Buddhism
comes West as a vast body of teaching, and we who
receive it are often awed by its abundance, its
complexity, and its subtlety. Where is the center,
the real thing we should fix on? Or is there a real
thing at all to be apprehended? History shows that
Buddhism can and will accommodate itself to new
cultures, and will flourish according to the
perceptiveness and energy of its new adherents. Now
in the West our perceptiveness and energy are put to
the test to grasp the "real thing" by which this
religion lives — its radicalism.
The
Buddhas only point the way, and the way they point
is a difficult one through the perfection of
morality, concentration, and wisdom to the freedom
from suffering called Nibbana. It is a way of
action. A path is useless without the will to follow
it, and good intentions alone are futile. To make
the journey, the roots of mental defilement must be
torn out entirely; the old illusions we live by must
be shattered; the mind must seek the light. It is a
radical way, because the Buddha enjoins us to give
up what is before, give up what is behind, and give
up what is in between. Then and only then will the
wheel of birth-and-death be knocked from its axis.
Those of
us in the jaded and desperate West who hear the
resonance of truth in the teachings of the Buddha
must hear also that urging to act, to start
an inner rebellion against our ancient sloth and
stupidity. Yet the more we ponder the more we
recognize the enormity of the task, and an
understandable reaction is to set about re-defining
just what has to be done and just how prudent it
might be to fling ourselves into action. The danger
here — so typical in our comfortable and seductive
society — is to forget the radical imperative of
suffering and try to make over Buddhism into a tame
amalgam of platitudes suitable for pleasant
contemplation — praising it in order to avoid
practicing it. Indeed, Buddhism is rational,
patient, deep in wisdom, but should we then just
bask in its reflected light?
Complacency is death. If, out of custom and
timidity, Western Buddhists turn their religion into
a museum piece, or worse, a hobby, they lose the
essence. It is easy enough to settle for an
undemanding status quo, a modicum of calm, a
pleasant sense of harmonious living, and it is easy
enough to postpone or forget any effort to break the
shackles of old delusion, believing that one need
not strain when the road will likely be long. But in
accommodating too much to personal or societal
expediency we cheapen our ideals and slide further
from the disturbing implications of the Noble Truth
of Suffering. We may even take the Buddhist vision
of kamma as an indication that "everything is as it
should be." But everything is not as it
should be. Everything is in fact miserable. If we
are complacent we blind ourselves, and there is no
safety in blindness.
In the
radical view of the Buddha, Samsara is no cosmic
merry-go-round, but a terrible juggernaut of birth
and death dragging beings through endless cycles of
woe. "Free yourselves!" says the Buddha. All lives
and events are variations on the theme of suffering.
All are without substance, endurance, permanence —
merely a web of emptiness, void upon void. The
"self" that everyone spends so much time defending
and nurturing is pure fiction. Dismiss it, says the
Buddha. The world will not conform to our wishes and
to presume otherwise is folly; the disciple must
cease clinging to it and proceed along the path to
the end of suffering. The root problem is craving,
and the radical solution is the destruction of
craving through wisdom.
The
sober truths taught by the Buddha, squarely faced,
present us with problems and choices. Are we to
assume that every Buddhist ought to be off grunting
in a cave, sweating his way toward enlightenment? Is
this the radical conclusion? Actually, the dilemma
is not so formidable. The Buddha taught
gradually, according to the capacity of his
hearers to understand and practice. Every person
should devote himself to the teaching as far as he
is able. The goal is ultimately the same for all,
though progress along the path depends on the
individual. The Dhamma of the Buddha will lead us to
the safety of Nibbana, and it will also sustain us
along the way. What matters is always to bear in
mind where we are and where we are headed.
The
radicalism of the Buddha is probably no more
difficult for Westerners to comprehend than for
anyone else, yet we are especially concerned with it
now, because the teaching is only just now settling
into our culture and its future direction is
uncertain. It is a critical time for the religion.
The fundamental teachings must not be neglected,
lest we take to wearing our religion like warm
slippers and doze into mediocrity. Understood
rightly, the Noble Truths are profoundly disturbing.
They compel us to act, to pursue the ideal of
emancipation no matter how difficult the journey
appears. Buddhism truly goes against the stream of
the world and demands an uncommon vigor of the
disciple. How well we respond depends on individual
choice and ability, but what matters most is the
recognition that a response is called for, that a
path does exist, and that the goal can be
achieved.
Understanding the basic teachings, Western Buddhists
should be wary of tendencies to turn Buddhism into
an instrument of secular reform, or a philosophical
playground, or an esoteric hobby. Before all else,
there is suffering and the path to the end of
suffering. There is no safety in faddishness,
complacency, or the compulsive intellectualism that
hungers for truth but eats the menu instead of the
dinner.
To reach
the truth, to reach deliverance, we are told to give
up what is before, give up what is behind, and give
up what is in between. The essence of Buddhism is to
let go of everything, to cease clinging desperately
to transient, woeful, empty phenomena. The disciple
who acts on this breathtaking advice may find the
bottom dropping out of this fictitious world. So be
it! Thus begins the journey.
The
Baited Hook
Though
seldom stated in so many words, a cherished belief
of all human beings is that happiness lies in the
satisfaction of our desires. All our actions are
usually predicated on this seemingly self-evident
fact. We are devoted to obtaining the objects of our
desire; we consider it our right, our duty, and
indeed our highest aspiration to get what we want,
to obtain what we think will bring us enjoyment,
satisfaction, or "fulfillment." We are accustomed to
asking one another, "What do you want out of life?"
believing that if we can settle on some clear vision
of happiness, and go after it, then all will be
well.
Unfortunately, experience has a way of overturning
our theories. Those manifold objects we yearn for
prove troublesome to capture; when captured they
yield less pleasure than expected; when held onto
they decay and cause us grief. Then we are driven to
turn for relief toward other enticements and thereby
renew the cycle. Somehow we believe that if only
this search for gratification is conducted
correctly, if only the right objects are selected,
if only we can have a little luck to add to our
efforts, then we can certainly attain that permanent
happiness that now eludes us. Badly thumped by
fortune, we doggedly tell ourselves, "Yes, it's
worth all the pain," and turn a swollen eye toward
fresh delights.
But is
it worth all the pain? Consider a succulent worm
bobbing just below the surface of a pond, attracting
the attention of a hungry fish. In a flash the fish
swallows the worm, only to discover the hidden hook,
the barb that rips into its innards and causes it
terror, suffering, and ultimately death. The worm is
attractive, but it delivers little satisfaction to
the fish. Such is the nature of sense-pleasures.
Those objects of eye, ear, nose, tongue, body, and
mind that we find so alluring are more likely to
cause us misery than happiness, and the surprising
truth is that it is not so much our choice of
objects that is at fault, but the mere act of
choosing in the first place, since all phenomena of
this world are in reality flawed, connected to
suffering, and unreliable.
According to the Buddha, true happiness is not to be
found in the deceptive sense-pleasures of the world
— not in wine or wealth or roses. No matter how hard
we try, we can never reach security as long as we
persist in wrong views of the desirability of this
or that sensual object. Without a clear
understanding of the nature of phenomena our search
is doomed from the outset. Our first task must be to
confront the facts that the universe does not exist
for our amusement and that such pleasures as we
customarily derive from it are false, impermanent,
and unworthy of our interest. While the Buddha does
not deny the existence of enjoyment in world, he
points out that all worldly pleasure is bound up
with suffering, inseparable from suffering, and sure
to give way to suffering. Therefore in embracing the
pleasant we cannot help but embrace the unpleasant.
Our craving prevents us from realizing these facts
by continually projecting a false appearance on the
world, convincing us that the tempting objects
around us can actually be possessed and squeezed dry
of some satisfying essence. Without the intervention
of wisdom, craving will keep us running from one
disappointment to another. Though we have many times
taken the bait of sense-pleasure and suffered the
inevitable pull of the hook, each new worm that
comes wiggling through the water excites the
heedless man.
The
Buddha teaches that the solution to the terrible
union of pleasure and pain is not to struggle
hopelessly to split them apart, but to view the
whole contaminated mass with detachment. All
phenomena share the same characteristics of
impermanence, unsatisfactoriness, and
unsubstantiality, so it is futile to single out some
objects for liking and others for loathing. The
whole cast of mind that sees things in terms of
liking-and-loathing must be abandoned in favor of
the detached observation called "mindfulness."
Clearly, if the bait hides a hook we do best to curb
our appetites.
Forsaking attachment to sense-pleasures is a logical
application of the Four Noble Truths, yet even among
those who subscribe to the teachings of the Buddha
there can be found a deep-seated reluctance to move
from theory to practice. The hold which craving has
over our minds is so tenacious that we tend to
straddle the abyss between truth arid illusion,
hoping to live in both with some fast philosophical
footwork. For example, may we not propose that
sense-pleasures are not in themselves harmful and
may therefore be enjoyed in moderation? We may
propose it, but we are apt to justify thereby any
craving that enters our heads. As long as one
regards any experience as personal or desirable, one
remains mired in ignorance. There are pleasant,
unpleasant, and neutral feelings arising in the
mind; they come and they go; they are to be
observed, not sought after, because it is such
seeking or craving that sustains the round of
suffering. Another common notion is that Buddhism
may be employed to beautify life by making the
individual more appreciative of the "harmony" of the
universe. This is false on two counts. The Buddha
did not aim to put a pleasing, comforting face on
things, but to educate the individual to the
ultimate worthlessness of suffering-dominated,
conditioned existence. Also, the only "harmony"
discernible here and now is the implacable and
impersonal law of cause and effect — not the
blissful oneness beloved of poets.
A third
erroneous notion is that sense-pleasures may be
pursued full speed if they are part of worthy
efforts and worthy goals. This is a self-serving
rationalization. While mundane aspirations may be
quite wholesome in conception, as long as they
provide a surreptitious vehicle for craving they are
flawed. For the proper development of insight one
needs to get rid of the idea of an ego or self that
enjoys, possesses, and appropriates. The
noble-minded man is detached from both ego and
world. He acts for the welfare of himself and others
without thought of reward or gratification. He is
indifferent to results; he is not swayed by the
pleasant and the unpleasant..
In
considering the lure and danger of sense-pleasures,
it is not difficult to see that most of us will
ultimately defend our indulgences, not from logic
but from the blind urge, "I want." What harm,
we reason, can there be in a little innocent
delight? To clarify: the harm lies not in the
sensation but in the deluded mind that
fastens onto the sensation and clings to it
obsessively. What behooves the diligent Buddhist is
to get beyond the whole idea of liking and
disliking, to set it aside, to cease entertaining it
— in order to advance to the fruitful fields of
direct insight.
Suppose
then, that we acknowledge the danger of the baited
hook and agree that the restless, craving mind is a
source of suffering. What do we do about it? Often
we complain, "I can't help myself! I know it's
dangerous but I can't help it." Anyone who has tried
to oppose his own ravenous appetites for pleasure,
amusement, or gratification knows this sense of
helplessness. A mind long accustomed to grasping is
not dissuaded by mere rational arguments; it goes
its own way, chewing up one experience after another
in a hopeless search for happiness. So what is to be
done? The trouble here, as is so often the case, is
one of self-deception. Although we may say we
understand the danger of sensual obsession and the
advantage of restraint, our weakness shows that in
fact we do not. Wisdom is simply incompatible with
defilement. As long as we are willing to compromise
with our obsessions we have not fully understood the
Buddha's teaching about the nature of reality. We
may-recognize intellectually that craving and
clinging lead to suffering, but we have not
penetrated to a direct experience of the truth. Much
work remains to be done: we can't simply throw up
our hands and plead weakness.
If we
truly recognize the hazards of succumbing to the
baited hook, we must resist its enticements. Yet the
Buddha does not recommend a stubborn, stoical
self-abnegation. The disciple must deal with the
problem intelligently. Escape from suffering does
not depend on obliterating or denying
sense-pleasures but on seeing them for what they are
through the systematic practice of mindfulness. In
ordinary life we are generally too caught up in
gaining and losing to give sufficient attention to
the elements and dynamics or the process. We are
borne along on these ancient waves only because of
compulsive habit. To stop our headlong career it is
essential to develop and apply mindfulness, to
cultivate scrupulous attention toward even the most
mundane habits and desires. Steady mindfulness,
intensified in meditation, reveals that the mind is
a ceaseless torrent of thoughts, feelings,
perceptions, and mental impressions — never still
for an instant, never stable enough to be considered
substantial or enduring. What we loosely term the
"external" world is likewise a blur of evanescent
phenomena, all changing with incredible speed,
arising and vanishing with no beginning or end in
sight. Where then is the object that is truly
desirable? Gone! Lost to view in the instant. Where
is the one who desires? Gone! Thought succeeds
thought, effect succeeds cause in a tumble of empty
foam, with a desiring "self" nowhere to be found.
Mindfulness discerns these truths directly,
examining and breaking down experience until the
"permanent" is understood as impermanent, until the
"pleasant" is understood as unsatisfactory, until
the "self" is understood as empty and unreal.
As with
all of the truths taught by the Buddha, these three
characteristics of existence must be realized
through direct insight — not just through the
ruminations of the intellect. The practice of
mindfulness can lead us to such insight if we
undertake the task with patience and impartiality.
One who luxuriates in craving will remain twisting
between misunderstood suffering and imagined
pleasure, but one who recognizes danger will shun
the baited hook and seek the bare facts of reality
beneath the dazzling magic show of the senses.
By
avoiding the baited hook of sense-pleasures we do
not, as is sometimes maintained, rob life of all its
joy. On the contrary, we abandon false satisfaction
and approach the true happiness that is born of
freedom. We take worldly enjoyment in moderation
keeping it in perspective. The wise disciple does
not dwell in gloom and try to see the bad side of
every experience. If it is pleasant, he notes it as
pleasant; if it is unpleasant, he notes it as
unpleasant; if it is neutral, he notes it as
neutral. Whatever its appearance, he regards it with
mindfulness and does not cling to it. He enjoys life
simply as he finds it. In so doing, he escapes the
peril of hook and line and sails freely toward the
end of suffering.
Again
and again the Buddha exhorts his followers to be
mindful, because the world is burning with greed,
hatred, and delusion. Freedom can be won, but not by
the careless, infatuated person. The one who attains
freedom will be the one who has mindfulness, energy,
and the courage to see the canker in the rose.
Meeting
the Buddha, Alone, on the Empty Shore
A veneer
of credulity and feeble optimism covers the dark
preoccupations of our lives. In an age marked
everywhere with signs of spiritual decay, we somehow
remain ever entranced by new toys, ever receptive to
the latest balderdash from noisy charlatans, and
ever ready to abandon the present moment for the
lure of the next. Let it be rumored that
"self-fulfillment" has been glimpsed in somebody's
book or therapy or religion, and immediately a cloud
of dust obscures the sun as we stampede into the new
territory — only to find ourselves, puzzlingly,
still in the same dull company. Do we really want
happiness, or only titillation? It's hard to say,
because we rarely sit still long enough to examine
the matter. Suspecting dimly that life is
treacherous, we keep moving fast to avoid calamity.
If we
are credulous, we are no less skeptical. We are
quick to believe but find belief intolerable. We
topple today's idols and from their fragments
eagerly assemble tomorrow's. We pace up and down the
shores of doubt, rousing one another with shouts of
encouragement, but stepping into the river we find
the water cold, and promptly conclude there's a
better crossing further down.
The
water is always cold. Somebody sees a vision over
the horizon, and the chilled troops waste no more
time at this spot. In our solitary
reflections we may notice our inconstancy and
regretfully wonder, "Has it always been thus?" If we
are Buddhists we are bound to answer, "Yes." This
endlessly mutable landscape of disappointment, this
lurch and halt of conviction, is called Samsara.
We are
accustomed to regarding the "cycle of birth" and
death as a remote, cosmic scheme of creation and
dissolution. In fact, Samsara whirls with cyclonic
force here in the prosaic moment, here in the
wavering and furtive mind. If this is,
that is. Out of ignorance rises craving; out of
craving rises the whole mass of anxiety and
suffering. We deceive ourselves even in our desire
for happiness. Our pursuit of pleasure or
"self-fulfillment" is also a flight from despair.
Uneasy with the deteriorating present, we leap with
unseemly greed toward the future, which, fictitious
creature that it is, soon fails us and leaves us
exactly where we were. The great wheel turns, and
has turned, and will turn again.
Freedom
from Samsara does not spring from finding the right
teacher or the right temple or the right style of
meditations. We must instead begin by discarding
false expedients, brief enthusiasms, fashions,
platitudes, and most of all, excuses. Self-excuse is
just grease for the wheel. Ah, we sigh, if only we
had met the Buddha in person! Vain foolishness,
this. The Buddha was never to be found in six feet
of flesh. In his time and in ours he is only seen in
the destruction of the defilements, in the giving up
of excuses, evasions, and willful blindness. If we
earnestly strive to distinguish between the false
and the true, the shallow and the profound, the path
of the Buddha takes shape before us.
But
after so many years of quick credulity and quicker
doubt, of lukewarm and ambivalent effort, how can we
make it across that cold, lonely river of ignorance?
If we divest ourselves of false and trivial comforts
shall we not be left naked? Indeed we shall. And it
is in precisely that condition that we may encounter
the Buddha. Buddhism is, after all, a religion of
renunciation — renunciation of wrong thoughts, wrong
speech, and wrong deeds. When we give up our shabby
illusions and the manifold hiding places of the mind
we find ourselves naked and ready for the first time
to see the world without distortion. Whereas before
we may have nominally accepted the reality of
impermanence, suffering, and non-self, now we may
begin to discern these truths directly and realize
our predicament. The old cliche, "The Buddhas only
point the way," strikes us with fresh significance.
Buddhism demands that we help ourselves, and here on
the long, empty shore where we have so often
wandered we may at last appreciate the task ahead.
The
world around us may be crass and wicked, but not so
crass and wicked as our own deluded minds. We feast
on the bones of cynicism and are not satisfied. We
give new names to iniquity and pursue it in shadows.
We mistake the pleasant for the good and perennially
follow the easiest course. Then in our accidental
nights of fear we stare in bafflement at the four
walls and ask ourselves, "Haven't I tried?" Silence
replies with silence, and there's nothing left for
us but to blunder after a new ghost of happiness,
and thereby give the wheel of Samsara another spin.
Credulity is not faith, nor is skepticism wisdom.
The noble follower of the Buddha proceeds with a
balanced mind, considering the world as he finds it,
shunning the harmful and welcoming the useful. He
crosses the flood of Samsara on the raft of Dhamma,
knowing that nobody will make the effort for him.
What distinguishes such a person from; his fellows
is not necessarily brilliance of mind, but plain and
simple perseverance, the resolve to follow the true
course no matter how long it may take. We can do
likewise if we set ourselves firmly on the path.
Delay is
the luxury of ignorance. We commonly suppose
Nibbana, the ultimate purity and freedom, to be
something infinitely far away and terrifically
difficult to reach. We think of the Buddha as long
departed. But Nibbana is near for those who would
have it near, and the Buddha is as close as true
Dhamma truly observed. What is required of us is to
let go of our crumbling, mortal toys and to come
down, alone, to the long shore of renunciation. In
that exhilarating solitude we may meet the Buddha,
whose body is wisdom, whose face is compassion, and
whose hand points out the waypoints directly to the
deep and hidden purity in our hearts.
April
and November
Early
spring is a fitting time to consider death, though
few of us, alas, appreciate this healthy practice.
When the first crocuses and skunk cabbage blunder
into the sunshine the conventional mind waxes bold
and brave and salutes the regeneration of the world.
We have won through once more, we've got another
chance, we shall dawdle barefooted in gardens. Gone
is the dark time, the emphatically dead winter of
land and heart. We are, surely, about to participate
in the general leafiness of things. The gurgling
pigeons in the park — formerly wretched pests —
excite our fine feelings of sympathy. We are
magnanimous at seventy degrees. We have great
expectations.
Legions
of us swarm the sidewalks with uplifted chins,
celebrating what we had no part in making. But
there's a certain self-deception here. If the sun
burns more beneficently these days is it any of our
doing? If it shut down altogether would we be
consulted? We may fancy ourselves philosophers
improvising on the rhapsody of spring, but we
display, in the main, scarcely more independence
than the pigeons. We are seduced by the flowers
April throws our way and esteem ourselves wise for
having noted they are pretty. We find in the
loveliness of the season not a theme for true
reflection but only a license for yearning. We
indulge without compunction, believing that we are
in accord with the sacred law of the moment, when
really we continue to flee the present moment
and lust for the unborn fixture — some garden of
promise yet to bloom.
Better
we should turn our minds to dissolution and death —
right now in the brilliant season. Any fellow of
sound faculties can stroll through late November and
remark the transience of vital forces. Ah, withered
grass, leaden skies, brief span of happiness! He is
moved — having, as he thinks, come to terms with
mortality. The same fellow, come the daffodils, is
warbling about youth and beauty. But where is the
brave heart who sees deeply in spring the bud dying
to the flower, the flower to the fruit? Where is he
who at close of the year regards the snow-bitten
rose and is not cast down? Where is he who lives
serenely in fair times and foul? All things shall
pass not only in black November but in pastel April
as well — a lapsing without pause, a continual
perishing of the dear, the unlovely, and the
indifferent. Nature suffers no moratorium on decay;
it unrolls itself in seasons that, we, with our
predilections for warmth and light, habitually
misunderstand, finding gloom this month and gaiety
in that.
To dote
on April is to despise November. We are caught up in
liking and disliking, taking a sip of truth when we
can't avoid it and spitting it out at the first
opportunity, living tentatively like wine-tasters.
We ride the seasons on and ever on to the sweet,
cruel music of hope, while the world burns because
of us, because we've lit it with the torch of
delusion. Should we not now starve the fire to
coolness and let be the race of forms we call our
life? Change sweeps all forms away, and no one can
find peace in his time who does not attend to this
universal moving-on.
So then,
it is spring and the bluebirds are twittering. Shall
we pick our scabs and visit graveyards? Of course
not. Let us go on breathing; if the air is sweet,
why then, it is sweet. If the rain blows off and the
sun slants warm through the willow tree, so be it.
Let us sit on the porch and be alive. No need to
scourge ourselves or sleep on gravel. No need to
curse winter or praise spring. They come and go
independently of us: dead grass, dragonflies,
thunderstorms, and snow — what scene should we
prefer when all are flowing? Reality cannot be
seized; it arises when the mind stops grasping. He
who lets go is he who is established. He lives in
all seasons but serves none.
The
Buddhist Publication Society
The
Buddhist Publication Society is an approved charity
dedicated to making known the Teaching of the
Buddha, which has a vital message for people of all
creeds.
Founded
in 1958, the BPS has published a wide variety of
books and booklets covering a great range of topics.
Its publications include accurate annotated
translations of the Buddha's discourses, standard
reference works, as well as original contemporary
expositions of Buddhist thought and practice. These
works present Buddhism as it truly is — a dynamic
force which has influenced receptive minds for the
past 2500 years and is still as relevant today as it
was when it first arose.
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PUBLICATION SOCIETY
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Bodhi
Leaves
No. B 92
Copyright © 1982 Buddhist Publication Society
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Transcribed from the print edition in
1995 by Jim McLaughlin & Jane Yudelman under the
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Publication Society.