Just a Vessel
We can apply investigation of the body (kayagatasati) in
order to develop the feeling of seclusion (viveka) – seclusion through the
experience of not assuming that we have ownership over the body. We try to see
the body simply as a manifestation of the elements and aggregates (khandha)
that exist in line with nature.
What we are – male or female or anything at all – is
differentiated and characterized by the names and conventions of society, but
in essence, people’s experiences are the same. The suffering everyone
experiences is the same. The happiness or unhappiness, the feeling of
satisfaction or disappointment is the same. This is where we need to focus.
If we realize that our own body and the bodies of other
people are essentially the same, we can experience a state of mind that is
conducive to the stilling of desire and craving. In the end there aren’t any
differences between people. We will start seeing other people in an
unprejudiced way.
The feeling that somebody is superior, inferior or on the
same level as someone else won’t arise. We don’t assume we are any better or
worse than others, or equal to them either. Through maintaining this attitude
towards ourselves we cultivate an awareness that is not blocked by the conceit
and bias of self-importance.
This is the way we practice kayagatasati. If we attain to
seclusion, we can call it kayaviveka, seclusion of the body.
Having a body is like a material object we can use, like the
almsbowl for example. The almsbowl is merely a container to receive food for
our use at mealtime. It is just a vessel. Similarly, our body is just a vessel
for inquiry, for giving rise to an understanding of reality.
(The Teachings of Luang Por Liem)
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