Foreword
Phra Ajaan Lee was
born in 1906 in a rural village in Ubon Ratchathani
province, northeastern Thailand. At the age of 20 he
was ordained as a monk at the temple in his home
village, and there began his study of Buddhist
doctrine and monastic discipline. He discovered,
much to his distress, that life in his temple -- as
in most temples in Thailand at the time -- had
little to do with the practice of the Buddha's
teachings. As he wrote later in his autobiography,
"Instead of observing the duties of the
contemplative life, we were out to have a good time:
playing chess, wrestling, playing match games with
girls whenever there was a wake... Whenever I looked
into the books on monastic discipline, I'd start
felling really uneasy. I told myself, 'If you don't
want to leave the monkhood, you're going to have to
leave this temple.'"
Soon after making
this resolution, he happened to meet a monk of the
wandering ascetic tradition founded by Phra Ajaan
Sao Kantasilo (1861-1941) and Phra Ajaan Mun
Bhuridatto (1870-1949). Impressed both with the
man's teachings and with his way of life, Ajaan Lee
set out on foot to find Ajaan Mun and to become his
student. He spent two very intensive periods
studying with Ajaan Mun: once, that first year, in
the forests of Ubon; and then again, four years
later, at Wat Chedi Luang in Chieng Mai. Ajaan Mun
and Ajaan Sao were unique in their time in teaching
that the way to nibbana was still open, and the
training they gave their students in the direction
of that goal was also unique, involving not only
intensive meditation practice, but also the total
re-education of the student's character: his habits,
values and powers of observation. As Ajaan Lee wrote
in his autobiography, "Staying with Ajaan Mun was
very good for me, but also very hard. I had to be
willing to learn everything anew... Some days he'd
be cross with me, saying that I was messy, that I
never put anything in the right place -- but he'd
never tell me what the right places were... To be
able to stay with him any length of time, you had to
be very observant and very circumspect. You couldn't
leave footprints on the floor, you couldn't make
noise when you swallowed water or opened the windows
or doors. There had to be a science to everything
you did -- hanging out robes... arranging bedding,
everything. Otherwise, he'd drive you out, even in
the middle of the Rains Retreat. Even then, you'd
just have to take it, and try to use your powers of
observation.
"In other matters,
such as sitting and walking meditation, he trained
me in every way, to my complete satisfaction. But I
was able to keep up with him at best only about 60
percent of the time."
After Ajaan Lee's
second period of training, Ajaan Mun sent him out
into the forests of northern Thailand to wander and
meditate on his own. Ajaan Lee's wanderings
eventually took him through every part of Thailand,
as well as into Burma, Cambodia and India. Of all of
Ajaan Mun's students, Ajaan Lee was the first to
bring the teachings of the forest tradition into the
mainstream of Thai society in central Thailand. In
1935 he founded a temple, Wat Paa Khlawng Kung, in a
cemetery near Chanthaburi, on the southeast coast;
and in 1955 he founded Wat Asokaram in a marshy area
at the mouth of the Chao Phraya River on the
outskirts of Bangkok. He drew students -- monks and
lay people, men and women -- from all levels of
society and all walks of life. In 1957 he was given
the ecclesiastical rank of Chao Khun, with the title
Phra Suddhidhammaransi Gambhiramedhacariya. He
passed away in 1961.
Even in his last
years, though, he continued to retreat regularly
into the forest. To quote again from his
autobiography: "Living in the forest, as I like to
do, has given me a lot to think about... It's a
quiet place, where you can observe the influences of
the environment. Take the wild rooster: If it went
around acting like a domestic rooster, the cobras
and mongooses would make a meal of it in no time...
So it is with us: If we spend all out time wallowing
in companionship, we're like a knife or a hoe stuck
down into the dirt -- it'll rust easily. But if it's
constantly sharpened on a stone or a file, rust
won't have a chance to take hold. So we should learn
always to be on the alert...
"Living in the
forest, the mind becomes confident. The Dhamma
you've studied -- or even that you haven't studied
-- will make itself clear, because nature is the
teacher. It's like the sciences of the world, which
every country has used to develop amazing powers:
None of their inventions or discoveries cane out of
textbooks. They came because scientists studied the
principles of nature, all of which appear right here
in the world. As for the Dhamma, it's just like
science: It exists in nature. When I realized this,
I no longer worried about studying the scriptures,
and I was reminded of the Lord Buddha and his
disciples: They studied and learned from the
principles of nature. None of them followed a
textbook.
"For these reasons,
I'm willing to be ignorant when it comes to texts
and scriptures. Some kinds of trees sleep at night
and are awake during the day. Others sleep by day
and are awake by night."
Introduction
This book on the
frames of reference is based to some extent on my
own thoughts and opinions. In some spots it may not
be directly in line with the original texts, because
my primary aim has been to get to the heart of the
matter, so that it can be conveniently put into
practice. Those who hold zealously to the texts may
feel that what I have written is wrong; but as for
me, I feel that whoever is able to practice in line
with what is written here will find that it can be
taken as a guide to the true principles of
concentration, discernment and release. To hold to
the texts isn't wrong, but they should be held to
intelligently, just as in medicine: A doctor who
thinks that the only way to cure a fever is to drink
a concoction of boiled neem and quinine leaves is
wrong. Some doctors may add the leaves of other
trees; some may make a concentrated extract; others
may vary the dosage. In the same way, when
practicing the Dhamma, to go no further than the
texts may in some cases be wrong. Actually, any path
that leads to the abandonment of defilement and to
release from suffering is right. The value of
medicine lies in its ability to cure disease; the
value of a method of practice lies in its ability to
get rid of defilement. As far as I can see, there is
nothing wrong with any method that has been found to
work. In the end, all such methods must follow the
basic principles of virtue, concentration and
discernment, and differ only as to whether they are
crude or sophisticated, direct or indirect, fast or
slow.
Now, I don't want to
set myself up as an absolute authority of any kind.
Thus, I want you, the reader, to use your own
discernment. Take whatever passage seems right for
you as a basis for your practice. There is no need
to follow the entire book. Simply focus on a single
point, and that will be enough. Once you have
mastered an important point, all the other sections
will come together and connect right there.
When you are ready
to meditate, you should try to find a quiet,
solitary place to assist in your practice of the
frames of reference. Otherwise, your practice won't
go smoothly, because solitude is desirable for all
spiritual seekers in general. Just as a person who
wants to look at his reflection in the water will be
able to see himself clearly only when there is no
wind rippling across the surface, in the same way, a
person who wants peace that is subtle and profound
has to conduct himself in this manner.
Or to put it another
way, there has to be external peace and quiet before
internal peace will arise. When both forms of peace
are present, you will know and see the Dhamma as it
actually is. So when you put this form of meditation
into practice, you should first say your chants and
pay respect to the Buddha in whatever way you are
accustomed to, and then begin sitting in meditation.
You are sure to obtain genuine results in line with
what I have written here.
If there is anything
defective or wrong in this book, I trust that the
reader will show me forgiveness, for I'm not much of
an expert when it comes to the texts. I've simply
learned a few parts, and put them into practice.
One more point: This
practice of training the heart is very important in
that it forms the source of all goodness and merit;
and whatever is the source of goodness and merit
deserves special care and attention. The heart is a
vessel for all that is good. When the heart is pure,
any meritorious actions you may perform externally
will truly foster happiness. External merit is like
a tasty curry. If it's served in a filthy dish, then
even though the curry may be delicious, the person
eating it won't want to eat his fill because of the
filth. But if the dish is clean and the curry
delicious, the person eating is likely to eat with
confidence to his heart's content. In the same way,
if the heart is clean, it will find itself attracted
to performing externally meritorious actions. It
will always be ready to make sacrifices, because in
every case it will taste the nourishment of its
goodness.
Not only that, a
clean heart also forms the path for release from
stress and suffering, leading ultimately to
nibbana. Those who are to reach the paths (magga)
and fruitions (phala) leading to nibbana will
do so by way of the heart. If the heart isn't
trained, then no matter how much external merit you
may have, you won't be able to reach nibbana.
Nibbana can be attained only by training the heart
in the practice of virtue, concentration and
discernment. Virtue forms the basis for
concentration; concentration, the basis for
discernment; and discernment, the basis for release.
Concentration is especially important because it
forms the basis for discernment and intuitive
understanding (ñana), which are the crucial
factors of the path. You can't do without
concentration. If concentration is lacking, you can
gain nothing but jumbled thoughts and conjectures,
without any sound support.
Concentration is
like a nail: and discernment, a hammer. If the nail
isn't held firm and straight, the hammer will strike
it only hit-or-miss, and the nail will never get
through the board. For the heart to penetrate the
world and get through to the highest Dhamma, it must
take a firm stance in concentration so as to give
rise to intuitive understanding. Intuitive
understanding can occur only to those who have
centered the mind in concentration. As for
discernment, it's something we all have, but if it
lacks intuitive understanding, it can never get
beyond the world.
For this reason, we
should all take an interest in the factors that form
the path leading beyond suffering and stress to
abundant well-being.
If you have
questions about any part of this book, please feel
free to ask at any time.
The merit coming
from the writing of this book, I ask to dedicate to
all those who have felt inspired to help pay for its
printing costs so that it can be distributed freely
as a gift of Dhamma. May the power arising from this
gift bear them fruit, so that whatever they aspire
to that is upright and just may succeed in bringing
them happiness in every way.
Phra Ajaan Lee
Dhammadharo
Wat Paa Khlawng Kung
(The Shrimp Canal Forest Temple)
Chanthaburi, 1948
Frames of Reference
An explanation of
the four frames of reference, which are -- for those
who put them into practice -- a means for freedom
from defilement:
I.
Kayanupassana satipatthana: being mindful of
the body as a frame of reference.
II. Vedananupassana satipatthana: being mindful of feelings as a
frame of reference.
III. Cittanupassana satipatthana: being mindful of the mind as a frame
of reference.
IV. Dhammanupassana satipatthana: being mindful of mental qualities
as a frame of reference.
In order to use
these four frames of reference as a means for
centering the mind, you must first familiarize
yourself with the following three qualities.
Otherwise, you can't say that you are standing firm
on your frame of reference. The truth of the matter
is that the translations given above are too narrow
-- for in dealing with the frames of reference, mere
mindfulness isn't enough. When it's not enough, and
yet you keep being mindful of the body, you will
give rise only to feelings of pleasure and
displeasure, because the duty of mindfulness is
simply to keep referring to an object. So in
developing the frames of reference, you have to know
your tools --
1.
Sati: mindfulness; powers of reference.
2.
Sampajañña: alertness. This has to be firmly
in place before sending mindfulness out to refer to
its object -- such as the body -- and then bringing
it back inwards to refer to the heart.
3.
Atappa: focused investigation, analyzing the
object into its various aspects.
This can be
illustrated as follows: The body is like a saw mill.
The mind is like a drive shaft. Alertness is the
pulley that spins around the drive shaft in one
spot. Mindfulness is the belt that ties the mind to
its object, not letting it slip away to other
objects. Focused investigation is the saw blade that
keeps cutting the logs into pieces so that they can
be of use. These three qualities must always be
present for your practice of centering the mind to
succeed.
Now we will discuss
the work to be done, the objects for which focused
investigation, alertness and mindfulness are
responsible, each its separate way. The objects are
four --
1.
The body (kaya), which is a conglomeration of
the four properties of earth, water, fire and wind.
2.
Feelings (vedana): the experiencing of such
sensations as pleasure, pain and indifference.
3.
The mind (citta), which is what stores up the
various forms of good and evil.
4.
Mental qualities (dhamma): conditions that
possess their own nature, such as the skillful and
unskillful qualities that occur mixed together in
the mind.
These are the four
things for which you must be responsible.
I. Body
The term "body" here
refers to conglomerations of the four properties,
both those that have consciousness directing them
and those that no longer do, but that still appear
to the eye. Both sorts are termed physical bodies
(rupa-kaya). Physical bodies can be considered
under three aspects --
A.
The inner body: your own body.
B. Outer bodies: the bodies of other people.
C. The body in and of itself: the act of
focusing on an aspect or part of the body, such as
the breath, which is an aspect of one of the four
properties. This is what is meant by the body in and
of itself.
The body, whether
inner or outer, is simply a matter of the four
properties. Now that you know your duties, you have
to perform them properly. Sampajañña: Keep
your alertness in place, right at the mind within.
You don't have to direct it anywhere else. Sati:
Your powers of reference have to be all-round. In
other words, refer inwardly to the mind and then out
to the object -- in this case, the body -- and then
watch after the mind and its object to make sure
that they don't slip away from each other. Atappa:
Focus on investigating the body, analyzing it into
its various aspects. This can be done in any of five
ways:
1.
Investigate the 32 parts of the body, beginning with
the hair of the head, hair of the body, nails,
teeth, skin, etc. Make a thorough survey and
evaluation. If this method doesn't calm the mind, go
on to --
2.
Investigate the various repugnant aspects of the
body, beginning with the fact that the body is a
conglomeration of all sorts of things. In other
words, it's a burial ground, a national cemetery,
filled with the corpses of cattle, pigs, ducks,
chickens, sour, sweet, greasy, salty, gathered and
aged in the stomach, filtered and distilled into
blood, pus, decomposing and putrid, oozing
throughout the body and coming out its various
openings: this body, which all of us in the human
race care for without ceasing -- bathing it,
scrubbing it, masking its smell -- and even then its
filth keeps displaying itself as ear wax, eye
secretions, nasal drip, tooth tartar, skin-scruff
and sweat, always oozing out, filthy in every way.
What it comes from is filthy, where it stays is
filthy (i.e., in a cemetery of fresh corpses, or
even worse -- we've probably buried hundreds of
different kinds of corpses within ourselves). If you
look at the human body, you'll see that its
characteristics are ill-matched and incongruous. Its
smell is something really offensive. If looking at
the body in this way doesn't give rise to a sense of
dispassion and detachment, go on to --
3.
Investigate the in-and-out breath. When the breath
comes in long, be aware of the fact. When it goes
out long, be aware of it. When you first begin
dealing with the breath, start out by sending your
awareness out with the out-breath and in with the
in-breath. Do this two or three times, and then let
your awareness settle in the middle -- without
letting it follow the breath in or out -- until the
mind becomes still, paying attention only to the
in-and-out breath. Make the mind open, relaxed and
at ease. You can settle your awareness at the tip of
the nose, at the palate -- if you can keep it
centered in the middle of the chest, so much the
better. Keep the mind still, and it will feel at
ease. Discernment will arise; an inner light will
appear, reducing distractive thought. Now observe
the behavior of the breath as it swells and
contracts -- in long and out long, in short and out
short, in short and out long, in long and out short,
in heavy and out light, in light and out heavy, in
light and out light. Focus on making a thorough
investigation into these different modes of
breathing, without letting the mind move along with
the breath. Do this until it gives rise to a sense
of mental calm. If, however, this method doesn't
make you calm, go on to --
4.
Investigate the four properties: earth, water, wind
and fire. The parts of the body that feel hard are
the earth property. The parts that feel liquid are
the water property. The energy that flows through
the body is the wind property; and the warmth in the
body, the fire property. Imagine that you can take
the earth property out and pile it in a heap in
front of you, that you can take the water property
out and pile it behind you, that you can pile the
wind property in a heap to your left and the fire
property in a heap to your right. Place yourself in
the middle and take a good look at the body, until
you see that, when taken apart in this way, it
vanishes into nothing, into ashes -- what they call
"death" -- and you will come to feel a sense of
dispassion and detachment. If, however, you don't
see any results appearing, go on to --
5.
Consider the fact that the body, once it's born,
leaves you exposed on all sides to the steady
onslaughts of old age, illness and death.
Ultimately, you are sure to be torn away from all
that you love and cherish in the world. The body is
always displaying its nature --
Anicca:
It's inconstant, unstable, always shifting
precariously about.
Dukkha:
It's hard to endure.
Anatta:
It's not you, yours, or anyone else's. You didn't
bring it with you when you came, and can't take it
with you when you go. When you die, you'll have to
throw it away like an old log or a piece of
kindling. There's nothing of any substance or worth
to it at all.
When you consider
things in this way, you'll come to feel a sense of
dispassion that will make the mind steady, still and
firmly centered in concentration.
These five
activities are the duties of your focused
investigation, fighting to see the true nature of
the body. As for mindfulness, it has to follow its
own duties, referring to the object under
investigation, at the same time referring to the
mind within. Don't make reference to anything else.
Keep check on whether or not you have your mind on
what you're doing: This is alertness. Keep track of
your mind, observing it at all times to see in what
ways it might be acting or reacting on you. Keep
your awareness of this always in place, right at the
heart.
All the activities
mentioned here are aspects of taking the body as a
frame of reference. Whether you are dealing with the
inner body, with outer bodies or with the body in
and of itself, you have to use the three qualities
mentioned above. Only when you have them fully
developed can you say that you are developing the
great frame of reference (maha-satipatthana).
Normally,
mindfulness is a quality we all have, but when it
lacks alertness, it falls into wrong ways, becoming
Wrong Mindfulness. But when you can follow the
methods outlined above, you are sure to develop a
disinterested steadiness of mind. You will come to
feel a sense of dispassion and detachment that will
make the mind quiet, calm and unperturbed. This is
the ladder of liberating insight
(vipassana-ñana), leading to nibbana, which
people of wisdom and experience have guaranteed:
nibbanam paramam
sukham
Nibbana is the ultimate ease.
This ends the
discussion of keeping the body in mind as a frame of
reference.
II. Feelings
The word "feeling"
refers to the experiencing of sensations that arise
from one's own actions, or kamma. There are
three sorts of feelings: inner feelings or moods,
outer feelings, and feelings in and of themselves.
A.
Inner feelings, in terms of how they feel, are of
three kinds --
1.
Sukha-vedana: good moods; a carefree sense of
ease or well-being in the mind.
2.
Dukkha-vedana: bad moods; a feeling of
depression, sorrow, annoyance or discouragement.
3.
Upekkha-vedana: neutral moods, during
intervals when happiness and sadness are not
appearing.
B.
Outer feelings are also of three kinds --
1.
Somanassa-vedana: pleasure or delight in
objects of the six senses -- sights, sounds, smells,
tastes, tactile sensations and thoughts; becoming
attracted to these things as they come into contact
with the heart.
2.
Domanassa-vedana: displeasure or discontent
that arises from contact with objects of the senses
such as sights, sounds, smells, tastes, etc., as
they appear to the eye, ear, nose, tongue, etc., and
strike one as unsatisfactory or undesirable.
3.
Upekkha-vedana: a feeling of indifference or
neutrality as one comes into contact with sights,
sounds, etc.
C.
Feelings in and of themselves: This refers to the
act of focusing on any single aspect of the
above-mentioned feelings. In other words, you don't
have to be particular. Whenever pleasure arises, for
example, set your mind on investigating it. Keep it
firmly in mind. Watch after it to see that it stays
in focus, and that you stay focused on it. Don't let
your frame of reference slip away and change -- and
don't let any hopes or wants arise in that mental
moment at all. Then use your powers of focused
investigation to look into the truth of the feeling;
and alertness to watch after the mind, to make sure
that your awareness stays in place. Don't allow the
mental current that causes stress to arise.
The cause of stress
first arises when alertness is weak and the mind
vacillates. The vacillation is called craving for
not-being (vibhava-tanha). As the movement
becomes stronger, a mental current arises and goes
straying out. The current that strays out is craving
for being (bhava-tanha). When it comes across
a thought or sensory object and grabs hold, that's
called craving for sensuality (kama-tanha).
For this reason, you should watch after the mind to
make sure that it stays with its one object, its
feeling of pleasure. Don't let any other
preoccupations get involved. Keep your mindfulness
and alertness firmly in place, and then make a
focused investigation of the truth of that feeling.
Only when you do this can you say that you are
making use of feelings in and of themselves as a
frame of reference.
By and large,
whenever a mood or feeling arises, we tend to give
rise to various hopes or desires. For instance, when
a good mood arises, we want that sense of well-being
to stay as it is or to increase. This desire gives
rise to stress, and so we receive results contrary
to what we had hoped for. Sometimes a bad mood
arises and we don't want it, so we struggle to find
happiness, and this simply piles on more suffering.
Sometimes the heart is neutral -- neither happy nor
sad, neither pleased nor displeased -- and we want
to stay that way constantly, or else we start to
think that staying neutral is stupid or inane. This
gives rise to more desires, and we start to struggle
for something better than what we already are.
When this happens,
we can't say that we're firmly based on our frame of
reference -- for even though we may be mindful of
the fact that a good or a bad or a neutral feeling
has arisen, we're not beyond it. This shows that we
lack the three qualities that can nurture and
support mindfulness in becoming a factor of the
Path. In other words, start out with alertness
firmly established, and then use mindfulness to
connect the mind with its object. Don't let the mind
slip away from the object, and don't let the object
slip away from the mind. Keep mindfulness in firm
reference to the object, and watch the mind to make
sure that it stays fixed on its one object. As for
the object, it's the responsibility of your focused
investigation to keep track of whatever aspect of
feeling may appear: inner or outer; happy, sad or
indifferent.
For instance, when
pain arises, what does it come from? Look into it
until you know its truth. What does pleasure come
from? It's the duty of your focused investigation to
find out. In what mental moment does indifference
occur? It's the duty of your focused investigation
to keep watch until you really know. Whatever
feelings may arise, inner or outer, are the
responsibility of your focused investigation. You
have to use your powers of analysis to burn into
whatever spot a feeling may arise. This is the first
round in your investigation.
2.
The second round: Watch the arising of feelings in
the present. You don't have to follow them anywhere
else. Tell yourself that whatever may be causing
these feelings, you're going to focus exclusively on
what is present.
3.
Focus on the fading of feelings in the present.
4.
Focus on the passing away of feelings in the
present.
5.
Stay with the realization that feelings do nothing
but arise and fall away -- simply flowing away and
vanishing in various ways -- with nothing of any
substance or worth. When you can do this, you can
say that your frame of reference is firmly
established in feelings in and of themselves -- and
at that point, the Path comes together.
If we were to
express this in terms of the factors of the Path,
we'd have to do so as follows: The alertness that
constantly watches after the mind, keeping it at
normalcy, making sure that it doesn't fall into
unskillful ways, is virtue. The mindfulness that
keeps the mind connected with its object so that it
doesn't slip away to other objects, is
concentration. The focused investigation that
penetrates into each object as it arises so as to
know its true nature clearly -- knowing both that
which arises and disbands, as well as that which
doesn't arise or disband -- is discernment. These
three qualities have to arise together in a single
mental moment for the Path to come together (magga-samangi),
and then the Path will function on its own, in line
with its duties, enabling you to see clearly and
know truly without having to let go of this or work
at that, work at this or let go of that, let go of
the outside or work at the inside, work at the
outside or let go of the inside or whatever.
When all three of
these qualities are gathered together, you can deal
with any feeling at all -- past, present or future;
pleasant, unpleasant or neutral -- because when
these three qualities are fully developed, they all
connect. This is why I made the comparison at the
beginning: The mind is like a drive shaft. Alertness
is a pulley spinning in place around the drive
shaft. Mindfulness is the belt that keeps the mind
and its objects from slipping away from each other.
Focused investigation is the saw blade that works
back and forth, cutting each object to pieces --
which is what is meant by "bhagavant."
Only a person who
has the discernment to see in line with the truth in
this way can be said to have mastered fully the use
of feelings as a frame of reference.
III. The Mind
In using the mind as
a frame of reference, there are three aspects to
deal with:
A.
The mind inside.
B. The mind outside.
C. The mind in and of itself.
"The mind inside"
refers to a state exclusively in the heart when it
isn't involved with any outer preoccupations. "The
mind outside" refers to its interaction with such
outer preoccupations as sights, sounds, etc. "The
mind in and of itself" refers to the act of singling
out any aspect of the mind as it appears, whether
inside or out.
As for the modes of
the mind inside, there are three --
1.
Raga-citta: a mental state infused with
desire or passion.
2. Dosa-citta: a sense of inner
irritation and displeasure.
3. Moha-citta: a cloudy, murky or
confused state of mind, in which it is unable to
consider anything; in short, delusion.
The mind outside is
divided into the same three aspects -- states of
passion, irritation and delusion -- but these are
said to be "outside" because once any of these
aspects arises, it tends to go out and latch onto an
outer preoccupation that simply serves to further
aggravate the original state of passion, irritation
or delusion. The mind then doesn't clearly or truly
understand its objects. Its knowledge goes off in
various directions, away from the truth: seeing
beauty, for instance, in things that aren't
beautiful, constancy in things that are inconstant,
pleasure in things that are painful, and self in
things that are not-self.
All of these things
are aspects of the mind outside.
"The mind in and of
itself" refers to the act of singling out any one of
these aspects of the mind. For example, sometimes
passion arises, sometimes anger, sometimes delusion:
Whichever aspect may be arising in the present,
single it out. With your alertness firmly in place,
be mindful of that aspect of the mind, without
making reference to any other objects -- and without
letting any hopes or wants arise in that particular
mental moment at all. Then focus unwaveringly on
investigating that state of mind until you know its
truth. The truth of these states is that sometimes,
once they've arisen, they flare up and spread;
sometimes they die away. Their nature is to arise
for a moment and then dissolve away with nothing of
any substance or worth. When you are intent on
examining things in this way -- with your
mindfulness, alertness and powers of focused
investigation firmly in place -- then none of these
defilements, even though they may be appearing, will
have the chance to grow or spread. This is like the
baskets or jars used to cover new lettuce plants: If
no one removes the baskets, the plants will never
have a chance to grow, and will simply wither away
and die. Thus you have to keep your alertness right
with each mental state as it arises. Keep
mindfulness constantly referring to its object, and
use your powers of focused investigation to burn
into those defilements so as to keep them away from
the heart at all times.
To put this another
way, all of the mental states mentioned above are
like lettuce or green-gram seeds. Mindfulness is
like a basket. Alertness is the person who scatters
the seeds, while the power of focused investigation
is the heat of the sun that burns them up.
So far,
we have mentioned only bad mental states. Their
opposites are good mental states: viraga-citta
-- the mind free from the grip of passion;
adosa-citta -- the mind free from the annoyance or
anger that can lead to loss and ruin; amoha-citta
-- the mind free from delusion, intoxication and
misunderstandings. These are skillful states of mind
(kusala-citta), which form the root of all
that is good. When they arise, maintain them and
observe them so that you can come to know the level
of your mind.
There are four
levels of good mental states --
1.
Kamavacara-bhumi: the level of sensuality.
2. Rupavacara-bhumi: the level of
form.
3. Arupavacara-bhumi: the level of
formlessness.
4. Lokuttara-bhumi: the transcendent
level.
1.
The level of sensuality: A mental state arises and
connects with a skillful object -- any sight, sound,
smell, taste, tactile sensation or idea that can
form the basis for skillful mental states. When it
meets with its object, it becomes happy, joyful, and
glad. (Here we are referring only to those sensory
objects that are good for the mind.) If you were to
refer to the Heavens of Sensual Bliss as they appear
within each of us, the list would run as follows:
Sights that can form the basis for skillful mental
states are one level, sounds are another, and same
with smells, tastes, tactile sensations and ideas.
Together they form the six levels of heaven on the
sensual level.
2.
The level of form: A mental state arises from
thinking about (vitakka) a physical object
that serves as the theme of one's meditation; and
then analyzing (vicara) the object into its
various aspects, at the same time making sure that
the mind doesn't slip away from the object (ekaggatarammana).
When the mind and its object are one in this way,
the object becomes light. The mind is unburdened and
can relax its sense of concern. Rapture (piti)
and ease (sukha) arise as a result. When
these five factors appear in the mind, it has
entered the first level of jhana -- the
beginning stage in the level of form.
3.
The level of formlessness: The mind lets go of its
physical object on the level of form, but is still
attached to a very subtle mental notion -- the
jhana of unbounded space, for instance, in which
you are focused on a sense of emptiness and
awareness with no physical object or image passing
into your field of attention, so that you are unable
to know its full range. What has actually happened
is that you have curled up and are hiding inside.
This isn't the kind of "going in to know" that comes
from finishing your work. It's the "going in to
know" that comes from wanting to run away. You've
seen the faults of what arises outside you, but
haven't seen that they really lie buried within you
-- so you've hidden inside by limiting the field of
your attention.
Some people, when
they reach this point, believe that they have done
away with defilement, because they mistake the
emptiness for nibbana. Actually, it's only the first
stage in the level of formlessness, and so is still
on the mundane level.
If you seriously
want to know whether your mind is on the mundane or
the transcendent level, then observe it when you
turn your awareness inward and make it still -- when
you feel a sense of peace and ease that seems to
have no defilements adulterating it at all. Let go
of that mental state, to see how it behaves on its
own. If defilements can reappear, you're still on
the mundane level. Sometimes that mental state
remains unchanged through the power of your own
efforts, but after a while you become unsure of your
knowledge. Your mind has to keep fondling, i.e.,
making a running commentary on it. When this is the
case, don't go believing that your knowledge is in
any way true.
There are many, many
kinds of knowledge: The intellect knows, the heart
knows, the mind knows, consciousness knows,
discernment knows, alertness knows, awareness knows,
unawareness knows. All these modes are based on
knowledge; they differ simply in how they know. If
you aren't able to distinguish clearly among the
different modes of knowing, knowing can become
confused -- and so you might take wrong knowing to
be right knowing, or unawareness to be awareness, or
knowledge attached to suppositions (sammuti)
to be freedom from suppositions (vimutti).
Thus you should experiment and examine things
carefully from all angles so that you can come to
see for yourself which kind of knowledge is genuine,
and which is counterfeit. Counterfeit knowledge,
merely knows, but can't let go. Genuine knowledge,
when it goes about knowing anything, is bound to let
go.
All three levels of
the mind discussed so far are on the mundane level.
4.
The transcendent level: This begins with the path
and fruition of entry into the stream to nibbana.
Those who reach this level have begun by following
the threefold training of virtue, concentration and
discernment on the mundane level, but then have gone
on to gain their first true insight into the four
Noble Truths, enabling them to free themselves from
the first three Fetters (sanyojana). Their
minds are thus released into the stream to nibbana.
The three Fetters are --
a.
Self-identification (sakkaya-ditthi): the
view that leads us to believe that the body is our
own.
b.
Doubt (vicikiccha): the uncertainty that
leads us to be unsure of the good we believe in --
i.e., of how much truth there is to the Buddha,
Dhamma and Sangha.
c.
Attachment to precepts and practices (silabbata-paramasa):
fondling the good that we practice; being attached
to those forms of goodness that are merely external
-- for instance, observing precepts or practices by
clinging simply to the level of bodily action or
speech. Examples of this attitude include such
things as developing virtue by adhering simply to
the precepts; practicing concentration by simply
sitting like a post; not being able to free yourself
from these actions, always holding onto the goodness
that comes from them, happy when you have the chance
to perform them in a particular way, upset when you
don't; thinking, for instance, that virtue is
something you get from monks when they give you the
precepts; that the eight precepts are to be observed
only on certain days and nights, months and years;
that you gain or lose merit simply as a result of
external actions associated with your accustomed
beliefs. None of these attitudes reaches the essence
of virtue. They go no further than simply clinging
to beliefs, customs, and conventions; clutching onto
these forms of goodness, always fondling them,
unable to let them go. Thus this is called
"attachment to precepts and practices."
Such attitudes are
an obstacle to what is truly good. Take, for
example, the long-held belief that goodness means to
practice charity, virtue and meditation on the
sabbath days: Stream-winners have completely let go
of such beliefs. Their hearts are no longer caught
up in beliefs and customs. Their virtues no longer
have precepts. In other words, they have reached the
essence of virtue. Their virtue is free from the
limits of time. In this they differ from ordinary,
run-of-the-mill people. Ordinary people have to hand
goodness over to external criteria -- believing, for
instance, that virtue lies on this day or that,
during Rains Retreat, during this or that month or
year -- and then holding fast to that belief,
maintaining that anyone who doesn't follow the
custom can't be virtuous. In the end, such people
have a hard time finding the opportunity really to
do good. Thus we can say that they don't know the
true criteria for goodness. As for Stream-winners,
all the qualities of virtue have come in and filled
their hearts. They are able to unshackle themselves
from the conventional values of the world that say
that this or that is good. What is truly good they
have seen appear in their hearts. Good lies right
here. Evil lies right here. Neither depends on
external actions. This is in line with the Buddha's
saying,
mano-pubbangama
dhamma
mano-settha mano-maya
All matters are
preceded by the heart,
Excelled by the heart,
Achieved through the heart.
This is what is
meant by "Stream-winner."
Stream-winners are
like people who have rowed their boats into the main
current of the Chao Phraya River, and so are
destined to float down to the river's mouth and into
the sea of amata -- deathless -- nibbana. There are
three ways they can reach the sea:
1.
The lowest level of Stream-winner is like a boatsman
who leans back with his hand simply placed on the
rudder. This level of Stream-winner reaches the goal
slowly.
2.
The second level is like a boatsman who has his foot
on the rudder, his hands on the oars, and rows
along.
3.
The third level: The boat is equipped with a motor
and the boatsman is at the steering wheel, and so he
reaches the goal in practically no time at all.
This -- reaching the
stream to nibbana -- is the beginning stage of the
transcendent level. If you were to simplify the
three Fetters, you could do so as follows: To be
attached to the body as being one's own is
self-identification. To be attached to the actions
of the body is attachment to precepts and practices.
Not knowing how to separate the mind from the body
or from one's actions makes one unable to see
clearly and know truly: This leads to uncertainty
and doubt.
These are simply my
opinions on the matter, so you who read this should
consider things carefully on your own.
This ends the
discussion of the transcendent and mundane skillful
states of mind.
When you know the
characteristics of the various mental states, you
should use the three qualities mentioned above as
your tools: Keep your mindfulness, alertness and
powers of focused investigation firmly in place at
the mind. To be able to gain knowledge, you have to
use the power of focused investigation, which is an
aspect of discernment, to know how mental states
arise and fall: pulling out, taking a stance, and
then returning into stillness. You must keep your
attention fixed on investigating these things
constantly in order to be able to know the arising
and falling away of mental states -- and you will
come to know the nature of the mind that doesn't
arise and doesn't fall away.
To know the arising
and falling away of mental states of the past is one
level of cognitive skill (vijja), and
deserves to be called "knowledge of previous
births." To know the states of the mind as they
change in the present deserves to be called
"knowledge of death and rebirth." To know how to
separate mental states from their objects, knowing
the primal nature of the mind, knowing the current
or force of the mind that flows to its objects;
separating the objects, the current of mind that
flows, and the primal nature of the mind: To be able
to know in this way deserves to be called "knowledge
of the ending of mental effluents." The objects or
preoccupations of the mind are the effluent of
sensuality. The current that flows is the effluent
of a state of becoming. Not knowing the primal
nature of the mind is the effluent of unawareness.
If we were to
express this in terms of the four Noble Truths, we
would have to do so as follows: The objects or
preoccupations of the mind are the truth of stress
(dukkha-sacca). The current of the mind that
flows into and falls for its objects is the truth of
the cause of stress (samudaya-sacca). The
mental state that penetrates in to see clearly the
truth of all objects, the current of the mind, and
the primal nature of the mind, is called the mental
moment that forms the Path (magga-citta). To
let go of the objects, the mental current, and the
primal nature of the mind, without any sense of
attachment, is the truth of the disbanding of stress
(nirodha-sacca).
When the three
qualities that assist the mind -- alertness,
mindfulness and focused investigation -- are
vigorous and strong, alertness becomes the awareness
of release (vijja-vimutti), mindfulness
becomes intuitive understanding (ñana), and
focused investigation becomes liberating insight
(vipassana-ñana), the discernment that can stay
fixed on knowing the truth of stress without
permitting any sense of pleasure or displeasure for
its object to arise. Intuitive understanding fathoms
the cause of stress, and the awareness of release
knows the heart clearly all the way through. When
you can know in this way, you can say that you know
rightly.
Here I would like to
back up and discuss the question of the mind in a
little more detail. The word "mind" covers three
aspects:
(1) The primal
nature of the mind.
(2) Mental states.
(3) Mental states in interaction with their objects.
All of these
aspects, taken together, make up the mind. If you
don't know the mind in this way, you can't say that
you really know it. All you can do is say that the
mind arises and falls away, the mind doesn't rise or
fall away; the mind is good, the mind is evil; the
mind becomes annihilated, the mind doesn't become
annihilated; the mind is a dhamma, the mind
isn't a dhamma; the mind gains release, the
mind doesn't gain release; the mind is nibbana, the
mind isn't nibbana; the mind is sensory
consciousness, the mind isn't sensory consciousness;
the mind is the heart, the mind isn't the heart...
As the Buddha
taught, there are only two paths to practice -- the
body, speech, and heart; and the body, speech, and
mind -- and in the end both paths reach the same
point: Their true goal is release. So if you want to
know the truth concerning any of the above issues,
you have to follow the path and reach the truth on
your own. Otherwise, you'll have to argue endlessly.
These issues -- for people who haven't practiced all
the way to clear insight -- have been termed by
people of wisdom as sedamocana-katha: issues
that can only make you break out in a sweat.
So I would like to
make a short explanation: The primal nature of the
mind is a nature that simply knows. The current that
thinks and streams out from knowing to various
objects is a mental state. When this current
connects with its objects and falls for them, it
becomes a defilement, darkening the mind: This is a
mental state in interaction. Mental states, by
themselves and in interaction, whether good or evil,
have to arise, have to disband, have to dissolve
away by their very nature. The source of both these
sorts of mental states is the primal nature of the
mind, which neither arises nor disbands. It is a
fixed phenomenon (thiti-dhamma), always in
place. By the primal nature of the mind -- which is
termed "pabhassara," or radiant -- I mean the
ordinary, elementary state of knowing in the
present. But whoever isn't able to penetrate in to
know it can't gain any good from it, like the
proverbial monkey with the diamond.
Thus the name given
by the Buddha for this state of affairs is really
fitting: avijja -- dark knowledge,
counterfeit knowledge. This is in line with the
terms "pubbante aññanam" -- not knowing the
beginning, i.e., the primal nature of the mind;
"parante aññanam" -- not knowing the end, i.e.,
mental states in interaction with their objects;
"majjhantika aññanam" -- not knowing the middle,
i.e., the current that streams from the primal
nature of knowing. When this is the case, the mind
becomes a sankhara: a concoctor, a magician,
fabricating prolifically in its myriad ways.
This ends the
discussion of the mind as a frame of reference.
IV. Mental Qualities
Mental qualities as
a frame of reference can be divided into three
sorts: inner mental qualities, outer mental
qualities, and mental qualities in and of
themselves.
A.
Inner mental qualities can be either good or bad,
but here we will deal only with the five Hindrances
(nivarana), which are bad --
1.
Kama-chanda: sensual desire.
2. Byapada: ill will, malevolence.
3. Thina-middha: sloth and torpor.
4. Uddhacca-kukkucca: restlessness and
anxiety.
5. Vicikiccha: uncertainty.
These five
Hindrances can be either inner or outer phenomena.
For example:
1.
The mind gives rise to desire, but hasn't yet
streamed out to fix its desires on any particular
object.
2.
The mind gives rise to a sense of irritation and
discontent, but without yet fixing on any particular
object.
3.
A state of torpor arises in the mind, without yet
fixing on any particular object.
4.
The mind is restless, anxious and disturbed on its
own, without yet fixing on any particular object.
5.
The mind is doubtful and uncertain -- unable to
think anything through -- but without yet fixing on
any particular object. It's simply that way on its
own.
If these five
Hindrances are still weak and haven't yet streamed
out to become involved with any external objects,
they are called "inner mental qualities."
B.
Outer mental qualities simply come from the inside:
1.
Once the mind has given rise to a sense of desire,
it streams out and fixes on such external objects as
sights, sounds, smells, tastes, etc.
2.
Once the mind has given rise to a sense of
irritation, it streams out and fixes on a sight,
sound, smell, taste, etc., and then dislikes its
object, wanting it to be destroyed.
3.
The mind, already in a state of torpor, streams out
and fixes on an outer object. Once it has fixed on
the object, it then becomes even more torpid.
4.
The mind, already restless, streams out to fix on
such outer objects as sights, sounds, smells,
tastes, etc.
5.
A mental state of uncertainty arises in the mind,
and the mind lets it stream out to fix on such
external objects as sights, etc.
These are thus
called outer mental qualities. When any mental
quality first arises in the mind, it's called an
inner quality. When it flares up, grows stronger and
streams out to an outer object, it's called an outer
quality.
C.
Mental qualities in and of themselves: This means to
focus on any one of these Hindrances -- because not
all five Hindrances can appear in the same mental
moment. You can thus pick out any Hindrance at all
to focus on and examine. For example, suppose that
sensual desire has appeared: Keep your alertness
firmly in place at the heart, and use your powers of
reference to keep the mind on the phenomenon. Don't
waver, and don't let any hopes or wishes arise. Keep
your mind firmly in one place. Don't go dragging any
other objects in to interfere. Focus your powers of
investigation down on nothing but the quality
appearing in the present. As long as you haven't
gained clear, true insight into it, don't let up on
your efforts. When you can do this, you are
developing mental qualities in and of themselves as
a frame of reference.
The qualities
mentioned above are all unskillful qualities
(akusala dhamma). They act as obstacles to such
things as jhana, liberating insight and the
transcendent. Thus, if you want to gain release from
them, you must first center the mind firmly in
concentration. To be able to center the mind firmly,
you have to develop the following three qualities
within yourself --
(1) Sampajañña:
alertness. Always have this firmly in place.
(2) Sati:
mindfulness. Keep the mind in firm reference to
whatever quality has arisen within it. Watch after
the quality to keep it with the mind; watch after
the mind to make sure that it doesn't lose aim and
go slipping off to other objects. Once you see that
the mind and its object have become compatible with
each other, use --
(3) Atappa --
the power of focused investigation -- to get to the
truth of the quality. If you haven't yet gained
clear and true insight, don't relax your efforts.
Keep focusing and investigating until the power of
your discernment is concentrated and strong, and you
will come to know that mental qualities -- whether
inner, outer, or in and of themselves -- simply
arise, fade and disband. There's nothing of any
lasting worth to them, because they are all
sankhata dhamma -- conditioned phenomena; and
whatever is conditioned falls under the truths of
aniccata -- inconstancy; dukkhata --
stress, i.e., it's hard to bear; and anattata:
It's not you, yours, or anyone else's. It simply
changes in line with natural conditions. No one with
any real discernment holds onto these qualities as
self or as anything of lasting worth, because such
people have seen that these things are like wheels
or gears: Whoever holds onto them will have to be
trampled or mashed.
Thus if you hope for
the genuine happiness offered by the Buddha's
teachings, you should take the three qualities
mentioned above and make them permanent features of
your heart -- and you will come to see clearly the
quality free from fabrication, called the
Unconditioned (asankhata dhamma), the genuine
Dhamma. Uncreated, uncaused, it simply is, by its
very nature. It doesn't circle about, arising and
passing away. The Unconditioned is a perfectly
ordinary part of nature, yet no one in the world can
know it aside from those who have developed virtue,
concentration and discernment. So if you sincerely
want to go beyond suffering and stress, you should
work to give rise to clear and true insight through
your own efforts. When you can keep your alertness
constantly in place, you will be able to know the
nature of the mind. Your powers of reference and
focused investigation will have to be constantly in
place within for you not to be misled by the objects
and preoccupations of the mind.
Most of us,
ordinarily, have no clear sense of our own nature,
and so we can't clearly see the thoughts and urges
that arise within us. As a result, we go out to
fasten onto their objects, giving rise to the wheel
of rebirth (vatta-samsara), circling around
and around without end.
Here I will refer to
the wheel within: Not knowing the primal nature of
the mind is the cycle of defilement (kilesa
vatta), or unawareness, which is the beginning
of the cycle. This gives rise to the act of mental
fabrication or synthesis, which is the cycle of
intention and action (kamma vatta). This in
turn leads us to experience mental objects and
preoccupations, which is the cycle of retribution
(vipaka vatta). Thus there are three parts to
the cycle.
The three parts of
the cycle can be illustrated as follows: Unawareness
is the hub of the wheel. Mental fabrications are the
spokes; and mental preoccupations, the rim. The
sensory organs form the yoke and harness, sensory
objects are the oxen, and the driver is birth, old
age, illness and death. Now pile on your belongings
-- your defilements -- and with a lash of the whip,
you're off: The oxen drag you away, leading you up
the mountains and down, until in the end you crash
and are smashed to smithereens, i.e., death.
For this reason, we
must make our awareness penetrate into the nature of
the mind at the center of the axle, which doesn't
turn with the wheel and which is said to be
"uncycling" (vivatta). Whoever can do this
will find that the path is sudden and short, not
slow. For example, in ancient times, monks and lay
disciples were able to reach Awakening even while
sitting and listening to a sermon, while going for
alms, or while gazing at a corpse. From this we can
gather that after they had imbued themselves with
the qualities mentioned above, they focused their
investigation on that particular point and gained
clear and true insight right then and there, without
having to pull in or out, back or forth. They were
able to let go naturally, with no "in" or "out," no
"coming" or "going."
Those who
investigate will see the truth. Some people believe
that they will have to abandon all mental
preoccupations before they can train the mind, but
the truth of the matter is that the mind is usually
deluded right there -- at its preoccupations -- and
the spot where you are deluded is the spot you have
to investigate. If you don't solve the problem right
where you're deluded, don't believe that you can let
go by running away. Even if you do run away, you'll
end up coming back and falling for the same old
preoccupations once more.
People of
discernment, though, whether they deal with what is
inside or out, can give rise to virtue,
concentration, discernment and release in every
context. They have no sense that the inside is right
and the outside wrong; that the inside is wrong and
the outside right; or that the inside is refined and
the outside base. Such opinions never occur to
people of discernment. Discernment has to be
all-around knowing or knowing all around before it
can be called full-fledged discernment. Knowing all
around means to know the inside first and then the
outside. All-around knowing means to know the
outside first, and then to bring that awareness all
the way in. This is why they are called people of
discernment: They can bring the outside in; what is
base they can make refined; past and future they can
bring into the present, because they have brought
the parts of the Path together in equal measure --
mindfulness, alertness and focused investigation --
each performing its duties, forming the way that
leads beyond all suffering and stress.
Those who can do
this will be able to reach the truth in any posture.
All that will appear to them will be the condition
of stress (sabhava-dukkha) and the condition
of things in themselves (sabhava-dhamma). To
see things this way is called "yathabhuta-ñana"
-- seeing things for what they really are.
Summary
The four frames of
reference can be reduced to two: physical and mental
phenomena, or -- another way of putting it -- body
and mind. Even though they are divided into four, it
is simply the current of the mind that is divided.
When you come to the essence of the practice, it all
boils down to the body and mind. If you want really
to simplify the practice, you should focus on
investigating the body, and then focus on
investigating the mind.
1.
To focus on investigating the body: Be aware of any
one aspect of the body, such as the breath, and then
when you can keep focused on it accurately, spread
your awareness to observe other aspects of the body,
examining them from various angles. While making
your investigation, though, don't let go of your
original focus -- the breath. Keep examining things
until you've gained clear and true insight into the
aspects of the body, and the mind becomes more
quiet, still and subtle than before. If anything
arises while you are investigating, don't fasten
onto it in any way.
2.
To focus on investigating the mind: Set your
awareness at one spot or another, and keep that
awareness perfectly still. After your mind has been
still long enough, examine the ways it then changes
and moves, until you can see that its movements,
whether good or bad, are simply a form of
fabrication (sankhara). Don't let yourself
become preoccupied with anything you may come to
know, think or see while examining. Keep your
awareness in the present. When you can do this, your
mind is headed towards peace and clear insight.
This way of practice
falls in line with all four of the frames of
reference. When you can do this, you will give rise
to the mental moment that forms the Path -- and the
moment the Path arises in full power is the moment
you can let go.
Letting go has two
forms: (1) Being able to set go of mental objects
but not of one's own mind. (2) Being able to let go
both of the objects of the mind and of one's self.
To be able to let go
both of one's objects and of one's self is genuine
knowing. To be able to let go of one's objects but
not of one's self is counterfeit knowing. Genuine
knowing lets go of both ends: It lets the object
follow its own nature as an object, and lets the
mind follow the nature of the mind. In other words,
it lets nature look after itself. "Object" here
refers to the body; "self" refers to the heart. You
have to let go of both.
When your knowledge
can reach this level, you don't have to worry much
about virtue, concentration or discernment. Virtue,
concentration and discernment aren't the nature of
the mind; nor is the nature of the mind virtue,
concentration and discernment. Virtue, concentration
and discernment are simply fabricated phenomena,
tools for extinguishing defilement. When defilement
is extinguished, then virtue, concentration and
discernment disband as well. Virtue, concentration
and discernment are like water. Defilement is like a
fire. The mind is like the person using the water to
put out the fire. When the water has put out the
flames, the water itself has vanished -- but the
person putting out the fire hasn't disappeared. The
fire isn't the water, the water isn't the fire. The
person isn't the water, the water isn't the person.
The person isn't the fire, the fire isn't the
person. The genuine nature of the mind isn't
defilement, nor is it virtue, concentration and
discernment. It simply is, in line with its own
nature.
Those who don't know
the nature of the truth maintain that death is
annihilation or that nibbana is annihilation of one
sort or another. This is simply their own
misunderstanding. Even those who have gone no higher
than the level of stream-entry are able to know that
the true nature of the mind isn't in any way
annihilated, which is why they are people of strong,
unwavering conviction, believing in the paths and
their fruitions. Even though their hearts aren't yet
entirely free from the admixture of defilements,
those defilements can't efface the true nature of
their hearts -- just as an ingot of gold, when it
falls into the dirt, may be covered with soot, but
the soot can't turn it into anything other than
gold.
This is unlike
ordinary, run-of-the-mill people. An ordinary
person's mind may be pure from time to time, but it
doesn't stay that way. It can't escape from being
defiled again -- just as a sharpened knife will stay
in shape only if it is kept bathed in oil. If you
put the knife to use, or forget to keep it bathed,
the steel of the blade might turn into something
other than steel.
Thus each
of us should earnestly make the effort to reach at
least the Stream, for although all the qualities I
have mentioned -- whether conditioned (sankhata
dhamma) or Unconditioned (asankhata dhamma)
-- lie mixed within every one of us, none of them
are as exalted as viraga dhamma: the act of
dispassion that extracts the Unconditioned from the
conditioned as gold is extracted from crude ore.
The Buddha's
teachings are subtle and deep. Whoever isn't set on
truly putting them into practice won't know their
taste -- like a cowherd hired to watch over cattle
without ever knowing the taste of their milk.
Thus we are
taught:
To study is to know
the texts,
To practice is to know
your defilements,
To attain the goal is to know
& let go.
Glossary
The definitions
given here are based on the meanings these terms
have in Ajaan Lee's writings and sermons.
Avijja:
Unawareness; counterfeit knowledge.
Ayatana:
Sense medium. The six inner sense media are the eye,
ear, nose, tongue, body and intellect. The six outer
sense media are their respective objects.
Bhagavant:
An epithet for the Buddha, commonly translated as
"Blessed One" or "Exalted One." Some commentators,
though, have traced the word etymologically to the
Pali root meaning "to divide" and, by extension, "to
analyze," and so translate it as "Analyst."
Dhamma:
Event; phenomenon; the way things are in and of
themselves; their inherent qualities; the basic
principles underlying their behavior. Also,
principles of behavior that human beings should
follow so as to fit in with the right natural order
of things; qualities of mind they should develop so
as to realize the inherent quality of the mind in
and of itself. By extension, "dhamma" is used
also to refer to any doctrine that teaches such
things. Thus the Dhamma of the Buddha refers both to
his teachings and to the direct experience of the
quality of nibbana at which those teachings are
aimed.
Dhatu:
Element; property; the elementary properties that
make up the inner sense of the body and mind: earth
(solidity), water (liquidity), fire (heat), wind
(energy or motion), space and consciousness.
Jhana:
Meditative absorption in a single object, notion or
sensation.
Kamma:
Acts of intention that result in states of being and
birth. "Kamma debts" are the moral debts one has to
others either through having been a burden to them
(the primary example being one's debt to one's
parents) or from having wronged them.
Khandha:
Component parts of sensory perception: rupa
(sense data, appearances); vedana (feelings
of pleasure, pain or indifference); sañña
(labels, concepts, allusions); sankhara
(mental constructs or fabrications); and viññana
(consciousness, the act of attention that
"spotlights" objects so as to know them distinctly
and pass judgment on them).
Magga:
The path to the cessation of suffering and stress.
The four transcendent paths -- or rather, one path
with four levels of refinement -- are the path to
stream-entry (entering the stream to nibbana, which
ensures that one will be reborn at most only seven
more times), the path to once-returning, the path to
non-returning and the path to arahantship. Phala
-- fruition -- refers to the mental state
immediately following the attainment of any of these
paths.
Mala:
Stains on the character, traditionally listed as
nine: anger, hypocrisy, envy, stinginess, deceit,
treachery, lying, evil desires and wrong views.
Nibbana (nirvana):
Liberation; the unbinding of the mind from greed,
anger and delusion, from physical sensations and
mental acts. As this term is used to refer also to
the extinguishing of fire, it carries connotations
of stilling, cooling and peace. (According to the
physics taught at the time of the Buddha, the
property of fire exists in a latent state to a
greater or lesser degree in all objects. When
activated, it clings and is bound to its fuel. As
long as it remains latent or is extinguished, it is
"unbound.")
Sankhara:
Fashioning -- the forces that fashion things, the
process of fashioning, and the fashioned things --
mental or physical -- that result. In some contexts
this term refers specifically to the fashioning of
thoughts in the mind. In others, it refers to all
five khandhas (see above).
If anything in this
translation is inaccurate or misleading, I ask
forgiveness of the author and reader for having
unwittingly stood in their way. As for whatever may
be accurate, I hope the reader will make the best
use of it, translating it a few steps further, into
the heart, so as to attain the truth at which it
points.
-- The translator
Inquiries
concerning this book may be addressed to: The Abbot,
Metta Forest Monastery, PO Box 1409, Valley Center,
CA 92082.
Sabbe satta sada
hontu
avera sukha-jivino
katam puñña-phalam mayham
sabbe bhagi bhavantu te
May all beings
always live happily,
free from enmity.
May all share in the blessings
springing from the good I have done.
Copyright © 1994
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.
This electronic edition was transcribed from the
print edition in 1994 by W.D. Savage under the
auspices of the DharmaNet Dharma Book Transcription
Project, with the kind permission of the translator.