The Teachings of Ajahn Mun Bhuridatta
Purifying the Mind
sacitta-pariyodapanam
etam buddhana-sasanam:
To purify one's own mind
is to follow the Buddhas' teachings.
The Buddha, our foremost teacher, taught about body, speech,
and mind. He didn't teach anything else. He taught us to practice, to train our
minds, to use our minds to investigate the body: This is called the
contemplation of the body as a frame of reference. We are taught to train our
mindfulness thoroughly in the practice of investigating — this is called the
analysis of phenomena (dhamma-vicaya, one of the factors for Awakening) — until
it reaches a point of sufficiency. When we have investigated enough to make
mindfulness itself a factor of Awakening, the mind settles down into concentration
of its own accord.
There are three levels of concentration. In momentary
concentration, the mind gathers and settles down to a firm stance and rests
there for a moment before withdrawing. In threshold concentration, the mind
gathers and settles down to its underlying level and stays there a fair while
before withdrawing to be aware of a nimitta of one sort or another. In fixed
penetration, the mind settles down to a firm stance on its underlying level and
stops there in singleness, perfectly still — aware that it is staying there —
endowed with the five factors of jhana, which then become gradually more and
more refined.
When we train the mind in this way, we are said to be
heightening the mind, as in the Pali phrase,
adhicitte ca ayogo
etam buddhana-sasanam:
To heighten the mind
is to follow the Buddhas' teachings.
The contemplation of the body is a practice that sages —
including the Lord Buddha — have described in many ways. For example, in the
Maha-satipatthana Sutta (Great Frames of Reference Discourse), he calls it the
contemplation of the body as a frame of reference. In the root themes of
meditation, which a preceptor must teach at the beginning of the ordination
ceremony, he describes the contemplation of hairs of the head, hairs of the
body, nails, teeth, and skin. In the Dhammacakkappavattana Sutta (Discourse on
the Turning of the Wheel of Dhamma), he teaches that birth, aging, and death
are stressful.
We have all taken birth now, haven't we? When we practice so
as to opanayiko — take these teachings inward and contemplate them by applying
them to ourselves — we are not going wrong in the practice, because the Dhamma
is akaliko, ever-present; and aloko, blatantly clear both by day and by night,
with nothing to obscure it.
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