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An informal talk
given in the Northeastern dialect, taken from an
unidentified tape.
"Regardless of time and place, the whole practice of Dhamma comes to
completionat the place where there is nothing. It's
the place of surrender, of emptiness,of laying down
the burden"
The things of this world
are merely conventions of our own making. Having
established them we get lost in them, and refuse to let
go, giving rise to clinging to our personal views and
opinions. This clinging never ends, it is samsara,
flowing endlessly on. It has no completion. Now, if we
know conventional reality then we'll know Liberation. If
we clearly know Liberation, then we'll know convention.
This is to know the Dhamma. Here there is completion.
Take people, for
instance. In reality people don't have any names, we are
simply born naked into the world. If we have names, they
arise only through convention. I've contemplated this and
seen that is you don't know the truth of this convention
it can be really harmful. It's simply something we use
for convenience. Without it we couldn't communicate,
there would be nothing to say, no language.
I've seen the Westerners
when they sit in meditation together in the West. When
they get up after sitting, men and women together,
sometimes they go and touch each other on the head!1When
I saw this I thought, "Ehh, if we cling to convention it
gives rise to defilements right there." If we can let go
of convention, give up our opinions, we are at peace.
Like the generals and
colonels, men of rank and position, who come to see me.
When they come they say, "Oh, please touch my head."2If
they ask like this there's nothing wrong with it,
they're glad to have their heads touched. But if you
tapped their heads in the middle of the street it'd be a
different story! This is because of clinging. So I
feel that letting go is really the way of peace. Touching
a head is against our customs, but in reality it is
nothing. When they agree to having it touched there's
nothing wrong with it, just like touching a cabbage or a
potato.
Accepting, giving up,
letting go -- this is the way of lightness.
Wherever you're clinging there's becoming and birth right
there. There's danger right there. The Buddha taught
about convention and he taught to undo convention in the
right way, and so reach Liberation. This is freedom, not
to cling to conventions. All things in this world have a
conventional reality. Having established them we should
not be fooled by them, because getting lost in them
really leads to suffering. This point concerning rules
and conventions is of utmost importance. One who can get
beyond them is beyond suffering.
However, they are a
characteristic of our world. Take Mr. Boonmah,
for instance; he used to be just one of the crowd but now
he's been appointedthe District Commissioner. It's just
a convention but it's a conventionwe should respect.
It's part of the world of people. If you think,
"Oh,before we were friends, we used to work at the
tailor's together," andthen you go and pat him on the
head in public, he'll get angry. It's notright, he'll
resent it. So we should follow the conventions in order
toavoid giving rise to resentment. It's useful to
understand convention,living in the world is just about
this. Know the right time and place,know the person.
Why is it wrong to go
against conventions? It's wrong because of people! You
should be clever, knowing both convention and
Liberations. Know the right time for each. If we know how
to use rules and conventions comfortably then we are
skilled. But if we try to behave according to the higher
level of reality in the wrong situation, this is wrong.
Where is it wrong? It's wrong with people's defilements,
nothing else! People all have defilements. In one
situation we behave one way, in another situation we
must behave in another way. We should know the ins and
outs because we live within conventions. Problems occur
because people cling to them. If we suppose something to
be, then it is. It's there because we suppose it to be
there. But if you look closely, in the absolute sense
these things don't really exist.
As I have often said,
before we were laymen and now we are monks. We lived
within the convention of "layman" and now we live within
the convention of "monk." We are monks by convention, not
monks through Liberation. In the beginning we establish
conventions like this, but if a person merely ordains,
this doesn't mean he overcomes defilements. If we take a
handful of sand and agree to call it salt, does this make
it salt? It is salt, but only in name, not in reality.
You couldn't use it to cook with. It's only use is within
the realm of that agreement, because there's really no
salt there, only sand. It becomes salt only through our
supposing it to be so.
This word "Liberation"
is itself just a convention, but it refers tothat beyond
conventions. Having achieved freedom, having reached
liberation,we still have to use convention in order to
refer to it as liberation.If we didn't have convention
we couldn't communicate, so it does have itsuse.
For example, people have
different names but they are all people just the same. If
we didn't have names to differentiate between them, and
we wanted to call out to somebody standing in a crowd,
saying, "Hey, Person! Person!", that would be useless.
You couldn't say who would answer you because they're all
"person." But if you called, "Hey, John!", then
John would come, the others wouldn't answer. Names
fulfill just this need. Through them we can communicate,
they provide the basis for social behavior.
So you should know both
convention and liberation. Conventions have a use, but in
reality there really isn't anything there. Even people
are non-existent! They are merely groups of elements,
born of causal conditions, growing dependent on
conditions, existing for a while, or control it.
But without conventions we would have nothing to say,
we'd have no names, no practice, no work. Rules and
conventions are established to give us a language, to
make things convenient, and that's all.
Take money, for example.
In olden times there weren't any coins or notes, they had
no value. People used to barter goods, but those things
were difficult to keep, so they created money using coins
and notes. Perhaps in the future we'll have a new king
decree that we don't have to use paper money, we should
use wax, melting it down and pressing it into lumps. We
say this is money and use it throughout the country. Let
alone wax, it may even happen that they decide to make
chicken dung the local currency -- all the other things
can't be money, just chicken dung! Then people would
fight and kill each other over chicken dung! This is the
way it is. You could use many examples to illustrate
convention. What we use for money is simply a convention
that we have set up, it has its use within that
convention. Having decreed it to be money, it becomes
money. But in reality, what is money? Nobody can say.
When there is a popular agreement about something, then a
convention comes about to fulfill the need. The world is
just this.
This is convention, but
to get ordinary people to understand liberation is really
difficult. Our money, our house, our family, our
children and relatives are simply conventions that we
have invented, but really, seen in the light of Dhamma,
they don't belong to us. Maybe if we hear this we don't
feel so good, but in reality is like that. These things
have value only through the established conventions. If
we establish that it doesn't have value, then it doesn't
have value. This is the way it is, we bring convention
into the world to fulfill a need.
Even this body is not
really ours, we just suppose it to be so. It's truly just
a supposition. If you try to find a real, substantial
self within it, you can't. There are merely elements
which are born, continue for awhile and then die.
Everything is like this. There's no real, true
substance to it, but it's proper that we use it. It's a
tool for your use. If it breaks there is trouble, so even
though it must break, you should try your utmost to
preserve it. And so we have the four supports3which
the Buddha taught again and again to contemplate. They
are the supports on which a monk depends to continue his
practice. As long as you live you must depend on them,
but you should understand them. Don't cling to
them, giving rise to craving in your mind.
Convention and
liberation are related like this continually. Even
though we use convention, don't place your trust in it as
being the truth. If you cling to it, suffering will
arise. The case of right and wrong is a good example.
Some people see wrong as being right and right as being
wrong, but in the end who really knows what is right and
what is wrong? We don't know. Different people establish
different conventions about what's right and what's
wrong, but the Buddha took suffering as his guide-line.
If you want to argue about it there's no end to it. One
says, "right," another says, "wrong." One says "wrong,"
another says "right." In truth we don't really know right
and wrong at all! But at a useful, practical level,
we can say that right is not to harm oneself and not to
harm others. This way fulfills a use.
So, after all, both
rules and conventions and liberation are simply dhammas.
One is higher than the other, but they go hand in hand.
There is no way that we can guarantee that anything is
definitely like this orlike that, so the Buddha said to
just leave it be. Leave it be as uncertain. However much
you like it or dislike it, you should understand it as
uncertain.
Regardless of time and
place, the whole practice of Dhamma comes to completion
at the place where there is nothing. It's the place of
surrender, of emptiness, of laying down the burden. This
is the finish. It's not like the person who says, "Why is
the flag fluttering in the wind? I say it's because of
the wind." Another person say's it's because of the
flag. The other retorts that it's because of the wind.
There's no end to this! The same as the old riddle,
"Which came first, the chicken or the egg?" There's no
way to reach a conclusion, this is just Nature.
All these things we say
are merely conventions, we establish them ourselves. If
you know these things with wisdom then you'll know
impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self. This is
the outlook which leads to enlightenment.
You know, training and
teaching people with varying levels of understanding is
really difficult. Some people have certain ideas, you
tell them something and they don't believe you. You tell
them the truth and they say it's not true. "I'm right,
you're wrong..." There's no end to this. If you don't let
go there will be suffering. I've told you before about
the four men who go into the forest. They hear a chicken
crowing, "Kak-ka-dehhh!" One of them wonders, "Is that a
rooster or a hen?" Three of them say together, "It's a
hen," but the other doesn't agree, he insists it's a
rooster. "How could a hen crow like that?" he asks. They
retort, "Well, it has a mouth, hasn't it?" They argue
till the tears fall, really getting upset over it, but in
the end they're all wrong. Whether you say a hen or a
rooster, they're only names. We establish these
conventions, saying a rooster is like this, a hen is like
that; a rooster cries like this, a hen cries like
that...and this is how we get stuck in the world!
Remember this! Actually, if you just say that really
there's no hen and no rooster then that's the end of it.
In the field of conventional reality one side is right
and the other side it wrong, but there will never be
complete agreement. Arguing till the tears fall has no
use!
The Buddha taught not to
cling. How do we practice non-clinging? We practice
simply to give up clinging, but this non-clinging is
very difficult to understand. It takes keen wisdom to
investigate and penetrate this, to really achieve
non-clinging. When you think about it, whether people are
happy or sad, content or discontent, doesn't depend on
their having little or having much -- it depends on
wisdom. All distress can be transcended only through
wisdom, through seeing the truth of things.
So the Buddha exhorted
us to investigate, to contemplate. This
"contemplation" means simply to try to solve these
problems correctly. This is our practice. Like birth, old
age, sickness and death -- they are the most natural
and common of occurrences. The Buddha taught to
contemplate birth, old age, sickness and death, but some
people don't understand this. "What is thereto
contemplate?" they say. They're born but they don't know
birth, they will die but they don't know death.
A person who investigates
these things repeatedly will see. Having seen he will
gradually solve his problems. Even if he still has
clinging, if he has wisdom and sees that old age,
sickness and death are the way of Nature, then he will be
able to relieve suffering. We study the Dhamma simply
for this -- to cure suffering. There isn't really much as
the basis of Buddhism, there's just the birth and death
of suffering, and this the Buddha called the truth. Birth
is suffering, old age is suffering, sickness is
suffering and death is suffering. People don't see this
suffering as the truth. If we know truth, then we know
suffering.
This pride in personal
opinions, these arguments, they have no end. In order to
put our minds at rest, to find peace, we should
contemplate our past, the present, and the things which
are in store for us. Like birth, old age, sickness and
death. What can we do to avoid being plagued by
these? Even though we may still have a little worry, if
we investigate till we know according to the truth, all
suffering will abate, we will no longer cling to it.
Notes
1.
The head is regarded as sacred in Thailand,
and to touch a person's head is considered an insult.
Also, according to tradition, men and women do not touch
each other in public. On the other hand, sitting in
meditation is regarded as a "holy" activity. Perhaps here
the Venerable Ajahn was using an example of Western
behavior which particularly shock a Thai audience.
2.
It is considered auspicious in Thailand to
have one's head touched by a highly esteemed monk.
3.
The four supports -- robes, alms-food,
lodgings, and medicines.
Copyright © 1991 The
Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat
Copyright © 1999 Wat
Pah Nanachat
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