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Saturday 29 October 2022

A Great Gift

A Great Gift


"Bhikkhus, here, a noble disciple, having abandoned the destruction of life, abstains from the destruction of life. 

By abstaining from the destruction of life, the noble disciple gives to an immeasurable number of beings freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. 

He himself in turn enjoys immeasurable freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. This is the first gift, a great gift, primal, of long standing, traditional, ancient, unadulterated and never before adulterated, which is not being adulterated and will not be adulterated and will not be adulterated, not repudiated by wise ascetics and brahmins.

This is the stream of merit, stream of the wholesome, nutriment of happiness- -heavenly, ripening in happiness, conducive to heaven--that leads to what is wished for, desired, and agreeable, to one's welfare and happiness."  

"Again, a noble disciple, having abandoned the talking of what is not given, abstains from talking what is not given. 

By abstaining from the taking what is not given, the noble disciple gives to an immeasurable number of beings freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. 

He himself in turn enjoys immeasurable freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. This is the second gift, a great gift, primal, of long standing, traditional, ancient, unadulterated and never before adulterated, which is not being adulterated and will not be adulterated, not repudiated by wise ascetics and brahmins.

This is the stream of merit, stream of the wholesome, nutriment of happiness- -heavenly ripening in happiness, conducive to heaven- -that leads to what is wished for, desired, and agreeable, to one's welfare and happiness."

"Again, a noble disciple, having abandoned from sexual misconduct, abstains from sexual misconduct. 

 By abstaining from sexual misconduct, the noble disciple gives to an immeasurable number of beings freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. 

He himself in turn enjoys immeasurable freedom from fear, enmity, and affliction. This is the third gift, a great gift, primal, of long standing, traditional, ancient, unadulterated and never before adulterated, which is not being adulterated and will not be adulterated, not repudiated by wise ascetics and brahmins.

This is the stream of merit, stream of the wholesome, nutriment of happiness- -heavenly, ripening in happiness, conducive to heaven- -that leads to what is wished for, desired, and agreeable, to one's welfare and happiness."

  

~ Bhikkhu Bodhi (trans.)


15th November, 2022





Friday 28 October 2022

❖ Why do monks wear robes of different colors? ❖ ~ by Ajahn Jayasaro ~

❖ Why do monks wear robes of different colors? ❖ 
~ by Ajahn Jayasaro ~ 

The bright yellow or orange - colored robes are usually worn by monks living in monasteries situated in the villages, towns and cities. The darker colored robes are usually worn by monks from forest monasteries. 

Most monks nowadays wear robes made of synthetic material. These robes are produced commercially in a variety of colors, bought by lay Buddhists, and then offered to monks. 

In most monasteries a set color is prescribed, but in some monasteries monks are free to wear whatever colored robe is offered to them, provided it lies within acceptable boundaries. 

In many forest monasteries monks still sew their own robes and dye them with color extracted from the heartwood of the jackfruit tree. The color of these robes varies according to the color of the wood used (which varies from a golden color through to orange-red), and to the age of the robe (which is only ever washed in a diluted solution of the dye, a weak astringent, and gets darker as it ages). 

(From “Without and Within, Sangha” by Ajahn Jayasaro) 

- - ❖ - -

To read the ebook, please visit ‘Without and Within', by Ajahn Jayasaro:

https://cdn.amaravati.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/11/Without-and-Within-by-Ajahn-Jayasaro.pdf

- - ❖ - -

For other teachings by Ajahn Jayasaro, please visit the Panyaprateep Foundation website:

https://www.jayasaro.panyaprateep.org/

- - ❖ - -

Photo: ‘Without and Within’


14th November, 2022






The Controversial Amulets of Ajaan Chah

The Controversial Amulets of Ajaan Chah


The thing about the Thai Forest Tradition, as it is known to us, is that it often plays down certain cultural elements to fit in with Western ideals of the path to arahantship. So many a times, we don't actually see the full picture of what our favourite monk was like. Many forest monks chewed betel nut, smoked, and had supernatural powers, e.g. Ajaan Lee was known to have relics manifesting and dropping around him, Luang Pu Chob was known to be visited by Devas, and our favourite Ajaan Chah, actually made or blessed quite a lot of amulets. 

Wat Nong Pah Pong may have issued a statement stating that the temple has never produced any amulets, but this was due to a misunderstanding during Luang Pu Chah's funeral where there were rumours of a LP Chah rian (coin) being released, so it did not want devotees to be scammed. That is why many people believe that the temple and Ajaan Chah had not produced any amulets. However, villagers who lived around the temple would tell a different story. 

It is said that Luang Pu Chah made or blessed most of his amulets from 1967-1977. As there is no official temple book released on the versions of LP Chah's amulets, it is difficult to compile an exact list of the amulets blessed or made by Ajaan Chah. LP Chah's first batch of Rian with his image is said to be produced in 1975. 

It is quite beautifully made and many fans of Ajaan Chah like to collect this. 

Other amulets are made from Phuttakun (Buddha Guna) or flower powder. There is even one commemorative amulet to memoralise Ajaan Chah's return from England, as well as Lockets and Loop Oms.

Just sharing for your information and reading pleasure. Not taking any sides in this debate. 

Cr: Various Sources, Dharma Gateway, Owners of the Amulets


13th November, 2022



Thursday 27 October 2022

The Teaching of Luang Phor Anan

The Teaching of Luang Phor Anan


Q: Where should a Phra Sivali statue be kept and how should we recollect Phra Sivali?

Luang Phor Anan: The statue should be next to the Buddha statue.

To recollect Phra Sivali, remember all the good things he did in order to become the foremost in gains, and how he received the good results of all those good actions. After reflecting like this you can feel fullness of heart, rapture, and happiness. Then build goodness yourself and you will be able to receive gains yourself.

A monk from America, Phra Jivako, once did a tudong of about 1,000 kilometers from Melbourne to Sidney. 

He asked for metta from me before his journey and I determined the goodness of Phra Sivali to help him on his journey. He had people put food in his bowl every day, and even, sometimes when he wished for coffee, someone would come to him and bring him coffee. This is truly miraculous. Devas can know one’s wishes and help in this way, with the power of Phra Sivali.

When we build goodness then devas come and help that person who has built goodness. They rejoice in the goodness of that person and support him or her in any lifetime that they are born into.

Phra Sivali had the faith to ordain as a monk. And when the preceptor shaved his head, before the first bunch of hair fell he attained to sotapanna, and then attained successively to sakadagami, anagami, and finally to arahant before he had finished shaving his head. And Phra Sivali, who was foremost in gains, because he had done many merits in the past, everywhere he would go, the devas would come and support. And he would let the devas rejoice. 

This is the parami he made since the past Buddha’s time by making a great offering of fresh honey. So by this power of goodness and the parami of Phra Sivali Maha Thera, may you all have gains wherever you go, whether far or near, may you all have success in all your aspirations, may you not be lacking in anything and may you not encounter any difficulties. May you have just fulfilment, happiness, and much wealth, and may you have devas supporting and looking after you.


Luang Phor Anan

Wat Marp Jan

Rayong Province


Cr: Wat Marp Jan Website


12th November, 2022





The teachings of Ajahn Jayasāro.

The teachings of Ajahn Jayasāro.


There is no way out of suffering for those who identify with it, or those who deny it.  There is no way out of suffering for those who consider it a random occurrence, or those who see it as a test or a punishment from a supreme being.  

There is a way out of suffering for those who gain faith in the Buddha's analysis of suffering as a conditioned state and who follow the Eightfold Path.  In the Upanisa Sutta, the Buddha revealed the causal process involved:

"With faith as proximate cause, well-being.

With well-being as proximate cause, zest.

With zest as proximate cause, tranquillity.

With tranquillity as proximate cause, happiness.

With happiness as proximate cause, samādhi.

With samādhi as proximate cause, the knowledge and vision of things as they really are.

With the knowledge and vision of things as they really are as proximate cause, disenchantment.

With disenchantment as proximate cause, dispassion.

With dispassion as proximate cause, liberation.

With liberation as proximate cause, the knowledge of ending."

"It's like when it rains heavily on a mountain top, and the water flows downhill to fill the hollows, crevices and creeks.  As they become full, they fill up the pools.  The pools fill up the lakes, the lakes fill up the streams, and the streams fill up the rivers.  And as the rivers become full, they fill up the ocean."


~ Ajahn Jayasāro


11th November, 2022





THE ROLE OF DESIRE IN THE BUDDHIST PATH

THE ROLE OF DESIRE IN THE BUDDHIST PATH


"All phenomena, the Buddha once said, are rooted in desire. Everything we think, say, or do--every experience--comes from desire. 

Even we come from desire. We were reborn into this life because of our desire to be. 

Consciously or not, our desires keep redefining our sense of who we are. Desire is how we take our place in the causal matrix of space and time. 

The only thing not rooted in desire is nirvana, for it's the end of all phenomena and lies even beyond the Buddha's use of the word "all." But the path that takes you to nirvana is rooted in desire--in skillful desires. 

The path to liberation pushes the limits of skillful desires to see how far they can go.

~

The notion of a skillful desire may sound strange, but a mature mind intuitively pursues the desires it sees as skillful and drops those it perceives as not. Basic in everyone is the desire for happiness. Every other desire is a strategy for attaining that happiness. 

You want an iPod, a sexual partner, or an experience of inner peace because you think it will make you happy. 

Because these secondary desires are strategies, they follow a pattern. They spring from an inchoate feeling of lack and limitation; they employ your powers of perception to identify the cause of the limitation; and they use your powers of creative imagination to conceive a solution to it.

~

But despite their common pattern, desires are not monolithic. Each offers a different perception of what's lacking in life, together with a different picture of what the solution should be. A desire for a sandwich comes from a perception of physical hunger and proposes to solve it with a Swiss‐on‐rye. A desire to climb a mountain focuses on a different set of hungers--for accomplishment, exhilaration, self‐mastery--and appeals to a different image of satisfaction. Whatever the desire, if the solution actually leads to happiness, the desire is skillful. If it doesn't, it's not. However, what seems to be a skillful desire may lead only to a false or transitory happiness not worth the effort entailed. So wisdom starts as a meta‐desire: to learn how to recognize skillful and unskillful desires for what they actually are...

~

...Most of us, when looking at the four noble truths, don't realize that they're all about desire. 

We're taught that the Buddha gave only one role to desire--as the cause of suffering. 

Because he says to abandon the cause of suffering, it sounds like he's denying any positive role to desire and its constructive companions: creativity, imagination, and hope. 

This perception, though, misses two important points:

The first is that all four truths speak to the basic dynamic of desire on its own terms: perception of lack and limitation, the imagination of a solution, and a strategy for attaining it. The first truth teaches the basic lack and limitation in our lives--the clinging that constitutes suffering--while the second truth points to the types of desires that lead to clinging: desires for sensuality, becoming, and annihilation. The third truth expands our imagination to encompass the possibility that clinging can be totally overcome. The fourth truth, the path to the end of suffering, shows how to strategize so as to overcome clinging by abandoning its cause.

~

The second point that's often missed is that the noble truths give two roles to desire, depending on whether it's skillful or not. Unskillful desire is the cause of suffering; skillful desire forms part of the path to its cessation. 

Skillful desire undercuts unskillful desire, not by repressing it, but by producing greater and greater levels of satisfaction and well‐being so that unskillful desire has no place to stand..."

❀❀❀

Thanissaro Bhikkhu

Excerpt from "Pushing the Limits: Desire and Imagination in the Buddhist Path"

~

You can read the complete talk here:

https://www.dhammatalks.org/books/PurityOfHeart/Section0007.html

or here:

eBook PURITY OF HEART

http://www.dhammatalks.org/Archive/Writings/purityofheart_v120208.pdf


10th November, 2022





The teachings of Ajahn Lee.

The teachings of Ajahn Lee.


“Our human minds rarely have any time to rest and relax. 

We all have things we keep thinking about. 

You could say that ever since we’ve learned human language, we’ve kept on thinking without any time to stop and rest. 

The mind keeps itself busy until it dies. 

If our bodies were this industrious, we’d all be millionaires. 

But when the mind doesn’t have any time to rest, it’s filled with the hindrances. 

That’s why it knows no peace. 

So we’re taught to practice concentration, letting go of thoughts about sensuality. 

In other words, we close off our sense doors, so that the mind isn’t involved with anything external, and we set our mind still and tall in the qualities of the Buddha, Dhamma, and Saṅgha. 

We don’t let it fall down into any sights, sounds, smells, tastes, or tactile sensations, which are sensual objects.

As for sensual defilements, we don’t let the mind fall into passion, aversion, or delusion. 

Sometimes our concentration practice goes as we want it to, and we get pleased and oblivious. 

Sometimes it doesn’t go as we’d like it to, and we get irritated and annoyed. 

These are cases of passion and aversion. 

As for delusion, sometimes when we sit we lose track of what we’re doing or where we are. 

We get distracted or absentminded and don’t know what’s going on, good or bad, right or wrong. 

This causes the mind to become dark and obscure. 

Sometimes we drift off into thoughts of the past and think about people who have done us wrong, so that we fall into ill will, wanting to get revenge and to settle an old score. 

In this way we harm ourselves by spoiling our practice. 

All three of these defilements—passion, aversion, and delusion—are piles of dried timber just waiting to catch fire, so we have to clear them completely out of the heart.

Mindfulness and alertness are the quality of the Buddha. 

The cool sense of happiness they give is the quality of the Dhamma. 

If you can maintain that coolness until it hardens into a block of ice—in other words, you make that goodness solid and strong in your heart—that’s the quality of the Saṅgha. 

Once you’ve got a solid block of goodness like this, you can pick it up and put it to any use you like. 

Whatever you say will give good results. 

Whatever you do will give good results. 

Your solid block of goodness will turn into a wish-fulfilling gem, bringing all sorts of happiness your way.”


Source: Living in Peace

by AJAHN LEE

https://www.dhammatalks.org/.../Heighten.../Section0013.html





9th November, 2022

The Moment of Death and the State of Death🥀

The Moment of Death and the State of Death🥀


Though we all have lived and died through countless rebirths, none of us can recall the experience of death. We do not know what death is really like. 

According to the sutras, when we die, we are still fully cognizant of all that are going on around us. We may hear the calm voice of the doctor announcing our death or the sound of our family grieving. We may still be able to see people gathering around our body, trying to move our body that is now empty of heartbeats and breathing. We may still worry about the many things that still need to be completed. We may feel ourselves moving among our family and friends, wanting to tell them what they should do. 

However, everybody is overcome with grief, and no one is able to see or hear us.

In the Reader's Digest, there was once an article about one man's near-death experience. 

One day while he was driving, he had a severe accident; the car was totally demolished, and he was killed on the spot. 

When the ambulance, paramedics, the police, and his family arrived on the scene, his consciousness had already left the body, and he felt himself floating in the air. He could hear over the din a group of people arguing about how the accident happened. 

So, he went over to the police officer and tried to tell him what actually happened. But the officer could neither hear nor see him. None of the others took notice of his presence nor could they see him. At this time, he only had his consciousness and was no longer in possession of his body. 

He finally became aware that he was floating outside his body, looking at his own body like an onlooker. He then found himself passing, at an incredible speed, through a long, dark, and narrow tunnel.

Another person spoke of his near-death experience when he suffered a severe head injury and was brought back from the brink of death. He said, "I remember my head went ‘boom,' and I lost consciousness. Afterward, I just felt warm, comfortable, and peaceful." 

This is because once one's consciousness leaves the body, the consciousness is no longer constrained and can therefore feel a level of comfort and serenity that it has never before experienced. 

Another person also has this to say of his near-death experience: "When I was dying, I had an extremely good, wonderful, and peaceful sensation." 

Another man described his experience this way: "I felt I was as light as a feather. I was flying freely toward a world of brightness!" 

Death is not as chilling and ghastly as we may have imagined.

In the sutras, it is written that our life in this world is cumbersome and clumsy, not unlike a tortoise that is weighted down by its heavy shell. 

When we die, we are able to get rid of this burden and transform an existence that has been confined by the limits of the physical body. 

However, when we are faced with death, most of us still try to hold on to the seven worldly emotions and the six sensual desires. We still cannot let go of our sons, daughters, grandchildren, or our wealth. 

We do not want to die and cannot accept death gracefully. 

We think of dying as a painful experience, like tearing the shell off of a living tortoise. 

Buddhism does not share this view of dying.

Buddhism teaches us that when we die, we are liberated from this body, and we feel extremely free and easy. It is like the relief of putting down a heavy piece of baggage. How light and free it is!

Whether we are smart or slow, good or bad, we all have to face death. 

Death is not a question of if, but a question of when and how. Even a powerful emperor like Emperor Chin-shih, who united the whole of China and became its first emperor, could not find any means to prolong his life. 

The mythical Peng Tsu might have lived to eight hundred years, but cosmologically, his life span was as short as that of an insect which lives only from morn till night. All beings that live must, without exception, also die. The difference lies only in the circumstances of death. The sutras divide the circumstances of death into four categories. 

1. Death upon exhaustion of one's life span.

This is what is called dying of old age. 

It is like a flickering flame that dies out naturally when its supply of oil is exhausted. 

We all like to live a nice long life, but a human life span has its limits. Life continues only with every breath we take, but as soon as we stop breathing, we die and are returned to the soil. There is a saying which goes like this: "Some only live from dawn till dusk. Others are born in spring or summer and die in autumn or winter. Some live for ten years, or a hundred, or even a thousand. Though we may live for a short or long time, is there really much difference?" What this says is that our life span has a limit, and no one can escape this reality.

2. Death upon exhaustion of one's merits.

It is said in the sutras, "Humans do not understand life and death; human eyes do not discern [karmic] merits and demerits." Life is like an air bubble on the surface of water; when the air inside the bubble dissipates, the bubble no longer exists. After a rich man has squandered his wealth, he becomes poor. 

Similarly, when we have exhausted our merits, death will soon be knocking on our doors.

3. Death caused by accidents.

This is what we call "premature death," which means that one dies when one is not supposed to. One may be killed in a car accident, ambushed in a war, murdered by an enemy, or attacked by a wild beast. 

Such deaths are sudden and unexpected. There is a Chinese proverb that is a fitting description of this kind of sudden death. It goes like this: "As long as one continues to breathe, possibilities abound. When death comes, everything comes to a standstill." 

4. Death at will.

The three circumstances of death described above are unpredictable and uncontrollable. On the contrary, death at will is without uncertainty and can be planned. In Buddhism, this is often referred to as "living and dying at will," and there are many great masters and Buddhist sages who can be born and die at will. They are not controlled by birth and death for they are totally in tune with the coming together and the breaking away of causes and conditions. 

Master Tao-an of the East Chin dynasty is a perfect example of such great masters. He was in total control of the passing of his life. On February 8th of the twentieth year of the Chien-yuan era, he assembled his disciples at the great hall of the Wu-chung temple in Chang-an. After praying and paying respect to the Buddha, he calmly told his disciples, "I am going to leave now! All of you should continue to spread the words of the Dharma and wake the ignorant up from their delusion."

Everyone was shocked and pleaded with the master, "Teacher, you are so healthy and strong. 

You should live for a long time to continue the work of the Buddha. How can you stop and leave us now? It is time for lunch; please have lunch first."

Tao-an answered, "Good, I'll have a little bit of lunch." 

Having said this, he ate his lunch as usual. 

After lunch, he returned to his room to rest, and he passed away while resting. Master Tao-an died at will, completely free of pain and suffering. If we practice the Dharma diligently, we can become free of karma, the force that binds us to death. 

We, too, can become enlightened and enter nirvana. 

Now that we have discussed the circumstances of death, let us turn our focus into another aspect of death. What are the sensations of death? The sutras tell us of three sensations experienced in death. 

They are:

1. The imbalance of the great earth element: When one dies of a disease of the body, one feels a sinking sensation as the body feels like a big piece of land sinking into the ocean. 

Slowly and gradually, the body is immersed and the person feels suffocated. The sensation associated with this kind of death is described as "the great earth element being taken over by the great water element."

2. The imbalance of the great water element: When one dies of circulatory diseases, one initially has a sensation of being submerged in water, feeling wet and cold. Later, this gives way to a burning sensation, and the person feels very, very hot. The sensation associated with this kind of death is described as "the great water element being engulfed by the great fire element."

3. The imbalance of the great fire element: When one dies of pulmonary diseases, one feels a burning sensation, like a wildfire burning at dusk. Then the body feels a biting pain as if being blown into pieces by strong gusts and being scattered about like ashes. The sensation associated with this kind of death is described as "the great fire element being swallowed by the great wind element."

We will next turn our discussion to what it is like immediately after death and before our next rebirth. The sutras tell us that because our body is transformed from a finite and bounded form to a limitless and formless state when we die, the way we feel immediately following death is not all bad. This may seem a bit surprising, but there are three good reasons to explain this. 

1. The limit of time and space: When we are alive, we are limited by time and space. We cannot travel simply by willing to be at a certain place, and we cannot revert the aging process that the passage of time brings upon us. 

Upon death, [and before our next rebirth,] we are liberated from the limits of the physical body, and our true nature can move about freely through the three realms of existence.

2. The burden of the body: It is said in the Dharmapada, "The physical body is the cause of all the sufferings on earth. The sufferings of hunger and thirst, hot or cold, anger and fear, lust, desires, hatred, and tragedy—all these stem from the existence of the body." 

When we are alive, we spend a lot of time taking care of our body. When we are hungry, we have to eat; when we are cold, we have to put on more clothing. When we are sick, we have to endure the pain. If we pause for a moment and take stock, we will notice that a lot of our concerns do pertain to the body. 

After death, the consciousness is no longer constrained by the confines of the body and all the problems associated with a physical body also vanish with it. There is no more hunger or sickness; a huge burden is lifted from our shoulders.

3. The supernatural element: While we are alive, our faculties are limited by our body. 

After death, we are no longer bound by the laws of physics. 

We will be able to see things that cannot be detected by the human eye. 

We will be able to hear sounds that cannot be heard by the human ear. We will be able to float freely in the air, as the force of gravity does not apply to us anymore. In this state, walls will not be able to stop us, and we will be able to travel simply by willing it. 

Death is not an end; it is not a finality. 

On the contrary, it is the beginning of another new existence. When we die, the physical body ceases to function, but the consciousness lives on. 

During the time after death and before the next rebirth, the consciousness is in a state referred to in Buddhism as the "intermediate being" state. 

Depending on the cumulative karma from previous lives, an intermediate being will be reborn into one of the six realms. Once reborn, all memories of past lives will be lost. This is called the "confusion of rebirth." Thus, we cannot recall any memories of our past lives, and when we are reborn in our next life, we will not recall any of the memories of this present life. A poem written by Emperor Shun Chin says it well, "Before I was born, who was I? After my birth, who am I? If this grown man is me, then who is the fellow after death?" 

Actually, it is not important for one to know one's past or future lives. From the Buddhist teachings, we learn that one never dies. What dies is the physical body, a combination of the four great elements. While the physical body dies, the consciousness continues without interruption. When we learn that the physical body is as lasting as a water bubble, then we begin to see the illusiveness of the world around us. We can then accept death without reservation.


http://www.abuddhistlibrary.com/Buddhism/D%20-%20Chinese%20Mahayana%20Buddhism/Authors/Hsing%20Yun/When%20We%20Die/19%20When%20We%20Die.htm


8th November, 2022






The Teaching of Luangta Maha Boowa

The Teaching of Luangta Maha Boowa


Being a Buddhist does not mean that you must be quiet or look solemn. If friends try to get you to go in a way which is unwholesome and you are observing the moral precepts, you should not follow them. You might lose your friends but you will not lose yourself. If you are satisfied that you have gone the way of wholesomeness, you should consider the Buddha as an example. He was a prince who had a large retinue and many friends. He renounced the world, gave up those friends, and went to dwell alone for many years. 

After he had attained Enlightenment, he was surrounded by friends and had many disciples who were Arahants (Pure Ones), monks as well as nuns, lay men and lay women, until the number of Buddhists was more than the population of the world. 

We all believe in the teachings of the Buddha, which unites the hearts and minds of all Buddhists. We therefore should not be afraid of having no friends. We should think, first of all, that our friends do not yet understand us, and so they drift away and no longer associate with us. Our way of practice in the way of wholesomeness still remains, however. We should see that there are still good people in the world!

Good people eventually meet and become friends with other good people, and these good people will be our friends. If there are no good people in the world, and if there is nobody interested in associating with us, then we should associate with the Dhamma in our hearts, which is better than friends who are not interested in goodness at all. 

Ordinarily, those good friends of yours will come back to you. You should therefore rest assured that if your heart is satisfied that you are going in a wholesome direction, then that is enough. 

You should not be concerned with or worry about others more than yourself. You should be responsible for yourself in the present and in the future, for there is nobody but yourself who can raise you up to a higher level.

~ Luangta Maha Boowa


7th November, 2022





"What would I do if I am born a human being?"

This is a popular post being shared by the Thais which I feel is quite meaningful, so I am translating for you guys - 

"What would I do if I am born a human being?"

The Heavenly Devas replied, "We will strive and practice the Dhamma and meditation. This is because the human body is the most convenient form in which to study and practice the Noble Eightfold Path. In the heavenly realms, there is too much partying, too much enjoyment, too much sensual pleasures distracting us from meditation."

The powerful Naga serpents replied, "We would ordain as monks and nuns. 

Last time, one of our own tried to ordain as a monk, but he was discovered by the Lord Buddha and had to leave the Sangha Order. If we can ordain as monks and nuns, we can practice the Path that leads to the End of Suffering, Nibbana. Nagas are supernaturally powerful but yet we can't ordain. What a pity!"

The Guardian Spirits of the Earth (土地公) replied, "If we are born as humans, we would definitely not miss a day of offering alms to monks going pindabat. Now we have to live on the offerings of people who offer food to us at our shrines. But we would rather make merit for ourselves, this is better."

The Animals replied, "If we were born as humans, we would do more for the welfare of other animals. Animals can't speak, and many of them are being mistreated by human beings, used for experiments in labs, killed for food, or being tortured. Humans are intelligent, they can use their wisdom to do good instead of evil."

The Hungry Ghosts replied, "If we were human, we would observe the 5 precepts. Now we have mouths with a hole as small as the width of a tiny needle, even if people offer food to us, we can't consume it! We are always hungry. If we observe the precepts, we won't have to be born in this state of woe."

The Hell Beings replied, "If we were human, we should have done more dana and tamboon. 

Make more merit, perfect our parami. Hell is so hot and full of unbearable pain, we can't make merit, we can't practice the Dhamma. We will not want to sin again!"

But Human Beings reply, "As a human, it is most important to accumulate wealth and properties. After that, I can enjoy life and party and enjoy myself to the fullest. I see everyone enjoying life on social media, especially the rich people. I want to be like them."

Despite more opportunities to practice than inhabitants of all other realms, we often miss our chance to. 


Cr. Amata Tham Thailand


6th November, 2022



In a devotee's own words: "LUANG POR JUMNEAN has saved many lives; one of them was me....

In a devotee's own words:
"LUANG POR JUMNEAN has saved many lives; one of them was me....


Recalling back in the year 2006, I was working in Singapore at that time. 

Who was it I do not know did a BLACK MAGIC spelled on me. 

This person first did it physically, but because I was wearing Buddhist amulet so the spell did not manage to get me. But one of my amulet cracked and the Tangkai which was on me just slip out from my waist...Imagine the Tangkai was tied to my waist very strongly just fell on the ground while I was showering. At that instance I felt something was wrong with me. I just ignored it.

Then as time goes by, my skin began to have spots and it's itchy. Each time when I scratch it, it began to bleed and was itchy. Friends saw and told me to see the doctor but I refused cause I knew that it's not a skin disease. I applied cream and it seems to get worst. 

Later on my bones was very painful and I had to limb while I was walking.

Every evening at about 7pm, I will start to have fever. And believe me as days passed I began to lose concentration in my work. Each day it's eating up my bones and it really hurts.

Then one day I received a call from my brother saying that Luang por Jumnean wants to see me and asked me to come back to KL because he's arriving. I kept telling my brother that I could not make it. He did not give up and kept trying to change my mind. I kept on telling him no I can't. 

In my life I have never said that I will not see Luang Por Jumnean whenever he's here in Malaysia. Then, I was asked to chant this "METTA PUTTO PUTTO AH HO SIT" it's a Metta of Loving Kindness given by Luang Por Jumnean. 

Trust me this is a very strong Metta. I chant this Metta very often. When I started to chant this, my mind started to change.

Then in the morning, I went to the bus terminal and catch the bus to KL. If I was late for 15 minutes, I would have not been able to come back. 

During my journey to KL, I could feel the pain that was in my head. It's much worse than migraine.

When I arrived that evening, I went straight to see Luang Por where he stayed. When I arrived Luang Por was resting and I met his disciple. 

My brother was there too and they were shocked to see me and immediately my tears starts to flow like a running tap. 

At 9 pm, Luang Por Jumnean came down to the hall and about to start his evening chanting. 

Before he starts, I went to see him and he looked at my hands and legs and told me, "You have been Black Magic". Then from that moment on he slowly healed me. 

For a month I was with him and that was the time he took it all out from me. 

Wherever he goes I was by his side. 

After 28 days, I was as clean as a newborn child. Luang Por Jumnean then accepted me as his God son and opened up a new road for me to pursue a new journey."


5th November, 2022





Chapter IV. Unusual Deaths and Extraordinary Deaths

Chapter IV. Unusual Deaths and Extraordinary Deaths


Some of you may ask this: How can death be wonderful and extraordinary? If we pause for a moment and think through this carefully, we will discover that the notion of a wonderful death is not at all far-fetched. When we have a correct understanding of the Buddha's teachings, we will see through the cloak of mystery about death and be totally at peace with both life and death. 

The Ch'an master Shan-chao of Fen-yang said it well, "One lives for all beings and dies for all beings."

There is a wonderful story about the way in which Shan-chao passed away. 

When Shan-chao was alive, there was a powerful magistrate by the name of Lee Hou. 

Lee had always wanted Shan-chao to become the abbot of Cheng-tien Temple and offered the position to the master on three separate occasions. When the master repeatedly declined the offer, Lee was furious. So, he ordered a messenger to go to the master and personally escort the master to the temple. As the messenger was about to leave, the magistrate told him explicitly, "Listen carefully, if you do not come back with the master, your life will not be spared!"

The messenger was petrified. He went to the Ch'an master and begged him to leave with him for Cheng-tien Temple. 

When the master learned of the predicament of the messenger, he realized he did not have much of a choice. He gathered all his disciples and told them, "On the one hand, I do not want to leave you all here to become the abbot of Cheng-tien Temple. On the other hand, if I take you all along, I am afraid you will not be able to keep up with me."

One of the disciples came up and said, "Master, I want to go with you. I can walk eighty miles a day."

The master shook his head and sighed, "Too slow. You cannot keep up with me."

Another disciple called out, "I will go; I can walk one hundred and twenty miles a day."

The master also shook his head and said, "Too slow, too slow."

The disciples looked at each other in puzzlement. They wondered: How fast can the master travel? At that moment, another disciple quietly came forward. He bowed to the master and said, "Master, I understand. I will go with you."

The master asked, "How fast can you walk?" 

The disciple replied, "However fast you can travel, I can too."

Hearing this, the master smiled and said, "Very well, let's go!"

Smiling and without so much of a stir, the Ch'an master passed away. The disciple who had volunteered stood respectfully beside the master and passed away, too. How carefree it is to leave this world at will!

The Ch'an master Te-pu of the Sung dynasty was equally charming when he passed away. 

One day, he gathered his disciples around him and said, "I am about to leave you. 

Though I am curious about the kind of funeral arrangements you will prepare for me, I am not sure if I have the time to come back and enjoy your offerings. Rather than we all worrying about each other after I depart, why don't we spend some time together and enjoy the offerings now."

The disciples felt their teacher was acting very strangely, but they dared not disobey their teacher. They prepared the funeral service and paid their respects to their teacher thinking it was all a joke. The next day, Te-pu did indeed pass away. 

Some of you may think it is very strange to have the funeral service before one passes away, but it is actually quite humorous and practical. 

There is an old Chinese saying which captures this sentiment well. It goes like this, "Offering a drop of water to a person while he is alive is better than offering him fountains of water after he departs the world." It is better that we are respectful to our parents while they are alive than to give them an elaborate funeral service when they pass away. 

The Ch'an master Tsung-yuan of the Sung dynasty also looked at death without attachment. He was eighty-three when he attained enlightenment and was neither attached to life nor to death. When he felt it was time for him to leave this world, he did it with grace and dignity. He even composed an elegy for himself:

In this world, none of us should live beyond our time, 

For after death, we all eventually become dusts in the grave. 

As I am now eighty and three; 

I write this elegy to bid my body farewell. 

The manner in which the Ch'an master Hsing-kung passed away is also legendary. 

At that time, there was a ferocious bandit by the name of Hsu Ming. He killed many people and caused a great deal of suffering. Hsing-kung could not bear to see the villagers suffer, so he decided to go and plead with the bandit. 

Though he realized that his life was in great danger, he had no fear. 

While he ate his meal with the bandit, he wrote this elegy for himself:

Faced with calamity in the midst of upheaval, I am a jolly and fearless fellow. 

There is no time more perfect than now, Cut me in half if you please. 

Hsing-kung's compassion and courage converted the bandit, and many lives were saved because of him. Later, when the master realized the end of his life was at hand, he told his disciples that he wanted to die floating on the river. His disciples prepared him a tub and punched a hole at the bottom of the tub. The master climbed in with a flute in his hand. The tub floated down the river amid the music of the flute. The master also left behind a poem about why he chose to leave the world this way. The poem goes like this:

A sitting or standing death cannot compare to a floating departure.

It saves firewood and the ground is not disturbed.

Leaving empty-handed is quite free and joyous.

Who can understand me? Venerable Chuan-tzu can.

At the turn of the century, there was a monk in Rangoon, Burma by the name of Miao-shan. In 1934, Miao-shan became ill with heat stroke and malnutrition. 

Huge boils grew on his feet and back. 

Even so, he continued to make prostrations to the Buddha on the hot cobblestones. The boils opened and became infected, with pus and blood oozing out. He was unfazed by his condition and refused medical treatment. He did not even want to take a bath, and nobody knew what to do. On the day of his death, one of his disciples again suggested that he should take a bath. 

This time, the venerable nodded and replied, "I am glad that you asked me to take a bath; it is time." Having said this, he went into the bathroom and happily took his bath. The disciple, who was worried about the venerable, stood by the door and urged the venerable to take a real good bath to cool off his body. The venerable chuckled and replied through the door, "I know. I will take a good bath today as this is my last bath." 

Several hours passed. His disciple could only hear the sound of running water, but the venerable was nowhere in sight. He pushed the door open, only to discover that the venerable had passed away. The venerable was still standing, but his heart had stopped. When we can let go of our attachments, we will no longer fear death.

There are many more examples of Ch'an masters dying peaceful deaths. 

The Ch'an master Tan-hsia Tien-jan died leaning on his walking staff. 

Venerable Hui-hsiang died kneeling down with a sutra in his hand. 

The Ch'an master Liang-chieh of the Tang dynasty had complete control over the timing of his death; he was asked to stay alive for seven more days and he did. The Ch'an master Yu-an came back to life after he had been in his coffin for three days. 

The Ch'an master Ku-ling Shen-tsan asked his disciples, "Do you know what soundless samadhi means?" 

When his disciples answered their master in the negative, the master closed his lips tightly and died instantly. The ways in which Pang Yun and his family passed away were even more varied and interesting. His daughter Ling-chao sat on her father's chair and passed away, while Pang Yun himself lay down to die. 

When his son, who was working in the fields, heard of their passing away, he put down his plow and died while standing. The wife of Pang Yun saw that all of them had passed away, so she pushed open a gap in a boulder and went inside. 

Before she went into the boulder, she left behind this verse:

To die while sitting, lying down, or standing is not unusual Mrs. Pang simply let go and departed.

With both hands she pushed open a seamless rock and left without a trace for others to see.

When we have the wisdom to see through life and death, we, too, can pass away as painlessly and effortlessly as some of the Ch'an masters we talked about today. With birth comes death. 

Whether we are Buddhists or not, we still have to face death one day. 

Hopefully, with the Buddha's teachings, we can understand life, and therefore death. We should not be fearful of death, for death is nothing but a natural phenomenon. When we are prepared in life, then we are hopeful of what follows after death.

We make provisions for everything in life. We keep a flashlight in case of emergency or blackout. We have an umbrella for rainy days. 

We pack food for long trips, and we change our wardrobes for the coming of a new season. 

Likewise, we should prepare ourselves spiritually for the day when death comes knocking on our door. 

Not only should we rest our hopes in the present, we should also be mindful of life after death. Amid the impermanence of life and death, we should keep in mind that the Dharma-body is eternal and the wisdom-life is timeless. Our buddha nature is everlasting!

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chan_Buddhism

https://taiwantoday.tw/news.php?post=25692&unit=20,29,35,45


4th November, 2022








Wat Samphanthawong Monastery Geelong

Wat Samphanthawong Monastery Geelong
A Buddhist Monastery in Thai Forest Tradition of Ajahn Mun
85 Tillys Road, Lara, VIC 3212, 
Tel.: (03) 5275 5095


The following short biographical account of the life of Luang Pu (LP) Jia is taken from the Thai language book, Autobiography of Luang Pu Jiak Cundo: The Monk Who is Like “Gold Wrapped in a Rag.”

LP Jiak was a disciple of the late forest meditation master LP Mun (Bhūridatta Mahā Thera 1870–1949). 

He was one of a small group of monks in the wandering dhutaṅga tradition following LP Mun, like a “calf following its mother.” Wherever the cow goes, its calf will move towards it without any fear or hesitation. 

Likewise, whatever LP Jiak had in mind, he would bring it out to discuss freely and boldly with LP Mun. 

He reckoned that “the one who practises seriously and intensely will achieve Dhamma.”

LP Jiak was born on 6 June 1916 at Tambon Klong Naam Khem, Laem Sing District, of Chanthaburi province. He was the fourth child in his family and had a total of eight siblings.

His father, Sunchae Phothikit, was a migrant from China who earned his living by trading. He had come to settle in Klong Naam Khen (Thailand) in his twenties, where he met and married Fae Phothikit. After their marriage, they moved to stay at Tambon Nong Bua. Both they and their parents had strong faith in Buddhism.

When young, LP Jiak was named Ow Jiak, which means “black stone,” because he had a black birthmark on his back. Apparently, the word “Ow Jiak” also had a Dhamma interpretation.

People who have such birthmarks are usually firm and strong-minded like rock or laterite. They can endure any heat or cold, happiness or suffering (dukkha), and can handle all kinds of situations. This is like the Dhamma reminding us to be firm, strong, and stable like a rock. 

Whatever clean or dirty stuff people throw at the rock, it doesn’t react. We should not be trapped into any deluded emotions that lure us. LP’s name was later shortened to Jia, which means ‘eat.’

As a young lad, he never bothered much about bad deeds or good deeds. He was a serious person, blunt and never afraid of anybody. He concentrated only on working to earn a living. He couldn’t even recite, “Namo Tassa,” and didn’t understand when the monks taught Dhamma on the six-sense bases: eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body, and consciousness. He thought to himself, “What is that monk talking about?” Later on, when he was ordained as a monk, he realized that this was the Dhamma concerned with dependent co-arising that emphasizes the realization of mental processes and perceptions right at the body’s senses.

He was a one-woman man, and only had one heart for the only woman, Paeng. He gave her a promise that he would ordain for his mother for only one rains retreat and would marry Paeng after disrobing. At first, he thought of her a lot. But as his meditation skill began to develop, he was able to realize the reality of the ugliness of the body, covered with skin and filled with blood, etc. When he went on piṇḍapāta (alms round), his mind was playing around with him. 

However, after his mind had come to realization, he told Paeng when he met her during an alms round one day that he had decided not to disrobe. He had made up his mind that he wouldn’t be the slave of anybody’s desire (taṇhā) or defilements (kilesa) anymore.

He was supposed to be conscripted into the military before turning twenty years old and had to complete military service prior to ordination. However, he was not recruited because the army wanted only forty new soldiers that year and they already had forty young men.

LP Jiak was ordained on 11 July 1937 at Wat Chanthanaraam, Chanthaburi Province. Than Phor Lee Dhammadharo was his Ordination Teacher. His monk’s name was Cundo. He was 21 years, 1 month, and 5 days old at the time of ordination. He was the first monk who had Than Phor Lee as the Ordination Teacher. After the ordination at Wat Chanthanaraam, he went to live at Wat Saai-ngaam for three years, studying with Phra Ajaan Kongmaa.

LP Jiak met Than Phor Fuang during his first rains retreat, and later they set out together to search for LP Mun after hearing about him from their teachers. He first met LP Mun at Wat Raang Paa Daeng and later became a close disciple to LP Mun. He had high respect for LP Mun and was impressed with LP Mun’s ability of to read peoples’ minds and predict the future. 

During the later stages of LP Mun’s life, LP Jiak spent much time attending to and nursing him.

LP Jiak also had the opportunity to live in LP Sao’s temple, Wat Don Taat, and to serve LP Sao, as instructed by LP Mun. He was by LP Sao’s side when the latter passed away on 3 February 1942, and he arranged for LP Sao’s bodily remains to be transported back across the Maekhong River to Ubon. There he subsequently organised the funeral ceremony.

Among the monks in the lineage of LP Mun, LP Jiak was well known and widely acknowledged for his insight into the Dhamma. His unorthodox conduct and brusque manner were like a curtain that blocked the discernment or the ordinary eyes of human beings from seeing his inner reality. Generally, people like to look at external beauty. They never go back to look inside the mind. Therefore, they cannot see or tell, and are not aware of what it is or will happen in the mind. The nature of a purified mind is not misleading like external appearances or verbal manners.

The early first generation disciples of LP Mun, such as LP Teu Acaladhammo, LP Fan Ācāro, LP Chorp Ṭhānasamo, LP Lui Candasāro, LP Khao Anālayo, Phra Ajaan Maha Boowa Nyanasampanno, were accomplished forest meditation masters themselves. They were also LP Jiak’s teachers and regularly came to visit him and discuss Dhamma whenever they knew where he was. This showed the close bond and mutual respect between these monks.

In November 1949, while staying at Huay Yaang, LP Jiak had a vision of LP Mun lying dead and naked. It was as if LP Mun wanted to display something to him. It seemed as though he was leaving Saṁsāra for the liberation realm, Anupadisesa Nibbāna, transcending the defilements by leaving behind the five aggregates. He was entering into the single Path of pure Dhamma (Visuddhi Dhamma). On the next day, news came through the radio that LP Mun had passed away the night before.

LP Jiak’s conduct and practice were very simple, with the emphasis on development of insight. 

He discouraged individuals coming to him to talk about mundane trivia or personal issues. He was often not easy to approach and was sometimes criticised for his “uncouth” behaviour by monks and laypeople who did not know him well.

According to Phra Ajaan Maha Boowa, LP Jiak was “very meticulous inside while loud outside.” 

However, in terms of inner qualities, no one excelled him. No one should ever look down upon his insight and virtue, as it is much brighter than any of us could imagine. In fact Phra Ajaan Maha Boowa praised him as “gold wrapped in a rag” — the “rag” referring to his crude and coarse exterior. “You are like a golden Buddha image covered with cement. I am now breaking it off to show the valuable thing inside. As long as people do not know, they will not realize its value. Once they know, it will be tremendously useful for them.”

LP Jiak did not bother much about the beauty of personal conduct and manners; instead, he was exquisite and beautiful according to the Dhamma. He always said that there was no need to feel embarrassed if one’s actions are not faulty according to the Vinaya, but one should feel embarrassed if they were.

Whenever anyone came close and listened to his teaching or asked him about the trouble they had regarding their insight meditation practice, he would know how to respond and guide them in the right direction straight away. After listening to him, those who had doubts in him or thought he was a fake often changed their opinions. They would often be astonished when listening to his Dhamma teaching.

LP Jiak served as abbot of four monasteries:

Wat Khao Kaew

Wat Saai Ngaam

Wat Nyāna-sangwararam

Wat Paa Bhūridatta Patipataaram.

He was also one of the teachers of Phra Ajaan Keng Khemako, having met him in 1988.

On 3 February 1996 (B.E. 2539), LP Jiak laid the foundation stone for the construction of Bhūridatta Chedi to enshrine a tooth relic of LP Mun. The chedi was designed with an octagonal shape in the Sukhothai style (Song Phum Khao Bin). The octagonal shape stood for the noble eightfold path, the Lord Buddha’s path to Awakening. It is an iron-reinforced concrete structure 22 metres wide and 37 metres high, representing the 37 bodhi-pakkhiya dhammas, the Wings to Awakening: the key teachings that the Buddha reminded his disciples to adhere closely in order to ensure that Buddhism and its practice will endure for a long time. This chedi was LP Jiak’s masterpiece, dedicated to his teacher, LP Mun.

In 2001, LP Jiak suffered a severe stroke and spent several months in hospital. He passed away on 23 August 2004, at the age of 88, after spending a total of 68 years in the Saṅgha.


3rd November, 2022






Vedanā in the Practice of Satipațthāna.

 Vedanā in the Practice of Satipațthāna.

 

The practice of the four-fold satipatthäna, the establishing of awareness, was highly praised by the Buddha in the suttas (discourses). Mentioning its importance in the Mahäsatipathana-sutta, the Buddha called it ekäyano maggo-"the only way for the purification of beings, for overcoming sorrow, for the extinguishing of suffering, for entering the path of truth and experiencing nibbana (liberation)."

In this sutta, the Buddha presented a practical method for developing self- knowledge by means of käyanupassand (constant observation of the body), vedandnupassand of sensation), cittänupassand  (constant observation observation of the mind), and dhammanupassand (constant observation of the contents of the mind). 

To explore the truth about ourselves, we must examine what we are: body and mind. We must learn to directly observe these within ourselves. 

Accordingly, we must keep three points in mind: 

1) The reality of the body may be imagined by contemplation, but to experience it directly one must work with vedand (bodily sensation) arising within it. 

2) Similarly, the actual experience of the mind is attained by working with the contents of the mind. Therefore, as body and sensation cannot be experienced separately, the mind cannot be observed apart from the contents of the mind. 

3) Mind and matter are so closely interrelated that the contents of the mind always manifest themselves as sensation in the body. 

For this reason the Buddha said: 

Vedanā-samosaraņā sabbe dhammä. Whatever arises in the mind is accompanied by sensation. 

Therefore, obscrvation of sensation offers a means-indeed the only means-to examine the totality of our being, physical as well as mental.

There are four dimensions to our nature:

 The body and its sensations, and the mind and its contents. These provide four avenues for the establishing of awareness in satipatthäna.

In order that the observation be complete, every facet must be experienced, as it can by means of vedand

This exploration of truth will remove the delusions we have about ourselves. 

Likewise, to come out of the delusion about the world outside, the truth about the contact of the outside world with our own mind-and- matter phenomenon must be explored. 

The outside world comes in contact with the individual only at the six sense doors: 

The eye,  ears, nose, tongue, body and mind. 

As all these sense doors are contained in the body, every contact of the outside world is at the body level. 

According to the law of nature, with every contact there is bound to be sensation. Every time there is a contact with any of the six sense objects, a sensation will arise on the body. 

Therefore, just as the understanding of vedanā is absolutely essential to understand the interaction between mind and matter within oursclves, the same understanding of vedand is essential to understand the interaction of the outside world with the individual. If this exploration of truth to be attempted by contemplation or intellectualization, we could have easily ignored the importance of vedanā.  

The Buddha's teaching is the necessity of understanding the truth not merely at the intellectual level, but by direct experience. 

For this reason vedand is defined were as follows: 

Ya vedeti ti vedanä, sävedayati lakkhaņā, anubhavanarasă...' 

That which feels the object is vedanā; its characteristic is to experience, its function is to realize the object... However, merely to feel the sensations within is not enough to remove our delusions. Instead, it is essential to understand the ti-lakkhana (three characteristics) of all phenomena. 

We must directly experience anicca (impermanence), dukkha (suffering), (substancelessness) within and anatta ourselves. Of these three the Buddha always gave importance to anicca because the realization of the other two will easily follow when we have experienced deeply the characteristic of impermanence. 

In the Meghiya-sutta of the Udana he said: Aniccasaññino hi, Meghiya, anattasaññā santhāti, anattasaññi asmimānasamugghätam papuņāti dițtheva dhamme nibbānam. 

In him, Meghiya, who is conscious of impermanence the consciousness of what is substanceless is established. He who is conscious of what is substanceless wins the uprooting of the pride of egotism in this very life, namely, he realizes nibbāna. Therefore, in the practice of satipațthaāna, the experience of anicca, arising and passing away, plays a crucial role. 

The Mahasatipatthữna sutta begins with the observation of the body. Here several different starting points are explained: observing respiration, giving attention to bodily movements, ctc. 

It is from these points that we progressively can develop vedanānupassanā, dhammanupassanā. 

However, no matter where the journey starts, there come stations through which everyone must pass on the way to the final goal. These are described in important sentences repeated not only at the end of each section of kayanupassand but also at the end of vedanānupassanā, cittänupassand and each section of dhammānupassand


They are: 

1. Samudaya-dhammänupassi vä viharati 

2. Vaya-dhammänupassi vā viharati 

3. Samudaya-vaya-dhammänupassi vä viharati. 

1. One dwells observing the phenomenon of arising. 

2. One dwells observing the phenomenon ofpassing away. 

3. One dwells observing the phenomenon of arising and passing away. 

These sentences reveal the essence of the practice of satipatthäna. Unless these three levels of anicca are practised, we will not have wisdom. Therefore, in order to practise any of the four-fold satipatthäna one has to develop the constant thorough understanding of impermanence known as sampajañña in Pali. 

In other words, one must meditate on the arising and passing away of phenomena (anicca-bodha), objectively observing mind and matter without reaction. The realization of samudaya-vaya-dhamma (impermanence) should not be merely a contemplation, or process of thinking, or imagination or even believing; it should be performed with paccanubhoti (direct experience). 

Here the observation of vedand plays its vital role, because with vedand a meditator very clearly and tangibly realizes samudaya-vaya (arising and passing away)." 

Sampajañña in fact is knowing the arising and passing away of vedanā and thereby all four facets of our being. It is for this reason that in each of the four satipatthāna, being sampajāno, as well as being ātāpī (ardent) and satimā (aware) are essential qualities and the three are invariably repeated for each of the satipatthāna

And as the Buddha explained, sampajañña is observing the arising and passing away of vedanā." 

Hence the part played by vedanā in the practice of satipațthāna should not be ignored, or this practice of satiputthāna will not be complete.

In the words of the Buddha: 

Tisso imā, bhikkhave, vedanā. Katamā tisso? Sukhā vedanā, dukkhā vedanā, adukkhamasukhā vedanā-imā kho, bhikkhave, tisso vedanā. Imāsam kho, bhikkhave, tissannam vedanānam pariññāya cattāro satipațthänä bhāvetabbā." 

Meditators, there are three types of bodily sensations. 

What are the three? 

Pleasant sensations, unpleasant sensations and neutral sensations. 

Practise, meditators, the four-fold satiputthana for the complete understanding of these three sensations. 

The practice of satipațthāna is complete only when one directly experiences impermanence. Bodily sensation provides the nexus where the entire mind and body are tangibly revealed as an impermanent phenomenon leading to liberation.


{SD}

Source:

Vipassana Research Institute


2nd November, 2022






“Today I brought the Crown of the Buddha to offer you. Invite to be with you. If not, that’s fine as well. Your aspiration will be successful for sure. Next you will become a Buddha.”

 “Today I brought the Crown of the Buddha to offer you. Invite to be with you. If not, that’s fine as well. Your aspiration will be successful for sure. Next you will become a Buddha.”


~ Luang Pu Budda speaking to Luang Pu Doo when he came to visit

This account was written down by Ajaan Suparat Saengchan, one of Luang Pu Doo’s prominent lay disciples with psychic power. Ajaan Suparat was present during the meeting of the two great geijis. 

But Ajaan Suparat later revealed to his disciples that he did not write down the words of Luang Pu Budda exactly as he had said it. This was because he was afraid that people who did not believe would slander Luang Pu and get a lot of evil kamma as a result. 

Ajaan Suparat mentioned that the sentence he wrote, “Next you will become a Buddha” wasn’t exactly accurate. What Luang Pu Budda actually said was, “You will become the next Buddha.”

Ajaan Suparat switched the position of the words “ต่อไป” (next)  from the back to the front to make it more vague so that people would not disbelieve and slander Luang Pu Doo. 

But now that so many people had visions and experiences with Luang Pu Doo and know that he is the incarnation of Maitreya Bodhisatta, his disciples have revealed the truth.


Namo Bodhisatto Promapanyo 🙏🙏🙏


Admin: Luang Pu Budda was famous for his blessed talcum powder. He offered it to Luang Pu Doo who accepted it and rubbed it on his head. When his disciples asked why, Luang Pu Doo simply said that it was the blessing of an Arahant and he should accept it.


1st November, 2022