The Path in Harmony
Today I would like to ask you all: ‘are you sure yet, are
you certain in your meditation practice?’ I ask because these days there are
many people teaching meditation, both monks and laypeople, and I’m afraid you
may be subject to wavering and doubt. If we understand clearly, we will be able
to make the mind peaceful and firm.
You should understand the eightfold path as morality,
concentration and wisdom. The path comes together as simply this. Our practice
is to make this path arise within us.
When sitting in meditation we are told to close our eyes,
not to look at anything else, because now we are going to look directly at the
mind. When we close our eyes, our attention comes inwards. We establish our
attention on the breath, centre our feelings there, put our mindfulness there.
When the factors of the path are in harmony we will be able to see the breath,
the feelings, the mind and mental objects for what they are. Here we will see
the ‘focus point’, where samādhi and the other factors of the path converge in
harmony.
When we are sitting in meditation, following the breath,
think to yourself that now you are sitting alone. There is no one sitting
around you, there is nothing at all. Develop this feeling that you are sitting
alone until the mind lets go of all externals, concentrating solely on the
breath. If you are thinking, ‘This person is sitting over here, that person is
sitting over there,’ there is no peace, the mind doesn’t come inwards. Just
cast all that aside until you feel there is no one sitting around you, until
there is nothing at all, until you have no wavering or interest in your
surroundings.
Let the breath go naturally, don’t force it to be short or
long or whatever, just sit and watch it going in and out. When the mind lets go
of all external impressions, the sounds of cars and such will not disturb you.
Nothing, whether sights or sounds, will disturb you, because the mind doesn’t
receive them. Your attention will come together on the breath.
If the mind is confused and won’t concentrate on the breath,
take a full, deep breath, as deep as you can, and then let it all out till
there is none left. Do this three times and then re-establish your attention.
The mind will become calm.
It’s natural for it to be calm for a while, and then
restlessness and confusion may arise again. When this happens, concentrate,
breathe deeply again, and then re-establish your attention on the breath. Just keep
going like this. When this has happened many times you will become adept at it.
The mind will let go of all external manifestations. External impressions will
not reach the mind. Sati will be firmly established.
As the mind becomes more refined, so does the breath.
Feelings will become finer and finer, the body and mind will be light. Our
attention is solely on the inner, we see the in-breaths and out-breaths
clearly, we see all impressions clearly. Here we will see the coming together
of morality, concentration and wisdom. This is called the path in harmony. When
there is this harmony our mind will be free of confusion, it will come together
as one. This is called samādhi.
After watching the breath for a long time, it may become
very refined; the awareness of the breath will gradually cease, leaving only
bare awareness.The breath may become so refined it disappears! Perhaps we are
‘just sitting’, as if there is no breathing at all. Actually there is
breathing, but it seems as if there’s none. This is because the mind has
reached its most refined state, there is just bare awareness. It has gone
beyond the breath. The knowledge that the breath has disappeared becomes
established. What will we take as our object of meditation now? We take just
this knowledge as our object, that is, the awareness that there’s no breath.
Unexpected things may happen at this time; some people
experience them, some don’t. If they do arise, we should be firm and have
strong mindfulness. Some people see that the breath has disappeared and get a
fright, they’re afraid they might die. Here we should know the situation just
as it is. We simply notice that there’s no breath and take that as our object
of awareness.
This, we can say, is the firmest, surest type of samādhi:
there is only one firm, unmoving state of mind. Perhaps the body will become so
light it’s as if there is no body at all. We feel like we’re sitting in empty
space, completely empty. Although this may seem very unusual, you should
understand that there’s nothing to worry about. Firmly establish your mind like
this.
When the mind is firmly unified, having no sense impressions
to disturb it, one can remain in that state for any length of time. There will
be no painful feelings to disturb us. When samādhi has reached this level, we can
leave it when we choose, but if we come out of this samādhi, we do so
comfortably, not because we’ve become bored with it or tired. We come out
because we’ve had enough for now, we feel at ease; we have no problems at all.
If we can develop this type of samādhi, then if we sit, say,
thirty minutes or an hour, the mind will be cool and calm for many days. When
the mind is cool and calm like this, it is clean. Whatever we experience, the
mind will take up and investigate. This is a fruit of samādhi.
Morality has one function, concentration has another
function and wisdom another. These factors are like a cycle. We can see them
all within the peaceful mind. When the mind is calm it has collectedness and
restraint because of wisdom and the energy of concentration. As it becomes more
collected it becomes more refined, which in turn gives morality the strength to
increase in purity. As our morality becomes purer, this will help in the
development of concentration. When concentration is firmly established it helps
in the arising of wisdom. Morality, concentration and wisdom help each other,
they are interrelated like this.
In the end the path becomes one and functions at all times.
We should look after the strength which arises from the path, because it is the
strength which leads to insight and wisdom.
On the Dangers of Samadhi
Samādhi is capable of bringing much harm or much benefit to
the meditator. You can’t say it brings only one or the other. For one who has
no wisdom it is harmful, but for one who has wisdom it can bring real benefit,
it can lead to insight.
That which can possibly be harmful to the meditator is
absorption samādhi (jhāna), the samādhi with deep, sustained calm. This samādhi
brings great peace. Where there is peace, there is happiness. When there is
happiness, attachment and clinging to that happiness arise. The meditator
doesn’t want to contemplate anything else, he just wants to indulge in that
pleasant feeling. When we have been practicing for a long time we may become
adept at entering this samādhi very quickly. As soon as we start to note our meditation
object, the mind enters calm, and we don’t want to come out to investigate
anything. We just get stuck on that happiness. This is a danger to one who is
practicing meditation.
We must use upacāra-samādhi: Here, we enter calm and then,
when the mind is sufficiently calm, we come out and look at outer activity.
Looking at the outside with a calm mind gives rise to wisdom. This is hard to
understand, because it’s almost like ordinary thinking and imagining. When
thinking is there, we may think the mind isn’t peaceful, but actually that
thinking is taking place within the calm. There is contemplation but it doesn’t
disturb the calm. We may bring thinking up in order to contemplate it. Here we
take up thinking to investigate it, it’s not that we are aimlessly thinking or
guessing away; it’s something that arises from a peaceful mind. This is called
‘awareness within calm and calm within awareness’. If it’s simply ordinary
thinking and imagining, the mind won’t be peaceful, it will be disturbed. But I
am not talking about ordinary thinking; this is a feeling that arises from the
peaceful mind. It’s called ‘contemplation’. Wisdom is born right here.
So, there can be right samādhi and wrong samādhi. Wrong
samādhi is where the mind enters calm and there’s no awareness at all. One
could sit for two hours or even all day but the mind doesn’t know where it’s
been or what’s happened. It doesn’t know anything. There is calm, but that’s
all. It’s like a well-sharpened knife which we don’t bother to put to any use.
This is a deluded type of calm, because there is not much self-awareness. The
meditator may think he has reached the ultimate already, so he doesn’t bother
to look for anything else. Samādhi can be an enemy at this level. Wisdom cannot
arise because there is no awareness of right and wrong.
With right samādhi, no matter what level of calm is reached,
there is awareness. There is full mindfulness and clear comprehension. This is
the samādhi which can give rise to wisdom, one cannot get lost in it. Practitioners
should understand this well. You can’t do without this awareness, it must be
present from beginning to end. This kind of samādhi has no danger.
You may wonder: where does the benefit arise, how does the
wisdom arise, from samādhi? When right samādhi has been developed, wisdom has
the chance to arise at all times. When the eye sees form, the ear hears sound,
the nose smells odours, the tongue experiences taste, the body experiences
touch or the mind experiences mental impressions – in all postures – the mind
stays with full knowledge of the true nature of those sense impressions, it
doesn’t follow them.
When the mind has wisdom it doesn’t ‘pick and choose’. In
any posture we are fully aware of the birth of happiness and unhappiness. We
let go of both of these things, we don’t cling. This is called right practice,
which is present in all postures. These words ‘all postures’ do not refer only
to bodily postures, they refer to the mind, which has mindfulness and clear
comprehension of the truth at all times. When samādhi has been rightly
developed, wisdom arises like this. This is called ‘insight’, knowledge of the
truth.
There are two kinds of peace – the coarse and the refined.
The peace which comes from samādhi is the coarse type. When the mind is peaceful
there is happiness. The mind then takes this happiness to be peace. But
happiness and unhappiness are becoming and birth. There is no escape from saṃsāra
here because we still cling to them. So happiness is not peace, peace is not
happiness.
The other type of peace is that which comes from wisdom.
Here we don’t confuse peace with happiness; we know the mind which contemplates
and knows happiness and unhappiness as peace. The peace which arises from
wisdom is not happiness, but is that which sees the truth of both happiness and
unhappiness. Clinging to those states does not arise, the mind rises above
them. This is the true goal of all Buddhist practice.
(The Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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