In the time of Ajahn Mun3 and Ajahn
Sao4 life was
a lot simpler, a lot less complicated than it is today. In those days monks had
few duties and ceremonies to perform. They lived in the forests without
permanent resting places. There they could devote themselves entirely to the
practice of meditation.
In those times one rarely
encountered the luxuries that are so commonplace today, there simply weren't
any. One had to make drinking cups and spittoons out of bamboo and lay people
seldom came to visit. One didn't want or expect much and was content with what
one had. One could live and breathe meditation!
The monks suffered many
privations living like this. If someone caught malaria and went to ask for
medicine, the teacher would say, ''You don't need medicine! Keep practicing''.
Besides, there simply weren't all the drugs that are available now. All one had
were the herbs and roots that grew in the forest. The environment was such that
monks had to have a great deal of patience and endurance; they didn't bother
over minor ailments. Nowadays you get a bit of an ache and you're off to the
hospital!
Sometimes one had to walk
ten to twelve kilometers on almsround. You would leave as soon as it was light
and maybe return around ten or eleven o'clock. One didn't get very much either,
perhaps some glutinous rice, salt or a few chilis. Whether you got anything to
eat with the rice or not didn't matter. That's the way it was. No one dared
complain of hunger or fatigue; they were just not inclined to complain but
learned to take care of themselves. They practiced in the forest with patience
and endurance alongside the many dangers that lurked in the surroundings. There
were many wild and fierce animals living in the jungles and there were many
hardships for body and mind in the ascetic practice of the dhutanga or forest-dwelling
monk. Indeed, the patience and endurance of the monks in those days was
excellent because the circumstances compelled them to be so.
In the present day,
circumstances compel us in the opposite direction. In ancient times, one had to
travel by foot; then came the oxcart and then the automobile. Aspiration and
ambition increased, so that now, if the car is not air-conditioned, one will
not even sit in it; impossible to go if there is no air-conditioning! The
virtues of patience and endurance are becoming weaker and weaker. The standards
for meditation and practice are lax and getting laxer, until we find that
meditators these days like to follow their own opinions and desires. When the
old folks talk about the old days, it's like listening to a myth or a legend.
You just listen indifferently, but you don't understand. It just doesn't reach
you!
As far as we should be
concerned about the ancient monks' tradition, a monk should spend at least five
years with his teacher. Some days you should avoid speaking to anyone. Don't
allow yourself to speak or talk very much. Don't read books! Read your own
heart instead. Take Wat Pah Pong for example. These days many university
graduates are coming to ordain. I try to stop them from spending their time
reading books about Dhamma, because these people are always reading books. They
have so many opportunities for reading books, but opportunities for reading
their own hearts are rare. So, when they come to ordain for three months
following the Thai custom, we try to get them to close their books and manuals.
While they are ordained they have this splendid opportunity to read their own
hearts.
Listening to your own heart
is really very interesting. This untrained heart races around following its own
untrained habits. It jumps about excitedly, randomly, because it has never been
trained. Therefore train your heart! Buddhist meditation is about the heart; to
develop the heart or mind, to develop your own heart. This is very, very
important. This training of the heart is the main emphasis. Buddhism is the
religion of the heart. Only this! One who practices to develop the heart is one
who practices Buddhism.
This heart of ours lives in
a cage, and what's more, there's a raging tiger in that cage. If this maverick
heart of ours doesn't get what it wants, it makes trouble. You must discipline
it with meditation, with samādhi. This is
called ''Training the Heart''. At the very beginning, the foundation of
practice is the establishment of moral discipline (sīla). Sīla is the training of the body and speech. From this arises conflict
and confusion. When you don't let yourself do what you want to do, there is
conflict.
Eat little! Sleep little!
Speak little! Whatever it may be of worldly habit, lessen them, go against
their power. Don't just do as you like, don't indulge in your thought. Stop
this slavish following. You must constantly go against the stream of ignorance.
This is called ''discipline''. When you discipline your heart, it becomes very
dissatisfied and begins to struggle. It becomes restricted and oppressed. When
the heart is prevented from doing what it wants to do, it starts wandering and
struggling. Suffering (dukkha)5becomes
apparent to us.
This dukkha, this suffering, is the first of the four noble truths. Most
people want to get away from it. They don't want to have any kind of suffering
at all. Actually, this suffering is what brings us wisdom; it makes us
contemplate dukkha. Happiness
(sukha) tends to make us close our eyes and ears. It never allows us to
develop patience. Comfort and happiness make us careless. Of these two
defilements, Dukkha is the easiest to see. Therefore we must bring up suffering in
order to put an end to our suffering. We must first know what dukkha is before
we can know how to practice meditation.
In the beginning you have
to train your heart like this. You may not understand what is happening or what
the point of it is, but when the teacher tells you to do something, then you
must do it. You will develop the virtues of patience and endurance. Whatever
happens, you endure, because that is the way it is. For example, when you begin
to practice samādhi you want peace and tranquillity. But you don't get any. You don't
get any because you have never practiced this way. Your heart says, ''I'll sit
until I attain tranquillity''. But when tranquillity doesn't arise, you suffer.
And when there is suffering, you get up and run away! To practice like this can
not be called ''developing the heart''. It's called ''desertion''.
Instead of indulging in
your moods, you train yourself with the Dhamma of the Buddha. Lazy or diligent,
you just keep on practicing. Don't you think that this is a better way? The
other way, the way of following your moods, will never reach the Dhamma. If you
practice the Dhamma, then whatever the mood may be, you keep on practicing,
constantly practicing. The other way of self-indulgence is not the way of the
Buddha. When we follow our own views on practice, our own opinions about the
Dhamma, we can never see clearly what is right and what is wrong. We don't know
our own heart. We don't know ourselves.
Therefore, to practice
following your own teachings is the slowest way. To practice following the Dhamma
is the direct way. Lazy you practice; diligent you practice. You are aware of
time and place. This is called ''developing the heart''.
If you indulge in following
your own views and try to practice accordingly, then you will start thinking
and doubting a lot. You think to yourself, ''I don't have very much merit. I
don't have any luck. I've been practicing meditation for years now and I'm
still unenlightened. I still haven't seen the Dhamma''. To practice with this
kind of attitude can not be called ''developing the heart''. It is called
''developing disaster''.
If, at this time, you are
like this, if you are a meditator who still doesn't know, who doesn't see, if
you haven't renewed yourself yet, it's because you've been practicing wrongly.
You haven't been following the teachings of the Buddha. The Buddha taught like
this: ''Ananda, practice a lot! Develop your practice constantly! Then all your
doubts, all your uncertainties, will vanish''. These doubts will never vanish
through thinking, nor through theorizing, nor through speculation, nor through
discussion. Nor will doubts disappear by not doing anything. All defilements
will vanish through developing the heart, through right practice only.
The way of developing the
heart as taught by the Buddha is the exact opposite of the way of the world,
because his teachings come from a pure heart. A pure heart, unattached to
defilements, is the Way of the Buddha and his disciples.
If you practice the Dhamma,
you must bow your heart to the Dhamma. You must not make the Dhamma bow to you.
When you practice this way. suffering arises. There isn't a single person who
can escape this suffering. So when you commence your practice suffering is
right there.
The duties of meditators
are mindfulness, collectedness and contentment. These things stop us. They stop
the habits of the hearts of those who have never trained. And why should we
bother to do this? If you don't bother to train your heart, then it remains
wild, following the ways of nature. It's possible to train that nature so that
it can be used to advantage. This is comparable to the example of trees. If we
just left trees in their natural state, then we would never be able to build a
house with them. We couldn't make planks or anything of use in building a
house. However, if a carpenter came along wanting to build a house, he would go
looking for trees such as these. He would take this raw material and use it to
advantage. In a short time he could have a house built.
Meditation and developing
the heart are similar to this. You must take this untrained heart, the same as
you would take a tree in its natural state in the forest, and train this
natural heart so that it is more refined, so that it's more aware of itself and
is more sensitive. Everything is in its natural state. When we understand
nature, then we can change it, we can detach from it, we can let go of it. Then
we won't suffer anymore.
The nature of our heart is
such that whenever it clings and grasps there is agitation and confusion. First
it might wander over there, then it might wander over here. When we come to
observe this agitation, we might think that it's impossible to train the heart
and so we suffer accordingly. We don't understand that this is the way the
heart is. There will be thought and feelings moving about like this even though
we are practicing, trying to attain peace. That's the way it is.
When we have contemplated
many times the nature of the heart, then we will come to understand that this
heart is just as it is and can't be otherwise. We will know that the heart's
ways are just as they are. That's its nature. If we see this clearly, then we
can detach from thoughts and feelings. And we don't have to add on anything
more by constantly having to tell ourselves that ''that's just the way it is''.
When the heart truly understands, it lets go of everything. Thinking and
feeling will still be there, but that very thinking and feeling will be
deprived of power.
This is similar to a child
who likes to play and frolic in ways that annoy us, to the extent that we scold
or spank him. We should understand that it's natural for a child to act that
way. Then we could let go and leave him to play in his own way. So our troubles
are over. How are they over? Because we accept the ways of children. Our outlook
changes and we accept the true nature of things. We let go and our heart
becomes more peaceful. We have ''right understanding''.
If we have wrong
understanding, then even living in a deep, dark cave would be chaos, or living
high up in the air would be chaos. The heart can only be at peace when there is
''right understanding''. Then there are no more riddles to solve and no more
problems to arise.
This is the way it is. You
detach. You let go. Whenever there is any feeling of clinging, we detach from
it, because we know that that very feeling is just as it is. It didn't come
along especially to annoy us. We might think that it did, but in truth it is
just that way. If we start to think and consider it further, that too, is just
as it is. If we let go, then form is merely form, sound is merely sound, odor
is merely odor, taste is merely taste, touch is merely touch and the heart is
merely the heart. It's similar to oil and water. If you put the two together in
a bottle, they won't mix because of the difference in their nature.
Oil and water are different
in the same way that a wise man and an ignorant man are different. The Buddha
lived with form, sound, odor, taste, touch and thought. He was an arahant(enlightened one), so He turned away from rather than toward these
things. He turned away and detached little by little since He understood that
the heart is just the heart and thought is just thought. He didn't confuse and
mix them together.
The heart is just the
heart; thoughts and feelings are just thoughts and feelings. Let things be just
as they are! Let form be just form, let sound be just sound, let thought be
just thought. Why should we bother to attach to them? If we think and feel in
this way, then there is detachment and separateness. Our thoughts and feelings
will be on one side and our heart will be on the other. Just like oil and water
- they are in the same bottle but they are separate.
The Buddha and his
enlightened disciples lived with ordinary, unenlightened people. They not only
lived with these people, but they taught these ordinary, unenlightened,
ignorant ones how to be noble, enlightened, wise ones. They could do this
because they knew how to practice. They knew that it's a matter of the heart,
just as I have explained.
So, as far as your practice
of meditation goes, don't bother to doubt it. If we run away from home to
ordain, it's not running away to get lost in delusion. Nor out of cowardice or
fear. It's running away in order to train ourselves, in order to master
ourselves. If we have understanding like this, then we can follow the Dhamma.
The Dhamma will become clearer and clearer. The one who understands the Dhamma,
understands himself; and the one who understands himself, understands the
Dhamma. Nowadays, only the sterile remains of the Dhamma have become the
accepted order. In reality, the Dhamma is everywhere. There is no need to
escape to somewhere else. Instead escape through wisdom. Escape through
intelligence. Escape through skill. don't escape through ignorance. If you want
peace, then let it be the peace of wisdom. That's enough!
Whenever we see the Dhamma,
then there is the right way, the right path. Defilements are just defilements,
the heart is just the heart. Whenever we detach and separate so that there are
just these things as they really are, then they are merely objects to us. When
we are on the right path, then we are impeccable. When we are impeccable, there
is openness and freedom all the time.
The Buddha said, ''Listen
to me, Monks. You must not cling to any dhammas''. 6 What are these dhammas? They
are everything; there isn't anything which is not dhamma. Love and hate aredhammas, happiness and suffering are dhammas, like and dislike aredhammas; all of these things, no
matter how insignificant, aredhammas. When we practice the Dhamma, when
we understand, then we can let go. And thus we can comply with the Buddha's
teaching of not clinging to any dhammas.
All conditions that are
born in our heart, all conditions of our mind, all conditions of our body, are
always in a state of change. The Buddha taught not to cling to any of them. He
taught his disciples to practice in order to detach from all conditions and not
to practice in order to attain to any more.
If we follow the teachings
of the Buddha, then we are right. We are right but it is also troublesome. It's
not that the teachings are troublesome, but it's our defilements which are
troublesome. The defilements wrongly comprehended obstruct us and cause us
trouble. There isn't really anything troublesome with following the Buddha's
teaching. In fact we can say that clinging to the path of the Buddha doesn't
bring suffering, because the path is simply ''let go'' of every single dhamma!
For the ultimate in the
practice of Buddhist meditation, the Buddha taught the practice of ''letting
go''. Don't carry anything around! Detach! If you see goodness, let it go. If
you see rightness, let it go. These words, ''let go'', do not mean that we don't
have to practice. It means that we have to practice following the method of
''letting go'' itself. The Buddha taught us to contemplate alldhammas,
to develop the path through contemplating our own body and heart. The Dhamma
isn't anywhere else. It's right here! Not someplace far away. It's right here
in this very body and heart of ours.
Therefore a meditator must
practice with energy. Make the heart grander and brighter. Make it free and
independent. Having done a good deed, don't carry it around in your heart, let
it go. Having refrained from doing an evil deed, let it go. The Buddha taught
us to live in the immediacy of the present, in the here and now. Don't lose
yourself in the past or the future.
The teaching that people
least understand and which conflicts the most with their own opinions, is this
teaching of ''letting go'' or ''working with an empty mind''. This way of
talking is called ''Dhamma language''. When we conceive this in worldly terms,
we become confused and think that we can do anything we want. It can be
interpreted this way, but its real meaning is closer to this: It's as if we are
carrying a heavy rock. After a while we begin to feel its weight but we don't
know how to let it go. So we endure this heavy burden all the time. If someone
tells us to throw it away, we say, ''If I throw it away, I won't have anything
left!'' If told of all the benefits to be gained from throwing it away, we
wouldn't believe them but would keep thinking, ''If I throw it away, I will
have nothing!'' So we keep on carrying this heavy rock until we become so weak
and exhausted that we can no longer endure, then we drop it.
Having dropped it, we
suddenly experience the benefits of letting go. We immediately feel better and
lighter and we know for ourselves how much of a burden carrying a rock can be.
Before we let go of the rock, we couldn't possibly know the benefits of letting
go. So if someone tells us to let go, an unenlightened man wouldn't see the
purpose of it. He would just blindly clutch at the rock and refuse to let go
until it became so unbearably heavy that he just had to let go. Then he can
feel for himself the lightness and relief and thus know for himself the
benefits of letting go. Later on we may start carrying burdens again, but now
we know what the results will be, so we can now let go more easily. This
understanding that it's useless to carry burdens around and that letting go
brings ease and lightness is an example of knowing ourselves.
Our pride, our sense of
self that we depend on, is the same as that heavy rock. Like that rock, if we
think about letting go of self-conceit, we are afraid that without it, there
would be nothing left. But when we can finally let it go, we realize for
ourselves the ease and comfort of not clinging.
In the training of the
heart, you mustn't cling to either praise or blame. To just want praise and not
to want blame is the way of the world. The Way of the Buddha is to accept
praise when it is appropriate and to accept blame when it is appropriate. For
example, in raising a child it's very good not to just scold all the time. Some
people scold too much. A wise person knows the proper time to scold and the
proper time to praise. Our heart is the same. Use intelligence to know the
heart. Use skill in taking care of your heart. Then you will be one who is
clever in the training of the heart. And when the heart is skilled, it can rid
us of our suffering. Suffering exists right here in our hearts. It's always
complicating things, creating and making the heart heavy. It's born here. It
also dies here.
The way of the heart is
like this. Sometimes there are good thoughts, sometimes there are bad thoughts.
The heart is deceitful. Don't trust it! Instead look straight at the conditions
of the heart itself. Accept them as they are. They're just as they are. Whether
it's good or evil or whatever, that's the way it is. If you don't grab hold of
these conditions, then they don't become anything more or less than what they
already are. If we grab hold we'll get bitten and will then suffer.
With ''right view'' there's
only peace. Samādhi is born and wisdom takes over. Wherever you may sit or lie down,
there is peace. There is peace everywhere, no matter where you may go.
So today you have brought
your disciples here to listen to the Dhamma. You may understand some of it,
some of it you may not. In order for you to understand more easily, I've talked
about the practice of meditation. Whether you think it is right or not, you
should take and contemplate it.
As a teacher myself, I've
been in a similar predicament. I, too, have longed to listen to Dhamma talks
because, wherever I went, I was giving talks to others but never had a chance
to listen. So, at this time, you really appreciate listening to a talk from a
teacher. Time passes by so quickly when you're sitting and listening quietly.
You're hungry for Dhamma so you really want to listen. At first, giving talks
to others is a pleasure, but after awhile, the pleasure is gone. You feel bored
and tired. Then you want to listen. So when you listen to a talk from a
teacher, you feel much inspiration and you understand easily. When you are
getting old and there's hunger for Dhamma, its flavor is especially delicious.
Being a teacher of others
you are an example to them, you're a model for other bhikkhus. You're an example to your disciples. You're an example to
everybody, so don't forget yourself. But don't think about yourself either. If
such thoughts do arise, get rid of them. If you do this then you will be one
who knows himself.
There are a million ways to
practice Dhamma. There's no end to the things that can be said about
meditation. There are so many things that can make us doubt. Just keep sweeping
them out, then there's no more doubt! When we have right understanding like
this, no matter where we sit or walk, there is peace and ease. Wherever we may
meditate, that's the place you bring your awareness. Don't hold that one only
meditates while sitting or walking. Everything and everywhere is our practice.
There's awareness all the time. There is mindfulness all the time. We can see
birth and death of mind and body all the time and we don't let it clutter our
hearts. Let it go constantly. If love comes, let it go back to its home. If
greed comes, let it go home. If anger comes, let it go home. Follow them! Where
do they live? Then escort them there. Don't keep anything. If you practice like
this then you are like an empty house. Or, explained another way, this is an
empty heart, a heart empty and free of all evil. We call it an ''empty heart'',
but it isn't empty as if there was nothing, it's empty of evil but filled with
wisdom. Then whatever you do, you'll do with wisdom. You'll think with wisdom.
You'll eat with wisdom. There will only be wisdom.
This is the teaching for
today and I offer it to you. I've recorded it on tape. If listening to Dhamma
makes your heart at peace, that's good enough. You don't need to remember
anything. Some may not believe this. If we make our heart peaceful and just
listen, letting it pass by but contemplating continuously like this, then we're
like a tape recorder. After some time when we turn on, everything is there.
Have no fear that there won't be anything. As soon as you turn on your tape
recorder, everything is there.
I wish to offer this to
every bhikkhu and to everyone. Some of you probably know only a little Thai, but
that doesn't matter. May you learn the language of the Dhamma. That's good
enough!
Footnotes
A talk
given to a group of Western Monks from Wat Bovornives, Bangkok, March 1977
N.B. in
this translation heart is used where mind was used in the other translations.
Ajahn
Mun: probably the most respected and most influential meditation master of this
century in Thailand. Under his guidance the ascetic forest tradition (dhutanga kammatthāna) became a very important
tradition in the revival of Buddhist meditation practice. The vast majority of
recently deceased and presently living great meditation masters of Thailand are
either direct disciples of the Venerable Ajahn or were substantially influenced
by his teachings. Ajahn Mun passed away in November 1949.
Ajahn
Sao: Ajahn Mun's teacher.
Dukkha: refers
to the implicit unsatisfactoriness, incompleteness, imperfection, insecurity of
all conditioned phenomena, which, because they are always changing, are always
liable to cause suffering. Dukkha refers to all forms of unpleasantness from gross bodily pains and
the suffering implicit in old age, sickness and death, to subtle feelings such
as being parted from what we like or associated with what we dislike, to
refined mental states such as dullness, boredom, restlessness, agitation, etc.
This is one of the most misunderstood concepts and one of the most important
for spiritual development.
Dhamma
and dhamma: please
note the various meanings of the words ''Dhamma'' (the liberating law
discovered and proclaimed by the Buddha), and ''dhamma'' (any quality,
thing, object of mind and/or any conditioned or unconditioned phenomena).
Sometimes the meanings also overlap.
Contents: © Wat Nong Pah
Pong, 2007
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