by Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo
(Phra Suddhidhammaransi Gambhiramedhacariya)
Translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu |
Prologue
There are two things beginning meditators should search for as
external aids to their practice:
1. Suitable companions (puggala-sappaya): Be judicious in
choosing
people to associate with. Search only for companions who
have peace of mind. This can be any group at all, as long as the
group as a whole is aiming for mental peace.
2. A suitable location (senasana-sappaya): Choose a quiet
place with an agreeable atmosphere, far from human society. Places
of this sort, providing physical seclusion, are conducive to the
practice of meditation. Examples listed in the Canon include caverns
and caves, the shade of an over-hanging cliff-face, the forest
wilderness, and empty houses or buildings where not too many people
will come passing by. Places like this are an excellent aid and
support for a beginning meditator.
When you go to stay in such a place, don't let your thoughts
dwell on topics that will act as enemies to your peace of mind. For
example, don't preoccupy yourself with magic spells or the black
arts. Instead, call to mind and put into practice those principles
and qualities that will be to your benefit. For example:
Appicchata: Be a person of few wants with regard to the
necessities of life.
Santutthi: Be content with the possessions you already
have.
Viveka: Aim solely for peace, quiet and seclusion.
Asansagga: Don't entangle yourself with human
companionship.
Viriyarambha: Be singleminded and persistent at making
the mind still and at peace.
Silanussati: Reflect on your own conduct to see if
you've overstepped any of your precepts, and if you have
immediately purify your behavior through your own intention.
Samadhi-katha: Focus on calling to mind the meditation
theme on which your mind can become firmly established.
Pañña-katha: Focus exclusively on those topics that
will give rise to discernment and clear insight.
Vimutti: Make the mind well-disposed toward the search
for release from all defilements.
Vimutti-ñana-dassana: Focus on contemplating how to
come to the realizations that will enable you to gain release from
the fermentation of all defilements.
These principles are guidelines for meditators of every sort and
will direct the mind solely to the path leading beyond all suffering
and stress.
What follows is a short-hand list of essential principles,
selected to help prevent meditators from getting tied up in the
course of their practice. These principles, though, should be viewed
merely as incidental to the Dhamma. The reality of the Dhamma has to
be brought into being within ourselves through our own energies:
This is called practicing the Dhamma. If we go no further than the
lists, we'll end up with only concepts of the Dhamma. Our ultimate
aim should be to make the mind still until we reach the natural
reality that exists on its own within us, that knows on its own and
lets go on its own. This is the practice of the Dhamma that will
lead us to the realization of the Dhamma the true taste and
nourishment of the Dhamma so that we will no longer be caught up
on the ropes.
In other words, conceptualized Dhamma is like a rope bridge for
crossing over a river. If we take the bridge down and then carry it
with us, it will serve no purpose other than to weigh us down and
get us all tied up. So no matter how much conceptualized Dhamma you
may have memorized, when you come to the point where you're
practicing for real you have to take responsibility for yourself.
Whether you are to win or lose, let go or cling, will depend on how
much quality you've built into your own mind. This is why we are
taught not to cling to the scriptures and texts, to meanings and
concepts. Only when we train ourselves to get beyond all this will
we be heading for purity.
Attahi attano natho:
Nothing can help us unless we can rely on ourselves. Only when we
realize this will we be on the right track. The Buddha attained all
of the truths he taught before he put them into words. It wasn't the
case that he came up with the words first and then put them into
practice later. He was like the scientists who experiment and get
results before writing textbooks. But people who simply read the
textbooks know everything for example, they may know every part
in an airplane but they can't produce one out of their own
knowledge. To be a consumer and to be a producer are two different
things. If we cling merely to the concepts of the Dhamma, simply
memorizing them, we're no more than consumers. Only if we make
ourselves into producers, so that others can consume, will we be
acting properly.
To be successful producers, we have to accept responsibility for
ourselves. If there's any area where we don't succeed, we should
make use of our own ingenuity until we do. If we rely merely on the
ingenuity of others, then we can't depend on ourselves. And if we
can't depend on ourselves, why should we let other people think that
they can depend on us?
This is why I have compiled this list of principles merely as a
brief beginning guide for meditators.
The Thirteen Ascetic Observances
1. Pansukulikanga: the practice of wearing robes made from
thrown-away cloth.
2. Tecivarikanga: the practice of using only one set of
three robes.
3. Pindapatikanga: the practice of going for alms.
4. Sapadacarikanga: the practice of not by-passing any
donors on one's alms path.
5. Ekasanikanga: the practice of eating no more than one
meal a day.
6. Pattapindikanga: the practice of eating one's food
only from one's bowl.
7. Khalupacchabhattikanga: the practice of not accepting
any food presented after one has eaten one's fill.
8. Araññikanga: the practice of living in the
wilderness.
9. Rukkhamulikanga: the practice of living under the
shade of a tree.
10. Abbhokasikanga: the practice of living out under the
open sky.
11. Sosanikanga: the practice of living in a cemetery.
12. Yathasanthatikanga: the practice of living in
whatever place is assigned to one.
13. Nesajjikanga: the practice of not lying down.
The Fourteen Duties
1. Akantuka-vatta: duties of a monk newly arriving at a
monastery.
2. Avasika-vatta: duties of a host-monk when a newcomer
arrives.
3. Gamika-vatta: duties of a monk when leaving a
monastery.
4. Anumodana-vatta: duties connected with expressing
appreciation for donations (of food).
5. Bhattaka-vatta: duties to observe before and after
one's meal.
6. Pindicarika-vatta: duties to observe when going for
alms.
7. Araññika-vatta: duties to observe when living in
the wilderness.
8. Senasana-vatta: duties to observe in looking after
one's dwelling place.
9. Jantaghara-vatta: duties to observe in using the
fire-house.
10. Vaccakuti-vatta: duties to observe in using the
toilet.
11. Upajjhaya-vatta: duties to observe in attending to
one's preceptor.
12. Acariya-vatta: duties to observe in attending to
one's teacher.
13. Saddhiviharika-vatta: a preceptor's duties toward
his pupil.
14. Antevasika-vatta: a teacher's duties toward his
pupil.
Seven Important Sets of Principles (The Wings to
Awakening)
1. The four frames of reference (satipatthana): body,
feelings, mind, mental qualities.
2. The four right exertions (sammappadhana): making the
effort to prevent evil from arising, to abandon whatever evil has
arisen, to give rise to the good that hasn't yet arisen, and to
maintain the good that has.
3. The four foundations of achievement (iddhipada):
Chanda feeling an affinity for one's meditation
theme.
Viriya persistence.
Citta intentness on one's goal.
Vimangsa circumspection in one's activities and
interests.
4. The five pre-eminent factors (indriya): conviction,
persistence, mindfulness, concentration, discernment (factors that
are pre-eminent in performing one's duties).
5. The five strengths (bala): conviction, persistence
mindfulness, concentration, discernment (factors that give energy
to the observance of one's duties).
6. The seven factors for Awakening (bojjhanga):
Sati-sambojjhanga powers of mindfulness,
recollection, and reference.
Dhammavicaya-sambojjhanga discrimination in choosing
a meditation theme well-suited to oneself.
Viriya-sambojjhanga persistence.
Piti-sambojjhanga rapture; fullness of body and mind.
Passaddhi-sambojjhanga physical stillness and mental
serenity.
Samadhi-sambojjhanga concentration.
Upekkha-sambojjhanga equanimity.
7. The eightfold path (magga):
Samma-ditthi Right View.
Samma-sankappa Right Intention.
Samma-vaca Right Speech.
Samma-kammanta Right Action.
Samma-ajiva Right Livelihood.
Samma-vayama Right Effort.
Samma-sati Right Mindfulness.
Samma-samadhi Right Concentration.
The Forty Meditation Themes
Ten recollections; ten foul objects; ten kasinas; four sublime
abidings; four formless absorptions; one resolution into elements;
and one perception of the filthiness of food.
Ten recollections:
1. Buddhanussati: recollection of the virtues of the
Buddha.
2. Dhammanussati: recollection of the virtues of the
Dhamma.
3. Sanghanussati: recollection of the virtues of the
Sangha.
4. Silanussati: recollection of one's own moral virtue.
5. Caganussati: recollection of one's generosity.
6. Devatanussati: recollection of the qualities that
lead to rebirth as a heavenly being.
7. Kayagatasati: mindfulness immersed in the body.
8. Maranassati: mindfulness of death.
9. Anapanassati: mindfulness of breathing.
10. Upasamanussati: recollection of the virtues of
nibbana ultimate pleasure; unexcelled ease, free from birth,
aging, illness and death.
Ten foul objects:
1. Uddhumataka: a rotten, bloated corpse, its body all
swollen and its features distended out of shape.
2. Vinilaka: a livid corpse, with patchy discoloration
greenish, reddish, yellowish from the decomposition of the
blood.
3. Vipubbaka: a festering corpse, oozing lymph and pus
from its various orifices.
4. Vichiddaka: a corpse falling apart, the pieces
scattered about, radiating their stench.
5. Vikkhayittaka: a corpse that various animals, such as
dogs, are gnawing, or that vultures are picking at, or that crows
are fighting over, pulling it apart in different directions.
6. Vikkhittaka: corpses scattered about, i.e., unclaimed
bodies that have been thrown together in a pile face up, face
down, old bones and new scattered all over the place.
7. Hatavikkhittaka: the corpse of a person violently
murdered, slashed and stabbed with various weapons, covered with
wounds short, long, shallow, deep some parts hacked so
that they're almost detached.
8. Lohitaka: a corpse covered with blood, like the hands
of a butcher, all red and raw-smelling.
9. Puluvaka: a corpse infested with worms: long worms,
short worms, black, green, and yellow worms, squeezed into the
ears, eyes, and mouth; squirming and squiggling about, filling the
various parts of the body like a net full of fish that has fallen
open.
10. Atthika: a skeleton, some of the joints already
separated, others not yet, the bones whitish, yellowish,
discolored scattered near and far all over the place.
Ten kasinas:
1. Pathavi kasina: staring at earth.
2. Apo kasina: staring at water.
3. Tejo kasina: staring at fire.
4. Vayo kasina: staring at wind.
5. Odata kasina: staring at white.
6. Pita kasina: staring at yellow.
7. Lohita kasina: staring at red.
8. Nila kasina: staring at blue (or green).
9. Akasa kasina: staring at the space in a hole or an
opening.
10. Aloka kasina: staring at bright light.
Four sublime abidings:
1. Metta: benevolence, friendliness, good will, love in the
true sense.
2. Karuna: compassion, sympathy, pity, aspiring to find
a way to be truly helpful.
3. Mudita: appreciation for the goodness of other people
and for our own when we are able to help them.
4. Upekkha: When our efforts to be of help don't
succeed, we should make the mind neutral neither pleased nor
upset by whatever it focuses on so that it enters the
emptiness of jhana, centered and tranquil to the point where it
can disregard acts of thinking and evaluating as well as feelings
of rapture and ease, leaving only oneness and equanimity with
regard to all objects and preoccupations.
Four formless absorptions:
1. Akasanancayatana: being absorbed in a sense of boundless
emptiness and space as one's preoccupation.
2. Viññanancayatana: being absorbed in boundless
consciousness as one's preoccupation, with no form or figure
acting as the sign or focal point of one's concentration.
3. Akiñcaññayatana: focusing exclusively on a fainter
or more subtle sense of cognizance that has no limit and in which
nothing appears or disappears, to the point where one almost
understands it to be nibbana.
4. Nevasañña-nasaññayatana: being absorbed in a
feeling that occurs in the mind, that isn't awareness exactly, but
neither is it non-awareness; i.e., there is awareness, but with no
thinking, no focusing of awareness on what it knows.
These four formless absorptions are merely resting places for the
mind, because they are states that the mind enters, stays in, and
leaves. They are by nature unstable and inconstant, so we shouldn't
rest content simply at this level. We have to go back and forth
through the various levels many times so as to realize that they're
only stages of enforced tranquillity.
One resolution into elements: i.e., regarding each part of
the body simply in terms of physical properties or elements.
One perception of the filthiness of food: i.e., viewing
food as something repugnant and unclean with regard to where it
comes from, how it's prepared, how it's mixed together when it's
chewed, and where it stays in the stomach and intestines.
* * *
With one exception, all of the meditation themes mentioned here
are simply gocara dhamma foraging places for the mind.
They're not places for the mind to stay. If we try to go live in the
things we see when we're out foraging, we'll end up in trouble.
Thus, there is one theme that's termed "vihara dhamma"
or "anagocara": Once you've developed it, you can
use it as a place to stay. When you practice meditation, you don't
have to go foraging in other themes; you can stay in the single
theme that's the apex of all meditation themes: anapanassati,
keeping the breath in mind. This theme, unlike the others, has none
of the features or various deceptions that can upset or disturb the
heart. As for the others:
Some of the recollections, when you've practiced them for a
long time, can give rise to startling or unsettling visions.
The ten foul objects can give rise after a while to visions
and sometimes to sense of alienation and discontent that turns
into restlessness and distress, your mind being unable to fashion
anything on which it can come to rest, to the point where you
can't eat or drink.
The ten kasina, after you've stared at them a long while,
can give rise to visions that tend to pull you out of your sense
of the body, as you become enthralled by their color and features,
to the point where you may become completely carried away.
As for the resolution into elements, when you become more
and more engrossed in contemplating the elements, everything in
the world becomes nothing more than elements, which are everywhere
the same. You come to believe that you no longer have to make
distinctions: You're nothing more than elements, members of the
opposite sex are nothing more than elements, food is nothing more
than elements, and so you can end up overstepping the bounds of
morality and the monastic discipline.
As for the perception of the filthiness of food, as you
become more and more caught up in it, everything becomes
repulsive. You can't eat or sleep, your mind becomes restless and
disturbed, and you inflict suffering on yourself.
As for the four sublime abodes, if you don't have jhana as
a dwelling for the mind, feelings of good will, compassion, and
appreciation can all cause you to suffer. Only if you have jhana
can these qualities truly become sublime abodes, that is, restful
places for the heart to stay (vihara dhamma).
Thus only one of these themes anapanassati, keeping the
breath in mind is truly safe. This is the supreme meditation
theme. You don't have to send your awareness out to fix it on any
outside objects at all. Even if you may go foraging through such
objects, don't go living in them, because after a while they can
waver and shift, just as when we cross the sea in a boat: When we
first get into the boat we may feel all right, but as soon as the
boat heads out into the open bay and we're buffeted by wind and
waves, we can start feeling seasick. To practice keeping the breath
in mind, though, is like sitting in an open shelter at dockside: We
won't feel queasy or sick; we can see boats as they pass by on the
water, and people as they pass by on land. Thus, keeping the breath
in mind is classed:
as an exercise agreeable to people of any and every
temperament;
as "anagocara," an exercise in which you
focus exclusively on the breath while you sit in meditation,
without having to compound things by sending your awareness out to
grab this or get hold of that;
and as "dhamma-thiti," i.e., all you have
to do is keep your mind established firm and in place.
The beginning stage is to think buddho "bud-"
with the in-breath, and "dho" with the out. Fixing
your attention on just this much is enough to start seeing results.
There's only one aim, and that's:
that you really do it.
If there is anything you're unsure of, or if you encounter any
problems, then consult the following pages.
Introduction
This handbook on keeping the breath in mind has had a number of
readers who have put it into practice and seen results appearing
within themselves in accordance with the strength of their practice.
Many people have come to me to discuss the results they've gained
from practicing the principles in this book, but now it's out of
print. For this reason I've decided to enlarge it and have it
printed again as an aid for those who are interested in the
practice.
Now, if you're not acquainted with this topic, have never
attempted it, or aren't yet skilled if you don't know the
techniques of the practice it's bound to be hard to understand,
because the currents of the mind, when they're written down as a
book, simply won't be a book. The issues involved in dealing with
the mind are more than many. If your knowledge of them isn't truly
comprehensive, you may misunderstand what you come to see and know,
and this in turn can be destructive in many ways. (1) You may lose
whatever respect you had for the practice, deciding that there's no
truth to it. (2) You may gain only a partial grasp of things,
leading you to decide that other people can't practice or are
practicing wrongly, and in the end you're left with no way to
practice yourself. So you decide to "let go" simply
through conjecture and speculation. But the truth is that this
simply won't work. True and complete letting go can come only from
the principles well-taught by the Buddha: virtue, concentration, and
discernment, which are a synopsis of the eightfold path he taught in
his first sermon.
So in our practice we should consider how virtue, concentration,
discernment, and release can be brought into being. Virtue forms the
basis for concentration; concentration, the basis for discernment
(liberating insight or cognitive skill); and discernment, the basis
for release from ignorance, craving, and attachment. Thus in this
book, which is a guide to developing Right Concentration, I would
like to recommend to other meditators a method that, in my
experience, has proven safe and productive, so that they can test it
for themselves by putting it into practice until they start seeing
results.
The main concern of this book is with the way to mental peace.
Now, the word "peace" has many levels: A mind infused with
virtue has one level of peace and happiness; a mind stilled through
concentration has another level of peace and happiness; a mind at
peace through the power of discernment has still another level of
happiness; and the peace of a mind that is released is yet another
level, with a happiness completely apart from the rest.
In these matters, though, meditators tend to prefer the results
to the causes. They aren't as interested in abandoning their own
defilements through the principles of the practice as they are in
standing out among society at large. They appropriate the ideas and
observations of other people as being their own, but by and large
their wisdom is composed of bahira pañña remembered
"outsights," not true insight.
So when you want the reality of the principles taught by the
Buddha, you should first lift your mind to this principle Right
Concentration because it's an excellent gathering of the
energies of your mind. All energy in the world comes from stopping
and resting. Motion is something that destroys itself as when
our thinking goes all out of bounds. Take walking for instance: When
we walk, energy comes from the foot at rest. Or when we speak,
energy comes from stopping between phrases. If we were to talk
without stopping, without resting between phrases, not only would it
waste energy, but the language we'd speak wouldn't even be human. So
it is with practicing the Dhamma: Release comes from concentration
and discernment acting together. Release through the power of the
mind (ceto-vimutti) requires more concentration and less
discernment; release through discernment (pañña-vimutti),
more discernment and less concentration but there is no way that
release can be attained without the stillness of concentration.
Thus, resting the mind provides the strength needed to support
all the qualities developed in the practice, which is why it's such
an essential part of Right Concentration. It forms a well-spring and
a storage place for all knowledge, whether of the world or of the
Dhamma. If you aren't acquainted with this basic principle, skilled
awareness won't arise. And if you don't have skilled awareness, how
will you be able to let go? You'll have to go groping around in
unskilled awareness. As long as the mind is in the grips of
unskilled awareness, it's bound to be deluded by its fashionings.
Unskilled awareness is a brine in which the mind lies soaking; a
mind soaked in its juices is like wet, sappy wood that, when burned,
gives off smoke as its signal, but no flame. As the smoke rises into
the air, you imagine it to be something high and exalted. It's high,
all right, but only like smoke or overcast clouds. If there's a lot
of it, it can obscure your vision and that of others, so that you
can't see the light of the sun and moon. This is why such people are
said to be "groping." Those who train their own hearts,
though, will give rise to skilled awareness. When skilled awareness
penetrates the heart, you'll come to realize the harmful potency of
mental fashionings. The arising of skilled awareness in the heart is
like the burning of dry, sapless wood that gives off flame and
light. Even though there may be some smoke, you don't pay it any
mind, because the firelight is more outstanding.
The flame of skilled awareness gives rise to five sorts of
results:
1. Rust (the defilements) won't take hold of the heart.
2. The heart becomes purified.
3. The heart becomes radiant in and of itself (pabhassaram
cittam).
4. The heart develops majesty (tejas).
5. The three skills, the eight skills, and the four forms of
acumen will arise.
All of these things arise through the power of the mind. The
nature of the mind is that it already has a certain amount of
instinctive intuition the times when it knows on its own, as
when you happen to think of a particular person, and then he or she
actually shows up. All good qualities, from the mundane to the
transcendent, are always present in each of us. These qualities
the Dhamma aren't the exclusive possession of any particular
group or person. We all have the right to develop them and put them
into practice.
For these qualities to yield results, we have to develop them in
conjunction with the following four principles:
1. Chanda: feeling an affinity for the practice.
2. Viriya: being persistent in the practice.
3. Citta: being intent on the practice.
4. Vimansa: being circumspect in what we do, i.e.,
circumspect before we do it, circumspect (mindful and aware) while
we're doing it, and circumspect with regard to the results that
arise from what we've done.
These four principles form the foundation for success in all
areas, whether in matters of the world or of the Dhamma. Once
they're actualized within us and focused together on a single goal,
we're bound to succeed in line with our aspirations. The results
they yield, briefly put, are of two sorts:
1. Iddhiriddhi: certain mundane powers that accrue to
meditators.
2. Puññariddhi: power in terms of the Dhamma that will
accrue to meditators, providing means for settling issues that
relate to the world and the heart, or for liberating the mind from
all mundane influences. This is termed:
Vimutti release,
Visuddhi purity,
Santi peace,
Nibbana the disbanding of all stress.
Thus, I would like to invite all Buddhists all who hope for
peace and well-being to reflect on the principles of practice
dealing with Right Concentration presented here as a guide for those
who are interested. If you have any questions dealing with this
book, or any problems arising from the practice of training the
mind, I will be glad to give whatever advice I can.
May you prosper and be well.
Whoever feels that this book is of use and would like to print it
again for free distribution, may go ahead and do so without having
to ask permission. Some parts may not be correct in terms of the
Pali, so wherever there may be any mistakes, I ask your forgiveness.
Phra Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo
Wat Asokaram, Samut Prakaan
September, 1960
"Buddhanussati metta ca asubham maranassati:
Iccima caturarakkha..."
(Recollection of the Buddha; good will;
The foul; mindfulness of death:
These four guardian protectors...)
Rama IV, "Mokkhupaya Gatha"
I. Recollection of the Buddha
Araham samma-sambuddho bhagava:
Buddham bhagavantam abhivademi.
The Blessed One is Worthy and Rightly Self-awakened.
I bow down before the Awakened, Blessed One. (Bow down)
Svakkhato bhagavata dhammo:
Dhammam namassami.
The Dhamma is well-expounded by the Blessed One.
I pay homage to the Dhamma. (Bow down)
Supatipanno bhagavato savaka-sangho:
Sangham namami.
The Sangha of the Blessed One's disciples has practiced well.
I pay respect to the Sangha. (Bow down)
A. Paying homage to objects worthy of respect:
Namo tassa bhagavato arahato samma-sambuddhassa. (Repeat
three times.)
Homage to the Blessed One, the Worthy One, the Rightly
Self-awakened One.
Ukasa, dvaratayena katam, sabbam aparadham khamatha me
bhante.
Asking your leave, I request that you forgive me for whatever
wrong I have done with the three doors (of body, speech, and
mind).
Vandami bhante cetiyam sabbam sabbattha thane, supatithitam
sariranka-dhatum, maha-bodhim buddha-rupam sakkarattham.
I revere every stupa established in every place, every Relic of
the Buddha's body, every Great Bodhi tree, every Buddha image that
is an object of veneration.
Aham vandami dhatuyo. Aham vandami sabbaso. Iccetam
ratanattayam, aham vandami sabbada.
I revere the relics. I revere them everywhere. I always revere
the Triple Gem.
B. Paying homage to the Triple Gem:
Buddha-puja mahatejavanto: I ask to pay homage to the
Buddha, whose majesty is greater than the powers of all beings
human and divine. Thus, this homage to the Buddha is a means of
developing great majesty.
Buddham jivitam yava nibbanam saranam gacchami: I take
refuge in the Buddha from now until attaining nibbana.
Dhamma-puja mahappanno: I ask to pay homage to the
Dhamma, the teachings of the Buddha, which are a well-spring of
discernment for beings human and divine. Thus, this worship of the
Dhamma is a means of developing great discernment.
Dhammam jivitam yava nibbanam saranam gacchami: I take
refuge in the Dhamma from now until attaining nibbana.
Sangha-puja mahabhogavaho: I ask to pay homage to those
followers of the Buddha who have practiced well in thought, word,
and deed; and who possess all wealth, beginning with Noble Wealth.
Thus, this homage to the Sangha is a means of developing great
wealth.
Sangham jivitam yava nibbanam saranam gacchami: I take
refuge in the Sangha from now until attaining nibbana.
N'atthi me saranam aññam, Buddho dhammo sangho me saranam
varam: Etena saccavajjena hotu me jayamangalam: I have no
other refuge: The Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha are my highest refuge.
By means of this vow, may the blessing of victory be mine.
Yankiñci ratanam loke vijjati vividham puthu, Ratanam
buddha-dhamma-sangha-samam natthi, Tasma sotthi bhavantu me:
Of the many and varied treasures found in the world, none equal
the Triple Gem. Therefore, may well-being be mine.
(If you repeat the translations of these passages, bow down once
at this point.)
II. Good Will
Declare your purity, taking the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha as
witness once more, repeating this Pali passage:
Parisuddho aham bhante. Parisuddhoti mam buddho dhammo sangho
dharetu. (I now declare my purity to the Triple Gem. May the
Triple Gem recognize me as pure at present.)
Now develop thoughts of good will, saying:
Sabbe satta May all living beings
Avera hontu Be free from animosity,
Abyapajjha hontu Free from oppression,
Anigha hontu Free from trouble,
Sukhi attanam pariharantu May they look after
themselves with ease.
Sabbe satta sada hontu avera sukha-jivino: May all
beings always live happily, free from animosity.
Katam puñña-phalam mayham sabbe bhagi bhavantu te: May
all share in the blessings springing from the good I have done.
(This is the abbreviated version. If your time is limited, simply
say this much and then get into position to meditate.)
Spreading thoughts of good will to the six directions:
1. The eastern quarter: "Puratthimasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta (May all living beings in the eastern quarter...) avera
hontu, abyapajjha hontu, anigha hontu, sukhi attanam pariharantu.
Sabbe satta sada hontu avera sukhajivino. Katam puññaphalam
mayham sabbe bhagi bhavantu te." (For translations, see
above.)
2. The western quarter: "Pacchimasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta, etc."
3. The northern quarter: "Uttarasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta, etc."
4. The southern quarter: "Dakkhinasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta, etc."
5. The lower regions: "Hetthimasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta, etc."
6. The upper regions: "Uparimasmim disa-bhage sabbe
satta avera hontu, abyapajjha hontu, anigha hontu, sukhi attanam
pariharantu. Sabbe satta sada hontu avera sukhajivino. Katam puññaphalam
mayham sabbe bhagi bhavantu te." (Bow down three times.)
When you have finished spreading thoughts of good will to all six
directions, cleanse your heart of thoughts of animosity and
apprehension. Make your heart completely clear and at ease. Good
will acts as a support for purity of virtue and so is an appropriate
way of preparing the heart for the practice of tranquillity and
insight meditation.
III. The Foul: Tranquillity Meditation
I.e., remove all befouling mental states from the mind. The
things that befoul and darken the mind are the five Hindrances:
Kama-chanda: sensual desires, taking pleasure in
sensual objects (sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile
sensations, ideas) and sensual moods (such as passion, aversion,
and delusion).
Byapada: ill will, malevolence, hatred.
Thina-middha: torpor, lethargy, drowsiness,
listlessness.
Uddhacca-kukkucca: restlessness and anxiety.
Vicikiccha: doubt, uncertainty.
When any of these unskillful states occupy the heart, it's not
flourishing, blooming, or bright. For the heart to bloom, it has to
be free from all five of the Hindrances; and for it to be free in
this way, we have to develop concentration or absorption (jhana),
which is composed of directed thought, evaluation, rapture,
pleasure, and singleness of preoccupation (see below). The heart
will then be clear, bright, and resplendent. In Pali, this is called
"sobhana-citta." Thus, in this section we will
discuss how to develop concentration as a means of eliminating the
Hindrances as follows:
A. "Among the forty themes, breath is
supreme."
Sit in a half-lotus position, your right leg on top of your left;
your hands palm-up in your lap, your right hand on top of your left.
Keep your body comfortably erect and your mind on what you're doing.
Don't let your thoughts go spinning forward or back. Be intent on
keeping track of the present: the present of the body, or the
in-and-out breath; and the present of the mind, or mindfulness and
all-round alertness. The present of the body and the present of the
mind should be brought together at a single point. In other words,
make the object of the mind single and one. Focus your attention on
the breath, keeping watch over it until you're clearly aware that,
"This is the in-breath," and "This is the out."
Once you can see clearly in this way, call to mind the virtues of
the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha, gathering them into a single word,
"Buddho." Then divide "Buddho" into two
syllables, thinking "bud-" with the in-breath, and "dho"
with the out, at the same time counting your breaths:
"Bud-" in, "dho" out, one; "bud-" in,
"dho" out, two; "bud-" in "dho" out,
three, and so on up to ten. Then start counting again from one to
nine; then one to eight, one to seven... six... five... four...
three... two... one... zero. In other words:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
1 2 3 4 5 6
1 2 3 4 5
1 2 3 4
1 2 3
1 2
1
0
Keep three points the breath, your mindfulness, and your
awareness together in a single stream. If when you've finished
counting you find that your mind still won't stay with the breath,
start by counting again, from one to ten and so on to zero. Keep
this up until you feel that your mind has settled down, and then
stay with zero. In other words, you no longer have to count, you no
longer have to think "Buddho." Simply keep careful watch
over your breath and your awareness. Keep your awareness focused on
a single point, being mindful and watchful. Don't send it in and out
after the breath. When the breath comes in, you know. When it goes
out, you know, but don't make your awareness go in or out. Keep it
neutral and still. Keep watch only on the present. When you can do
this, the five Hindrances won't be able to find entry into the mind.
This is called "parikamma bhavana," repetition
meditation.
At this point, the mind becomes light and can put aside its heavy
burdens. When the mind is light, so is the body. In Pali this is
called, "kaya-lahuta, citta-lahuta." The mind is
peaceful and solitary free from agitation and unrest clear
and calm with the refined sense of the breath. When the mind reaches
this state, it's in the sphere of directed thought (vitakka),
which is the first factor of jhana.
Now survey and examine the characteristics of the breath. Try
adjusting the breath in four different ways: Breathe in long and out
long, and see whether your mind is at ease with that sort of breath.
Then breathe in short and out short to see whether you feel
comfortable and at ease that way. Then see whether you feel at ease
breathing in long and out short, or in short and out long. Continue
breathing in whichever of these four ways feels most comfortable and
then let that comfortable breath spread throughout the different
parts of the body. At the same time, expand your sense of mindful
awareness along with the breath.
When the breath runs throughout the body, and the sensations of
breath in the various parts of the body are coordinated, they can be
put to use, for example, to relieve feelings of pain. Your sense of
mindfulness at this point is broad; your alertness, complete and
mature. When mindfulness is spread throughout the body, this is
called kayagatasati mindfulness immersed in the body.
Your frame of reference is large and expansive, and so is called "mahasatipatthana."
Your alertness is present throughout, aware both of the causes
i.e., what you're doing and of the results coming from what
you've done. All of these characteristics are aspects of evaluation (vicara),
the second factor of jhana.
Now that the body and mind have received nourishment in other
words, now that the breath has provided for the body, and
mindfulness has provided for the mind both body and mind are
bound to reap results, i.e., rapture. The body is full and
refreshed, free from restlessness. The mind is full and refreshed,
free from anxiety and distraction, broad and blooming. This is
called rapture (piti), which is the third factor of jhana.
Once fullness arises in this way, body and mind settle down and
are still. In Pali this is termed "kaya-passaddhi,
citta-passaddhi." This feeling of stillness leads to a
sense of relaxation and ease for both body and mind, termed pleasure
(sukha).
These are the beginning steps in dealing with the mind. Once you
are able to follow them, you should make a point of practicing them
repeatedly, back and forth, until you're skilled at entering
concentration, staying in place, and withdrawing. Even just this
much can form a path along which the mind can then progress, for it
has to some extent already reached the level of upacara bhavana,
threshold concentration.
B. Focal points for the mind
These include: (1) the tip of the nose; (2) the middle of the
head; (3) the palate; (4) the base of the throat; (5) the tip of the
breastbone; (6) the "center," two inches above the navel.
In centering the breath at any of these points, people who tend to
have headaches shouldn't focus on any point above the base of the
throat.
Coordinate the various aspects of breath in the body, such as the
up-flowing breath, the down-flowing breath, the breath flowing in
the stomach, the breath flowing in the intestines, the breath
flowing along every part of the body, hot breath, cool breath, warm
breath: Mesh these various sorts of breath so that they're balanced,
even, and just right, so as to give rise to a sense of ease and
comfort throughout the body. The purpose of examining and
coordinating the breath is to expand your sense of mindfulness and
awareness so that they are sensitive throughout the entire body.
This will then benefit both body and mind. The enlarged sense of the
body is termed mahabhuta-rupa; expanded awareness is termed mahaggatam
cittam. This sense of awareness will then go on to reap the
benefits of its beauty that will arise in various ways, leading it
to the level of appana bhavana, fixed penetration.
* * *
The characteristics of the in-and-out breath, as they interact
with the properties of the body, can cause the properties of water
and earth to be affected as follows:
There are three types of blood in the human body:
1. Clear, white arising from cool breath.
2. Light red, dark red arising from warm breath.
3. Black, bluish black arising from hot breath.
These different types of blood, as they nourish the nerves in the
body, can cause people to have different tendencies:
1. Hot breath can make a person tend heavily toward being
affectionate, easily attracted, and infatuated tendencies that
are associated with delusion.
2. Warm breath can cause a person to have moderate tendencies
as far as affection is concerned, but strong tendencies toward a
quick and violent temper tendencies associated with anger.
3. Cool breath causes weak tendencies toward affection, but
strong tendencies toward greed, craving material objects more than
anything else.
If we know clearly which physical properties are aggravating
greed, anger, or delusion, we can destroy the corresponding
properties and these states of mind will weaken on their own.
"Remove the fuel, and the fire won't blaze."
To adjust these properties skillfully gives rise to discernment,
which lies at the essence of being skillful. Adjust the property of
warmth so that the blood is clear and light red, and your
discernment will be quick, your nerves healthy, your thinking
perceptive, subtle, and deep. In other words, to make heavier use of
the nerves in the physical heart is the way of the Dhamma. As for
the nerves of the brain, to use them a great deal leads to
restlessness, distraction, and heavy defilements.
These are just a few of the issues related to the breath. There
are many, many more, that people of discernment should discover on
their own. Ñana-dhatu-vijja: knowledge of the subtleties of
all 18 elements (dhatu), the 22 pre-eminent qualities (indriya),
the six sense media (ayatana); acute insight into the
qualities of the mind; expertise in concentration. Concentration
gives rise to liberating insight, acquaintance with the process of
fashioning;
nibbida disenchantment; viraga
disengagement; nirodha utter disbanding; vimutti
a mind released from the mundane; santi peace of
heart; paramam sukham the ease that is ultimate bliss.
C. Images
These are of two sorts:
1. Uggaha nimitta: images as they are first perceived.
2. Patibhaga nimitta: adjusted images.
Images of either sort can appear at certain mental moments or
with certain people. When the mind becomes still, uggaha nimittas
can appear in either of two ways:
from mental notes made in the past;
on their own, without our ever having thought of the matter.
Uggaha nimittas of both sorts can be either beneficial or
harmful, true or false, so we shouldn't place complete trust in
them. If we're thoroughly mindful and alert, they can be beneficial.
But if our powers of reference are weak or if we lack strength of
mind, we're likely to follow the drift of whatever images appear,
sometimes losing our bearings to the point where we latch on to the
images as being real.
Uggaha nimittas are of two sorts:
a. Sensation-images: e.g., seeing images of our own body, of other
people, of animals, or of corpses; images of black, red, blue or
white. Sometimes these images are true, sometimes not. Sometimes
images arise by way of the ear for example, we may hear the
voice of a person talking. Sometimes they arise by way of the nose
we may smell fragrant scents or foul, like those of a corpse.
Sometimes images are sensed by the body the body may feel
small or large, tall or short. All of these sensations are classed
as uggaha nimittas. If the mind is strong and resilient,
they can act as a means for the arising of liberating insight. If
our powers of reference are weak, though, they can turn into
corruptions of insight (vipassanupakkilesa), in which we
fall for the objects we experience, believing them to be true.
Even when they're true, things that are false can mingle in with
them like a man sitting under the open sky: When the sun
shines, he's bound to have a shadow. The man really exists, and
the shadow is connected with him, but the shadow isn't really the
man. Thus, we're taught to let go of what's true and real; things
that are untrue will then fall from our grasp as well.
b. Thought-images: When the breath is subtle and the mind is
still and unoccupied, things can occur to it. Sometimes we may
think of a question and then immediately know the answer.
Sometimes we don't even have to think: The knowledge pops into the
mind on its own. Things of this sort are also classed as uggaha
nimittas. Sometimes they may be true, sometimes false,
sometimes mixed. You can't trust them to be absolutely true.
Sometimes they're true, and that truth is what leads us to fall
for them. For example, they may be true about three things and
false about seven. Once we've placed our confidence in them, even
the false things will appear true to us. This is one way of giving
rise to the corruptions of insight.
So when sensation-images or thought-images arise in one way or
another, you should then practice adjusting and analyzing them (patibhaga
nimitta). In other words, when a visual image arises, if it's
large, make it small, far, near, large, small, appear, and
disappear. Analyze it into its various parts and then let it go.
Don't let these images influence the mind. Instead, have the mind
influence the images, as you will. If you aren't able to do this,
then don't get involved with them. Disregard them and return to your
original practice with the breath.
If a thought-image arises by way of the mind, stop, take your
bearings, and consider exactly how much truth there is to the
knowledge it gives. Even if it's true, you shouldn't latch onto what
you know or see. If you latch onto your knowledge, it'll become a
corruption of insight. If you latch on to your views, they'll become
a form of attachment and conceit, in which you assume yourself to be
this or that. Thus, you should let go of these things, in line with
their true nature. If you aren't wise to them, they can skew your
practice so that you miss out on the highest good.
D. The Ten Corruptions of Insight
1. Obhasa: a bright light that enables you to see places
both far and near.
2. Ñana: knowledge enabling you to know in an uncanny
way things you never before knew, such as pubbenivasanussati-ñana,
the ability to remember previous lifetimes. Even knowledge of this
sort, though, can mislead you. If you learn good things about your
past, you may get pleased. If you learn bad or undesirable things
about your past, you may get displeased. Cutupapata-ñana:
Sometimes you may learn how people and other living beings die and
are reborn knowing, for instance, where they are reborn when
they have died from this world which can cause you to become
engrossed in the various things you come to know and see. As you
become more and more engrossed, false knowledge can step in, and
yet you still assume it to be true.
3. Piti: a sense of physical and mental fullness and
satisfaction, full to the point of infatuation physically
satisfied to the point where you don't feel hunger or thirst, heat
or cold; mentally satisfied to the point where you become
engrossed and oblivious, lazy and lethargic, perhaps deciding that
you've already achieved the goal. What's actually happened is that
you've swallowed your mood down whole.
4. Passaddhi: The body is at peace and the mind serene,
to the point where you don't want to encounter anything in the
world. You see the world as being unpeaceful and you don't want to
have anything to do with it. Actually, if the mind is really at
peace, everything in the world will also be at peace. People who
are addicted to a sense of peace won't want to do any physical
work or even think about anything, because they're stuck on that
sense of peace as a constant preoccupation.
5. Sukha: Once there's peace, there's a sense of
physical and mental pleasure and ease; and once there's a great
deal of pleasure, you come to hate pain, seeing pleasure as
something good and pain as something bad. Your view of things
falls into two parts. (Actually, pleasure doesn't come from
anywhere else but pain.) Pain is the same thing as pleasure: When
pleasure arises, pain is its shadow; when pain arise, pleasure is
its shadow. As long as you don't understand this, you give rise to
a kind of defilement again, you swallow your mood down whole.
When a deep and arresting sense of relaxation, stillness, ease, or
freedom from disturbance arises, you get engrossed in that
feeling. What has happened is that you're simply stuck on a
pleasing mental state.
6. Adhimokkha: being disposed to believing that your
knowledge and the things you know are true. Once "true"
takes a stance, "false" is bound to enter the picture.
True and false go together, i.e., they're one and the same thing.
For example, suppose we ask, "Is Nai Daeng at home?" and
someone answers, "No, he isn't." If Nai Daeng really
exists and he's really at home, then when that person says,
"He's not at home," he's lying. But if Nai Daeng doesn't
exist, that person can't lie. Thus, true and false are one and the
same...
7. Paggaha: excessive persistence, leading to
restlessness. You're simply fastened on your preoccupation and too
strongly focused on your goal...
8. Upatthana: being obsessed with a particular item
you've come to know or see, refusing to let it go.
9. Upekkha: indifference, not wanting to meet with
anything, be aware of anything, think about anything, or figure
anything out; assuming that you've let go completely. Actually,
though, this is a misunderstanding of that very mental moment.
10. Nikanti: being content with your various
preoccupations, simply attached to the things you experience or
see.
All of these things, if we aren't wise to them, can corrupt the
heart. So, as meditators, we should attend to them and reflect on
them until we understand them thoroughly. Only then will we be able
to give rise to liberating insight, clear knowledge of the four
truths:
1. Physical and mental stress, i.e., the things that burden the
body or mind. Physical and mental pleasure and ease, though, are
also classed as stress because they are subject to change.
2. The factors that enable these forms of stress to arise are
three:
a. Kama-tanha: craving for attractive and appealing
sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile sensations, and ideas;
fastening onto these things, grabbing hold of them as belonging
to the self. This is one factor that enables stress to arise.
(The mind flashes out.)
b. Bhava-tanha: desire for things to be this way or
that at times when they can't be the way we want them; wanting
things to be a certain way outside of the proper time or
occasion. This is called "being hungry" like a
person who hungers for food but has no food to eat and so acts
in a way that shows, "I'm a person who wants to eat."
Bhava-tanha is another factor that enables stress to arise. (The
mind strays.)
c. Vibhava-tanha: not wanting things to be this way or
that, e.g., having been born, not wanting to die; not wanting to
be deprived of the worldly things we've acquired: for example,
having status and wealth and yet not wanting our status and
wealth to leave us. The truth of the matter is that there's no
way it can be avoided. As soon as the change comes, we thus feel
stress and pain. (The mind flinches.)
Punappunam pilitatta
sansaranta bhavabhave:
"Repeated oppression,
wandering on from one state of becoming to another."
Different states of becoming arise first in the mind, then
giving rise to birth. Thus, people of discernment let go of these
things, causing:
3. Nirodha cessation or disbanding to appear in
the heart. In other words, the mind discovers the limits of
craving and lets it go through the practice of insight meditation,
letting go of all fashionings, both good and bad. To be able to
let go in this way, we have to develop:
4. Magga the Path so as to make it powerful. In
other words, we have to give rise to pure discernment within our
own minds so that we can know the truth. Stress is a truth; its
cause is a truth; its cessation and the Path are truths: To know
in this way is liberating insight. And then when we let all four
truths fall away from us so that we gain release from
"true," that's when we'll reach deathlessness (amata
dhamma). Truths have their drawbacks in that untrue things are
mixed in with them. Wherever real money exists, there's bound to
be counterfeit. Wherever there are rich people, there are bound to
be thieves waiting to rob them. This is why release has to let go
of truths before it can reach nibbana.
Meditators, then, should acquaint themselves with the enemies of
concentration, so as to keep their distance from all five of the
Hindrances, the two sorts of uggaha nimittas, and the ten
corruptions of insight. The mind will then be able to gain release
from all things defiling, dirty, and damp. What this means is that
the mind doesn't hold onto anything at all. It lets go of supposings,
meanings, practice, and attainment. Above cause and beyond
effect: That's the aim of the Buddha's teachings.
Those who want to get rid of kama-tanha desire and
attraction for the six types of sensory objects have to develop
virtue that's pure all the way to the heart: This is termed
heightened virtue (adhisila). Those who are to get rid of bhava-tanha
thoughts that stray out, choosing objects to dwell on first
have to develop Right Concentration, pure and circumspect: This is
termed heightened mind (adhicitta). Those who are to get rid
of vibhava-tanha attachment to knowledge and viewpoints,
attainments and states of becoming, theories and conceits will
first have to develop clear-seeing discernment, cognitive skill
that's pure and fully developed: This is heightened discernment (adhipañña).
Thus, the threefold training virtue, concentration, and
discernment is a group of truths that can let go of the causes
of stress. Other than this, there's no way to release.
IV. Mindfulness of Death:
Insight Meditation
I.e., keep death in mind. This is where the mind advances to the
development of liberating insight, taking death as its theme.
"Death" here refers to the death occurring in the present
physical sensations arising and passing away, mental acts
arising and passing away, all in a moment of awareness. Only when
you're aware on this level can you be classed as being mindful of
death.
Now that we've brought up the topic of death, we have to reflect
on birth, seeing how many ways sensations are born and how many ways
mental acts are born. This is something a person with a quiet mind
can know.
A. Sensations have up to five levels of refinement:
1. Hina-rupa: coarse sensations, sensations of discomfort,
aches and pains. When these arise, focus on what causes them until
they disappear.
2. Panita-rupa: exquisite sensations that make the body
feel pleasurable, light, and refined. Focus on what causes them
until they disappear...
3. Sukhumala-rupa: delicate sensations, tender,
yielding, and agile. When they arise, focus on what causes them
until they disappear.
4. Olarika-rupa: physical sensations that give a sense
of grandeur, exuberance, brightness, and exultation: "Mukhavanno
vipassidati." When they arise, focus on finding out what
causes them until they disappear...
All four of these sensations arise and disband by their very
nature; and it's possible to find out where they first appear.
5. "Mano-bhava": imagined circumstances that
appear through the power of the mind. When they arise, focus on
keeping track of them until they disappear. Once you're able to
know in this way, you enter the sphere of true mindfulness of
death.
An explanation of this sort of sensation: When the mind is quiet
and steadily concentrated, it has the power to create images in the
imagination (inner sensations, or sensations within sensations).
Whatever images it thinks of will then appear to it; and once they
appear, the mind tends to enter into them and take up residence. (It
can go great distances.) If the mind fastens onto these sensations,
it is said to take birth simply because it has no sense of
death.
These sensations can appear in any of five ways:
a. arising from the posture of the body, disappearing when the
posture changes;
b. arising from thoughts imbued with greed, hatred, or delusion
arising, taking a stance, and then disbanding;
c. arising with an in-breath and disbanding with the following
out-breath;
d. arising from the cleansing of the blood in the lungs
appearing and disbanding in a single instant;
e. arising from the heart's pumping blood into the various
parts of the body, the pressure of the blood causing sensations to
arise that correspond to sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and
tactile sensations. Sensations of this sort are arising and
disbanding every moment.
Another class of sensation is termed "gocara-rupa"
sensations that circle around the physical body. There are five
sorts light, sound, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations
each having five levels. For instance, common light travels slowly;
in the flash of an eye it runs for a league and then dies away. The
second level, subtle light, goes further; and the third level goes
further still. The fourth and fifth levels can travel the entire
universe. The same holds true for sounds, smells, tastes, and
tactile sensations. The relationships between all the potentials in
the universe are interacting at every moment, differing only as to
whether they're fast or slow. This is the inequality that has been
termed "anicca-lakkhana" inherent inconstancy.
Whoever is ignorant is bound to think that all this is impossible,
but actually this is the way things already are by their nature.
We'll come to know this through vijja cognitive skill
not through ordinary labels and concepts. This is called true
knowing, which meditators who develop the inner eye will realize for
themselves: knowing the arising of these sensations, their
persisting and their disbanding, in terms of their primary qualities
and basic regularity.
Knowing things for what they really are.
Release, purity, dispassion, disbanding;
Nibbanam paramam sukham:
Nibbana is the ultimate ease.
B. As for mental acts that arise and die, their timespan
is many thousands of times faster than that of sensations. To be
able to keep track of their arising and dying away, our awareness
has to be still. The four kinds of mental acts are:
Vedana: the mind's experience of feelings of pleasure,
pain, and indifference.
Sañña: recognizing and labeling the objects of the
mind.
Sankhara: mental fabrications or fashionings of good
and bad.
Viññana: distinct consciousness or cognizance of
objects.
One class of these mental acts stays in place, arising and
disbanding with reference to the immediate present. Another class is
termed "gocara vedana" "gocara sañña,"
etc., which go out to refer to the world. Each of these has five
levels, differing as to whether they're common, refined, or subtle,
slow or fast. These five levels connect with each other, running out
in stages, and then circling back to their starting point,
disbanding and then arising again all without end.
When we don't have the skill to discern the primary sensations
and mental acts that stay in place, we can't see into the "gocara"
sensations and mental acts that go flowing around. This is termed "avijja,"
the unawareness that opens the way for connecting consciousness (patisandhi
viññana), giving rise to the act of fashioning (sankhara),
which is the essence of kamma. This gives fruit as sensations
and feelings that are followed by craving, and then the act of
labeling, which gives rise to another level of consciousness of
sensory objects and then the cycle goes circling on. This is
termed the "khandha-vatta," the cycle of the
aggregates, circling and changing unevenly and inconsistently. To
see this is called aniccanupassana-ñana, the knowledge that
keeps track of inconstancy as it occurs. This is known through the
inner eye, i.e., the skill of genuine discernment.
Thus, those who practice the exercises of insight meditation
should use their sensitivities and circumspection to the full if
they hope to gain release from unawareness. Fashionings, in this
context, are like waves on the ocean. If we're out in a boat on the
ocean when the waves are high, our vision is curtailed. Our senses
of hearing, smell, taste, touch, and ideation are all curtailed. We
won't be able to perceive far into the distance. What this means is
that when our minds are immersed in the Hindrances, we won't be able
to perceive death at all. But once we've been able to suppress the
Hindrances, it's like taking a boat across the ocean when there are
no waves. We'll be able to see objects far in the distance. Our eyes
will be clear-seeing, our ears clear-hearing, our senses of smell,
taste, touch and ideation will be broad and wide open. The water
will be clear, and the light brilliant. We'll be able to know all
around us.
In the same way, those who are to know death clearly have to
begin by practicing concentration as a foundation for developing
liberating insight. How do the five sorts of above-mentioned
sensation arise? What are their causes? How do they disappear? How
do physical and mental feelings arise? How do they disappear? What
are their causes? How do labels and concepts arise? What are their
causes? How do they disappear? How do mental fashionings arise? What
are their causes? How do they disappear? How does consciousness
arise by way of the senses of sight, hearing, smell, taste, touch,
and ideation? What are its causes? How does it disappear?
Altogether there are four levels to each of the five aggregates (khandhas):
external and internal, staying in place and streaming outward. These
can be known at all times, but only people who have the discernment
that comes from training the mind in tranquillity and insight
meditation will be able to know death on this level.
The discernment that arises in this way has been termed pubbenivasanussati-ñana,
i.e., understanding past sensations, future sensations, and
sensations in the present. These sensations differ in the way they
arise and pass away. To know this is to have mastered one cognitive
skill.
Cutupapata-ñana: With discernment of this sort, we're
able to keep track of the states of our own mind as they arise and
disappear, sometimes good as they arise and good as they disappear,
sometimes bad as they arise and bad as they disappear, sometimes
good as they arise and bad as they disappear, sometimes bad as they
arise and good as they disappear. To be able to keep track in this
way is to know states of being and birth.
Asavakkhaya-ñana: When the discernment of this skill
arises, it leads to disenchantment with the way sensations and
mental acts arise and disappear and then arise again, simply
circling about: coarser sensations going through the cycle slowly,
more refined sensations going quickly; coarser mental acts going
slowly, more refined mental acts going quickly. When you can keep
track of this, you know one form of stress. Now focus attention back
on your own mind to see whether or not it's neutral at that moment.
If the mind approves of its knowledge or of the things it knows,
that's kamasukhallikanuyoga indulgence in pleasure. If
the mind disapproves of its knowledge or of the things it knows,
that's attakilamathanuyoga, indulgence in self-infliction.
Once you've seen this, make the mind neutral toward whatever it may
know: That moment of awareness is the mental state forming the Path.
When the Path arises, the causes of stress disband. Try your best to
keep that mental state going. Follow that train of awareness as much
as you can. The mind when it's in that state is said to be
developing the Path and at whatever moment the Path stands firm,
disbanding and relinquishing occur.
When you can do this, you reach the level where you know death
clearly. People who know death in this way are then able to reduce
the number of their own deaths. Some of the Noble Ones have seven
more deaths ahead of them, some have only one more, others go beyond
death entirely. These Noble Ones are people who understand birth and
death, and for this reason have only a few deaths left to them.
Ordinary people who understand their own birth and death on this
level are hard to find. Common, ordinary birth and death aren't
especially necessary; but people who don't understand the Dhamma
have to put up with birth and death as a common thing.
So whoever is to know death on this level will have to develop
the cognitive skill that comes from training the mind. The skill,
here, is knowing which preoccupations of the mind are in the past,
which are in the future, and which are in the present. This is
cognitive skill (vijja). Letting go of the past, letting go
of the future, letting go of the present, not latching onto anything
at all: This is purity and release.
As for unawareness, it's the exact opposite, i.e., not knowing
what's past, not knowing what's future, not knowing what's present
that is, the arising and falling away of sensations and mental
acts, or body and mind or at most knowing only on the level of
labels and concepts remembered from what other people have said, not
knowing on the level of awareness that we've developed on our own.
All of this is classed as avijja, or unawareness.
No matter how much we may use words of wisdom and discernment, it
still won't gain us release. For instance, we may know that things
are inconstant, but we still fall for inconstant things. We may know
about things that are stressful, but we still fall for them. We may
know that things are not-self, but we still fall for things that are
not-self. Our knowledge of inconstancy, stress, and not-self isn't
true. Then how are these things truly known? Like this:
Knowing both sides,
Letting go both ways,
Shedding everything.
"Knowing both sides" means knowing what's constant and
what's inconstant, what's stress and what's ease, what's not-self
and what's self. "Letting go both ways" means not latching
onto things that are constant or inconstant, not latching onto
stress or ease, not latching onto self or not-self. "Shedding
everything" means not holding onto past, present, or future:
Awareness doesn't head forward or back, and yet you can't say that
it's taking a stance.
Yavadeva ñanamattaya patissatimattaya
anissito ca viharati
na ca kiñci loke upadiyati.
"Simply mindful and aware, the mind remains independent, not
attached to anything in the world."
Epilogue
I. There are three sets of results arising from the
practice.
Set A
1. Pubbenivasanussati-ñana: the ability to remember
previous lives.
2. Cutupapata-ñana: the ability to know how the living
beings of the world die and are reborn.
3. Asavakkhaya-ñana: understanding how to put an end to
the defilements of the heart.
Set B
1. Vipassana-ñana: clear insight, through training the
mind, into phenomena in and of themselves, in terms of the four
Noble Truths.
2. Manomayiddhi: psychic power, making things appear in
line with your thoughts for example, thinking of a visual
image that then appears to the physical eye. Those who are to
develop this skill must first become expert at uggaha nimittas.
3. Iddhividhi: the ability to change such images as you
like. Those who are to develop this skill must first become expert
in patibhaga nimittas.
4. Dibbacakkhu: clairvoyance, the ability to see great
distances. Only people with good optic nerves and who
understand how to adjust the physical properties in the body so as
to keep the nerves charged and awake will be able to develop
this skill.
5. Dibbasota: clairaudience, the ability to hear sounds
at great distances. Only people whose auditory nerves are good
and who understand how to adjust the properties in the body so
that they act as a conducting medium will be able to develop
this skill.
6. Cetopariya-ñana: knowing the thoughts and mental
states of other people. To do this, you first have to adjust the
fluids nourishing your heart muscles so that they're clean and
pure.
7. Pubbenivasanussati-ñana: the ability to remember
previous lives, knowing by means of mental images or intuitive
verbal knowledge. To remember past lives, you first have to
understand how to interchange the physical properties in the body.
8. Asavakkhaya-ñana: knowing the causes for mental
defilement; knowing the means for putting an end to mental
fermentations.
Set C
1. Attha-patisambhida-ñana: acumen in understanding the
meaning of various teachings.
2. Dhamma-patisambhida-ñana: acumen acquired by
means of your own heart with regard to all fashioned
properties and qualities.
3. Nirutti-patisambhida-ñana: the ability to understand
by means of the heart the affairs and languages of people and
other living beings in the world.
4. Patibhana-patisambhida-ñana: the intuitive ability
to respond promptly and aptly in situations where you're called on
to speak; the ability to respond to an opponent without having to
think: Simply by focusing the mind heavily down, the right
response will appear on its own, just as a flashlight gives off
light immediately as we press the switch.
* * *
Taken together, all of these skills arise exclusively from
training the heart and are called bhavana-maya-pañña
discernment developed through training the mind. They can't be
taught. You have to know them on your own. Thus, they can be called paccatta-vijja,
personal skills. If you're astute enough, they can all become
transcendent. If not, they all become mundane. Thus, the principles
of discernment are two:
1. Mundane discernment: studying and memorizing a great deal,
thinking and evaluating a great deal, and then understanding on the
common level of labels and concepts.
2. Transcendent discernment: knowledge that comes from practicing
Right Concentration; intuitive understanding that arises naturally
on its own within the heart, beyond the scope of the world; clear
insight; release from all views, conceits, defilements, and
fermentations of the mind.
* * *
II. Upakara dhamma. There are three sets of
qualities that are of help in giving rise to cognitive skill.
Set A
1. Sila-sanvara: taking good care of your virtue your
manners and conduct in thought, word, and deed following such
principles as the ten guidelines (kammapatha).
2. Indriya-sanvara: being constantly mindful of the six
"gateways" the senses of sight, hearing, smell,
taste, touch, and ideation making sure they don't give rise to
anything that would disturb your own peace or that of others.
3. Bhojane mattannuta: having a sense of moderation in
the amount of food you eat not too much, not too little,
eating only food that's compatible with your physical make-up;
making sure that it's light food: Otherwise, you'll have to eat
only half-full or on the small side. As far as food is concerned,
if you can get by on only one meal a day, you'll find it much
easier to train the mind.
There are three ways of eating:
a. Stuffing yourself full. This interferes with concentration
and is termed "being greedy."
b. Eating just enough to keep the body going. This is termed
"being content with what you have."
c. Eating no more than half full. This is termed "being
a person of few wants," who has no worries associated with
food and whose body weighs lightly. Just as a tree with light
heartwood won't sink when it falls in the water, so the
meditation of such a person is not inclined to lead to anything
low. The senses of such a person the nerves of the eyes,
ears, nose, tongue, and body tend toward peacefulness and
are well-suited for helping the mind to attain peace.
4. Jagariyanuyoga: awakening the physical properties of
the body by developing the factor that fashions the body (kaya-sankhara),
i.e., adjusting the in-and-out breath so that it's thoroughly
beneficial to the properties of earth, water, wind, and fire
within the body. This is termed developing mindfulness immersed in
the body (kayagatasati-bhavana), as in the verse:
Suppabuddham pabujjhanti
sada gotamasavaka
Yesam diva ca ratto ca
niccam kayagatasati.
"The disciples of the Buddha Gotama are always well alert,
their mindfulness constantly, by day and by night, immersed in the
body"... their mindfulness charging the body whether their
eyes are open or closed.
At the same time, we have to understand how to keep the mind
wide awake through developing jhana, starting with directed
thought, evaluation, rapture, pleasure, and singleness of object
(see below). The mind will then awaken from its forgetfulness.
With regard to forgetfulness, the Buddha taught that when the mind
gets drawn in by its objects, it faints for a spell. If this
happens often enough to become a habit, it gives rise to delusion,
leaving us no way to give rise to the discernment of liberating
insight.
Set B
1. Saddha: conviction, i.e., being convinced of the causes
of goodness and of the results that will come from acting in line
with those causes.
2. Hiri: inner shame at the thought of doing evil, not
daring to do evil either openly or secretly, because we realize
that there are no secret places in the world. Even if other people
don't see us doing evil, we ourselves are sure to see.
3. Ottappa: fear of evil, not being attracted to the
idea of doing evil; viewing bad kamma as a poisonous cobra raising
its head and spreading its hood, and thus not daring to go near.
4. Bahusacca: studying and training yourself constantly,
seeking advice from those who are knowledgeable and expert in the
practice. Don't associate with people who have no knowledge of the
matters in which you are interested.
5. Viriya: persistence in abandoning the defilements of
the mind i.e., the Hindrances; perseverance in giving rise to
good within the mind by developing such things as the first jhana.
Briefly put, there are three ways to do this: being persistent in
giving rise to the good, in maintaining the good, and in
constantly developing the good that has already arisen.
6. Satipatthana: giving your powers of reference a frame
and a focal point by developing mindfulness immersed in the body ("kesa,
loma") or mindfulness of breathing, etc.
7. Pañña: discernment; circumspection that's
all-encompassing and fully reasonable in doing good, in
maintaining the good, and in using the good so as to be of benefit
at large for low-level benefits, intermediate benefits, and
ultimate benefits, with regard to this life, lives to come, and
the ultimate benefit, nibbana. This is what is meant by
discernment.
Set C
1. The first jhana. Vitakka: Think of an object for the
mind to focus on. Vicara: Evaluate the object on which you
have focused. For example, once you are focused on keeping track
of the breath, take a good look at the various breath-sensations
in the body. Learn how to adjust and change whichever part or
aspect is uncomfortable. Learn how to use whichever part feels
good so as to be of benefit to the body and mind. Keep this up
continually, and results will appear: The body will feel light and
full, permeated with a sense of rapture and refreshment (piti).
Awareness will be full and all-round, with no distracting
restlessness. At this point, both mind and body are quiet, just as
a child lying in a cradle with a doll to play with won't cry. The
body is thus at ease, and the mind relaxed (sukha). Ekaggatam
cittam: The mind sticks steadily with a single object, without
grasping after past or future, comfortably focused in the present.
This much qualifies as jhana.
2. The second jhana. Directed thought and evaluation disappear;
awareness settles in on its sense of ease and rapture. The body is
relaxed, the mind quiet and serene. The body feels full, like the
earth saturated with rain water to the point where puddles form.
The mind feels brighter and clearer. As awareness focuses more
heavily on its one object, it expands itself even further, letting
go of the sense of rapture and entering the third jhana.
3. The third jhana has two factors:
a. Sukha, its taste: physical pleasure; cool mental
pleasure and peace.
b. Ekaggatarammana: Awareness is firm and fixed in a
snug fit with its object. As it focuses strongly and forcibly
expands itself, a bright sense of light appears. The mind seems
much more open and blooming than before. As you focus in with
complete mindfulness and alertness, the sense of pleasure begins
to waver, and as the mind adjusts its focus slightly it enters
the fourth jhana.
4. The fourth jhana has two factors:
a. Upekkha: equanimity with regard to objects. Past,
future, and the grosser sense of the body in the present
disappear.
b. Ekaggatarammana: The mind is solitary, its
mindfulness full and bright as if you were sitting in a
brightly-lit, empty room with your work finished, free to relax
as you like. The mind rests, its energy strong and expansive.
Now withdraw from this level back out to the first and then
enter in again. As you do this repeatedly, liberating insight will
arise on its own, just like a light connected to a battery: When
we press down on the switch, the light flashes out on its own. And
then we can use whatever color of bulb we want and put it to use
in whatever way we like, depending on our own skill and ingenuity.
In other words, the skills mentioned above will appear.
* * *
People who develop jhana fall into three classes:
1. Those who attain only the first level and then gain liberating
insight right then and there are said to excel in discernment (paññadhika).
They Awaken quickly, and their release is termed pañña-vimutti,
release through discernment.
2. Those who develop jhana to the fourth level, there gaining
liberating insight into the Noble Truths, are said to excel in
conviction (saddhadhika). They develop a moderate number of
skills, and their Awakening occurs at a moderate rate. Their
release is the first level of ceto-vimutti, release through
concentration.
3. Those who become skilled at the four levels of jhana
adept at entering, staying in place, and withdrawing and then
go all the way to the four levels of arupa-jhana, after which they
withdraw back to the first jhana, over and over again, until
finally intuitive knowledge, the cognitive skills, and liberating
discernment arise, giving release from mental fermentation and
defilement: These people are said to excel in persistence (viriyadhika).
People who practice jhana a great deal, developing strong energy
and bright inner light, can Awaken suddenly in a single mental
instant, as soon as discernment first arises. Their release is cetopariyavimutti,
release through mastery of concentration.
These are the results to be gained by meditators. But there have
to be causes our own actions before the results can come
fully developed.
Translator's Appendix
The "Seven Important Sets of Principles" listed in the
prologue to Basic Themes are common to all schools of
Buddhism. In the Pali Canon they appear in a number of discourses
(e.g., Maha-parinibbana Sutta, Pasadika Sutta, etc.)
as the Buddha's own summary of the essential points of his teaching.
Many of these principles are discussed in connection with various
aspects of the practice at different points in this book. What
follows is a selection of excerpts from Ajaan Lee's other writings
and talks dealing with these principles as they relate directly to
the practice of keeping the breath in mind.
* * *
The four frames of reference when we sit in meditation: The
breath is "body"; comfort and discomfort are
"feeling"; purity and clarity are states of
"mind"; and steadiness of mind is "mental
quality."
* * *
Chanda: being content to focus on the breath. Viriya:
trying to adjust the breath so that it's comfortable. Citta:
paying attention to how the breath is flowing. Vimansa:
knowing how to use the breath to benefit every part of the body. If
we follow these four "paths to success," they will lead us
to liberating insight.
* * *
In order to divest our hearts of sights, sounds, smells, tastes,
etc., we have to develop concentration, which is composed of seven
basic qualities:
1. Sati-sambojjhanga: The mind is centered firmly on the
breath, aware of the body, feelings, mind, and mental qualities.
2. Dhamma-vicaya-sambojjhanga: We let the breath spread
throughout the body, making an enlarged frame of reference. We
know how to adjust, improve, choose, and use our breaths so that
they give us comfort. We throw out whichever breaths are harmful
and foster whichever ones are beneficial.
3. Viriya-sambojjhanga: We don't abandon or forget the
breath. We stick with it, and it sticks with us as we keep warding
the Hindrances from the heart. We don't fasten on or become
involved with distracting perceptions. We keep trying to make our
stillness of mind stronger and stronger.
4. Piti-sambojjhanga: When the mind is quiet, the breath
is full and refreshing. We are free from the Hindrances and from
every sort of restlessness, like a white cloth that's spotlessly
clean. When the mind is clear in this way, it feels nothing but
comfort and fullness, which gives rise to a sense of satisfaction,
termed "rapture."
5. Passaddhi-sambojjhanga: The breath is solid
throughout the body. The elements are at peace, and so is the
mind. Nothing feels troublesome or aroused.
6. Samadhi-sambojjhanga: The breath is firm, steady, and
unwavering. The mind takes a firm stance in a single
preoccupation.
7. Upekkha-sambojjhanga: When body, feelings, mind, and
mental qualities are fully snug with one another in these two
types of breath when the mind stays with these aspects of the
breath it doesn't have to fashion anything at all. It doesn't
latch onto any manifestation of good or bad. Neutral and
unperturbed, it doesn't approve or disapprove of anything.
* * *
When mindfulness saturates the body the way flame saturates every
thread in the mantle of a Coleman lantern, the elements throughout
the body work together like a group of people working together on a
job: Each person helps a little here and there, and in no time at
all almost effortlessly the job is done. Just as the mantle
of a Coleman lantern whose every thread is soaked in flame becomes
light, white, and dazzling, so if you soak your mind in mindfulness
until it's aware of the entire body, both the body and mind become
buoyant. When you think using the power of mindfulness, your sense
of the body will immediately become thoroughly bright, helping to
develop both body and mind. You'll be able to sit or stand for long
periods of time without getting tired, to walk for great distances
without getting fatigued, to go for unusually long periods of time
on just a little food without getting hungry, or to go without food
and sleep altogether for several days running without losing energy.
As for the heart, it will become pure, open, and free from
blemish. The mind will become bright, energetic, and strong. Saddha-balam:
Your conviction will run like a car running without stop along the
road. Viriya-balam: Your persistence will accelerate and
advance. Sati-balam: Your mindfulness will be robust and
vigorous. Samadhi-balam: Your concentration will become
unwavering and resilient. No activity will be able to kill it. In
other words, no matter what you're doing sitting, standing,
walking, talking, whatever as soon as you think of practicing
concentration, your mind will immediately be centered. Whenever you
want it, just think of it and you have it. When your concentration
is this powerful, insight meditation is no problem. Pañña-balam:
Your discernment will be like a double-edged sword: Your discernment
of what's outside will be sharp; your discernment of what's inside
will be sharp.
When these five strengths appear in the heart, the heart will be
fully mature. Your conviction, persistence, mindfulness,
concentration, and discernment will all be mature and pre-eminent in
their own spheres. It's the nature of mature adults that they
cooperate. When they work together on a job, they finish it. So it
is when you have these five adults working together for you: You'll
be able to complete any task. Your mind will have the power to
demolish every defilement in the heart, just as a nuclear bomb can
demolish anything anywhere in the world.
* * *
When your concentration has strength, it gives rise to
discernment: the ability to see stress, its cause, its disbanding,
and the Path to its disbanding, all clearly within the breath. We
can explain this as follows: The in-and-out breath is stress the
in-breath the stress of arising, the out-breath the stress of
passing away. Not being aware of the breath as it goes in and out,
not knowing the characteristics of the breath: This is the cause of
stress. Knowing when the breath is coming in, knowing when it's
going out, knowing its characteristics clearly i.e., keeping
your views in line with the truth of the breath: This is Right View,
part of the Noble Path. Knowing which ways of breathing are
uncomfortable, knowing how to vary the breath; knowing, "That
way of breathing is uncomfortable; we'll have to breathe like this
in order to feel at ease": This is Right Intention. The mental
factors that think about and properly evaluate all aspects of the
breath are Right Speech. Knowing various ways of improving the
breath; breathing, for example, in long and out long, in short and
out short, in short and out long, in long and out short, until you
come across the breath that's most comfortable for you: This is
Right Action. Knowing how to use the breath to purify the blood, how
to let this purified blood nourish the heart muscles, how to adjust
the breath so that it eases the body and soothes the mind, how to
breathe so that you feel full and refreshed in body and mind: This
is Right Livelihood. Trying to adjust the breath so that it comforts
the body and mind, and to keep trying as long as you aren't fully at
ease: This is Right Effort. Being mindful of the in-and-out breath
at all times, knowing the various aspects of the breath the
up-flowing breath, the down-flowing breath, the breath in the
stomach, the breath in the intestines, the breath flowing along the
muscles and out to every pore keeping track of these things with
every in-and-out breath: This is Right Mindfulness. A mind intent
only on matters of the breath, not pulling any other objects in to
interfere, until the breath is refined, giving rise to fixed
absorption and then liberating insight: This is Right Concentration.
When all of these aspects of the Noble Path virtue,
concentration, and discernment are brought together fully mature
within the heart, you gain insight into all aspects of the breath,
knowing that, "Breathing this way gives rise to good mental
states; breathing that way gives rise to bad mental states."
You let go of the factors i.e., the breath in all its aspects
that fashion the body, the factors that fashion speech, the
factors that fashion the mind, whether good or bad, letting them be
as they truly are, in line with their own inherent nature: This is
the disbanding of stress.
Glossary
Apaya: States of deprivation, i.e., the four lower realms
of existence: rebirth in hell, as a hungry ghost, as an angry demon,
or as a common animal. In Buddhism, none of these states are
regarded as eternal conditions.
Arahant: A "worthy one" or "pure one,"
i.e., a person whose heart no longer has any defilements and is thus
not destined for further rebirth. A title for the Buddha and the
highest level of his Noble Disciples.
Ariyadhana: "Noble Wealth," i.e., qualities that
serve as "capital" in the quest for liberation:
conviction, virtue, conscience, fear of evil, erudition, generosity,
and discernment.
Ayatana: Sense media, i.e., the six senses (the five
physical senses plus the intellect) and their corresponding objects.
Bhavanga (-pada, -citta): The mind's underlying
preoccupation or resting state, which determines its state of being
and to which it reverts in between its responses to stimuli.
Brahma: An inhabitant of the higher heavens (of form and
formlessness), a position earned but not forever through the
cultivation of virtue and meditative absorption (jhana), along with
the attitudes of limitless love, compassion, appreciation, and
equanimity.
Dhamma: Event; phenomenon; the way things are in and of
themselves; quality both in its neutral and in its positive
senses: (1) the basic qualities into which natural phenomena
mental and physical can be analyzed; the terms in which things
are known by the sense of ideation. Also, any teaching that analyzes
phenomena into their basic terms. This is one sense in which the
Buddha's doctrine is his "Dhamma." (2) The quality of
one's heart and mind, as manifest by the rectitude, fairness,
compassion, composure, discernment, etc., revealed in one's actions.
The manifestations can be enumerated and prescribed as principles
(again, "dhamma" another sense in which the Buddha's
doctrine is his Dhamma) that can then be put into practice and
developed as means of removing shoddiness from the heart so that its
genuine, unchanging quality can become fully apparent from within:
This is the Buddha's Dhamma in its ultimate sense.
Dhatu: Element, property, potential. Basic forces that,
when aroused out of their latent state, cause activity on the
physical or psychological level. In traditional Thai physics, which
is based on the physics of the Pali Canon, the four dhatu of earth,
water, fire, and wind are said to permeate all matter in latent or
potential form. To become manifest, they have to be aroused. Thus,
for example, the act of starting a fire is explained as the arousal
of the fire-dhatu (tejas), which already exists in the air
and in the object to be ignited. Once this is "seized," it
clings to the fuel, and the object will be on fire. The fire will
continue burning as long as tejas has sustenance to cling to. When
it runs out of sustenance or is forced to let go, it will grow quiet
returning to its normal, latent state and the individual
fire will go out.
On the level of the human body, diseases are explained as
resulting from the aggravation or imbalance of any of these four
physical properties. Diseases are classified by how they feel:
Fevers are attributed to the fire property, dizziness and faintness
to the wind property, constipation to the earth property, etc.
Well-being is defined as a state in which none of these properties
is dominant. All are quiet, unaroused, balanced and still.
There are a number of lists of dhatus given in the Pali Canon.
The six dhatus are the four physical properties plus space and
consciousness. The 18 dhatus are the six senses, their respective
objects, and the acts of consciousness associated with each.
Gotarabhu-ñana: "Change of lineage knowledge"
the glimpse of nibbana that changes one from an ordinary,
run-of-the-mill person to a Noble One. This is also classed as "ñana-dassana
visuddhi," purity of knowledge and vision.
Indra: King of the gods in the sensual heavens.
Indriya: Pre-eminent or dominating qualities. The 22
qualities that can dominate consciousness are: the senses of vision,
hearing, smell, taste, touch, ideation; femininity, masculinity,
life; pleasure, pain, joy, sorrow, equanimity; conviction,
persistence, mindfulness, concentration, discernment; the
realization that "I shall come to know the unknown," final
knowledge, the state of final-knower.
Jhana: Absorption in a single object or preoccupation. Rupa-jhana
refers to absorption in a physical sensation; arupa-jhana, to
absorption in a mental notion or state. When Ajaan Lee uses the term
"jhana" by itself, he is usually referring to rupa-jhana.
Kamma: Acts of intention that result in states of being
and birth.
Kammapatha: Ten guidelines for moral conduct not
killing, not stealing, not engaging in sexual misconduct, not lying,
not speaking divisively, not using coarse or vulgar language, not
speaking idly, not coveting, not harboring anger, holding right
views.
Kasina: An object stared at with the purpose of fixing an
image of it in one's consciousness, the image then being manipulated
to fill the totality of one's awareness.
Kesa: Hair of the head; the first in the list of 32 parts
of the body used as a meditation theme for counteracting lust.
Khandha: Aggregate the component parts of sensory
perception; physical and mental phenomena as they are directly
experienced: rupa sensations, sense data; vedana
feelings of pleasure, pain, and indifference that result from
the mind's savoring of its objects; sañña labels,
names, allusions; sankhara thought-formations (see below); viññana
sensory consciousness.
Nibbana: The "unbinding" of the mind from
sensations and mental acts, preoccupations and suppositions. As this
term is also used to refer to the extinguishing of a fire, it
carries the connotations of stilling, cooling, and peace. (The use
of the word "unbinding" to refer to the extinguishing of a
fire is best understood in light of the way fire was viewed at the
time of the Buddha. See "dhatu.")
Niramisa-sukha: Literally, "un-raw" pleasure, or
pleasure "not of the flesh." The bliss and ease of nibbana,
a pleasure independent of sensations or mental acts.
Nirodha: Disbanding, disappearance, cessation. In the
absolute sense, this refers to the utter disbanding of stress and
its causes. In an applied sense, it can refer to the temporary and
partial suppression of defilement and stress attained in
tranquillity meditation.
Nivarana: Hindrances; mental qualities that hinder the
mind from attaining concentration and discernment: sensual desire,
ill will, torpor & lethargy, restlessness & anxiety, and
uncertainty.
Pali: The name of the most ancient recension of the
Buddhist scriptures now extant and by extension of the
language in which it was composed.
Patimokkha: The basic monastic code, composed of 227
rules.
Sankhara: Fashioning the forces and factors that
fashion things, the process of fashioning, and the fashioned things
that result. As the fourth khandha, this refers to the act of
fashioning thoughts, urges, etc. within the mind. As a blanket term
for all five khandhas, it refers to all things, physical or
psychological, fashioned by nature.
Stupa: Originally, a tumulus or burial mound enshrining
relics of the Buddha or objects associated with his life. Over the
centuries, however, this has developed into the tall, spired
monuments familiar in temples in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Burma; and
into the pagodas of China, Korea and Japan.
Tejas: See "dhatu."
The translations in this book are based on the editions printed
during Ajaan Lee's lifetime that seem most definitive and complete.
At certain points, these editions differ from those currently
available. In particular, I was able to locate a copy of the essay, Basic
Themes, containing corrections in Ajaan Lee's own hand. These
have been incorporated in the translation.
If these translations are in any way inaccurate or misleading, I
ask forgiveness of the author and reader for having unwittingly
stood in their way. As for whatever may be accurate conducive to
the aims intended by the author I hope the reader will make the
best use of it, translating it a few steps further, into the heart,
so as to attain those aims.
The translator
* * * Sabbe satta sada hontu
avera sukhajivino.
Katam puññaphalam mayham
sabbe bhagi bhavantu te.
May all living beings always live happily,
free from animosity.
May all share in the blessings
springing from the good I have done.
Abbreviations
| Source: Copyright © 1995 Metta
Forest Monastery Reproduced and reformatted from Access to
Insight edition © 1995 For free distribution. This work may be
republished, reformatted, reprinted, and redistributed in any
medium. It is the author's wish, however, that any such
republication and redistribution be made available to the public
on a free and unrestricted basis and that translations and other
derivative works be clearly marked as such. Inquiries concerning
this book may be addressed to: The Abbot, Metta Forest
Monastery, PO Box 1409, Valley Center, CA 92082 U.S.A. |
|