Right Here in the Heart (Part 2)
Practice concentration so that the heart can be still.
Constrain the heart at that point where you are practicing concentration. The
time when you’re constraining the heart and training it to meditate is not the
time to let it go wandering as it likes. We call this making an effort, being
persistent – making a persistent effort to straighten out the heart and uproot
its enemies, until the heart can grow still. The heart grows still because our
efforts force it to, not because we let it go wandering as it likes. This is
when we see the rewards or the value of our efforts, because the heart has been
brought to stillness through our efforts and stays that way through our
efforts, step after step. The value of effort becomes more and more apparent,
in line with the worth of the heart which appears as the result of that effort.
So. When the time comes to investigate in terms of wisdom,
focus on investigating so as to see things clearly. Contemplate everything in
the world so as to see it in line with its truth. The world may be infinitely
wide, but when the heart is obscured by defilements, we’re caught in the most
narrow and confining thing there is. It’s confining right here. Whether you sit
or lie down, there’s no comfort at all. Wherever you go there’s no comfort,
because the heart is confined. It weighs on itself. So open it up right where
it’s confining and give it space to blossom and be bright. It’ll then feel
free, calm and at ease.
This is the point where you can investigate discontent and
pain, because the mind now has the strength to investigate. It’s ready and
willing to investigate because pain is a whetstone for sharpening wisdom.
Concentration and wisdom are what we use to slash defilements and mental
effluents away. Wisdom is what uproots them, but concentration is what first
catches them and ties them down. Concentration stills the heart and gathers it
into one so that it doesn’t get scattered around to the point where you can’t
even catch hold of it. Once the heart is gathered into one, wisdom opens it up
and unravels it to see clearly where its concerns and attachments lie – with
sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations, or with form, feelings,
memory, thought, and consciousness. Wisdom takes these things apart to see them
in thorough detail, in line with their truth as it actually is.
Wisdom contemplates these things and investigates them, over
and over again. These are the points where it travels. These are its
whetstones. The more it investigates them, the more it branches out, step by
step, understanding things for what they are and letting them go. Letting them
go means putting down the burdens that weigh on the heart under the sway of
attachment.
What is the mind thinking about? What good does it get from its
thoughts? The moment a thought forms, it ceases. A good thought? It forms and
ceases. A bad thought? It forms and ceases. Whatever the thought, it forms and
ceases. These are called thought-formations. They form. They arise. They cease.
Their forming and ceasing happen together. They arise and cease in the same
instant. So how can we attach any sense of self to these things – to this
arising-ceasing, arising-ceasing?
Investigate pain, which is something we all fear. Everyone
fears the word pain, so how can we hold onto it as us or ours? Are you going to
persist in holding to this mass of pain as you? To hold to it as your ‘self’ is
to hold onto fire to burn the heart. Know pain simply as pain. What knows the
pain isn’t the pain. It’s the heart. The heart is what knows all about the
pain. When pain arises, the heart knows. When pain remains, the heart knows.
When the pain ceases, the heart knows. It knows through its wisdom. Wisdom sees
clearly, distinctly, that pain is pain, and what knows is what knows.
Memory. However much we can recognize and give meaning to
things, we forget it all. If we want to remember, we have to recognize and give
meaning again. The mind establishes a meaning that then ceases in the same
instant. Can this be our ‘self’? We recognize the meaning, and then it ceases,
arises, ceases, arises and ceases, arises and ceases like everything else. Can
this sort of thing be our ‘self’? Can this sort of thing be ours? If it’s us,
if it’s ours, then we’re wriggling all the time because of memory and pain.
Memory arises and ceases. Pain arises and ceases, arises and ceases, giving us
trouble and turmoil without let-up, without stop. This is why we have to
investigate so as to see those conditions – the khandhas – that arise and cease
all around us, all around the heart.
Consciousness: How long have we been conscious of sights and
sounds? Ever since birth. And what lasting worth have we ever gained from these
things? As soon as we’re conscious of anything by way of the eye, ear, nose,
tongue, or body – Blip! – it ceases in the same instant, the very same instant.
So what lasting worth can you get from it? Nothing at all. Can sights be our
‘self’? Can sounds? Can smells, tastes, tactile sensations be our ‘self’?
Consciousness – acknowledging whatever makes contact – can this be our ‘self’?
It acknowledges – Blip! Blip! Blip! – and immediately ceases. Immediately
ceases. Can this be our ‘self’? There’s no way it can be.
How can we hold to this arising and immediate ceasing as our
‘self’? How can we put our trust in these things? They arise and cease, arise
and cease. Are we going to persist in holding to this arising and ceasing as
our ‘self’? If so, we’re in a turmoil all day long because these things are
arising and ceasing all the time! No matter whether they are form or feeling –
pleasure, pain or indifference – memory, thought, or consciousness, they’re
constantly arising and ceasing, each and every one of them. So how can we grab
onto them as us or ours even though we know full well that they arise and
cease? This is why we have to use wisdom to investigate them so as to see
clearly what they really are and to let them go for what they are.
What knows doesn’t cease. The true heart – what knows –
doesn’t cease. It knows whatever ceases, but “that which knows” doesn’t cease.
All that ceases is what appears and ceases in line with its own affairs. Form,
feelings, memory, thought and consciousness for example – these are all natural
conditions that come under the three characteristics.
The three characteristics are impermanence, discontent, and
not-self. How can we hold to things of this sort as us or ours? If we
investigate into their causes and effects using our mindfulness and wisdom,
there is no way we can hold onto them. Only when our defilements are thick, and
the heart hasn’t investigated – and doesn’t know what’s what – can we be
deluded into becoming attached. Once we’ve investigated so as to see these
things for what they really are, the heart lets go of its own accord.
When the time comes to go into battle – when the time comes
to die – take these things as your battlefield. In particular, feelings of pain
will stand out more than anything else when things start to break apart. Take
pain and the heart as your battlefield. Investigate them so as to see their
truth. No matter how great the pain may be, it doesn’t go past death. Pain goes
only as far as death. The body and khandhas go only as far as death, but the
heart doesn’t go only as far as death. It goes past death, because the heart
has never died. It lies above all these things. Pain is pain only as far as
death. It doesn’t go past it. No matter what feelings arise, they go only as
far as their ceasing, and that’s all. Whether they’re very painful or only a
little painful, the heart keeps knowing, knowing at all times.
When there’s mindfulness, the heart keeps knowing each stage
of the pains that appear. What knows doesn’t cease, so why should we be worried
and concerned about pains, which aren’t us or ours. They’re just conditions
that arise. They depend on the heart for their arising, but they aren’t the
heart. They depend on the body for their arising, but they aren’t the body.
They’re just feelings. Pain, for instance, is something different, something
separate from the body and heart. That’s its pure, unadulterated truth.
If we don’t try to go against the truth, the heart can reach
peace through its investigation of pain, especially at the last stage which is
the break-up of the body. Give it your all! You can see what ceases first and
what ceases after because what knows will keep on knowing. Even when everything
else has ceased, what knows still won’t cease.
This is our investigation. All it takes is for you to see
causes and effects in this way just once, and your courage in the face of these
things will spring right into action. When death comes, you’ll immediately take
a fighting stance. You’ll take your stance as a warrior going into the battle
between the khandhas and the heart. You’ll investigate, using your wisdom.
You’ll take mindfulness and wisdom as your weapons in slashing down to the
truth. And when you’ve slashed everything down, where will you end up? Right
there with the truth.
Use your mindfulness and wisdom to slash down to the truth of
everything of every sort. When you reach the truth, everything will be
levelled. Everything will be still. Nothing will be left to disturb the heart.
If anything is still disturbing the heart, that means you haven’t investigated
fully down to its truth. Once you’ve reached the full truth in every way,
there’s nothing that can disturb or provoke or incite or jab at the heart at
all. There’s nothing but a state of truth penetrating everywhere. This is
called being levelled and made still by the truth, which comes through the
power of mindfulness and wisdom investigating to see things clearly.
Right here is where the Buddha and his Arahant disciples,
all those who have gone beyond suffering and discontent, have gone beyond –
right where suffering and discontent exist. And where do they exist? In this
body, these khandhas, this heart. When we take things apart, we take them apart
right here. When we know, we know right here – right where we were deluded.
Wherever we don’t know, mindfulness and wisdom – our tools for slashing our way
into the truth – will make us know. There’s nothing to equal mindfulness and
wisdom in breaking through to the endpoint of all phenomena, in washing away
all defilements and absolutely eliminating them from the heart. They are thus
the most up-to-date tools for dealing with defilements and mental effluents of
every sort.
So put mindfulness and wisdom to use when you need them, and
especially when you’re about to die. There’s no one else who can help you then.
Even if your relatives, parents, brothers, sisters, wife, husband, children are
all thronging around you, none of them can really help you. Everything depends
on you. As the Buddha says: “The self is its own mainstay.” Realize this in
full measure! What can you do to be your own mainstay and not your own enemy?
If you bring out nothing but weakness, confusion, and lack of wisdom, you’re
being your own enemy. If you use mindfulness, discernment, conviction,
persistence, and courage in line with the principles taught by the Buddha,
investigating down to the causes and effects and the facts of all the
conditions of nature, that’s when you’re truly your own mainstay.
So find yourself a mainstay. Where can you find it? “I go to
the Buddha for refuge.” This reverberates throughout the heart and nowhere
else. “I go to the Dhamma for refuge” reverberates through the heart. “I go to
the Sangha for refuge” reverberates through one and the same heart. The heart
is their vessel. The Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha are all gathered into this one
heart because the heart is the most appropriate vessel for all dhammas. Get so
that you see this – and especially so that you see that the whole heart is the
Dhamma in full.
So cleanse your heart. If you can make it gain release at
that point, so much the better. You won’t know where to ask about the Buddha,
Dhamma, and Sangha. You won’t ask – for you’ll have no doubts. You’ll simply
look at the knowingness showing its absolute fullness inside you and know that
what that is, is what they are. The Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha are all one
Dhamma – one single, solid Dhamma.
These are the results of the practice of eliminating our
defilements and mental effluents from the very beginning, when the heart had no
worth, since it was filled with nothing but the excrement of greed, anger, and
delusion. Wash away that excrement by using the principles of the Dhamma. When
it’s all gone, the heart will become Dhamma. Once it’s Dhamma, it’s infinitely
at ease. Wherever you go, you’re at ease.
“Nibbãna is the ultimate void.” Whatever is annihilated in
that void, this is where you’ll know. Whatever is still there, this is also
where you’ll know. Who can know this better than one without defilements? – for
the Buddha, in saying that nibbãna is the ultimate void, was speaking from his
absolute freedom from defilement. He said this from having seen nibbãna. But we
haven’t seen it yet. No matter how much we repeat his words, we just stay where
we are. Investigate so that you truly see it. The saying “Nibbãna is the
ultimate void” will no longer be any problem, because it will be fully clear to
the heart what is annihilated and what’s not.
“Nibbãna is the ultimate happiness.” Listen! The ultimate
happiness here isn’t a feeling of pleasure or happiness. Instead, it’s the
happiness that comes with the absolute purity of the heart, with no arising or
ceasing like our feelings of pleasure and pain. This has nothing to do with the
three characteristics. The ultimate happiness as a constant feature of the pure
heart has absolutely nothing to do with the three characteristics, nothing at
all to do with impermanence, discontent, and not-self – it doesn’t change, it
always stays just as it is.
The Buddha says nibbãna is constant. What’s constant? The
pure heart and nothing else, that’s what’s constant. Get so that you see it,
get so that you know.
(Ajahn Maha Boowa “A Life of Inner Quality”)