Supports for Meditation (Part 2)
When there is total knowing, a continuous and unbroken
awareness at each and every moment, this is called presence of mind. If your
attention drifts from the breath to other places then the knowing is broken.
Whenever there is awareness of the breath the mind is there. With just the breath
and this even and continuous awareness you have presence of mind.
There must be both sati and sampajañña. Sati is recollection
and sampajañña is self-awareness. Right now you are clearly aware of the
breath. This exercise of watching the breath helps sati and sampajañña develop together.
They share the work. Having both sati and sampajañña is like having two workers
to lift a heavy plank of wood. Suppose there are two people trying to lift some
heavy planks, but the weight is so great, they have to strain so hard, that
it’s almost unendurable. Then another person, imbued with goodwill, sees them
and rushes in to help. In the same way, when there is sati and sampajañña, then
paññā (wisdom) will arise at the same place to help out. Then all three of them
support each other.
With paññā there will be an understanding of sense objects.
For instance, during the meditation sense objects are experienced which give
rise to feelings and moods. You may start to think of a friend, but then paññā
should immediately counter with ‘It doesn’t matter,’ ‘Stop’ or ‘Forget it.’ Or
if there are thoughts about where you will go tomorrow, then the response would
be, ‘I’m not interested, I don’t want to concern myself with such things.’
Maybe you start thinking about other people, then you should think, ‘No, I
don’t want to get involved.’ ‘Just let go,’ or ‘It’s all uncertain and never a
sure thing.’ This is how you should deal with things in meditation, recognizing
them as ‘not sure, not sure’, and maintaining this kind of awareness.
You must give up all the thinking, the inner dialogue and
the doubting. Don’t get caught up in these things during the meditation. In the
end all that will remain in the mind in its purest form are sati, sampajañña
and paññā. Whenever these things weaken doubts will arise, but try to abandon
those doubts immediately, leaving only sati, sampajañña and paññā. Try to
develop sati like this until it can be maintained at all times. Then you will
understand sati, sampajañña and samādhi thoroughly.
Focusing the attention at this point there will be sati,
sampajañña, samādhi and paññā together. Whether you are attracted to or
repelled by external sense objects, you will be able to tell yourself, ‘It’s
not sure.’ Either way they are just hindrances to be swept away till the mind
is clean. All that should remain is sati, recollection; sampajañña, clear
awareness; samādhi, the firm and unwavering mind; and paññā, or consummate
wisdom. For the time being I will say just this much on the subject of
meditation.
Now, about the tools or aids to meditation practice – there
should be mettā (goodwill) in your heart; in other words, the qualities of
generosity, kindness and helpfulness. These should be maintained as the
foundation for mental purity. For example, begin doing away with lobha, or
selfishness, by giving. When people are selfish they aren’t happy. Selfishness
leads to a sense of discontent, and yet people tend to be very selfish without realizing
how it affects them.
You can experience this at any time, especially when you are
hungry. Suppose you get some apples and you have the opportunity to share them
with a friend; you think it over for a while, and, sure, the intention to give
is there all right, but you want to give the smaller one. To give the big one
would be … well, such a shame. It’s hard to think straight. You tell them to go
ahead and take one, but then you say, ‘Take this one!’ and give them the
smaller apple! This is one form of selfishness that people usually don’t
notice. Have you ever been like this?
You really have to go against the grain to give. Even though
you may really only want to give the smaller apple, you must force yourself to
give away the bigger one. Of course, once you have given it to your friend, you
feel good inside. Training the mind by going against the grain in this way
requires self-discipline – you must know how to give and how to give up, not
allowing selfishness to stick. Once you learn how to give, if you are still
hesitating over which fruit to give, then while you are deliberating you will
be troubled, and even if you give the bigger one, there will still be a sense
of reluctance. But as soon as you firmly decide to give the bigger one, the
matter is over and done with. This is going against the grain in the right way.
Doing this you win mastery over yourself. If you can’t do it
you will be a victim of yourself and continue to be selfish. All of us have
been selfish in the past. This is a defilement which needs to be cut off. In
the Pāḷi scriptures, giving is called ‘dāna,’ which means bringing happiness to
others. It is one of those conditions which help to cleanse the mind from
defilement. Reflect on this and develop it in your practice.
You may think that practicing like this involves hounding
yourself, but it doesn’t really. Actually it’s hounding craving and the
defilements. If defilements arise within you, you have to do something to
remedy them. Defilements are like a stray cat. If you give it as much food as
it wants, it will always be coming around looking for more food, but if you
stop feeding it, after a couple of days it’ll stop coming around. It’s the same
with the defilements, they won’t come to disturb you, they’ll leave your mind
in peace. So rather than being afraid of defilement, make the defilements
afraid of you. To make the defilements afraid of you, you must see the Dhamma
within your minds.
Where does the Dhamma arise? It arises with our knowing and
understanding in this way. Everyone is able to know and understand the Dhamma.
It’s not something that has to be found in books, you don’t have to do a lot of
study to see it, just reflect right now and you can see what I am talking
about. Everybody can see it because it exists right within our hearts.
Everybody has defilements, don’t they? If you are able to see them, you can
understand. In the past you’ve looked after and pampered your defilements, but
now you must know your defilements and not allow them to come and bother you.
The next constituent of practice is moral restraint (sīla).
Sīla watches over and nurtures the practice in the same way as parents look
after their children. Maintaining moral restraint means not only to avoid
harming others but also to help and encourage them. At the very least you
should maintain the Five Precepts, which are:
1. Not only not to kill or deliberately harm others, but to
spread goodwill towards all beings.
2. To be honest, refraining from infringing on the rights of
others, in other words, not stealing.
3. Knowing moderation in sexual relations: In the household
life there exists the family structure, based around husband and wife. Know who
your husband or wife is, know moderation, know the proper bounds of sexual
activity. Some people don’t know the limits. One husband or wife isn’t enough,
they have to have a second or third. The way I see it, you can’t consume even
one partner completely, so to have two or three is just plain indulgence. You
must try to cleanse the mind and train it to know moderation. Knowing
moderation is true purity, without it there are no limits to your behaviour.
When eating delicious food, don’t dwell too much on how it tastes, think of
your stomach and consider how much is appropriate to its needs. If you eat too
much you get trouble, so you must know moderation.
4. To be honest in speech – this is also a tool for
eradicating defilements. You must be honest and straight, truthful and upright.
5. To refrain from taking intoxicants. You must know
restraint and preferably give these things up altogether. People are already
intoxicated enough with their families, relatives and friends, material
possessions, wealth and all the rest of it. That’s quite enough already without
making things worse by taking intoxicants as well. These things just create
darkness in the mind. Those who take large amounts should try to gradually cut
down and eventually give it up altogether.
Maybe I should ask your forgiveness, but my speaking in this
way is out of a concern for your benefit, so that you can understand that which
is good. You need to know what is what. What are the things that are oppressing
you in your everyday lives? What are the actions which cause this oppression?
Good actions bring good results and bad actions bring bad results. These are
the causes.
Once moral restraint is pure there will be a sense of
honesty and kindness towards others. This will bring about contentment and
freedom from worries and remorse. Remorse resulting from aggressive and hurtful
behavior will not be there. This is a form of happiness. It is almost like a
heavenly state. There is comfort, you eat and sleep in comfort with the
happiness arising from moral restraint. This is the result; maintaining moral
restraint is the cause. This is a principle of Dhamma practice – refraining
from bad actions so that goodness can arise. If moral restraint is maintained
in this way, evil will disappear and good will arise in its place. This is the
result of right practice.
But this isn’t the end of the story. Once people have
attained some happiness they tend to be heedless and not go any further in the
practice. They get stuck on happiness. They don’t want to progress any further,
they prefer the happiness of ‘heaven’. It’s comfortable but there’s no real understanding.
You must keep reflecting to avoid being deluded. Reflect again and again on the
disadvantages of this happiness. It’s transient, it doesn’t last forever. Soon
you are separated from it. It’s not a sure thing; once happiness disappears
then suffering arises in its place and the tears come again. Even heavenly
beings end up crying and suffering.
So the Lord Buddha taught us to reflect on the disadvantages
of happiness, that there exists an unsatisfactory side to it. Usually when this
kind of happiness is experienced, there is no real understanding of it. The
peace that is truly certain and lasting is covered over by this deceptive
happiness. This happiness is not a certain or permanent kind of peace, but
rather a form of defilement, a refined form of defilement to which we attach.
Everybody likes to be happy. Happiness arises because of our liking for
something. As soon as that liking changes to dislike, suffering arises. We must
reflect on this happiness to see its uncertainty and limitation. Once things change
suffering arises. This suffering is also uncertain; don’t think that it is
fixed or absolute. This kind of reflection is called ādīnavakathā, the
reflection on the inadequacy and limitation of the conditioned world. This
means to reflect on happiness rather than accepting it at face value. Seeing
that it is uncertain, you shouldn’t cling fast to it. You should take hold of
it but then let it go, seeing both the benefit and the harm of happiness. To
meditate skilfully you have to see the disadvantages inherent within happiness.
Reflect in this way. When happiness arises, contemplate it thoroughly until the
disadvantages become apparent.
When you see that things are imperfect (dukkha) your heart
will come to understand the nekkhammakathā, the reflection on renunciation. The
mind will become disinterested and seek for a way out. Disinterest comes from
having seen the way forms really are, the way tastes really are, the way love
and hatred really are. By disinterest we mean that there is no longer the desire
to cling to or attach to things. There is a withdrawal from clinging, to a
point where you can abide comfortably, observing with an equanimity that is
free of attachment. This is the peace that arises from practice.
(The Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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