The Supreme Attainments (Part 1)
Now I’m going to describe the gathering place of all things
– goodness and evil, happiness and suffering – so that you’ll know exactly
where they all converge. Tune in your receivers well and you’ll come to know
that everything converges at the heart.
Darkness lies here. Brightness lies here. Ignorance and
delusion, knowledge and wisdom all lie here in the heart. The heart is thus
like a single chair on which two people are waiting to sit. If one of them sits
down, the other has to stand. But if they share the chair, they each get to sit
on separate parts of it. The same is true of the ignorance and wisdom dwelling
in the one heart. Even when we’re ignorant or deluded, we still have some
knowledge. Even when we know, there’s still some ignorance infiltrating the
heart. This is why we say the heart is like a single chair on which two people
are waiting to sit. One heart, but ignorance and knowledge have infiltrated
different parts of it. Whichever one is stronger will get to sit there more
than the other. The techniques for training the heart and developing every form
of goodness and virtue are thus meant to rid the heart of the things that cloud
and stain it.
When we’re taught about ignorant people or intelligent
people, we hear and understand. When we’re taught about ordinary run-of-
the-mill people and their thick defilements, we know and understand. When we’re
taught about the Noble Ones (ariya puggala), from the first up to the highest
levels, we know and understand step by step. Even though we ourselves aren’t
yet able to be like them, we’re curious and want to hear about the goodness
they’ve developed and the path of practice by which they developed it – how
they practiced so as to attain those levels of Dhamma.
In the beginning, the Buddha and his Arahant disciples –
those who practiced and came to know following in his footsteps – started out
as people with defilements just like ours. They differed, though, in that they
were unflagging and persistent in developing themselves so as to wash away the
dark, obscuring things in their hearts. They kept at their practice steadily,
without stopping or abandoning their efforts. As a result, their hearts – which
were being nourished with the good fertilizer of their wise actions – gradually
developed step by step until they were able to attain that highest of the
supreme attainments, the fruit of Arahantship.
The term “Noble One” means a supreme person – supreme
because the Dhamma he or she has attained is supreme. There are four levels:
Stream-enterers, Once-returners, Non-returners, and Arahants.
The text say that those who have attained the level of
stream-entry have abandoned three fetters: self-identity views, uncertainty and
the fondling of precepts and practices. Self-identity views, as expressed in
terms of the khandhas, take twenty forms with each of the five khandhas acting
as a basis for four of the forms. For example you may see the body (your
physical body) as your ‘self’, or your ‘self’ as the body, the body as existing
in your ‘self’, or your ‘self’ as existing in the body. Altogether these are
four. Or you may see feeling as your ‘self’, or your ‘self’ as feeling, feeling
as existing in your ‘self’ or your ‘self’ as existing in feeling – another
four. In the same way the khandhas of memory, thought, and consciousness each
form the basis for four forms, which can be inferred from the above examples.
In other words, each of the five khandhas acts as the basis for four forms of
these views. Four times five is twenty forms of self-identity views.
According to the texts, Stream-enterers have abandoned these
absolutely, but the practice of ‘Forest Dhamma’ differs somewhat in this point.
Other than that though, there are no points of disagreement. So I’d like to
insert a few of the observations of ‘Forest Dhamma’ here, in hopes that they
won’t act as an obstacle to your reading. If you see that they don’t form the
path to release in line with the well-taught Dhamma, please let them pass so
that they won’t form a hindrance in your heart.
To summarize briefly, people who have absolutely abandoned
the twenty forms of self-identity view are those who don’t see the five
khandhas as their self, their self as the five khandhas, the five khandhas as
existing in their self or their self as existing in the five khandhas. Now it
would seem perfectly reasonable to say that people of this sort would also no
longer be interested in sexual relationships, because sexual relationships are
a matter of the five khandhas which are the nest of the twenty forms of
self-identity view that have yet to be abandoned absolutely.
As for those who have abandoned them absolutely, the
physical body no longer has any meaning as an object of sensual desire. Their
feelings no longer indulge in sensual desire. Their memory no longer gives
meaning to things for the sake of sensual desire. Their thought and imagination
no longer create objects for the sake of sensual desire. Their consciousness no
longer acknowledges things for the sake of sensual desire. In short, their five
khandhas no longer function for the sake of sensual desires or for only worldly
relationships whatsoever. Their five khandhas must then change their
functioning to another level of work that they see is still unfinished. In
other words, they are raised to the level of the five subtle fetters: passion
for form, passion for formless phenomena, conceit, restlessness, and ignorance.
The ability to absolutely abandon the twenty forms of
self-identity view would thus appear to fall to Non-returners, because only on
their level is the heart finished with its attachments to sensual desires.
As for Stream-enterers, the way in which they know and let
go of these views, as I understand it, is in line with the following analogy:
Suppose there is a man travelling deep into the forest who comes across a pond
of clear, clean, fresh-tasting water. The water is covered with duckweed,
though, so it isn’t completely visible. He parts the duckweed and sees that the
water looks clear, clean, and inviting. He scoops up a handful of water to
taste it, and then he knows that the water in the pond is really fresh. With
that, he drinks from the pond in earnest until he has satisfied the thirst he
has felt for so long and then continues along his way.
Once he has left, the duckweed moves in to cover the water
as before. As for the man, even though he has left, the memory of the water
always stays in his mind. Every time he enters the forest he goes straight to
the pond, parts the duckweed, and scoops up the water to drink it and bathe
himself to his heart’s content whenever he wants. Even though the water is
again completely covered by the duckweed when he goes away, the convictions
that are firmly implanted in his heart – that the pond is full of water, that
the water is clean and clear, that its taste is absolutely fresh – these
convictions will never be erased.
The man in this analogy stands for the earnest meditator who
uses wisdom to investigate the various parts of the body until they are fully
clear. The citta at that moment lets go of the body, feelings, memory, thought
and consciousness and enters a pure stillness of its very own, with absolutely
no connection to the khandhas. In that moment, the five khandhas don’t function
in any way at all related to the citta. In other words the citta and the
khandhas exist independently because they have been absolutely cut off from one
another through the persistent effort of the meditation.
That moment is one in which there arises a sense of wonder
and amazement that no experience ever, from the day of our birth or the
beginning of our practice, can possibly equal. Yet now we have come to see this
marvel appearing right then and there. The citta stays in that sense of
stillness and ease for a period of time and then withdraws. Once it withdraws
it reconnects with the khandhas as before, but it remains firmly convinced that
the citta had reached a realm of radical stillness, that the five khandhas
(body, feelings, memory, thought and consciousness) were completely cut off
from it during that time, and that while it remained in that stillness it
experienced an extremely amazing mental state. These convictions will never be
erased.
Because of these firm, unshakeable convictions, which become
fixed in the heart as a result of this experience and which can’t be affected
by unfounded or unreasonable assertions, we become earnest in resuming our
earlier meditation, this time with firm determination and a sense of absorption
coming from the magnetic pull that these convictions have in the heart. The
citta is then able to settle down into stillness and ease, and to rest there
for periods of time as before. Even though we can’t yet release the heart
absolutely from the infiltration of the khandhas, we are in no way discouraged
from making a persistent effort for the higher levels of the Dhamma, step by
step.
As for the qualities of Stream-enterers’ hearts, these
include unshakeable conviction (acala-saddhã) in the results they have clearly
seen from their practice and in the higher levels of Dhamma they have yet to
know and see; and impartiality (samãnattatã), free from prejudice and pride
with regard to people of any class. Stream-enterers have Dhamma in charge of
their hearts. They don’t hold to anything over and above what they see as
correct in line with the principle of cause and effect. They accept and
immediately put into practice the principles of truth and are unwilling to
resist or disobey them. No matter what nationality, class, or race individual
Stream-enterers may belong to, they are open and impartial to all people in
general. They aren’t disdainful even toward common animals or people who have
behaved wickedly in the past, for they see that all living beings fall into the
same lot of having good and bad kamma. They understand that whatever sort of
kamma we have, we must accept it in line with the actions we have performed and
the truth of what we have done. If anyone makes assertions that are reasonable
and correct, Stream-enterers will immediately take them to heart without making
an obstacle out of the speaker’s past, race, nationality, or social standing.
If what I have said here is correct, then there would be
nothing about a Stream-enterer’s searching for a spouse that would be in any
way inconsistent with the fact that he or she has yet to abandon absolutely the
twenty forms of self-identity views that are the nest of sensual desires. The
abandonment of self-identity views is no obstacle to Stream-enterers’ having
families because the absolute abandonment of these views lies on an entirely
different level.
(Ajahn Maha Boowa “A Life of Inner Quality”)
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