It's the nature of
the world that nothing is totally bad. Everything
has to have at least some good to it. The same holds
true with the various forms of Mara, or the demons
of temptation, that get in the way of our practice.
It's not the case that they always obstruct us.
Sometimes they turn into our friends and companions;
sometimes into our workers and supporters; sometimes
into our slaves, helping us and caring for us. This
is why, if you're discerning, you have to walk a
middle course. On one hand, you have to focus on
their bad side. On the other, you have to focus on
their good. Their good and bad sides are realities
that have to exist together. As for us, we have to
take a stance in the middle, examining things so
that we don't act out of suspicion or prejudice.
Once we see the good side of these things, we can
get more familiar with them. We can get intimate.
When we get familiar and intimate, we develop a
sense of kinship with them. As the Buddha said,
vissasa parama ñati: familiarity is the highest
form of kinship.
Even our enemies,
when we become familiar with them, can become our
friends. Our companions. Our servants. Our slaves.
When we can look at things in this way, both sides
benefit. We benefit and our Maras benefit as well.
In the time of the Buddha, for instance, the Buddha
got so familiar with Mara that eventually Mara got
converted and felt favorably inclined to the merit
and skillfulness that the Buddha had developed. Once
Mara had no more power over the Buddha, he paid
homage to the Buddha and found himself transported
to heaven. And that's not all. He became a
bodhisattva. In the future he'll gain Awakening as a
fully self-awakened Buddha. So he benefited and the
Buddha benefited. This is the nature of people with
discernment: they can take bad things and turn them
into good.
As for us, we still
lie under the sway of Maras of various kinds. These
intimidating Maras are called Kilesa-Maras, the
demons of defilement. The big ones, the really
infamous ones, are greed, aversion, and delusion.
These are the famous ones. As for the ones that stay
more in the background, behind the scenes, those are
kama-tanha, craving for sensuality,
struggling to get things in ways that are offensive
to the Dhamma; bhava-tanha, craving for
things to be this way or that; and vibhava-tanha,
craving that things not happen. For instance, once
we've gained wealth, we don't want to lose it; once
we've gained status, we don't want anyone to wipe
out the edge we have over others. This is
vibhava-tanha. These three forms of craving are
also demons of defilement, but they're not very well
known. Only once in a long, long while do you hear
anyone mention their names.
As for greed,
aversion, and delusion, they're very big, very
powerful, very well known. The mother of all these
Maras is ignorance (avijja). Everything comes
out of ignorance. Goodness comes from ignorance.
Evil comes from ignorance. To call things by their
proper names, ignorance is the requisite condition
for fabrications (sankhara), and
fabrications, when they arise, come in three sorts:
-
meritorious
fabrications: intentions and considerations that
go in the direction of giving rise to goodness;
-
demeritorious
fabrications: thoughts that go in the direction
of what is evil, corrupt, and improper, defiling
the mind and making it lose its luster; and
-
neutral
fabrications: thoughts that are neither
meritorious nor evil. For instance, when we
think about going to the market tomorrow, or
about going to work in our field, or about
taking a bath or eating a meal. When thoughts
like this arise in the mind, they're called
neutral fabrications: thinking that isn't yet
either good or bad.
These forms of
fabrication are also demons of defilement. They're
the children of Mara, but they rarely show their
faces in public. They're like the children of
nobility, children in the royal palace. They hardly
ever show their faces outside, so very few people
know their names, very few people have seen their
faces. Unless you develop the mind in concentration
you won't get to see these beauties. If you develop
concentration, you can peer inside, using your
discernment to part the curtains, and then you'll
get to see these children of Mara.
The mother of Mara,
ignorance, lies even deeper inside. Ignorance means
not being acquainted with your own mind -- mistaking
your thinking for your mind; mistaking your
knowledge for the mind; thinking that your thoughts
of the past or future are the mind; thinking that
the body is the mind or the mind is the body; that
feeling is the mind or the mind is feeling; that
mental qualities are the mind, or that the mind is
mental qualities; that the mind is the self or the
self is the mind; not being able to separate these
things from yourself, getting yourself all
entangled: that's called ignorance. In short,
ignorance means getting caught up on the present.
All of the things
I've mentioned so far are called the demons of
defilement. They bother us all the time, get in our
way all the time, which is why they're called the
demons of defilement. How are they demons? When you
get really greedy, for instance, it gets in the way
of your being generous and giving donations. You
simply want to get and don't want to give. That's
how greed is a demon. When we get possessive of
things, holding on tight, and someone destroys what
we're holding onto, we get upset and feel
mistreated. This puts our mind into a turmoil and
gets it all stirred up. This is how greed is a
demon.
The same holds true
for anger. Once it arises, you don't give a damn
about anything. You see other people as nothing more
than red or black ants: all you have to do is step
on them and they're done for. The explosive power of
anger is more violent than anything else. Whether or
not you'll actually be able to get your way, you
don't care. You're brazen and foolhardy. But if
anyone comes along at that time and tries to
persuade you to act in a skillful way, you don't
want anything of what they have to say. The anger
has to go its course until it runs out on its own.
This is why it's called a demon, because you can't
do anything good while you're under its power.
Delusion is even
worse. Delusion seeps into you, the way blood seeps
throughout every part of your body. When we do evil,
we're deluded. When we do good, we're still deluded.
Even though we're well-educated in the Dhamma, we
can't yet escape from the power of delusion. No
matter who we are, it stays right on our heels. We
may want to make merit, but when we're deluded we
don't know what's right and what's wrong. We simply
want the merit. We observe the precepts because we
want to be good, but we don't know what real virtue
is. It's the same when we practice concentration. We
want to get results, but we can't tell right
concentration from wrong. We simply keep on wanting.
This is called delusion, in that our knowledge isn't
in line with the truth. It's not that we don't know
anything. We know, but what we know goes straying
away from the truth. We're like a person who has
lost his way: he can still keep going; it's just
that he's not on the right path. Suppose, for
instance, that we want to go to Bangkok but we get
confused about the way and start heading to BangPuu.
We're off the path as far as Bangkok is concerned,
but we're on the right path for BangPuu -- and we
can keep on going. It's not the case that when
you're on the wrong path you can't go. You can, but
it's the wrong path as far as the destination you
want. You're simply going to end up disappointed.
This is why delusion is called a demon.
The second level of
demons are the forms of craving. There are three
forms of craving, but they boil down to two sorts.
We translate craving as "desire," and desire has two
types. One is desire mixed with lust, in the
ordinary way of the world. The second has no lust.
It's simply a sense of inclination, affection, a
liking for objects. For example, we feel a liking
for certain sights. We see certain material objects
and we like the way they look, so we search for them
-- in other words, we want to get them. This, too,
is a type of craving. The same holds true for the
various sounds we like. We struggle to get hold of
them. Our desire pulls us, yanks us, drags us along
-- whether or not we'll get what we want, we have to
keep running. If we get what we want, we at least
have something to show for our efforts. If we don't,
it's a waste of time and energy, and we suffer. This
kind of desire is also called craving: craving for
objects, for sights, sounds, smells, tastes, tactile
sensations: things we like. This is desire combined,
not with lust, but with greed.
So craving has these
two flavors, distilled out of kama-tanha,
bhava-tanha, and vibhava-tanha: desire
combined with lust, and desire free of lust. These,
too, are demons of defilement. Each of them prevents
the mind from inclining toward right concentration.
This is why desire -- chanda -- is classed as
a hindrance. Desire on the level of a hindrance
covers inclination, a sense of liking, without any
lust mixed in. But there's another type of chanda
-- called chanda-raga, or desire-and-passion
-- which is heavier than chanda as a
hindrance. Chanda as a hindrance is light.
Chanda-raga is an enemy of the precepts.
Chanda as a hindrance is an enemy of
concentration. This is why desire in either sense of
the word is classed as a demon, a demon of
defilement. This is the second level.
The next level of
demons are the forms of mental fabrication. For
example, meritorious fabrications: the mind's
thoughts of concocting or giving rise to merit. Now
suppose that those thoughts don't succeed. The mind
sours. Like King Asoka, who ruled over the Indian
subcontinent, governing in two ways. One was through
his goodness as a person. His subjects respected
him, honored him, and so they obeyed him. The other
way was through his military power and might. This
was why there was law and order among his people. In
the area of the religion, he gave tremendous support
and encouragement, building a great deal of goodness
-- so much so that it backfired on him. He gave
continual donations to the bhikkhu sangha until one
day, toward the end of his life, he decided that he
wanted to use some money to buy donations as a form
of homage to the Buddha, homage to the Dhamma, and
homage to the Sangha. After he had formulated this
intention, but before he had had the opportunity to
spend as much as he wanted, he fell ill. So he
wanted to hurry up and finish making merit in line
with his plans. He sent one of his officials to draw
more money from the treasury, which held both
government funds and the king's private funds. When
the official got to the treasury, the treasurer
wouldn't hand over the money, because he felt that
it should go only to the government.
So the official
returned to inform King Asoka, who got upset. "These
are my funds," he thought. He wanted to use the
funds as a form of homage to the Buddha, homage to
the Dhamma, and homage to the Sangha, but when he
couldn't do it, his mind turned sour. And it so
happened that while his mind was soured, he died.
Now, because he died while he was angry at his
treasurer for not letting him make merit, the result
was that he was born as a gigantic snake, an
enormous python, slithering back and forth around
the royal treasury. And there he had to stay,
fixated on his possessions, for many days, which
prevented him from enjoying the results of the good
he had done. When he was alive, he had done good in
lots of ways: building temples, building chedis,
planting huge numbers of Bodhi trees, giving huge
donations to the Sangha, observing the precepts,
listening to the Dhamma. When he died, he should
have been reborn as a male or female deva, but
instead he went and took birth as a snake. This is
an instance of how good intentions, meritorious
intentions, when they aren't fulfilled, can lead to
defilement and rebirth as a common animal. This is
why thoughts of making merit, even though they're
meritorious, can turn into demons.
The same is even
more true with demeritorious fabrications, thoughts
of doing evil. Simply thinking evil is enough to get
in the way of our goodness. When thoughts of this
kind arise in the mind, even though we haven't yet
acted on them, even though we haven't yet spoken
under their influence, the simple fact of having a
bad intention in the mind is enough to prevent us
from reaching the noble paths and fruitions. An
example of this is the story of two villagers, two
friends, on the Buddhist sabbath. Early in the
morning, the people in the village heard the sound
of the bell and gong in the local temple, so they
got up before daylight and got ready to go give food
and listen to a sermon at the temple. One of the
friends thought to himself, "If I go make merit at
the temple, then when I get back home I won't have
anything to eat. I'd better go fishing instead." So
he cooked some rice and prepared the food for the
other friend to take to the temple.
As for the friend
who went to the temple: while he was placing food in
the monks' bowls, taking the precepts, and listening
to the sermon, all he could think was evil thoughts:
"Will my friend catch any fish for us to eat this
evening, I wonder." As he thought about this, he
developed a strong desire to eat fish curry, made
from the fish his friend was out killing in the
stream. That's all he could think about as he was
putting food in the monks' bowls and listening to
the sermon. He wasn't thinking about the killing. He
simply thought, "If my friend catches some fish,
I'll get to eat." As for the friend who was out
catching fish, all he could think about was, "I
wonder if my friend has put food in the monks' bowls
yet... By now, he's probably taken the precepts...
By now he's probably listening to the sermon and
getting lots and lots of merit." That's all he could
think about. Now, through the strong meritorious
power of his thinking, not a single fish got caught
in his net. Every time he heard the gong being
struck at the temple, he'd put down his net, raise
his hands, and say, "Sadhu!" -- all day until
darkness fell. Because his thoughts were so lost in
doing good, his efforts to do evil didn't succeed.
As for the friend
who went to make merit in the temple, his thoughts
were lost in eating fish with his friend, so he
ended up getting hardly any merit at all. The
returns on his merit weren't worth all the time and
effort that had gone into fixing food for the monks,
taking the precepts, and listening to the sermon
with his hands folded in respect. In other words,
his state of mind canceled out his goodness, so he
ended up no match for his friend who was out doing
evil without really wanting to. Thus his state of
mind turned into a demon and harmed him in two ways:
The first was that he wanted to eat fish but didn't
get a single bite. The second was that even though
he did gain some merit from the donations he had
made to the monks, it was only a little bit. He
simply went through the motions of putting food in
the monks' bowls, taking the precepts, listening to
the sermon, but his mind was focused on eating
murrel-fish curry with his friend. So he didn't get
any of the good results that he should have from his
actions. This is why it's said that evil thoughts
cancel out our goodness. Even if we're doing good,
thoughts of this sort cut off our goodness, like a
palm tree or a coconut tree with its crown cut off.
Or a banana tree that has borne fruit: it won't be
able to grow any further, to bear flowers or produce
any more fruit. People who think in ways that are
evil, even if they do good, don't meet with any
progress in life. They meet with nothing but
failure. This is called demeritorious fabrication,
another kind of demon that prevents us from
succeeding at giving rise to goodness.
The third kind of
mental fabrication is thinking that's neutral, that
isn't yet good or evil. This kind of thinking can
also be a demon of defilement. Say, for instance,
that we plan to work on our farm. "We don't have
time to go to the monastery," we tell ourselves. "We
don't yet have enough to eat." Or if we plan to go
selling things. "If we go to the monastery, we won't
have time to get a good return." Or we spend our
time thinking about some important business we have
to do, that we'll have to do this and say that. Or
we think about going out to cruise around and relax
a bit. When we think in this way, it takes up the
time we can use to develop goodness within
ourselves. We keep putting it off. In what way? When
we're children, we tell ourselves that we can wait
until we're older. We're not going to die anytime
soon, so we should take the time to study instead.
When we become young adults, we tell ourselves that
we can wait until we get married. Once we get
married and get ourselves established in our career,
we tell ourselves to wait until our children are
grown and they get married. Going to the
monastery can wait until we've aged a bit. We keep
on putting it off and turn ourselves into nice sweet
pigs for Mara to swallow down easily without our
even realizing it.
Finally, if we
really do survive until old age, our children get
worried and try to dissuade us from going. "Mom,
don't go to the monastery. You're old. You'll suffer
all sorts of hardships." And we believe them. "If
you feel faint or get sick, it's going to be hard
for you." Your eyes get so that you can't see, your
ears get so that you can't hear. You can't hear the
sermons, can't hear when they're giving the
precepts. Your eyes, your ears, every path for doing
good gets closed off and sealed up tight.
This is what happens
to people who get all wrapped up in their work --
worried about how they're going to eat, sleep, and
live; worried about wealth and poverty to the point
where they can't develop any skillfulness and see it
through. These ways of thinking are a type of mental
fabrication that fools us, trips us up, pulls us
back, ties us down. That's why they count as a type
of Mara, as demons of defilement.
The demon of
defilement on the fourth level is ignorance, not
being acquainted with things. We aren't acquainted
with suffering and stress; aren't acquainted with
the cause of stress; aren't acquainted with the
cessation of stress or with the path of practice
leading to the cessation of stress. Our not being
acquainted with these four noble truths is one
aspect of ignorance. Another aspect is not knowing
which affairs are past, which ones are future, and
which ones are present. These three, plus the four
noble truths, add up to seven. And then there's not
knowing ignorance itself, which makes eight. These
forms of unawareness are called avijja, or
ignorance.
What this all boils
down to is not knowing the path. For instance, when
we practice the four frames of reference:
kayanupassana -- we focus on the body in and of
itself, but we don't understand the body. We think
that the body is the mind or the mind is the body.
This is ignorance. It's dark. It closes off the body
and closes off the mind, so that we think that
they're one and the same thing. We can't separate
the body from the mind or the mind from the body.
This is called not knowing our path.
Vedananupassana:
we focus
on feelings in and of themselves, but we aren't
really acquainted with feelings. "Feelings" here
means the act of savoring sensations, which
sometimes are pleasant, sometimes painful, sometimes
neither pleasant nor painful. We think that the
pleasure is the same thing as our own mind, or that
our self is what has pleasure. Or we think that the
pain is the same thing as our self, or that our self
is what has pain. We can't separate the pleasure and
pain from the mind, so they get tightly tangled up
together. We can't separate them, can't tell what's
what. This is called ignorance, not being acquainted
with the path.
Cittanupassana:
we focus
on the mind in and of itself, but we aren't really
acquainted with the mind. What is the mind?
Actually, there are two aspects to the mind. There's
mental consciousness, and then there's the mind
itself. We think that consciousness is the mind,
that the mind is consciousness. Actually,
consciousness is what goes. Say that we see a sight
in Bangkok. Cakkhu-viññana --
eye-consciousness -- is what goes to the sight, but
the mind doesn't go. The act of going is what's
called consciousness, but there's no substance to
it.
Sota-viññana:
Sometimes we remember sounds from the past. Thoughts
of sounds appear in the mind and we focus on them,
so that we can remember what this or that person
said, how beautiful it was. What we've remembered is
sota-viññana, consciousness at the ear. Then
there's consciousness at the nose. We can recognize
what smells are making contact. We can remember what
smells there were and what things we smelled in the
past. The mental current that goes out to know these
things is called ghana-viññana. Then there's
kaya-viññana, consciousness at the body. We
can recognize hot air, cold air. We can recognize
that, "This kind of coolness is the coolness of
water; that kind of coolness is the coolness of
wind; this kind of heat is the heat of fire; this
kind of heat is the heat of hot air; that kind of
heat is the heat of the sun." We can recognize these
things clearly. We could even write a textbook about
them. Knowing these things is called kaya-viññana.
Mano-viññana,
consciousness at the intellect. Our thinking goes
out: to Bangkok, to the forest, to the wilderness,
all around the world. Our knowledge of these
thoughts is mano-viññana, while the mind is
what stays right here in the present. It can't go
anywhere. The part of the mind that's awareness
itself can't go anywhere at all. It stays right
here. It goes out only as far as the skin. There's
awareness of things beyond the skin, but that
awareness isn't the mind. It's consciousness.
There's no substance to consciousness, no substance
at all, just like the air. So we don't have to get
entangled with it. We can separate consciousness out
of the mind, separate the mind out of consciousness.
The mind is like a fire; consciousness, the light of
the fire. The light and the fire are two different
things, even though the light comes out of the fire.
When we don't understand this, that's called
ignorance. We conceive consciousness to be the mind,
and the mind to be consciousness. When we have
things all mixed up like this, that's called
ignorance.
Dhammanupassana.
We focus
on dhammas in and of themselves, i.e., the mental
qualities that arise in the mind. When unskillful
qualities arise in the mind, we don't know how much
harm they cause. That's ignorance. As for skillful
qualities: which ones give only small benefits,
which ones give medium benefits, and which ones give
overwhelming benefits, we don't know. This means
that we aren't acquainted with the qualities of the
mind. When we don't know the qualities of the mind,
we can't separate good from evil or evil from good,
we can't separate the mind from its qualities or the
qualities from the mind. Everything is firmly stuck
together in a big, thick mass so that we can't pry
them apart. This is called ignorance. Ignorance is a
Mara, a demon, a demon that stands in the way,
preventing us from attaining the highest good, i.e.,
nibbana.
All four of these
types of defilement are called the Maras or demons
of defilement. The mother of Mara is ignorance. The
children of Mara are mental fabrications; the
grandchildren of Mara are the three forms of
craving; and the great-grandchildren of Mara are
greed, aversion, and delusion. Sometimes these
members of the Mara family help us develop merit and
skill. Sometimes they get up and sit on our heads,
lording it over us, ordering us around. Say, for
instance, that greed gets really strong. We grab
hold of whatever we can get our hands on, with no
thought for who it belongs to, or whether taking it
is right or wrong. When greed gets really strong, it
can pressure us into doing evil. When anger gets
really strong, it puts pressure on our nerves to the
point where we can hand down a death sentence and
commit murder. The same is true with delusion.
Each of these things
is an enemy, blocking off our goodness, but each can
also benefit us as well. If we have any discernment,
greed can help us. Anger can help us. Delusion can
help us. If we have any discernment, craving can
help motivate us to develop goodness. Don't look
down on it. We've come here to listen to a sermon.
Who talked us into coming? Craving, that's who. When
people ordain as monks and novices, what forces them
to do it? Craving, that's what. We shouldn't focus
only on its bad side. As for meritorious
fabrications, if we didn't have any of them at all,
we wouldn't be able to develop any goodness.
Everyone who develops goodness in any way has to
start out with the intention to do it. Ignorance is
also good. When we know that we have ignorance, we
hurry up and find some way to overcome it. Ignorance
is what leads us astray, but ultimately ignorance is
what will have to lead us back. Knowledge never led
anyone to study. Ignorance is what makes people want
to learn. When people already know, why would they
want to look further? Delusion is what makes us look
for knowledge -- by joining society, by associating
with people. Our knowledge grows broader and broader
from the first impulse born in ignorance.
So when dealing with
the demons of defilement, you have to look for both
their good and their bad points. Only when you see
both sides can you be said to be discerning and
wise. When you can take bad things and make them
good, that's when you're really outstanding. If you
take good things and make them bad, that's no good
at all. Even when you take good things and make
other good things out of them, that's not really
special. There are three levels of goodness: good,
excellent, and outstanding. A good person does good.
An excellent person takes something good and makes
it better. That's excellent, but not outstanding. An
outstanding person takes bad things and makes them
good, takes good things and makes them excellent. So
these are the three levels of goodness: good,
excellent, and outstanding.
So today I've talked
about the demons of defilement, after the talk the
other day on the demons of the aggregates (khandha-mara).
We should all learn to think, to consider things, to
ponder things over, so that we can find goodness on
every side, in every corner we look. This way, if we
look beneath us we'll find treasures. If we look
above us we'll find treasures. Looking beneath us
means looking at the things that are our enemies.
We'll be able to gain treasures from them: goodness
on the outstanding level. When we look at the things
that are our friends, we can gain excellence from
them. We should try to develop all three levels of
goodness. If we have discernment, we can gain all
three levels of goodness from the demons of
defilement and the demons of the aggregates, and
we'll gain all three of the benefits I've mentioned.
For this reason we
should develop our mental faculties (indriya)
until they're strong, capable, and mature, so that
they don't fear Maras of any sort. A person who has
studied snakes can pick them up with no fear of
their venom. A person who has studied tigers can
catch them and they won't bite. In the same way, if
we have any discernment, we can capture and tame the
demons of defilement so that they support us in
being outstanding, all the way to the paths (magga)
and fruitions (phala) leading to nibbana.
Whoever doesn't have the ability or discernment will
get carried off by the demons of defilement to get
tortured and killed. So we should use our sharpest
discernment to consider these things. That's what
will lead us to the noble paths and their fruitions.
So when we've heard
this we should consider what we've heard and take it
to heart, bringing it inside to see the ways things
actually are inside us and then practicing
accordingly, in line with the way of right practice.
That's when we can be at our ease. Evil people will
help us. Good people will help us. We'll be free of
danger. Thieves will be our servants, helping us in
our various tasks. Wise people will help us in our
work -- so how can we fail? If we look to bad
people, they come and help us. If we look to good
people, they come and help us. If we focus on the
Maras who are our enemies, they turn into our
friends and companions. When we reach this point, we
won't know what's a Mara -- because nothing's a
Mara in any way at all. Everything's neutral,
the common property of the world. Whoever can see
things in this way has no more suffering, no more
obstacles. Everything is bright, beaming, and easy.
If you go forward, you don't get stuck. If you go
back you don't get entangled. You can go as smoothly
as a boat over water. That's why this sort of person
is said to be sugato: someone who goes well,
who's well-gone.
So all of us who are
developing our perfections should practice in this
way.
And now that I've
explained the demons of defilement, I'll end right
here.
Copyright © 1998 Metta Forest Monastery
For free distribution only.
You may print copies of this work for your personal
use.
You may re-format and redistribute this work for use
on computers and computer networks,
provided that you charge no fees for its
distribution or use.
Otherwise, all rights
reserved.