’t think that you can’t practice in this place.
Practice has no limits. Whether standing, walking, sitting or lying down, you
can always practice. Even while sweeping the monastery grounds or seeing a beam
of sunlight, you can realize the Dhamma. But you must have sati at hand. Why
so? Because you can realize the Dhamma at any time at all, in any place, if you
ardently meditate.
Don’t be heedless. Be watchful, be alert. While walking on
almsround all sorts of feelings arise, and it’s all good Dhamma. When you get
back to the monastery and are eating your food there’s plenty of good Dhamma
for you to look into. If you have constant effort, all these things will be
objects for contemplation. There will be wisdom, you will see the Dhamma. This
is called dhamma-vicaya, reflecting on Dhamma. It’s one of the enlightenment
factors. If there is sati, recollection, there will be dhamma-vicaya as a
result. These are factors of enlightenment. If we have recollection then we
won’t simply take it easy, there will also be inquiry into Dhamma. These things
become factors for realizing the Dhamma.
If we have reached this stage, our practice will know
neither day or night, it will continue on regardless of the time of day. There
will be nothing to taint the practice, or if there is we will immediately know
it. Let there be dhamma-vicaya within our minds constantly, looking into
Dhamma. If our practice has entered the flow, the mind will tend to be like
this. It won’t go off after other things. ‘I think I’ll go for a trip over
there, or perhaps this other place, over in that province should be
interesting.’ That’s the way of the world. Not long and the practice will die.
So resolve yourselves. It’s not just by sitting with your
eyes closed that you develop wisdom. Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind
are constantly with us, so be constantly alert. Study constantly. Seeing trees
or animals can all be occasions for study. Bring it all inwards. See clearly
within your own heart. If some sensation makes an impact on the heart, witness
it clearly for yourself, don’t simply disregard it.
Take a simple comparison: baking bricks. Have you ever seen
a brick-baking oven? They build the fire up about two or three feet in front of
the oven, then the smoke all gets drawn into it. Looking at this illustration
you can more clearly understand the practice. To make a brick kiln work the
right way you have to make the fire so that all the smoke gets drawn inside,
none is left over. All the heat goes into the oven, and the job gets done
quickly.
We Dhamma practitioners should experience things in this
way. All our feelings should be drawn inwards to be turned into right view. The
sights we see, the sounds we hear, the odours we smell, the flavours we taste,
and so on, the mind draws them all inward to be converted into right view.
Those feelings thus become experiences which give rise to wisdom.
(The Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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