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Wednesday 30 September 2020

“Just be aware - be aware of what’s going on. Don’t criticize. Don’t make comments.”

The Teaching of Ajahn Suchart.

20 September 2024

“Just be aware - be aware of what’s going on. Don’t criticize. Don’t make comments.”

Male:  I’m interested in the practice of ānāpānasati and awareness.

Than Ajahn:  Mindfulness – this is the basic. 

You start with mindfulness and sit a lot. If you have mindfulness, then you’ll find peace. 

There are a lot of questions that are not necessary to have an answer.  Once you know how to make your mind peaceful, you’ll get all the answers.

No matter how much you have acquired externally, they have nothing to do with your peace of mind. 

They don’t contribute to peace of mind but they tend to contribute to more chaos of the mind.  The mind becomes more restless, more agitated because the more you have, the more you have to look after.  And different things that you have, you cannot really look after them anyway because they are dealing with the impermanent world, they come and go.  But you forget this reality, this truth.  You keep thinking that what we have will last, to be with us all the time.

When you cannot find happiness within yourself, you have to go looking for happiness outside of yourself.  

So, you have to reverse that process. Try to find happiness within yourself. Once you find that, then you don’t need to go after other things. That’s the happiness you have within yourself. It’s long-lasting, permanent. 

For the happiness you get from other things, they are only temporary and you have to keep on looking, getting, acquiring, pursuing. No matter how much you have, you still don’t feel fulfilled. 

But if you find peace of mind, then you’ll find fulfillment. That will make you feel you don’t need anything. Meditation is the path towards that fulfillment.

And you need to be alone, need to be in the quiet environment, away from all the distractions and temptation. You also have to control your mind, your thinking.  Stop it from thinking because most of your thoughts go towards acquiring, possessing, pursuing things.

Male:  When you observe, say with Ānāpanassati, are you focusing your mind on something, like awareness, and another time are you more like just watching?

Than Ajahn:  When you’re watching your breath, it’s usually when you sit in meditation. 

But at other times when you are not in (sitting) meditation, you have to control your thoughts.  

So, you sometimes might have to use a mantra to replace your thought.  If you repeat a mantra, you cannot think about other things.  

Or you can watch your body movement, every movement of your body.”

Male:  like reciting anicca?

Than Ajahn:  If it can stop you from thinking.  

If you think of anicca, think of death, it might stop you from being ambitious, from wanting to have this or that.

Be very careful if you use your thought to stop thinking because sometimes it can backfire; instead of thinking to stop thinking, you are thinking to create more thinking. You want to think to stop thinking.  If you think and you’re creating more thoughts, then you shouldn’t do that.

It’s better to just focus on something.  If you’re sitting, focus on your breath.  If you’re working or doing something, just watch your body movement.  Don’t think.

Just be aware - be aware of what’s going on. 

Don’t criticize. Don’t make comments. We normally like to make comments about things, about this and that, good and bad, right and wrong. All these are mental judgments, mental thoughts.

The mind should just be aware, be an observer rather than being a critic. If you cannot stop it from criticizing, or analyzing, then you will need a mantra to stop it. When you a mantra, you cannot criticize or think about this and that.

You can use ‘anicca, anicca, anicca’ or ‘Buddho, Buddho, Buddho’ or any other words that you find comfortable, that can stop you from thinking or just watch your body movement. When you walk, just watch your feet, left, right, left, right. So, the goal is not to think about anything. If you have something to concentrate on, then you cannot think about other things. If you have nothing to tie your mind to, then your mind will think about this and that. If you let your mind keep thinking, then you will not be able to get your mind into samādhi or calm.


By Ajaan Suchart Abhijāto
www.phrasuchart.com

Youtube: Dhamma in English
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g

Tuesday 29 September 2020

“Just keep on meditating whenever you feel lonely and sad. Those emotions will disappear once your mind has calmed down.”

The Teaching of Ajahn Suchart.

1 May 2024

“Just keep on meditating whenever you feel lonely and sad. Those emotions will disappear once your mind has calmed down.”

I first began practising at home. I just happened to have a row house that was unoccupied. So I stayed in it alone and practised meditation for about one year. But I didn’t stay there the entire time. There were times when I went to stay somewhere else. I sometimes went to stay on an island and such. But I mainly stayed alone. I did sitting and walking meditation in the house. I read Dhamma books and tried to control my desires to go out. I tried not to indulge myself because I knew that it was only enjoyable when I was out. 

But once I came back, I’d get lonely and sad.

It is better to resist these urges and to control your mind in order to fight against the loneliness and depression in you. You know that they are mental defilements (kilesas), that they are emotions, and that they are only made up by your mind. If you keep on trying to do your sitting and walking mediation, these emotions will eventually subside on their own. This is the right way to address them.

Once you’ve meditated, these feelings and emotions will disappear. That’s when you realise the true value of meditation practice. If you don’t meditate and instead let your mind ponder on things, you’ll soon enough want to go out. When you don’t get to go out, you’ll get frustrated and sad. Once you’ve re-established your mindfulness, you need to hurry back to your meditation practice.

Just keep on meditating whenever you feel lonely and sad. Those emotions will disappear once your mind has calmed down. When you meditate on a regular basis, it will then become your habit. That’s when you have a cure— a right and reasonable one.

Not knowing how to address the issue, whenever you feel bored and upset, you’d go out shopping. You’d go sightseeing to take away the negative emotions. But once you come back home, you’d feel the same way. The suffering would come back again.

But if you resort to the Dhamma—simply do sitting or walking meditation whenever there’s suffering and not think about going out and try to fight the urges, the suffering will subside once your mind is calm. So then you can just be at home. You’re at ease when your mind is calm. Repeat the same thing when it resurfaces. If you’re able to practise consistently, then there’s no chance for it to resurface. With discontinuous practice, boredom may arise during the in-betweens. There’s no chance for such a feeling to arise if you practise continuously.


By Ajaan Suchart Abhijāto

www.phrasuchart.com

Youtube: Dhamma in English

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g

How to contemplate the five aggregates, to see that these five aggregates are all anattā?

Question:  How to contemplate the five aggregates, to see that these five aggregates are all anattā?


Than Ajahn:  When we contemplate, it is just like doing homework. First, we have to prepare ourselves to let go of the five aggregates and before we can let go of these five aggregates, we have to know why we have to let go. We study the five aggregates to see that they are not ourselves; they don’t belong to us; we cannot keep them. One day sooner or later they will have to leave and separate from us. Right now, the separation is still not happening, so we are preparing our mind for the examination that will come about when we get sick or when we die.


When we contemplate on the five khandhas, we are merely teaching the mind to know the truth of the body, the five aggregates, and when the time comes for us to let go of them, we can let them go because we understand why we have to let them go. We understand that if we are attached to them, we will be sad; if we let go, we will be peaceful and happy. 


We have to wait for the time for us to relinquish the five aggregates. We can do this in two ways. First, we let go of the body, then we let go of the nāma-khandhas. These are two separate problems that we have to solve. With the body you have to constantly look at the body that it is going to get sick, get old and die and once you know this, you have to let go of it because if you cling to it, your mind will suffer due to your fear for the body to die. The desire not to die is the cause of your suffering.


If you don’t want to suffer then you have to let go of your desire, stop desiring for the body not to die because nothing can stop the body from dying. When you see this truth, you will realise that if you still have the desire for the body not to die, you will suffer deeply. 


However, when you are contemplating, this is only at the level of imagining the situation and you are preparing yourself to meet the actual event, when something really happens to your body. If you want to take the test, you have to find a place where you can give up your body, like going to the forest and living with the wild animals, which you might not know whether you are going to be attacked by wild animals.


So, when you suddenly feel that you are about to be attacked, that you’re going to die, then you will have to use this wisdom that you have developed in your contemplation to teach the mind to let go of the body, not to cling to the body, not to have the desire not to die because when you have this desire not to die, you will suffer but if you see that the body is going to die and you can do nothing, then you’re willing to let it go. Stop your desire from arising. When there is no desire, then your mind becomes peaceful and calm. 

And you might die but your mind is peaceful and happy. So, this is the way how to abandon, to let go of the five aggregates. This is the body part.


For the nāma-khandhas part, you have to deal with this painful feeling which is dukkha-vedanā. For the other vedanās, there are no problems. So, we have to deal with the one which is problematic. The one that is problematic is dukkha-vedanā, painful feeling.


First, when we get sick, we suffer and the reason why we suffer is because we don’t want to get sick. We want to get well. This is the cause of your suffering, not the sickness itself. 

But it’s your desire not to get sick or desire to get well, so you have to use wisdom to see that you cannot force the dukkha-vedanā to disappear. They come and go by themselves. 


The only thing you can do when they come is to just accommodate them: not to have the desire to get rid of them, because when you have the desire to get rid of them, you (will) have suffering. But if you have no desire, then you just keep your mind calm and peaceful, and acknowledge the existence of this painful feeling. 

Then, this painful feeling will not cause any suffering. The cause of your suffering is your desire for the painful feeling to disappear. So, when you have painful feeling, teach your mind to remain calm, accommodate the painful feeling, don’t deny it, don’t want to get rid of it, then your mind will not suffer. Then, you can let go. This is the way of letting go of your nāma-khandhas. 


The other khandhas work in conjunction with the vedanā-khandha. So, you only have to deal with vedanā-khandha. Saññā, saṅkhārā, viññāna are just parts of the group. But dukkha-vedanā is the leader. If you can deal with the leader, then the other three fall in line.

So, you don’t have to worry about saññā, saṅkhārā, viññāna. 


You’re actually ‘changing’ saññā, saṅkhārā, viññāna. Saññā tends to tell you that this vedanā is controllable. You can change it but the truth is you cannot change it. We change it by moving the body around. 

When we sit and feel painful, we move the body, then the pain disappears. We think that we can manage the feeling. But there are times when you get sick and there is nothing you can do, even with medicine. 

Sometimes the medicine will not help either. You know that this is something that you cannot change but you can live with it and it cannot make you suffer if you have no desire for it to disappear. 


So, the problem is your desire to have the painful feeling disappear. If you can stop this desire and accept the painful feeling, then you don’t have to do anything. When you get sick, you just remain peaceful and calm, and then the sickness will come and go. The painful feeling will come and go, and your mind will not be hurt by the painful feeling.


Dhamma in English, Dec 27, 2016.


By Ajahn Suchart Abhijāto

www.phrasuchart.com

Latest Dhamma talks on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g

Monday 28 September 2020

GOING AGAINST THE GRAIN IN THE RIGHT WAY

GOING AGAINST THE GRAIN IN THE RIGHT WAY


About the tools or aids to meditation practice – there should be mettā (goodwill) in your heart; in other words, the qualities of generosity, kindness and helpfulness. 


These should be maintained as the foundation for mental purity. For example, begin doing away with lobha (greed), or selfishness, by giving. When people are selfish they aren’t happy. 


Selfishness leads to a sense of discontent, and yet people tend to be very selfish without realizing how it affects them.


You can experience this at any time, especially when you are hungry. Suppose you get some apples and you have the opportunity to share them with a friend; you think it over for a while, and, sure, the intention to give is there all right, but you want to give the smaller one. To give the big one would be … well, such a shame. It’s hard to think straight. You tell them to go ahead and take one, but then you say, ‘Take this one!’ and give them the smaller apple! 


This is one form of selfishness that people usually don’t notice. Have you ever been like this?


You really have to go against the grain to give. Even though you may really only want to give the smaller apple, you must force yourself to give away the bigger one. Of course, once you have given it to your friend, you feel good inside. Training the mind by going against the grain in this way requires self-discipline – you must know how to give and how to give up, not allowing selfishness to stick. 


Once you learn how to give, if you are still hesitating over which fruit to give, then while you are deliberating you will be troubled, and even if you give the bigger one, there will still be a sense of reluctance. 


But as soon as you firmly decide to give the bigger one, the matter is over and done with. This is going against the grain in the right way.


~ Ajahn Chah




“Consider your thoughts like money: you want to save your money. You don’t want to spend your money recklessly.

The Teaching of Ajahn Suchart.

27 July 2024

“Consider your thoughts like money: you want to save your money. You don’t want to spend your money recklessly. 

Similarly, you don’t want to think recklessly. You want to use your thoughts very sparingly. 

Use thoughts only when you have to. You don’t want to spend your money on useless things.

You only want to use it on something beneficial. If you want to think, think of the 32 parts of the body. Think of annicca, aging, sickness and death. Think of anatta, everything is like the weather. 

This is the kind of thought you should be thinking about. If not, you should just stop your thoughts. Don’t think about getting rich, don’t think about where you are going to go for your holidays. These are useless thoughts. They only lead you to more rebirth.”


"If there is Dhamma in your heart

And you still suffer,

Then it is not true Dhamma,

Or the real kind of wisdom.

If it is real, then your mind

Will not be affected by anything."


“Dhamma in English, Sep 27, 2020.”

By Ajahn Suchart Abhijāto

www.phrasuchart.com

Latest Dhamma talks on Youtube: 

https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g




www.phrasuchart.com

Latest Dhamma talks on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g

Q & A to Bhante Ashin Acara A sharing of being ordained ......

Q & A to Bhante Ashin Acara
 A sharing of being ordained  ......


QUESTION


Venerable Sir, recently, I met a mother of an autistic son. She was very worried and as a mother she suffers more than her son. She would like to help him by ordaining herself into Buddhism for certain days as advised by one of her friends. 


She thinks that both mother, i.e. herself and son had very bad Karma which put them in this situation today. Therefore, she wishes to be a nun for a few days and transfer merit to her son. The Question is: Will this transfer of merit help her son?


Respectfully,


ANSWER


It is believed that they are in this situation due to their bad kamma. The mother’s ordination will be a good kamma if she conducts herself properly as an ordained nun. 


This is her own kamma which will hopefully bring her better things. Her son can also enjoy the benefits of her merit. It is clear that if she gets better things as the benefits of her merit, her ordination, these (better things) can be shared with her son. In this regard it is better to say ‘sharing the benefits of merit’ than saying ‘transfering merit.’


I don't know how she will  transfer her merit to her son. 


In Theravada Buddhism transfering of merit itself is a way of making merit. And this act is also called sharing merit. 


In particular, today’s Buddhists perform dana or giving in charity for the benefits of their departed relatives. They usually offer venerable monks material offerings like alms-food and robes. After making offerings, the merit is shared with or transferred to the departed ones. This practice includes mainly three meritorious actions, namely: 

giving in charity (dana), 

sharing or transferring merit (pattidana), and 

rejoicing in merit (pattanumodana).


Buddhaghosa Thera, when he comments on Tirokutta Sutta of Khaddaka-patha, gives three factors for a beneficial way of transferring merit to the departed ones:


-     departed ones rejoice in the merit done by living people (petananhi attano anumodanena)


-     departed ones are dedicated (dayakanam uddissena)


-     those who receive the donation are noble (dakkhineyya sampadaya) (Verses 5 and 6)


Briefly, it is understood that the departed ones will benefit only if they can rejoice in the merit accrued by those living  and dedicating it to the departed ones.


According to Theravada Buddhism merit can neither be directly transferred to others nor shared with others without them rejoicing in it. We must make or generate our merit by ourselves. Thus the Buddha taught in Dhammapada that one is one’s own refuge, no one can be the refuge of another. The departed ones must rejoice in others’ merit so they can attain a better life even when they are reborn in a lower life like that of the hungry ghosts (peta). Now it should be noted that the act of rejoicing in other’s merit is a good kamma done by the departed ones.


In this regard, living people can also rejoice in others’ merit. Actually it is more meaningful to rejoice in another’s meritorious deed while we are living than to hope for a chance to rejoice in the merit of others, after our death. And it is the best to generate our own good kamma ourselves.


As I said at the beginning, the ordination of your friend is her own good kamma. And her son will also be making his own good kamma if he can rejoice in his mother’s ordination. Moreover they can do other kinds of merits such as giving in charity (dana), practising morality (sila) and meditating (bhavana). It is believed that their merits will bring happiness to them. 


Finally I recommend that your friend should try, directly or indirectly, her best to let and encourage her son to generate his own kamma by himself. This should be her first priority. 


This is better than transferring her merit to her son.


With Metta,

Ashin Acara




Dhammapada Verse 212 The Story of a Rich Householder

Dhammapada Verse 212
The Story of a Rich Householder


Once, a householder was feeling very distressed over the death of his son. He often went to the cemetery and wept there. Early one morning, the Buddha saw the rich householder in his vision. So, taking a bhikkhu along with him, the Buddha went to the house of that man. 

There, he asked the man why he was feeling so unhappy. Then, the man related to the Buddha about the death of his son and about the pain and sorrow he was suffering. To him the Buddha said, "My disciple, death does not occur only in one place. All beings that are born must die one day; indeed, life ends in death.

You must ever be mindful of the fact that life ends in death.

Do not imagine that only your beloved son is subject to death. 

Do not be so distressed or be so shaken. Sorrow and fear arise out of affection."

Then the Buddha spoke in verse as follows:
Dhammapada, Verse 212:

"Affection begets sorrow, affection begets fear. For him who is free from affection there is no sorrow; how can there be fear for him?"

At the end of the discourse, the rich householder attained Sotapatti Fruition.

Source: http://www.tipitaka.net/tipitaka/dhp/verseload.php?verse=212

GIVING ( OFFERING OF DANA )

GIVING ( OFFERING OF DANA )


May the Dhamma last as long as my sons and grandsons, and the sun and the moon will be and may the people follow the path of the Dhamma, for if one follows the path, happiness in this and in other world will be attained.-King Asoka-


Dana is a Pali word that can be translated as giving, generosity, charity and liberality. Buddhist should take heed and cultivate a good spirit of dana. Its is a first step towards eliminating the defilement of greed, hatred and delusion (lobha, dosa & moha), for every act of giving is an act of non-greed, non-hatred and non-delusion. 


In doing dana, such as offering of food to monks, the donor should be happy before, during and after the offering. This means that before the offering, during the preparatory stage, the donor should go about the planning and preparation happily.


He should realize and appreciate that what he is thinking, planning and doing is very commendable and wholesome. He should be glad on that account. Then when offering the food he should be happy, mindful and aware of what he is doing. He should not be absent-minded and think about other things while making the offering.


After the offering, whenever he recalls his good deed, he should rejoice and be glad. Some people may not have such an attitude. For example, they may have an intention to do dana but failed to carry it out. Or when doing dana, they may not be mindful and are thinking of something else. And after making the offering, some may even regret doing so. In this way, the result of the deed varies.


Furthermore, dana should be done with understanding of the law of action and result (Karma-vipaka). We understand that we are the owner of our deeds. Whatever we do will rebound back on us. Good will beget good, and bad will beget bad. Dana when done with the belief in the law of Karma is accompanied by wisdom.


Resolution is an important factor. Whenever we do any good deed we should make an aspiration for the attainment of Nibbana-the cessation of all suffering. In the Myanmar tradition, one wishes that one may be healthy, wealthy, and happy and attain Nibbana. 


After the performance of dana or any good deed, we should share the merits gained with all beings. This is very beneficial, as sharing of merits is in itself a good deed. The mind enjoys a wholesome state associated with loving-kindness and compassion as we share the merits of our good deeds.

 

Monks who receive food and other requisites from devotees also have a duty to fulfill. The monks should realize that those who are offering them food are not their relatives. May the good monk be of good health to pursue a holy life, practice meditation and be liberated from samsara. May we, the person who offers, also benefit from these good deeds. Therefore the monks as receivers can only repay the devotees by striving hard, studying the Dhamma and practicing meditation to purify their minds. In this way, the devotees will gain great merits by virtue of the purity of the monk or his earnest efforts to attain that purity.

 

In giving, one can only give what one can afford. But in giving, it is not only the value that counts, but also the heart that gives. 


The immediate result of dana is that one will be popular and well-liked by people. This is natural, people feel good and happy when they receive something. According to Buddhism, the result of giving is that one will become wealthy in this or future lives. The person who is generous may find himself advancing in his career or business, and making even more money. Furthermore, after death he may reborn in the heavenly world and enjoy celestial pleasures. If he is reborn as a human being he will be wealthy.





Sunday 27 September 2020

The Last Message of the Buddha

The Last Message of the Buddha


'When I am gone, my Teaching shall be your Master and Guide.'


Three months before His passing away the Buddha addressed His disciples and said: 'I have delivered sermons to you during these forty-five years. You must learn them well and treasure them. You must practise them and teach them to others. This will be of great use for the welfare of the living and for the welfare of those who come after you'.


'My years are now full ripe; the life span left is short. I will soon have to leave you. You must be earnest. O monks, be mindful and of pure virtue! 


Whoever untiringly pursues the Teaching, will go beyond the cycle of birth and death and will man an end of Suffering.'


When Ananda asked the Buddha what would become of the Order after He pass away, the Buddha replied, 'What does the Order expect of me, Ananda? I have preached the Truth without any distinction; for in regard to the Truth, there is no clenched hand in the Teachings of the Buddha°‚. It may be, Ananda, that to some among you, the thought will come 'The Master's words will soon end; soon we will no longer have a master.' But do not think like this, Ananda. When I am gone, my Teaching and the disciplinary code shall be your Master.'


The Buddha further explained: 'If there is anyone who thinks, 'It is I who will lead the brotherhood', or 'The Order is dependent on me, it is I who should give instructions', the Buddha does not think that He should lead the order or that the Order is dependent on Him. I have reached the end of my days. Just as a worn-out cart can only be made to move with much additional care, so my body can be kept going only with much additional care. Therefore, Ananda, be a lamp and refuge unto yourselves. Look for no other refuge. Let the Truth be your lamp and your refuge. 


Seek no refuge elsewhere.'


At the age of eighty, on His birthday, He passed away without showing any worldly supernatural powers. He showed the real nature of component things even in His own life.


When the Buddha passed away into Nibbana, one of His disciples remarked, 'All must depart---all beings that have life must shed their compounded forms. Yes, even a Master such as He, a peerless being, powerful in Wisdom and Enlightenment, even He must pass away.'


The parting words of the Buddha:

'When I am gone, my Teaching shall be your Master and Guide.'



Friday 25 September 2020

Characteristics of a Monk

Characteristics of a Monk


Among the salient characteristics of a monk are purity, voluntary poverty, humility, simplicity, selfless service, self-control, patience, compassion and harmlessness. He is expected to observe the four kinds of Higher Morality—namely: 


Patimokkha Sila: The Fundamental Moral Code (major offences related to immoral, cruel, harmful and selfish activities).


Indriyasamvara Sila: Morality pertaining to sense-restraint. 


Ajivaparisuddhi Sila: Morality pertaining to purity of livelihood. 


Paccayasannissita Sila:   Morality pertaining to the use of requisites pertaining to life. 


These four kinds of morality are collectively called Sila-Visuddhi (Purity of Virtue). 


When a person enters the Order and receives his ordination he is called a Samanera — Novice Monk. 


He is bound to observe Ten Samanera Precepts with certain disciplinary codes for leading a monastic life until he receives his higher ordination — Upasampada and becomes a Bhikkhu or full fledged monk. A novice nun is called a samaneri, and a full fledged one is called a bhikkhuni. 


A bhikkhu or monk is bound to observe the above-mentioned four kinds of higher morality which comprise 227 Precepts apart from several other minor ones. 


The four major ones which deal with celibacy and abstinence from stealing, murder, and false claims to higher spirituality must strictly be observed. If he violates any one of these, a monk is regarded as a “defeated” person in the Sangha community. He will be deprived of certain religious rights by the Sangha community. In the case of other rules which he violates, he has to face many other consequences and make amends according to the gravity of the offence. There are no vows or laws for a bhikkhu. He becomes a bhikkhu of his own accord in order to lead a Holy Life for as long as he likes.


There is therefore no need for him to feel trapped by a vow he made earlier and to be hypocritical because he alone can decide whether or not he wishes to obey the rules. He is at liberty to leave the Order at any time and can lead a lay Buddhist way of life when he feels it is inconvenient. He can also return to the monastic life at any time he desires. The same general rules apply for bhikkhunis as well.





Find your real home By Ajahn Chah

Find your real home
By Ajahn Chah


Thinking that you’d like to go on living for a long time will make you suffer. But thinking you’d like to die right away or die very quickly isn’t right either. It’s suffering, isn’t it? 


Conditions don’t belong to us, they follow their own natural laws. You can’t do anything about the way the body is. You can prettify it a little, make it look attractive and clean for a while, like the young girls who paint their lips and let their nails grow long, but when old age arrives, everyone’s in the same boat. That’s the way the body is, you can’t make it any other way. But what you can improve and beautify is the mind.


Anyone can build a house of wood and bricks, but the Buddha taught that that sort of home is not our real home; it’s only nominally ours. It is a home in the world and it follows the ways of the world. Our real home is inner peace. 


An external, material home may well be pretty but it is not very peaceful. There’s this worry and then that, this anxiety and then that. So we say it is not our real home, it is external to us. Sooner or later we’ll have to give it up. It’s not a place we can live in permanently because it doesn’t truly belong to us, it’s part of the world.


Our body is the same: we take it to be self, to be “me” and “mine,” but in fact it’s not really so at all. It’s another worldly home. Your body has followed its natural course from birth until now; it’s old and sick and you can’t forbid it from doing that. That’s the way it is. Wanting it to be different would be as foolish as wanting a duck to be like a chicken. When you see that that’s impossible—that a duck has to be a duck, that a chicken has to be a chicken and that bodies have to get old and die— you will find strength and energy. However much you want the body to go on and last for a long time, it won’t do that.


Conditions are impermanent and unstable; having come into being they disappear, having arisen they pass away. And yet everyone wants them to be permanent. This is foolishness.


As soon as we’re born, we’re dead. Our birth and our death are just one thing. It’s like a tree: when there’s a root there must be twigs. When there are twigs, there must be a root. You can’t have one without the other. It’s a little funny to see how at a death people are so grief-stricken and distracted, fearful and sad, and at a birth how happy and delighted. It’s delusion; nobody has ever looked at this clearly. 


I think if you really want to cry, then it would be better to do so when someone’s born. For actually birth is death, death is birth, the root is the twig, the twig is the root. If you’ve got to cry, cry at the root, cry at the birth. Look closely: if there were no birth, there would be no death. Can you understand this?


Don’t think a lot. Just think, “This is the way things are.” It’s your work, your duty. Right now nobody can help you; there is nothing that your family and your possessions can do for you. All that can help you now is correct awareness.


So don’t waver. Let go. Throw it all away.


Even if you don’t let go, everything is starting to leave anyway. Can you see that, how all different parts of your body are trying to slip away? Your eyes, ears, nose, tongue—everything is trying to leave because this isn’t their home. You can’t make a permanent home in a sankhara; you can stay for a short while and then you have to go. It’s like a tenant watching over his tiny little house with failing eyes. His teeth aren’t so good, his ears aren’t so good, his body’s not so healthy, everything is leaving.


To put it simply, impermanence is the Buddha.

So you needn’t worry about anything because this isn’t your real home, it’s just a temporary shelter. Having come into this world, you should contemplate its nature. Everything there is, is preparing to disappear. Look at your body. Is there anything there that’s still in its original form? Is your skin as it used to be? Is your hair? It’s not the same, is it? Where has everything gone? This is nature, the way things are. When their time is up, conditions go their way. This world is nothing to rely on—it’s an endless round of disturbance and trouble, pleasures and pain. There’s no peace.


So understand this point that all people, all creatures, are about to leave. When beings have lived an appropriate time, they go their way. The rich, the poor, the young, the old, all beings must experience this change. To put it simply, impermanence is the Buddha. If we see an impermanent phenomenon really clearly, we’ll see that it’s permanent, in the sense that its subjection to change is unchanging.


This is the permanence that living beings possess. There is continual transformation—from childhood through youth to old age—and that very impermanence, that nature to change is permanent and fixed. If you look at it like that, your heart will be at ease.


Let go, relax, and let your family look after you. Those who nurse the sick grow in goodness and virtue. One who is sick and giving others that opportunity shouldn’t make things difficult for them. If there’s a pain, or some problem or other, let them know and keep the mind in a wholesome state.


One who is nursing parents should fill his or her mind with warmth and kindness, not get caught in aversion. This is the one time when you can repay the debt you owe them. From your birth through your childhood, as you’ve grown up, you’ve been dependent on your parents. That we are here today is because our mothers and fathers have helped us in so many ways. We owe them an incredible debt of gratitude.


So today, all of you children and relatives gathered here together, see how your parents become your children. Before you were their children, now they become yours. They become older and older until they become children again. 


Their memories go, their eyes don’t see so well, and their ears don’t hear. Sometimes they garble their words. Don’t let it upset you. All of you nursing the sick must know how to let go. Don’t hold on to things; just let go and let them have their own way. When a young child is disobedient, sometimes the parents let it have its own way just to keep the peace, to make it happy. Now your parents are like that child. Their memories and perceptions are confused. Sometimes they muddle up your names or you ask them to give you a cup and they bring a plate. It’s normal, don’t be upset by it.


Let the patient remember the kindness of those who nurse and patiently endure the painful feelings. Exert yourself mentally, don’t let the mind become scattered and agitated, and don’t make things difficult for those looking after you. Let those who nurse the sick fill their minds with virtue and kindness. Don’t be averse to the unattractive side of the job, to cleaning up mucus and phlegm, or urine and excrement. Try your best. Everyone in the family give a hand.


These are the only parents you’ve got. They gave you life; they have been your teachers, your nurses and your doctors; they’ve been everything to you. that they have brought you up, taught you, shared their wealth with you and made you their heirs is the great beneficence of parents. 


Consequently the Buddha taught the virtues of katannu and katavedi, knowing our debt of gratitude and trying to repay it. These two dhammas are complementary. If our parents are in need, they’re unwell or in difficulty, then we do our best to help them. This is katannukatavedi; it is a virtue that sustains the world. It prevents families from breaking up; it makes them stable and harmonious.


Today I have brought you the Dhamma as a gift in this time of illness. I have no material things to give you—there seems to be plenty of those in the house already—and so I give you the Dhamma, something which has a lasting worth, something which you’ll never be able to exhaust. 


Having received it from me, you can pass it on to as many others as you like and it will never be depleted. That is the nature of the Truth. I am happy to have been able to give you this gift of Dhamma and hope it will give you strength to deal with your pain.


First published on January 1, 1994 

Just be still By Ajahn Chah

Just be still
By Ajahn Chah


So let go, put everything down—everything except knowing. Don’t be fooled if visions or sounds arise in your mind during meditation. Put them all down. Don’t take hold of anything at all. Just stay with this non-dual awareness. 


Don’t worry about the past or the future. Just be still and you will reach the place where there is no advancing, no retreating and no stopping, where there is nothing to grasp at or cling to. Why? Because there’s no self, no “me” or “mine.” It’s all gone.


The Buddha taught us to be emptied of everything in this way, not to carry anything with us. To know, and having known, let go.


Realizing the Dhamma, the path to freedom from the Round of Birth and Death, is a task that we all have to do alone. So keep trying to let go and to understand the teachings. Really put effort into your contemplation. Don’t worry about your family. At the moment they are as they are; in the future they will be like you. There’s no one in the world who can escape this fate. The Buddha told us to put down everything that lacks a real abiding substance. If you put everything down, you will see the truth. If you don’t, you won’t. That’s the way it is and it’s the same for everyone in the world. So don’t worry and don’t grasp at anything.


Even if you find yourself thinking, that’s alright too, as long as you think wisely. Don’t think foolishly. If you think of your children, think of them with wisdom, not with foolishness. Whatever the mind turns to, then think and know that thing with wisdom, aware of its nature. If you know something with wisdom, then you let it go and there’s no suffering. The mind is bright, joyful, and at peace, and turning away from distractions, it is undivided. Right now, what you can look to for help and support is your breath.


This is your own work, nobody else’s. Leave others to do their own work. You have your own duty and responsibility and you don’t have to take on those of your family. Don’t take anything else on; let it all go. That letting go will make your mind calm. Your sole responsibility right now is to focus your mind and bring it to peace. Leave everything else to others. Forms, sounds, odors, tastes—leave them to others to attend to. Put everything behind you and do your own work, fulfill your own responsibility. Whatever arises in your mind—be it fear of pain, fear of death, anxiety about others or whatever—say to it, “Don’t disturb me. You’re not my business any more.” Just keep saying this to yourself when you see those dhammas arise.


The world is the very mental state that is agitating you at this moment. “What will this person do? When I’m dead, who will look after them? How will they manage?” This is all just “the world.” Even the mere arising of a thought fearing death or pain is the world. 


Throw the world away! The world is the way it is. If you allow it to arise in the mind and dominate consciousness, then the mind becomes obscured and can’t see itself. 


So whatever appears in the mind, just say “This isn’t my business. It’s impermanent, unsatisfactory, and not-self.”

Advice for Someone Who is Dying BY AJAHN CHAH OCTOBER 26, 2018

Advice for Someone Who is Dying
BY AJAHN CHAH
OCTOBER 26, 2018


Ajahn Chah’s simple, profound advice to an aging student approaching her death.


Today I have brought nothing material of any substance to offer you, only Dhamma, the teachings of the Buddha. 


Listen well. You should understand that even the Buddha himself, with his great store of accumulated virtue, could not avoid physical death. 


When he reached old age, he relinquished his body and let go of its heavy burden. Now you too must learn to be satisfied with the many years you’ve already depended on your body. You should feel that it’s enough.


You can compare it to household utensils that you’ve had for a long time—your cups, saucers, plates and so on. When you first had them they were clean and shining, but now after using them for so long, they’re starting to wear out. Some are already broken, some have disappeared, and those that are left are deteriorating: they have no stable form, and it’s their nature to be like that. 


Your body is the same way. It has been continually changing right from the day you were born, through childhood and youth, until now it has reached old age. You must accept that. 


The Buddha said that conditions (sankharas), whether they are internal conditions, bodily conditions, or external conditions, are not-self—their nature is to change. Contemplate this truth until you see it clearly.


Keep mind and body separate. 


This very lump of flesh that lies here in decline is saccadhamma, the truth. The truth of this body is saccadhamma, and it is the unchanging teaching of the Buddha. The Buddha taught us to look at the body, to contemplate it and to come to terms with its nature. We must be able to be at peace with the body, whatever state it is in. The Buddha taught that we should ensure that it is only the body that is locked up in jail, and not let the mind be imprisoned along with it. Now as your body begins to run down and deteriorate with age, don’t resist that, but don’t let your mind deteriorate with it. Keep the mind separate. 


Give energy to the mind by realizing the truth of the way things are. The Lord Buddha taught that this is the nature of the body. It can’t be any other way. Having been born, it gets old and sick and then it dies. This is a great truth that you are presently encountering. Look at the body with wisdom and realize it.


Allow the mind to let go of its attachments. The time is ripe.


Even if your house is flooded or burnt to the ground, whatever the danger that threatens it, let it concern only the house. If there’s a flood, don’t let it flood your mind. If there’s a fire, don’t let it burn your heart. Let it be merely the house, that which is external to you, that is flooded and burned. Allow the mind to let go of its attachments. The time is ripe.


You have been alive a long time. Your eyes have seen any number of forms and colors, your ears have heard so many sounds, and you’ve had any number of experiences. And that’s all they were— just experiences. You’ve eaten delicious foods and all the good tastes were just good tastes, nothing more. The unpleasant tastes were just unpleasant tastes, that’s all. If the eye sees a beautiful form, that’s all it is, just a beautiful form. An ugly form is just an ugly form. The ear hears an entrancing, melodious sound, and it’s nothing more than that. A grating, disharmonious sound is simply so.


The Buddha said that rich or poor, young or old, human or animal, no being in this world can maintain itself in any one state for long; everything experiences change and estrangement. This is a fact of life that we can do nothing to remedy. But the Buddha said that what we can do is to contemplate the body and mind so as to see their impersonality, see that neither of them is “me” or “mine.” 


They have a merely provisional reality. It’s like this house: it’s only nominally yours, you couldn’t take it with you anywhere.


It is the same with your wealth, your possessions, and your family—they are all yours only in name; they don’t really belong to you, they belong to nature. Now this truth doesn’t apply to you alone; everyone is in the same position, even the Lord Buddha and his enlightened disciples. They differed from us in only one respect, and that was in their acceptance of the way things are. They saw that it could be no other way.


Don’t wish it were otherwise. 


The Buddha taught us to scan and examine this body, from the soles of the feet up to the crown of the head, then back down to the feet again. Just take a look at the body. What sort of things do you see? Is there anything intrinsically clean there? Can you find any abiding essence? This whole body is steadily degenerating and the Buddha taught us to see that it doesn’t belong to us. It is natural for the body to be this way because all conditioned phenomena are subject to change. How else would you have it be? Actually there’s nothing wrong with the way the body is. It’s not the body that causes you suffering, it’s your wrong thinking. When you see the right wrongly, there’s bound to be confusion.


Take this feeling of letting go as your refuge.


It’s like the water of a river. It naturally flows down the gradient; it never flows against it, and that is its nature. If a person were to go and stand on a river bank and, seeing the water flowing swiftly down its course, foolishly want it to flow back up the gradient, he would suffer. Whatever he was doing, his wrong thinking would allow him no peace of mind. He would be unhappy because of his wrong view, thinking against the stream. If he had right view, he would see that the water must inevitably flow down the gradient, but until he realized and accepted that fact, the man would be agitated and upset.


The river that must flow down the gradient is like your body. Having been young, your body has become old and now it is meandering towards its death. 


Don’t go wishing it were otherwise; it is not something you have the power to remedy. The Buddha told us to see the way things are and then let go of our clinging to them. Take this feeling of letting go as your refuge. Keep meditating even if you feel tired and exhausted. Let your mind dwell with the breath. Take a few deep breaths and then establish the mind on the breath using the mantra Buddha. Make this practice habitual.


Let go of all externals

The more exhausted you feel, the more subtle and focused your concentration must be, so that you can cope with the painful sensations that arise.


When you start to feel fatigued, then bring all your thinking to a halt, let the mind gather itself together, and then turn to knowing the breath. Just keep up the inner recitation: Bud-dho, Bud-dhu. 


Let go of all externals. Don’t go grasping at thoughts of your children and relatives, don’t grasp at anything whatsoever. Let go. Let the mind unite in a single point and let that composed mind dwell with the breath. Let the breath be its sole object of knowledge. Concentrate until the mind becomes increasingly subtle, until feelings are insignificant and there is great inner clarity and wakefulness. 


Then when painful sensations arise, they will gradually cease of their own accord.


Finally you’ll look on the breath as if it were a relative come to visit you. When a relative leaves, we follow him out and see him off. We watch until he’s walked or driven out of sight and then we go back indoors. We watch the breath in the same way. If the breath is coarse, we know that it’s coarse; if it’s subtle, we know that it’s subtle. As it becomes increasingly fine, we keep following it, while simultaneously awakening the mind. Eventually the breath disappears altogether and all that remains is the feeling of wakefulness. This is called meeting the Buddha. We have that clear wakeful awareness that is called Buddho, the one who knows, the one who is awake, the radiant one. It is meeting and dwelling with the Buddha, with knowledge and clarity. For it was only the historical flesh-and-blood Buddha that entered Parinibbana. The true Buddha—the Buddha that is clear, radiant, knowing—we can still experience and attain today, and when we do, the heart is one.




**********



Thursday 24 September 2020

Teaching of Ajahn Chah

Teaching of Ajahn Chah


"If we don’t clearly know in accordance with the truth then we get annoyed at sounds of people, cars, electric drills and so on. 


This is just the ordinary, untrained mind acknowledging the sound with annoyance. It knows in accordance with its preferences, not in accordance with the truth. We must further train it to know with vision and insight, ñānadassana, the power of the refined mind, so that it knows the sound as simply sound.


 If we don’t cling to sound there is no annoyance. The sound arises and we simply note it. This is called truly knowing the arising of sense objects.


 If we develop the Buddho, clearly realizing the sound as sound, then it doesn’t annoy us. It arises according to conditions, it is not a being, an individual, a self, an ‘us’ or ‘them’. It’s just sound. The mind lets go. This knowing is called Buddho, the knowledge that is clear and penetrating. 


With this knowledge we can let the sound simply be sound. It doesn’t disturb us unless we disturb it by thinking, ‘I don’t want to hear that sound, it’s annoying.’ Suffering arises because of this thinking. Right here is the cause of suffering, that we don’t know the truth of this matter, we haven’t developed the Buddho. 


We are not yet clear, not yet awake, not yet aware. This is the raw, untrained mind. This mind is not yet truly useful to us."


~ Ajahn Chah






“We need to have this knowledge about the true nature of the body in order to let go of our delusion…”

“We need to have this knowledge about the true nature of the body in order to let go of our delusion…”


- - -


“A monk doesn’t seek any happiness from anything in this world. We only seek happiness that arises from mental calm. In order to be able to have this mental calm, we need mindfulness. In Pāli we call it sati. Sati is the instrument or the tool that will stop the mind from thinking. 


When the mind stops thinking then the mind will become calm, peaceful and happy. So what we have to constantly do from the time we get up to the time we go to sleep is to develop mindfulness, being mindful with one thing, like using a mantra, using the name of the Buddha: ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’. 


We just keep reciting ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’ all the time, regardless of whatever we do. This is in order to stop us from thinking about other things. The exception is when we have to think about some other things, then we can temporarily stop reciting ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’ and think of the things that we really have to think about, like what we have to do. 


When we are doing something, we have to use our thoughts, then we stop reciting ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’ for a while. After we finish with whatever we have to think, then we should come back and recite ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’ in order to prevent the mind from thinking aimlessly and uselessly. 


When the mind doesn’t think, we can stop reciting, we can just watch the mind. We watch the mind that doesn’t think and we keep it that way. Whenever the mind starts thinking aimlessly again, then we should start reciting the mantra again, ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’. 


When we have time to sit, we should sit down, close our eyes, and recite ‘Buddho’ ‘Buddho’ again, and eventually the mind will come to perfect stillness. The mind will stop thinking, the mind will enter into fourth jhāna or appanā-samādhi. That’s where we want the mind to go, to enter where there is no thinking. All that is left is only the one who knows and a sense of peace and happiness. This is what we want to acquire. 


Once we have acquired it, we want to maintain it. When the mind is in appanā-samādhi, we should not do anything. We should just maintain our mindfulness, just watch this state of mind for as long as possible. It is not the time yet to develop wisdom such as contemplation of the body. This will have to come after the mind withdraws from samādhi. 


After the mind remains in the appanā state for a while, it will then withdraw. When it withdraws, it will come back to its normal state, and be aware of sight, sound, smell, taste and tactile objects, and start to think again. When the mind starts thinking we should direct the mind towards body contemplation, to study the true nature of the body by going through the 32 parts of the body, by separating these 32 parts of the body to see that truly there is nobody in this body. There are only the 32 parts. This is the way to develop wisdom or paññā. 


We need to have this knowledge about the true nature of the body in order to let go of our delusion, our attachment to the body and our desire to keep the body in this state all the time. The truth is we cannot have the body with us all the time. One day sooner or later, this body will have to leave us, but if we know this will happen and we are willing to let go of the body, then we will not be affected when the body leaves us in the future."


“Singapore via skype – talks given to monks, Aug 9, 2015.”


By Ajahn Suchart Abhijāto

www.phrasuchart.com

Latest Dhamma talks on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCi_BnRZmNgECsJGS31F495g

Wednesday 23 September 2020

Key to Liberation and The Path to Peace Talks on Dhamma Practice Venerable Ajahn Chah - Evening Sitting

Key to Liberation and The Path to Peace
Talks on Dhamma Practice
Venerable Ajahn Chah - Evening Sitting


I would like to ask you about your practice. You have all been practising meditation here, but are you sure about the practice yet? Ask yourselves, are you confident about the practice yet? These days there are all sorts of meditation teachers around, both monks and lay teachers, and I’m afraid it will cause you to be full of doubts and uncertainty about what you are doing. This is why I am asking. As far as Buddhist practice is concerned, there is really nothing greater or higher than these teachings of the Buddha which you have been practising with here. If you have a clear understanding of them, it will give rise to an absolutely firm and unwavering peace in your heart and mind.


Making the mind peaceful is known as practising meditation, or practising samadhi (concentration). The mind is something which is extremely changeable and unreliable. Observing from your practice so far, have you seen this yet? Some days you sit meditation and in no time at all the mind is calm, others, you sit and whatever you do there’s no calm – the mind constantly struggling to get away, until it eventually does. 

Some days it goes well, some days it’s awful. This is the way the mind displays these different conditions for you to see. You must understand that the eight factors of the Noble Eightfold Path (ariya magga) merge in sila (moral restraint), samadhi and panna (wisdom). They don’t come together anywhere else. This means that when you bring the factors of your practice together, there must be sila, there must be samadhi and there must be panna present together in the mind. It means that in practising meditation right here and now, you are creating the causes for the Path to arise in a very direct way.


In sitting meditation you are taught to close your eyes, so that you don’t spend your time looking at different things. This is because the Buddha was teaching that you should know your own mind. Observe the mind. If you close your eyes, your attention will naturally be turned inwards towards the mind – the source of many different kinds of knowledge. This is a way of training the mind to give rise to samadhi.


Once sitting with the eyes closed, establish awareness with the breath – make awareness of the breath more important than anything else. This means you bring awareness to follow the breath, and by keeping with it, you will know that place which is the focal point of sati (mindfulness), the focal point of the knowing and the focal point of the mind’s awareness. Whenever these factors of the path are working together, you will be able to watch and see your breath, feelings, mind and arammana (mind-objects), as they are in the present moment. Ultimately, you will know that place which is both the focal point of samadhi and the unification point of the path factors.


When developing samadhi, fix attention on the breath and imagine that you are sitting alone with absolutely no other people and nothing else around to bother you. Develop this perception in the mind, sustaining it until the mind completely lets go of the world outside and all that is left is simply the knowing of the breath entering and leaving. The mind must set aside the external world. Don’t allow yourself to start thinking about this person who is sitting over here, or that person who is sitting over there. 

Don’t give space to any thoughts that will give rise to confusion or agitation in the mind – it’s better to throw them out and be done with them. There is no one else here, you are sitting all alone. Develop this perception until all the other memories, perceptions and thoughts concerning other people and things subside, and you’re no longer doubting or wandering about the other people or things around you. Then you can fix your attention solely on the in-breaths and out-breaths. Breathe normally. Allow the in-breaths and the out-breaths to continue naturally, without forcing them to be longer or shorter, stronger or weaker than normal. Allow the breath to continue in a state of normality and balance, and then sit and observe it entering and leaving the body.


Once the mind has let go of external mind-objects, it means you will no longer feel disturbed by the sound of traffic or other noises. You won’t feel irritated with anything outside. Whether it’s forms, sounds or whatever, they won’t be a source of disturbance, because the mind won’t be paying attention to them – it will become centred upon the breath.


If the mind is agitated by different things and you can’t concentrate, try taking an extra-deep breath until the lungs are completely full, and then release all the air until there is none left inside. Do this several times, then re-establish awareness and continue to develop concentration. Having re-established mindfulness, it’s normal that for a period the mind will be calm, then change and become agitated again. 

When this happens, make the mind firm, take another deep breath and subsequently expel all the air from your lungs. Fill the lungs to capacity again for a moment and then re-establish mindfulness on the breathing. Fix sati on the in-breaths and the out-breaths, and continue to maintain awareness in this way.


The practice tends to be this way, so it will have to take many sittings and much effort before you become proficient. Once you are, the mind will let go of the external world and remain undisturbed. Mind-objects from the outside will be unable to penetrate inside and disturb the mind itself; Once they are unable to penetrate inside, you will see the mind. You will see the mind as one object of awareness, the breath as another and mind-objects as another. They will all be present within the field of awareness, centred at the tip of your nose. Once sati is firmly established with the in-breaths and out-breaths, you can continue to practise at your ease. As the mind becomes calm, the breath, which was originally coarse, correspondingly becomes lighter and more refined. The object of mind also becomes increasingly subtle and refined. The body feels lighter and the mind itself feels progressively lighter and unburdened. The mind lets go of external mind-objects and you continue to observe internally.


From here onwards your awareness will be turned away from the world outside and is directed inwards to focus on the mind. Once the mind has gathered together and become concentrated, maintain awareness at that point where the mind becomes focused. As you breathe, you will see the breath clearly as it enters and leaves, sati will be sharp and awareness of mind-objects and mental activity will be clearer. At that point you will see the characteristics of sila, samadhi and panna and the way in which they merge together. This is known as the unification of the Path factors. Once this unification occurs, your mind will be free from all forms of agitation and confusion. It will become one-pointed and this is what is known as samadhi. 

When you focus attention in just one place, in this case the breath, you gain a clarity and awareness because of the uninterrupted presence of sati. As you continue to see the breath clearly, sati will become stronger and the mind will become more sensitive in many different ways. You will see the mind in the centre of that place (the breath), one-pointed with awareness focused inwards, rather than turning towards the world outside. The external world gradually disappears from your awareness and the mind will no longer be going to perform any work on the outside. It’s as if you’ve come inside your ‘house’, where all your sense faculties have come together to form one compact unit. You are at your ease and the mind is free from all external objects. Awareness remains with the breath and over time it will penetrate deeper and deeper inside, becoming progressively more refined. Ultimately, awareness of the breath becomes so refined that the sensation of the breath seems to disappear. You could say either that awareness of the sensation of the breath has disappeared, or that the breath itself has disappeared. Then there arises a new kind of awareness – awareness that the breath has disappeared. In other words, awareness of the breath becomes so refined that it’s difficult to define it.


So it might be that you are just sitting there and there’s no breath. Really, the breath is still there, but it has become so refined that it seems to have disappeared. Why? Because the mind is at its most refined, with a special kind of knowing. All that remains is the knowing. Even though the breath has vanished, the mind is still concentrated with the knowledge that the breath is not there. As you continue, what should you take up as the object of meditation? Take this very knowing as the meditation object – in other words the knowledge that there is no breath – and sustain this. You could say that a specific kind of knowledge has been established in the mind.


At this point, some people might have doubts arising, because it is here that nimitta [1] can arise. These can be of many kinds, including both forms and sounds. It is here that all sorts of unexpected things can arise in the course of the practice. If nimitta do arise (some people have them, some don’t) you must understand them in accordance with the truth. Don’t doubt or allow yourself to become alarmed


At this stage, you should make the mind unshakable in its concentration and be especially mindful. Some people become startled when they notice that the breath has disappeared, because they’re used to having the breath there. When it appears that the breath has gone, you might panic or become afraid that you are going to die. Here you must establish the understanding that it is just the nature of the practice to progress in this way. What will you observe as the object of meditation now? Observe this feeling that there is no breath and sustain it as the object of awareness as you continue to meditate. The Buddha described this as the firmest, most unshakable form of samadhi. There is just one firm and unwavering object of mind. 

When your practice of samadhi reaches this point, there will be many unusual and refined changes and transformations taking place within the mind, which you can be aware of. The sensation of the body will feel at its lightest or might even disappear altogether. You might feel like you are floating in midair and seem to be completely weightless. It might be like you are in the middle of space and wherever you direct your sense faculties they don’t seem to register anything at all. Even though you know the body is still sitting there, you experience complete emptiness. This feeling of emptiness can be quite strange.


As you continue to practise, understand that there is nothing to worry about. Establish this feeling of being relaxed and unworried, securely in the mind. Once the mind is concentrated and one-pointed, no mind-object will be able to penetrate or disturb it, and you will be able to sit like this for as long as you want. You will be able to sustain concentration without any feelings of pain and discomfort.


Having developed samadhi to this level, you will be able to enter or leave it at will. When you do leave it, it’s at your ease and convenience. You withdraw at your ease, rather than because you are feeling lazy, unenergetic or tired. You withdraw from samadhi because it is the appropriate time to withdraw, and you come out of it at your will.


This is samadhi: you are relaxed and at your ease. You enter and leave it without any problems. The mind and heart are at ease. If you genuinely have samadhi like this, it means that sitting meditation and entering samadhi for just thirty minutes or an hour will enable you to remain cool and peaceful for many days afterwards. Experiencing the effects of samadhi like this for several days has a purifying effect on the mind – whatever you experience will become an object for contemplation. This is where the practice really begins. It’s the fruit which arises as samadhi matures.


Samadhi performs the function of calming the mind. Samadhi performs one function, sila performs one function and panna performs another function. These characteristics, which you are focussing attention on and developing in the practice, are linked, forming a circle. This is the way they manifest in the mind. sila, samadhi and panna arise and mature from the same place. Once the mind is calm, it will become progressively more restrained and composed due to the presence of panna and the power of samadhi. As the mind becomes more composed and refined, this gives rise to an energy, which acts to purify sila. 

Greater purity of sila facilitates the development of stronger and more refined samadhi, and this in turn supports the maturing of panna. They assist each other in this way. Each aspect of the practice acts as a supporting factor for each other one – in the end these terms becoming synonymous. As these three factors continue to mature together, they form one complete circle, ultimately giving rise to Magga. Magga is a synthesis of these three functions of the practice working smoothly and consistently together. As you practise, you have to preserve this energy. It is the energy which will give rise to vipassana (insight) or panna. Having reached this stage (where panna is already functioning in the mind, independent of whether the mind is peaceful or not) panna will provide a consistent and independent energy in the practice. You see that whenever the mind is not peaceful, you shouldn’t attach, and even when it is peaceful, you shouldn’t attach. Having let go of the burden of such concerns, the heart will accordingly feel much lighter. Whether you experience pleasant mind-objects or unpleasant mind-objects, you will remain at ease. The mind will remain peaceful in this way.


Another important thing is to see that when you stop doing the formal meditation practice, if there is no wisdom functioning in the mind, you will give up the practice altogether without any further contemplation, development of awareness or thought about the work which still has to be done. In fact, when you withdraw from samadhi, you know clearly in the mind that you have withdrawn. Having withdrawn, continue to conduct yourself in a normal manner. Maintain mindfulness and awareness at all times. It isn’t that you only practise meditation in the sitting posture – samadhi means the mind which is firm and unwavering. As you go about your daily life, make the mind firm and steady and maintain this sense of steadiness as the object of mind at all times. You must be practising sati and sampajañña (all round knowing) continuously. After you get up from the formal sitting practice and go about your business – walking, riding in cars and so on – whenever your eyes see a form or your ears hear a sound, maintain awareness. As you experience mind-objects which give rise to liking and disliking, try to consistently maintain awareness of the fact that such mental states are impermanent and uncertain. In this way the mind will remain calm and in a state of ‘normality’.


As long as the mind is calm, use it to contemplate mind-objects. Contemplate the whole of this form, the physical body. You can do this at any time and in any posture: whether doing formal meditation practice, relaxing at home, out at work, or in whatever situation you find yourself. Keep the meditation and the reflection going at all times. Just going for a walk and seeing dead leaves on the ground under a tree can provide an opportunity to contemplate impermanence. Both we and the leaves are the same: when we get old, we shrivel up and die. Other people are all the same. This is raising the mind to the level of vipassana, contemplating the truth of the way things are, the whole time. Whether walking, standing, sitting or lying down, sati is sustained evenly and consistently. This is practising meditation correctly – you have to be following the mind closely, checking it at all times.


Practising here and now at seven o’clock in the evening, we have sat and meditated together for an hour and now stopped. It might be that your mind has stopped practising completely and hasn’t continued with the reflection. That’s the wrong way to do it. When we stop, all that should stop is the formal meeting and sitting meditation. You should continue practising and developing awareness consistently, without letting up.


I’ve often taught that if you don’t practise consistently, it’s like drops of water. It’s like drops of water because the practice is not a continuous, uninterrupted flow. Sati is not sustained evenly. The important point is that the mind does the practice and nothing else. The body doesn’t do it. The mind does the work, the mind does the practice. If you understand this clearly, you will see that you don’t necessarily have to do formal sitting meditation in order for the mind to know samadhi. The mind is the one who does the practice. You have to experience and understand this for yourself, in your own mind.


Once you do see this for yourself, you will be developing awareness in the mind at all times and in all postures. If you are maintaining sati as an even and unbroken flow, it’s as if the drops of water have joined to form a smooth and continuous flow of running water. Sati is present in the mind from moment to moment and accordingly there will be awareness of mind-objects at all times. If the mind is restrained and composed with uninterrupted sati, you will know mind-objects each time that wholesome and unwholesome mental states arise. You will know the mind that is calm and the mind that is confused and agitated. Wherever you go you will be practising like this. If you train the mind in this way, it means your meditation will mature quickly and successfully.


Please don’t misunderstand. These days it’s common for people to go on vipassana courses for three or seven days, where they don’t have to speak or do anything but meditate. Maybe you have gone on a silent meditation retreat for a week or two, afterwards returning to your normal daily life. You might have left thinking that you’ve ‘done vipassana’ and, because you feel that you know what it’s all about, then carry on going to parties, discos and indulging in different forms of sensual delight. When you do it like this, what happens? There won’t be any of the fruits of vipassana left by the end of it. If you go and do all sorts of unskilful things, which disturb and upset the mind, wasting everything, then next year go back again and do another retreat for seven days or a few weeks, then come out and carry on with the parties, discos and drinking, that isn’t true practice. It isn’t patipada or the path to progress.


You need to make an effort to renounce. You must contemplate until you see the harmful effects, which come from such behaviour. See the harm in drinking and going out on the town. Reflect and see the harm inherent in all the different kinds of unskilful behaviour which you indulge in, until it becomes fully apparent. This would provide the impetus for you to take a step back and change your ways. Then you would find some real peace. To experience peace of mind you have to clearly see the disadvantages and danger in such forms of behaviour. This is practising in the correct way. If you do a silent retreat for seven days, where you don’t have to speak to or get involved with anybody, and then go chatting, gossiping and overindulging for another seven months, how will you gain any real or lasting benefit from those seven days of practise?


I would encourage all the lay people here, who are practising to develop awareness and wisdom, to understand this point. Try to practise consistently. See the disadvantages of practising insincerely and inconsistently, and try to sustain a more dedicated and continuous effort in the practice. Just this much. It can then become a realistic possibility that you might put an end to the kilesa (mental defilements). But that style of not speaking and not playing around for seven days, followed by six months of complete sensual indulgence, without any mindfulness or restraint, will just lead to the squandering of any gains made from the meditation – there won’t be anything left. It's like if you were to go to work for a day and earned twenty pounds, but then went out and spent thirty pounds on food and things in the same day; where would there be any money saved? It would be all gone. It’s just the same with the meditation.


This is a form of reminder to you all, so I will ask for your forgiveness. It’s necessary to speak in this way, so that those aspects of the practice, which are at fault, will become clear to you and accordingly, you will be able to give them up. You could say that the reason why you have come to practise is to learn how to avoid doing the wrong things in the future. What happens when you do the wrong things? Doing wrong things leads you to agitation and suffering, when there’s no goodness in the mind. It’s not the way to peace of mind. This is the way it is. If you practise on a retreat, not talking for seven days, and then go indulging for a few months, no matter how strictly you practised for those seven days, you won’t derive any lasting value from that practice. Practising that way, you don’t really get anywhere. Many places where meditation is taught don’t really get to grips with or get beyond this problem. Really, you have to conduct your daily life in a consistently calm and restrained way.


In meditation you have to be constantly turning your attention to the practice. It’s like planting a tree. If you plant a tree in one place and after three days pull it up and plant it in a different spot, then after a further three days pull it up and plant it in yet another place, it will just die without producing anything. 

Practising meditation like this won’t bear any fruit either. This is something you have to understand for yourselves. Contemplate it. Try it out for yourselves when you go home. Get a sapling and plant it one spot, and after every few days, go and pull it up and plant it in a different place. It will just die without ever bearing any fruit. It’s the same doing a meditation retreat for seven days, followed by seven months of unrestrained behaviour, allowing the mind to become soiled, and then going back to do another retreat for a short period, practising strictly without talking and subsequently coming out and being unrestrained again. As with the tree, the meditation just dies – none of the wholesome fruits are retained. The tree doesn’t grow, the meditation doesn’t grow. I say practising this way doesn’t bear much fruit.


Actually, I’m not fond of giving talks like this. It’s because I feel sorry for you that I have to speak critically. When you are doing the wrong things, it’s my duty to tell you, but I’m speaking out of compassion for you. Some people might feel uneasy and think that I’m just scolding them. Really, I’m not just scolding you for its own sake, I’m helping to point out where you are going wrong, so that you know. 

Some people might think, “Luang Por is just telling us off”, but it’s not like that. It’s only once in a long while that I’m able to come and give a talk – if I was to give talks like this everyday, you would really get upset! But the truth is, it’s not you who gets upset, it’s only the kilesa that are upset. I will say just this much for now.


[1] Nimitta: a sign or appearance that may take place as seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching or mental impression, and which arises from the citta (mind) itself rather than any of the physical senses. Examples of nimitta are: seeing or hearing beings in other realms of existence, precognition, clairvoyance, etc.



THE MIND READER MATIKA MATA

THE MIND READER MATIKA MATA


While residing at the Jetavana monastery, the Buddha uttered Verse (35) of this book, with reference to a certain bhikkhu.


On one occasion, sixty bhikkhus, after obtaining a subject of meditation from the Buddha, went to Matika village, at the foot of a mountain. There, Matikamata, mother of the village headman, offered them alms-food; she also built a monastery for them, so that they could stay in the village during the rainy season. One day she asked the group of bhikkhus to teach her the practice of meditation. They taught her how to meditate on the thirty-two constituents of the body leading to the awareness of the decay and dissolution of the body. 


Matikamata practised with diligence and attained the three Maggas and Phalas together with Analytical Insight and mundane supernormal powers, even before the bhikkhus did.


Rising from the bliss of the Magga and Phala she looked with the Divine Power of Sight (Dibbacakkhu) and saw that the bhikkhus had not attained any of the Maggas yet. She also learnt that those bhikkhus had enough potentiality for the attainment of arahatship, but that they needed proper food. So, she prepared good, choice food for them. With proper food and right effort, the bhikkhus developed right concentration and eventually attained arahatship.


At the end of the rainy season, the bhikkhus returned to the Jetavana monastery, where the Buddha was in residence. They reported to the Buddha that all of them were in good health and in comfortable circumstances and that they did not have to worry about food. They also mentioned about Matikamata who was aware of their thoughts and prepared and offered them the very food they wished for.


A certain bhikkhu, hearing them talking about Matikamata, decided that he, too, would go to that village. 


So, taking a subject of meditation from the Buddha he arrived at the village monastery. There, he found that everything he wished for was sent to him by Matikamata, the lay-devotee. 


When he wished her to come she personally came to the monastery, bringing along choice food with her. After taking the food, he asked her if she knew the thoughts of others, but she evaded his question and replied, "People who can read the thoughts of others behave in such and such a way." Then, the bhikkhu thought, "Should I, like an ordinary worldling, entertain any impure thought, she is sure to find out." He therefore got scared of the lay-devotee and decided to return to the Jetavana monastery. He told the Buddha that he could not stay in Matika village because he was afraid that the lay-devotee might detect impure thoughts in him. The Buddha then asked him to observe just one thing; that is, to control his mind. The Buddha also told the bhikkhu to return to Matika village monastery, and not to think of anything else, but the object of his meditation only. The bhikkhu went back. The lay-devotee offered him good food as she had done to others before, so that he might able to practise meditation without worry. Within a short time, he, too, attained arahatship.


With reference to this bhikkhu, the Buddha spoke in verse as follows:


Dunniggahassa lahuno

yatthakamanipatino1

cittassa damatho sadhu

cittam dantam sukhavaham2.


Verse 35:

“The mind is difficult to control;

swiftly and lightly, 

it moves and lands wherever it pleases. 

It is good to tame the mind, 

for a well-tamed mind brings happiness." .




Tuesday 22 September 2020

Dharma from Luang Pu Phuang. - Good deeds for parents

Dharma from Luang Pu Phuang.
- Good deeds for parents.


Since we have known Luang Pu Phuang, one thing that Luang Pu will teach often. It's about the merit of parents.


If Luang Pu sees or hears a child who comes to the temple to make merit with parents, but he talks bad things. He does bad verb to parents. He will preach for long time. It's called being held hard. If you do bad verb to your parents, let him see.


Luang Pu will teach that parents are the highest merit in our lives. Without both of us, we were born. We didn't grow up. This body, parents are the creator.


Luang Pu always says that you don't have to bring good things and good food to the monk. If we haven't provided them with good food like that to our parents.


He said that since she was in the mother's stomach, she cherish her. Allergic to the stomach. Trying to nourish herself for the child in the stomach. Even if she doesn't like it, she doesn't want to eat. But


Our birthday. Mother is hurt to death. Little one. Mother and father can't sleep. Take care of us to survive. Growing up and peeing. Parents never hate. Never complained.


Grow up. Parents teach, talk, teach, walk, nourish, take care of everything when we were young. We still obey parents. Still love parents. They are still stuck.


But when I grow up, I start arguing. I don't listen. I start to get addicted to friends. I start addicted to lovers.

When I want to make merit, I'm ′′ addicted to monks ′′


People often go out to do good things to others. Outside, go out to make merit with monks. But they forget to do good things and make merit with the most important people in life


Luang Pu always teaches that parents are the givers of life. Parents are the highest merit in our lives. Without parents, we can't be born. Even if parents may not have raised us, but the merit that they gave birth to our lives is great. We are not all replaceable.


Luang Pu always focuses on gratitude to parents. Giving back to the merit.


Luang Pu taught me that people in chest cuddle girls don't know the parents or troubled the parents. They won't be successful. They won't be successful because the karma that they did to parents is heavy karma.


And if we are going to expect the progress of Dharma, the first thing we need to have is gratitude. Otherwise, there is no way to prosper. There is no way to understand. Dharma is not free.


He said that he made merit. Start making merit with parents first then come out to make merit outside.


If you can't be good to your parents, the good deeds that you do to others. Do to monks or teachers loudly. It's meaningless.

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— with Suchin Kaewkeeyoon, Thanakrit Chaiphidech, ชอบ ตันรัตนาวงศ์ and 46 others.