There was once a western
monk, a student of mine. Whenever he saw Thai monks and
novices disrobing he would say, "Oh, what a shame! Why
do they do that? Why do so many of the Thai monks and
novices disrobe?" He was shocked. He would get saddened
at the disrobing of the Thai monks and novices, because
he had only just come into contact with Buddhism. He was
inspired, he was resolute. Going forth as a monk was the
only thing to do, he thought he'd never disrobe. Whoever
disrobed was a fool. He'd see the Thais taking on the
robes at the beginning of the Rains Retreat as monks and
novices and then disrobing at the end of it..."Oh, how
sad! I feel so sorry for those Thai monks and novices.
How could they do such a thing?"
Well, as time went by
some of the western monks began to disrobe, so he came
to see it as something not so important after all. At
first, when he had just begun to practice, he was
excited about it. He thought that it was really
important thing, to become a monk. He thought it would
be easy.
When people are inspired
it all seems to be so right and good. There's nothing
there to gauge their feelings by, so they go ahead and
decide for themselves. But they don't really know what
practice is. Those who do know will have a thoroughly
firm foundation within their hearts -- but even so they
don't need to advertise it.
As for myself, when I
was first ordained I didn't actually do much practice,
but I had a lot of faith. I don't know why, maybe it was
there from birth. The monks and novices who went forth
together with me, come the end of the Rains, all
disrobed. I thought to myself, "Eh? What is it with
these people?" However, I didn't dare say anything to
them because I wasn't yet sure of my own feelings, I was
too stirred up. But within me I felt that they were all
foolish. "It's difficult to go forth, easy to disrobe.
These guys don't have much merit, they think that the
way of the world is more useful than the way of Dhamma."
I thought like this but I didn't say anything, I just
watched my own mind.
I'd see the monks who'd
gone forth with me disrobing one after the other.
Sometimes they'd dress up and come back to the monastery
to show off. I'd see them and think they were crazy, but
they thought they looked snappy. When you disrobe you
have to do this and that...I'd think to myself that that
way of thinking was wrong. I wouldn't say it, though,
because I myself was still an uncertain quantity. I
still wasn't sure how long my faith would last.
When my friends had all
disrobed I dropped all concern, there was nobody left to
concern myself with. I picked up the Patimokkha1
and got stuck into learning that. There was nobody left
to distract me and waste my time, so I put my heart into
the practice. Still I didn't say anything because I felt
that to practice all one's life, maybe seventy, eighty
or even ninety years, and to keep up a persistent
effort, without slackening up or losing one's resolve,
seemed like an extremely difficult thing to do.
Those who went forth
would go forth, those who disrobed would disrobe. I'd
just watch it all. I didn't concern myself whether they
stayed or went. I'd watch my friends leave, but the
feeling I had within me was that these people didn't see
clearly. That western monk probably thought like that.
he'd see people become monks for only one Rains Retreat,
and get upset.
Later on he reached a
stage we call...bored; bored with the Holy Life. He let
go of the practice and eventually disrobed.
"Why are you disrobing?
Before, when you saw the Thai monks disrobing you'd say,
'Oh, what a shame! How sad, how pitiful.' Now, when you
yourself want to disrobe, why don't you feel sorry now?"
He didn't answer. He
just grinned sheepishly.
When it comes to the
training of the mind it isn't easy to find a good
standard if you haven't yet developed a "witness" within
yourself. In most external matters we can rely on others
for feedback, there are standards and precedents. But
when it comes to using the Dhamma as a standard...do we
have the Dhamma yet? Are we thinking rightly or not? And
even if it's right, do we know how to let go of
rightness or are we still clinging to it?
You must contemplate
until you reach the point where you let go, this is the
important thing...until you reach the point where there
isn't anything left, where there is neither good nor
bad. You throw it off. This means you throw out
everything. If it's all gone then there's no remainder;
if there's some remainder then it's not all gone.
So in regard to this
training of the mind, sometimes we may say it's easy.
it's easy to say, but it's hard to do, very hard. It's
hard in that it doesn't conform to our desires.
Sometimes it seems almost as if the angels2
were helping us out. Everything goes right, whatever we
think or say seems to be just right. Then we go and
attach to that rightness and before long we go wrong and
it all turns bad. This is where it's difficult. We don't
have a standard to gauge things by.
People who have a lot of
faith, who are endowed with confidence and belief but
are lacking in wisdom, may be very good at samadhi
but they may not have much insight. They see only one
side of everything, and simply follow that. They don't
reflect. This is blind faith. In Buddhism we call this
Saddha adhimokkha, blind faith. They have faith
all right but it's not born of wisdom. But they don't
see this at the time, they believe they have wisdom, so
they don't see where they are wrong.
Therefore they teach
about the Five Powers (Bala): Saddha,
viriya,sati,samadhi, pañña. Saddha is
conviction; viriya is diligent effort; sati
is recollection; samadhi is fixedness of mind;
pañña is all-embracing knowledge. Don't say that
pañña is simply knowledge -- pañña is
all-embracing, consummate knowledge.
The wise have given
these five steps to us so that we can link them, firstly
as an object of study, then as a gauge to compare to the
state of our practice as it is. For example, saddha,
conviction. Do we have conviction, have we developed it
yet? Viriya: do we have diligent effort or not?
Is our effort right or is it wrong? We must consider
this. Everybody has some sort of effort, but does our
effort contain wisdom or not?
Sati
is the same. Even a cat has sati. When it sees a
mouse, sati is there. The cat's eyes stare
fixedly at the mouse. This is the sati of a cat.
Everybody has sati, animals have it, delinquents
have it, sages have it.
Samadhi,
fixedness of mind -- everybody has this as well. A cat
has it when its mind is fixed on grabbing the mouse and
eating it. It has fixed intent. That sati of the
cat's is sati of a sort; samadhi, fixed
intent on what it is doing, is also there. Pañña,
knowledge, like that of human beings. It knows as an
animal knows, it has enough knowledge to catch mice for
food.
These five things are
called powers. Have these Five Powers arisen from Right
View, sammaditthi, or not? Saddha,
viriya, sati,samadhi,pañña -- have these
arisen from Right View? What is Right View? What is our
standard for gauging Right View? We must clearly
understand this.
Right View is the
understanding that all these things are uncertain.
Therefore the Buddha and all the Noble Ones don't hold
fast to them. They hold, but not fast. They don't let
that holding become an identity. The holding which
doesn't lead to becoming is that which isn't tainted
with desire. Without seeking to become this or that
there is simply the practice itself. When you hold on to
a particular thing is there enjoyment, or is there
displeasure? If there is pleasure, do you hold on to
that pleasure? If there is dislike, do you hold on to
that dislike?
Some views can be used
as principles for gauging our practice more accurately.
Such as knowing such views as that one is better than
others, or equal to others, or more foolish than others,
as all wrong views. We may feel these things but we also
know them with wisdom, that they simply arise and cease.
Seeing that we are better than others is not right;
seeing that we are equal to others is not right; seeing
that we are inferior to others is not right.
The right view is the
one that cuts through all of this. So where do we go to?
If we think we are better than others, pride arises.
It's there but we don't see it. If we think we are equal
to others, we fail to show respect and humility at the
proper times. If we think we are inferior to others we
get depressed, thinking we are inferior, born under a
bad sign and so on. We are still clinging to the Five
Khandhas,3
it's all simply becoming and birth.
This is one standard for
gauging ourselves by. Another one is: if we encounter a
pleasant experience we feel happy, if we encounter a bad
experience we are unhappy. Are we able to look at both
the things we like and the things we dislike as having
equal value? Measure yourself against this standard. In
our everyday lives, in the various experiences we
encounter, if we hear something which we like, does our
mood change? If we encounter an experience which isn't
to our liking, does our mood change? Or is the mind
unmoved? Looking right here we have a gauge.
Just know yourself, this
is your witness. Don't make decisions on the strength of
your desires. Desires can puff us up into thinking we
are something which we're not. We must be very
circumspect.
There are so many angles
and aspects to consider, but the right way is not to
follow your desires, but the Truth. We should know both
the good and the bad, and when we know them to let go of
them. If we don't let go we are still there, we still
"exist," we still "have." If we still "are" then there
is a remainder, there are becoming and birth in store.
Therefore the Buddha
said to judge only yourself, don't judge others, no
matter how good or evil they may be. The Buddha merely
points out the way, saying "The truth is like this."
Now, is our mind like that or not?
For instance, suppose a
monk took some things belonging to another monk, then
that other monk accused him, "You stole my things." "I
didn't steal them, I only took them." So we ask a third
monk to adjudicate. How should he decide? He would have
to ask the offending monk to appear before the convened
Sangha. "Yes, I took it, but I didn't steal it." Or in
regard to other rules, such as parajika or
sanghadisesa offenses: "Yes, I did it, but I didn't
have intention." How can you believe that? It's tricky.
If you can't believe it, all you can do is leave the
onus with the doer, it rests on him.
But you should know that
we can't hide the things that arise in our minds. You
can't cover them up, either the wrongs or the good
actions. Whether actions are good or evil, you can't
dismiss them simply by ignoring them, because these
things tend to reveal themselves. They conceal
themselves, they reveal themselves, they exist in and of
themselves. They are all automatic. This is how things
work.
Don't try to guess at or
speculate about these things. As long as there is still
avijja (unknowing) they are not finished with.
The Chief Privy Councilor once asked me, "Luang Por, is
the mind of an anagami4
pure yet?"
"It's partly pure."
"Eh? An anagami
has given up sensual desire, how is his mind not yet
pure?"
"He may have let go of
sensual desire, but there is still something remaining,
isn't there? There is still avijja. If there is
still something left then there is still something left.
It's like the bhikkhus' alms bowls. There are "a
large-size large bowl; a medium-sized large bowl, a
small-sized large bowl; then a large-sized medium bowl,
a medium-sized medium bowl, a small-sized medium bowl;
then there are a large-sized small bowl, a medium-sized
small bowl and a small-sized small bowl...No matter how
small it is there is still a bowl there, right? That's
how it is with this...sotapanna, sakadagami,
anagami... they have all given up certain
defilements, but only to their respective levels.
Whatever still remains, those Noble Ones don't see. If
they could they would all be arahants. They still
can't see all. Avijja is that which doesn't see.
If the mind of the anagami was completely
straightened out he wouldn't be an anagami, he
would be fully accomplished. But there is still
something remaining.
"Is his mind purified?"
"Well, it is somewhat,
but not 100%."
How else could I answer?
He said that later on he would come and question me
about it further. He can look into it, the standard is
there.
Don't be careless. Be
alert. The Lord Buddha exhorted us to be alert. In
regards to this training of the heart, I've had my
moments of temptation too, you know. I've often been
tempted to try many things but they've always seemed
like they're going astray of the path. It's really just
a sort of swaggering in one's mind, a sort of conceit.
Ditthi, views, and mana, pride, are there.
It's hard enough just to be aware of these two things.
There was once a man who
wanted to become a monk here. He carried in his robes,
determined to become a monk in memory of his late
mother. He came into the monastery, laid down his robes,
and without so much as paying respects to the monks,
started walking meditation right in front of the main
hall...back and forth, back and forth, like he was
really going to show his stuff.
I thought, "Oh, so there
are people around like this, too!" This is called
saddha adhimokkha -- blind faith. He must have
determined to get enlightened before sundown or
something, he thought it would be so easy. He didn't
look at anybody else, just put his head down and walked
as if his life depended on it. I just let him carry on,
but I thought, "Oh, man, you think it's that easy or
something?" In the end I don't know how long he stayed,
I don't even think he ordained.
As soon as the mind
thinks of something we send it out, send it out every
time. We don't realize that it's simply the habitual
proliferation of the mind. It disguises itself as wisdom
and waffles off into minute detail. This mental
proliferation seems very clever, if we didn't know we
would mistake it for wisdom. But when it comes to the
crunch it's not the real thing. When suffering arises
where is that so-called wisdom then? Is it of any use?
It's only proliferation after all.
So stay with the Buddha.
As I've said before many times, in our practice we must
turn inwards and find the Buddha. Where is the Buddha?
The Buddha is still alive to this very day, go in and
find him. Where is he? At aniccam, go in and find
him there, go and bow to him: aniccam,
uncertainty. You can stop right there for starters.
If the mind tries to
tell you, "I'm a sotapanna now," go and bow to
the sotapanna. He'll tell you himself, "It's all
uncertain." If you meet a sakadagami go and pay
respects to him. When he sees you he'll simply say "Not
a sure thing!" If there is an anagami go and bow
to him. He'll tell you only one thing..."Uncertain." If
you meet even an arahant, go and bow to him,
he'll tell you even more firmly, "It's all even more
uncertain!" You'll hear the words of the Noble
Ones..."Everything is uncertain, don't cling to
anything."
Don't just look at the
Buddha like a simpleton. Don't cling to things, holding
fast to them without letting go. Look at things as
functions of the Apparent and then send them on to
Transcendence. That's how you must be. There must be
Appearance and there must be Transcendence.
So I say "Go to the
Buddha." Where is the Buddha? The Buddha is the Dhamma.
All the teachings in this world can be contained in this
one teaching: aniccam. Think about it. I've
searched for over forty years as a monk and this is all
I could find. That and patient endurance. This is how to
approach the Buddha's teaching... aniccam: it's
all uncertain.
No matter how sure the
mind wants to be, just tell it "Not sure!." Whenever the
mind wants to grab on to something as a sure thing, just
say, "It's not sure, it's transient." Just ram it down
with this. Using the Dhamma of the Buddha it all comes
down to this. It's not that it's merely a momentary
phenomenon. Whether standing, walking, sitting or lying
down, you see everything in that way. Whether liking
arises or dislike arises you see it all in the same way.
This is getting close to the Buddha, close to the
Dhamma.
Now I feel that this is
more valuable way to practice. All my practice from the
early days up to the present time has been like this. I
didn't actually rely on the scriptures, but then I
didn't disregard them either. I didn't rely on a teacher
but then I didn't exactly "go it alone." My practice was
all "neither this nor that."
Frankly it's a matter of
"finishing off," that is, practicing to the finish by
taking up the practice and then seeing it to completion,
seeing the Apparent and also the Transcendent.
I've already spoken of
this, but some of you may be interested to hear it
again: if you practice consistently and consider things
thoroughly, you will eventually reach this point...At
first you hurry to go forward, hurry to come back, and
hurry to stop. You continue to practice like this until
you reach the point where it seems that going forward is
not it, coming back is not it, and stopping is not it
either! It's finished. This is the finish. Don't expect
anything more than this, it finishes right here.
Khinasavo -- one who is completed. He doesn't go
forward, doesn't retreat and doesn't stop. There's no
stopping, no going forward and no coming back. It's
finished. Consider this, realize it clearly in your own
mind. Right there you will find that there is really
nothing at all.
Whether this is old or
new to you depends on you, on your wisdom and
discernment. One who has no wisdom or discernment won't
be able to figure it out. Just take a look at trees,
like mango or jackfruit trees. If they grow up in a
clump, one tree may get bigger first and then the others
will bend away, growing outwards from that bigger one.
Why does this happen? Who tells them to do that? This is
Nature. Nature contains both the good and the bad, the
right and the wrong. It can either incline to the right
or incline to the wrong. If we plant any kind of trees
at all close together, the trees which mature later will
branch away from the bigger tree. How does this happen?
Who determines it thus? This is Nature, or Dhamma.
Likewise, tanha,
desire, leads us to suffering. Now, if we contemplate
it, it will lead us out of desire, we will outgrow
tanha. By investigating tanha we will shake
it up, making it gradually lighter and lighter until
it's all gone. The same as the trees: does anybody order
them to grow the way they do? They can't talk or move
around and yet they know how to grow away from
obstacles. Wherever it's cramped and crowded and growing
will be difficult, they bend outwards.
Right here is Dhamma, we
don't have to look at a whole lot. One who is astute
will see the Dhamma in this. Trees by nature don't know
anything, they act on natural laws, yet they do know
enough to grow away from danger, to incline towards a
suitable place.
Reflective people are
like this. We go forth into the homeless life because we
want to transcend suffering. What is it that make us
suffer? If we follow the trail inwards we will find out.
That which we like and that which we don't like are
suffering. If they are suffering then don't go so close
to them. Do you want to fall in love with conditions or
hate them?...they're all uncertain. When we incline
towards the Buddha all this comes to an end. Don't
forget this. And patient endurance. Just these two are
enough. If you have this sort of understanding this is
very good.
Actually in my own
practice I didn't have a teacher to give as much
teachings as all of you get from me. I didn't have many
teachers. I ordained in an ordinary village temple and
lived in village temples for quite a few years. In my
mind I conceived the desire to practice, I wanted to be
proficient, I wanted to train. There wasn't anybody
giving any teaching in those monasteries but the
inspiration to practice arose. I traveled and I looked
around. I had ears so I listened, I had eyes so I
looked. Whatever I heard people say, I'd tell myself,
"Not sure." Whatever I saw, I told myself, "Not sure,"
or when the tongue contacted sweet, sour, salty,
pleasant or unpleasant flavors, or feelings of comfort
or pain arose in the body, I'd tell myself, "This is not
a sure thing"! And so I lived with Dhamma.
In truth it's all
uncertain, but our desires want things to be certain.
what can we do? We must be patient. The most important
thing is khanti, patient endurance. Don't throw
out the Buddha, what I call "uncertainty" -- don't throw
that away.
Sometimes I'd go to see
old religious sites with ancient monastic buildings,
designed by architects, built by craftsmen. In some
places they would be cracked. Maybe one of my friends
would remark, "Such a shame, isn't it? It's cracked."
I'd answer, "If that weren't the case then there'd be no
such thing as the Buddha, there'd be no Dhamma. It's
cracked like this because it's perfectly in line with
the Buddha's teaching." Really down inside I was also
sad to see those buildings cracked but I'd throw off my
sentimentality and try to say something which would be
of use to my friends, and to myself. Even though I also
felt that it was a pity, still I tended towards the
Dhamma.
"If it wasn't cracked
like that there wouldn't be any Buddha!"
I'd say it really heavy
for the benefit of my friends...or perhaps they weren't
listening, but still I was listening.
This is a way of
considering things which is very, very useful. For
instance, say someone were to rush in and say, "Luang
Por! Do you know what so and so just said about you?"
or, "He said such and such about you..." Maybe you even
start to rage. As soon as you hear words of criticism
you start getting these moods every step of the way. As
soon as we hear words like this we may start getting
ready to retaliate, but on looking into the truth of the
matter we may find that...no, they had said something
else after all.
And so it's another case
of "uncertainty." So why should we rush in and believe
things? Why should we put our trust so much in what
others say? Whatever we hear we should take note, be
patient, look into the matter carefully...stay straight.
It's not that whatever
pops into our heads we write it all down as some sort of
truth. Any speech which ignores uncertainty is not the
speech of a sage. Remember this. As for being wise, we
are no longer practicing. Whatever we see or hear, be it
pleasant or sorrowful, just say "This is not sure!" Say
it heavy to yourself, hold it all down with this. Don't
build those things up into major issues, just keep them
all down to this one. This point is the important one.
This is the point where defilements die. Practicers
shouldn't dismiss it.
If you disregard this
point you can expect only suffering, expect only
mistakes. If you don't make this a foundation for your
practice you are going to go wrong...but then you will
come right again later on, because this principle is a
really good one.
Actually the real
Dhamma, the gist of what I have been saying today, isn't
so mysterious. Whatever you experience is simply form,
simply feeling, simply perception, simply volition, and
simply consciousness. There are only these basic
qualities, where is there any certainty within them?
If we come to understand
the true nature of things like this, lust, infatuation
and attachment fade away. why do they fade away? Because
we understand, we know. We shift from ignorance to
understanding. Understanding is born from ignorance,
knowing is born from unknowing, purity is born from
defilement. It works like this.
Not discarding
aniccam, the Buddha -- This is what it means to say
that the Buddha is still alive. To stay that the Buddha
has passed into Nibbana is not necessarily true.
In a more profound sense the Buddha is still alive. It's
much like how we define the word "bhikkhu." If we
define it as "one who asks,"5
the meaning is very broad. We can define it this way,
but to use this definition too much is not so good -- we
don't know when to stop asking! If we were to define
this word in a more profound way we would say:
"Bhikkhu -- one who sees the danger of Samsara."
Isn't this more
profound? It doesn't go in the same direction as the
previous definition, it runs much deeper. The practice
of Dhamma is like this. If you don't fully understand
it, it becomes something else again. It becomes
priceless, it becomes a source of peace.
When we have sati
we are close to the Dhamma. If we have sati we
will see aniccam, the transience of all things.
We will see the Buddha and transcend the suffering of
samsara, if not now then sometime in the future.
If we throw away the
attribute of the Noble Ones, the Buddha or the Dhamma,
our practice will become barren and fruitless. We must
maintain our practice constantly, whether we are working
or sitting or simply lying down. When the eye sees form,
the ear hears sound, the nose smells an odor, the tongue
tastes a flavor or the body experiences sensation...in
all things, don't throw away the Buddha, don't stray
from the Buddha.
This is to be one who
has come close to the Buddha, who reveres the Buddha
constantly. We have ceremonies for revering the Buddha,
such as chanting in the morning Araham Samma
Sambuddho Bhagava... This is one way of revering the
Buddha but it's not revering the Buddha in such a
profound way as I've described here. It's the same as
with that word "bhikkhu." If we define it as "one
who asks" then they keep on asking...because it's
defined like that. To define it in the best way we
should say "Bhikkhu -- one who sees the danger of
samsara."
Now revering the Buddha
is the same. Revering the Buddha by merely reciting Pali
phrases as a ceremony in the mornings and evenings is
comparable to defining the word "bhikkhu" as "one
who asks." If we incline towards annicam, dukkham and
anatta6
whenever the eye sees form, the ear hears sound, the
nose smells an odor, the tongue tastes a flavor, the
body experiences sensation or the mind cognizes mental
impressions, at all times, this is comparable to
defining the word "bhikkhu" as "one who sees the danger
of samsara." It's so much more profound, cuts
through so many things. If we understand this teaching
we will grow in wisdom and understanding.
This is called
patipada. Develop this attitude in the practice and
you will be on the right path. If you think and reflect
in this way, even though you may be far from your
teacher you will still be close to him. If you live
close to the teacher physically but your mind has not
yet met him you will spend your time either looking for
his faults or adulating him. If he does something which
suits you, you say he's no good -- and that's as far as
your practice goes. You won't achieve anything by
wasting your time looking at someone else. But if you
understand this teaching you can become a Noble One in
the present moment.
That's why this year7
I've distanced myself from my disciples, both old and
new, and not given much teaching: so that you can all
look into things for yourselves as much as possible. For
the newer monks I've already laid down the schedule and
rules of the monastery, such as: "don't talk too much."
Don't transgress the existing standards, the path to
realization, fruition and nibbana. Anyone who
transgresses these standards is not a real practicer,
not one who has with a pure intention to practice. What
can such a person ever hope to see? Even if he slept
near me every day he wouldn't see me. Even if he slept
near the Buddha he wouldn't see the Buddha, if he didn't
practice.
So knowing the Dhamma or
seeing the Dhamma depends on practice. Have confidence,
purify your own heart. If all the monks in this
monastery put awareness into their respective minds we
wouldn't have to reprimand or praise anybody. We
wouldn't have to be suspicious of or favor anybody. If
anger or dislike arise just leave them at the mind, but
see them clearly!
Keep on looking at those
things. As long as there is still something there it
means we still have to dig and grind away right there.
Some say "I can't cut it, I can't do it," -- if we start
saying things like this there will only be a bunch of
punks here, because nobody cuts at their own
defilements.
You must try. If you
can't yet cut it, dig in deeper. Dig at the defilements,
uproot them. Dig them out even if they seem hard and
fast. The Dhamma is not something to be reached by
following your desires. Your mind may be one way, the
truth another. You must watch up front and keep a
lookout behind as well. That's why I say, "It's all
uncertain, all transient."
This truth of
uncertainty, this short and simple truth, at the same
time so profound and faultless, people tend to ignore.
They tend to see things differently. Don't cling to
goodness, don't cling to badness. These are attributes
of the world. We are practicing to be free of the world,
so bring these things to an end. The Buddha taught to
lay them down, to give them up, because they only cause
suffering.
Notes
1. The central body of the monastic code, which
is recited fortnightly in the Pali language.
2. Devaputta Mara -- the Mara, or Tempter, which
appears in a seemingly benevolent form.
3. The Five Khandhas: Form (rupa),
feeling (vedana), perception (sañña),
conceptualization or mental formations (sankhara)
and sense-consciousness (viññana). These comprise
the psycho-physical experience known as the "self."
4. Anagami (non-returner): The third
"level" of enlightenment, which is reached on the
abandonment of the five "lower fetters" (of a total of
ten) which bind the mind to worldly existence. The first
two "levels" are sotapanna ("stream-enterer") and
sakadagami ("once-returner"), the last being
araham ("worthy or accomplished one").
5. That is, one who lives dependent on the
generosity of others.
6. Transience, Imperfection, and Ownerlessness.
7. 2522 of the Buddhist Era, or 1979 CE.
Copyright © 1992 The
Sangha, Wat Pah Nanachat
Copyright © 1999 Wat
Pah Nanachat