Supports
for Meditation (Part 1)
Seekers of
goodness who have gathered here, please listen in peace. Listening to the
Dhamma in peace means to listen with a one-pointed mind, paying attention to
what you hear and then letting go. Listening to the Dhamma is of great benefit.
While listening to the Dhamma we are encouraged to firmly establish both body
and mind in samādhi, because it is one kind of Dhamma practice. In the time of
the Buddha people listened to Dhamma talks intently, with a mind aspiring to real
understanding, and some actually realized the Dhamma while listening.
This place
is well suited to meditation practice. Having stayed here a couple of nights I
can see that it is an important place. On the external level it is already
peaceful, all that remains is the internal level, your hearts and minds. So I
ask all of you to make an effort to pay attention.
Why have
you gathered here to practice meditation? It’s because your hearts and minds do
not understand what should be understood. In other words, you don’t truly know
how things are, or what is what. You don’t know what is wrong and what is
right, what it is that brings you suffering and causes you to doubt. So first
you have to make yourselves calm. The reason that you have come here to develop
calm and restraint is that your hearts and minds are not at ease. Your minds
are not calm, not restrained. They are swayed by doubting and agitation. This
is why you have come here today and are now listening to the Dhamma.
I would
like you to concentrate and listen carefully to what I say, and I ask
permission to speak frankly because that’s how I am. Please understand that
even if I do speak in a forceful manner, I am doing so out of goodwill. I ask
your forgiveness if there is anything I say that upsets you, because the
customs of Thailand and those of the West are not the same. Actually, speaking
a little forcefully can be good because it helps to stir people up who might
otherwise be sleepy or drowsy; and rather than rousing themselves to hear the Dhamma,
allow themselves to drift instead into complacency, and as a result they never
understand anything.
Although
there may appear to be many ways to practice, really there is only one. As with
fruit trees, it is possible to get fruit quickly by planting a cutting, but the
tree would not be resilient or long lasting. Another way is to cultivate a tree
right from the seed, which produces a strong and resilient tree. Practice is
the same.
When I
first began to practice I had problems understanding this. As long as I still
didn’t know what was what, sitting meditation was a real chore, even bringing
me to tears on occasion. Sometimes I would be aiming too high, other times not
high enough, never finding the point of balance. To practice in a way that’s
peaceful means to place the mind neither too high or too low, but at the point
of balance.
I can see
that it’s very confusing for you, coming from different places and having
practiced in different ways with different teachers. Coming to practice here,
you must be plagued with all kinds of doubts. One teacher says you must practice
in one way, another says you should practice another way. You wonder which
method to use, unsure of the essence of the practice. The result is confusion.
There are so many teachers and so many teachings that nobody knows how to
harmonize their practice. As a result there is a lot of doubt and uncertainty.
So you must
try not to think too much. If you do think, then do so with awareness. But so
far your thinking has been done with no awareness. First you must make your
mind calm. Where there is knowing there is no need to think; awareness will
arise in its place, and this will in turn become wisdom (paññā). But the
ordinary kind of thinking is not wisdom, it is simply the aimless and unaware
wandering of the mind, which inevitably results in agitation. This is not
wisdom.
At this
stage you don’t need to think. You’ve already done a great deal of thinking at
home, haven’t you? It just stirs up the heart. You must establish some awareness.
Obsessive thinking can even bring you tears, just try it out. Getting lost in
some train of thought won’t lead you to the truth, it’s not wisdom. The Buddha
was a very wise person, he’d learned how to stop thinking. In the same way you
are practicing here in order to stop thinking and thereby arrive at peace. If
you are already calm it is not necessary to think, wisdom will arise in its
place.
To meditate
you do not have to think much more than to resolve that right now is the time
for training the mind and nothing else. Don’t let the mind shoot off to the
left or to the right, to the front or behind, above or below. Our only duty
right now is to practice mindfulness of the breathing. Fix your attention at
the head and move it down through the body to the tips of the feet, and then
back up to the crown of the head. Pass your awareness down through the body,
observing with wisdom. We do this to gain an initial understanding of the way
the body is. Then begin the meditation, noting that at this time your sole duty
is to observe the inhalations and exhalations. Don’t force the breath to be any
longer or shorter than normal, just allow it to continue easily. Don’t put any
pressure on the breath, rather let it flow evenly, letting go with each
in-breath and out-breath.
You must
understand that you are letting go as you do this, but there should still be
awareness. You must maintain this awareness, allowing the breath to enter and
leave comfortably. There is no need to force the breath, just allow it to flow easily
and naturally. Maintain the resolve that at this time you have no other duties
or responsibilities. Thoughts about what will happen, what you will know or see
during the meditation may arise from time to time, but once they arise just let
them cease by themselves, don’t be unduly concerned over them.
During the
meditation there is no need to pay attention to sense impressions. Whenever the
mind is affected by sense impingement, wherever there is a feeling or sensation
in the mind, just let it go. Whether those sensations are good or bad is
unimportant. It is not necessary to make anything out of those sensations, just
let them pass away and return your attention to the breath. Maintain the
awareness of the breath entering and leaving. Don’t create suffering over the
breath being too long or too short, simply observe it without trying to control
or suppress it in any way. In other words, don’t attach. Allow the breath to
continue as it is, and the mind will become calm. As you continue the mind will
gradually lay things down and come to rest, the breath becoming lighter and
lighter until it becomes so faint that it seems like it’s not there at all.
Both the body and the mind will feel light and energized. All that will remain
will be a one-pointed knowing. You could say that the mind has changed and reached
a state of calm.
If the mind
is agitated, set up mindfulness and inhale deeply till there is no space left
to store any air, then release it all completely until none remains. Follow
this with another deep inhalation until you are full, then release the air
again. Do this two or three times, then re-establish concentration. The mind
should be calmer. If any more sense impressions cause agitation in the mind,
repeat the process on every occasion. Similarly with walking meditation. If
while walking, the mind becomes agitated, stop still, calm the mind,
re-establish the awareness with the meditation object and then continue
walking. Sitting and walking meditation are in essence the same, differing only
in terms of the physical posture used.
Sometimes
there may be doubt, so you must have sati, to be the one who knows, continually
following and examining the agitated mind in whatever form it takes. This is to
have sati. Sati watches over and takes care of the mind. You must maintain this
knowing and not be careless or wander astray, no matter what condition the mind
takes on.
The trick
is to have sati taking control and supervising the mind. Once the mind is
unified with sati a new kind of awareness will emerge. The mind that has
developed calm is held in check by that calm, just like a chicken held in a
coop; the chicken is unable to wander outside, but it can still move around
within the coop. Its walking to and fro doesn’t get it into trouble because it is
restrained by the coop. Likewise the awareness that takes place when the mind
has sati and is calm does not cause trouble. None of the thinking or sensations
that take place within the calm mind cause harm or disturbance.
Some people
don’t want to experience any thoughts or feelings at all, but this is going too
far. Feelings arise within the state of calm. The mind is both experiencing
feelings and calm at the same time, without being disturbed. When there is calm
like this there are no harmful consequences. Problems occur when the ‘chicken’
gets out of the ‘coop’. For instance, you may be watching the breath entering
and leaving and then forget yourself, allowing the mind to wander away from the
breath, back home, off to the shops or to any number of different places. Maybe
even half an hour passes before you suddenly realize you’re supposed to be
practicing meditation and reprimand yourself for your lack of sati. This is
where you have to be really careful, because this is where the chicken gets out
of the coop – the mind leaves its base of calm.
You must
take care to maintain the awareness with sati and try to pull the mind back.
Although I use the words ‘pull the mind back’, in fact the mind doesn’t really
go anywhere, only the object of awareness has changed. You must make the mind
stay right here and now. As long as there is sati there will be presence of
mind. It seems like you are pulling the mind back but really it hasn’t gone
anywhere, it has simply changed a little. It seems that the mind goes here and
there, but in fact the change occurs right at the one spot. When sati is
regained, in a flash you are back with the mind without it having to be brought
from anywhere.
(The
Teachings of Ajahn Chah)
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