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Showing posts with label Ajahn Chah. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ajahn Chah. Show all posts

Friday, 13 October 2023

The teachings of Ajahn Chah

The teachings of Ajahn Chah


Use the mind to contemplate the body so that you’re familiar with it. When you’re familiar with it, you’ll see that it’s not for sure — every part of it is inconstant. 

When you see in this way, your mind will give rise to a sense of disenchantment—disenchanted with the body and mind because they’re not for sure, they’re unreliable. So you want to find a way out, a way to gain release from suffering and stress.

It’s like a bird in a cage: It sees the drawbacks of not being able to fly anywhere, so its mind is obsessed with finding a way out of the cage. It’s fed up with the cage where it lives. 

Even if you give it food to eat, it’s still not happy, because it’s fed up with the cage where it’s imprisoned.

The same with our heart: When it sees the drawbacks of the inconstancy, stressfulness, and not-selfness of physical and mental phenomena, it will try to contemplate how to escape from that cycle of wandering-on.


~ Ajahn Chah


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Wednesday, 30 August 2023

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah.


There are a million ways to practice Dhamma. There’s no end to the things that can be said about meditation. 

There are so many things that can make us doubt. Just keep sweeping them out, then there’s no more doubt! 

When we have right understanding like this, no matter where we sit or walk, there is peace and ease. Wherever we may meditate, that’s the place you bring your awareness. Don’t hold that one only meditates while sitting or walking. 

Everything and everywhere is our practice. There’s awareness all the time. There is mindfulness all the time. We can see birth and death of mind and body all the time and we don’t let it clutter our hearts. Let it go constantly. If love comes, let it go back to its home. If greed comes, let it go home. If anger comes, let it go home. Follow them! Where do they live? Then escort them there. Don’t keep anything. If you practice like this you are like an empty house. Or, explained another way, this is an empty heart, a heart empty and free of all evil. We call it an ‘empty heart’, but it isn’t empty as if there was nothing, it’s empty of evil but filled with wisdom. Then whatever you do, you’ll do with wisdom. You’ll think with wisdom. You’ll eat with wisdom. There will only be wisdom.


~ Ajahn Chah


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2 September 2023




Sunday, 30 July 2023

The Teachings of Ajahn Chah

The Teachings of Ajahn Chah


In every home and in every community, whether we live in the city, the countryside, the forests or the mountains, we are the same in experiencing happiness and suffering. So many of us lack a place of refuge, a field or garden where we can cultivate positive qualities of heart. We experience this spiritual poverty because we don’t really have commitment; we don’t have clear understanding of what this life is all about and what we ought to be doing. From childhood and youth until adulthood, we only learn to seek enjoyment and take delight in the things of the senses. We never think that danger will threaten us as we go about our lives, making a family and so on.

If we don’t have land to till and a home to live in, we are without an external refuge and our lives are filled with difficulty and distress. Beyond that, there is the inner lack of not having sīla and Dhamma in our lives, of not going to hear teachings and practice Dhamma. As a result there is little wisdom in our lives and everything regresses and degenerates. The Buddha, our supreme teacher, had mettā for beings. He led sons and daughters of good families to be ordained; to practice and realize the truth, to establish and spread the Dhamma to show people how to live in happiness in their daily lives.


(Ajahn Chah)



13 August 2023




Saturday, 8 July 2023

INSIGHT FROM AJAHN CHAH:

 INSIGHT FROM AJAHN CHAH:


“Therefore the Buddha taught us to develop the path. We can divide it up into morality, concentration and wisdom-develop them to completion. 

This is the path of practice which destroys the world. Where is this world? It is just in the minds of beings infatuated with it! The action of clinging to praise, gain, fame, happiness and unhappiness is called 'world'. 

When these things are there in the mind, then the world arises, the worldly being is born. The world is born because of desire. Desire is the birthplace of all worlds. To put an end to desire is to put an end to the world.”


_/\_ _/\_ _/\_


17 July 2023




Wednesday, 14 June 2023

The teachings of Ajahn Chah💠

The teachings of Ajahn Chah💠


Nothing happens immediately, so in the beginning we can't see any results from our practice. This is like the example that I have often given of the man who tries to make fire by rubbing two sticks together. He says, "They say there's fire here!" He then begins rubbing energetically. 

He's very impetuous. He rubs on and on, but his impatience doesn't end. He wants to have that fire, but the fire just doesn't come, so he gets discouraged and stops to rest for a while. He starts again, but by then the initial heat he had has disappeared, so the going is slow. He just doesn't keep at it long enough. He rubs and rubs until he is tired and then stops altogether. Not only is he tired, but he becomes discouraged. 

"There's no fire here!" He finally decides and gives up completely.

Actually he was doing the work, but there wasn't enough heat to start the fire. The fire was there all the time, but he didn't carry on to the end. 

Until we are able to reach peace, the mind will continue as before. For this reason the teacher says, "Just keep on doing it. Keep on with the practice!" Maybe we think , "If I don't, yet understand, how can I do it?" Until we are able to practice properly, wisdom won't arise. So we say just keep on with it. If we practice without stopping, we'll begin to think about what we are doing, and consider our practice. 


~ Ajahn Chah


16 June 2023




Thursday, 4 May 2023

THE TEACHINGS OF AJAHN CHAH The Training of the Heart

THE TEACHINGS OF AJAHN CHAH
The Training of the Heart


"In the time of Ajahn Mun and Ajahn Sao life was a lot simpler, a lot less complicated than it is today. In those days monks had few duties and ceremonies to perform. They lived in the forests without permanent resting places. 

There they could devote themselves entirely to the practice of meditation.

In those times one rarely encountered the luxuries that are so commonplace today, there simply weren't any. One had to make drinking cups and spittoons out of bamboo and lay people seldom came to visit. 

One didn't want or expect much and was content with what one had. One could live and breathe meditation!

The monks suffered many privations living like this. If someone caught malaria and went to ask for medicine, the teacher would say, You don't need medicine! Keep practicing. Besides, there simply weren't all the drugs that are available now. All one had were the herbs and roots that grew in the forest. The environment was such that monks had to have a great deal of patience and endurance; they didn't bother over minor ailments. 

Nowadays you get a bit of an ache and you're off to the hospital!

Sometimes one had to walk ten to twelve kilometers on almsround. You would leave as soon as it was light and maybe return around ten or eleven o'clock. One didn't get very much either, perhaps some glutinous rice, salt or a few chilis. Whether you got anything to eat with the rice or not didn't matter. That's the way it was. No one dared complain of hunger or fatigue; they were just not inclined to complain but learned to take care of themselves. They practiced in the forest with patience and endurance alongside the many dangers that lurked in the surroundings. There were many wild and fierce animals living in the jungles and there were many hardships for body and mind in the ascetic practice of the Dhutanga or Forest-Dwelling monk. Indeed, the patience and endurance of the monks in those days was excellent because the circumstances compelled them to be so.

In the present day, circumstances compel us in the opposite direction. In ancient times, one had to travel by foot; then came the oxcart and then the automobile. Aspiration and ambition increased, so that now, if the car is not air-conditioned, one will not even sit in it; impossible to go if there is no air-conditioning! 

The virtues of patience and endurance are becoming weaker and weaker.

The standards for meditation and practice are lax and getting laxer, until we find that meditators these days like to follow their own opinions and desires. 

When the old folks talk about the old days, it's like listening to a myth or a legend. You just listen indifferently, but you don't understand. It just doesn't reach you!

As far as we should be concerned about the ancient monks' tradition, a monk should spend at least five years with his teacher. Some days you should avoid speaking to anyone. Don't allow yourself to speak or talk very much. Don't read books! 

Read your own heart instead. Take Wat Pah Pong for example. These days many university graduates are coming to ordain. I try to stop them from spending their time reading books about Dhamma, because these people are always reading books. They have so many opportunities for reading books, but opportunities for reading their own hearts are rare. So, when they come to ordain for three months following the Thai custom, we try to get them to close their books and manuals. While they are ordained they have this splendid opportunity to read their own hearts.

Listening to your own heart is really very interesting. This untrained heart races around following its own untrained habits. It jumps about excitedly, randomly, because it has never been trained. Therefore train your heart! 

Buddhist meditation is about the heart; to develop the heart or mind, to develop your own heart. This is very, very important. This training of the heart is the main emphasis. Buddhism is the religion of the heart. Only this! 

One who practices to develop the heart is one who practices Buddhism.

This heart of ours lives in a cage, and what's more, there's a raging tiger in that cage. If this maverick heart of ours doesn't get what it wants, it makes trouble. You must discipline it with meditation, with samadhi. 

This is called Training the Heart. At the very beginning, the foundation of practice is the establishment of moral discipline (sila). Sila is the training of the body and speech. From this arises conflict and confusion. 

When you don't let yourself do what you want to do, there is conflict.

Eat little! Sleep little! Speak little! Whatever it may be of worldly habit, lessen them, go against their power. Don't just do as you like, don't indulge in your thought. Stop this slavish following. 

You must constantly go against the stream of ignorance. This is called discipline. When you discipline your heart, it becomes very dissatisfied and begins to struggle. It becomes restricted and oppressed. 

When the heart is prevented from doing what it wants to do, it starts wandering and struggling. 

Suffering (dukkha ) becomes apparent to us.

This dukkha, this suffering, is the first of the four noble truths. Most people want to get away from it. 

They don't want to have any kind of suffering at all. Actually, this suffering is what brings us wisdom; it makes us contemplate dukkha. 

Happiness (sukha) tends to make us close our eyes and ears. It never allows us to develop patience. 

Comfort and happiness make us careless. 

Of these two defilements, Dukkha is the easiest to see. 

Therefore we must bring up suffering in order to put an end to our suffering. We must first know what dukkha is before we can know how to practice meditation.

In the beginning you have to train your heart like this. You may not understand what is happening or what the point of it is, but when the teacher tells you to do something, then you must do it. You will develop the virtues of patience and endurance. Whatever happens, you endure, because that is the way it is. For example, when you begin to practice samadhi you want peace and tranquillity. But you don't get any. You don't get any because you have never practiced this way. Your heart says, I'll sit until I attain tranquillity. 

But when tranquillity doesn't arise, you suffer. And when there is suffering, you get up and run away! To practice like this can not be called developing the heart. It's called desertion.

Instead of indulging in your moods, you train yourself with the Dhamma of the Buddha. 

Lazy or diligent, you just keep on practicing. Don't you think that this is a better way? The other way, the way of following your moods, will never reach the Dhamma. If you practice the Dhamma, then whatever the mood may be, you keep on practicing, constantly practicing. The other way of self-indulgence is not the way of the Buddha. 

When we follow our own views on practice, our own opinions about the Dhamma, we can never see clearly what is right and what is wrong. We don't know our own heart. We don't know ourselves.

Therefore, to practice following your own teachings is the slowest way. To practice following the Dhamma is the direct way. Lazy you practice; diligent you practice. You are aware of time and place. This is called developing the heart.

If you indulge in following your own views and try to practice accordingly, then you will start thinking and doubting a lot. You think to yourself, I don't have very much merit. I don't have any luck. I've been practicing meditation for years now and I'm still unenlightened. I still haven't seen the Dhamma. To practice with this kind of attitude can not be called developing the heart. It is called developing disaster.

If, at this time, you are like this, if you are a meditator who still doesn't know, who doesn't see, if you haven't renewed yourself yet, it's because you've been practicing wrongly. You haven't been following the teachings of the Buddha. The Buddha taught like this: Ananda, practice a lot! Develop your practice constantly! Then all your doubts, all your uncertainties, will vanish. 

These doubts will never vanish through thinking, nor through theorizing, nor through speculation, nor through discussion. Nor will doubts disappear by not doing anything. All defilements will vanish through developing the heart, through right practice only.

The way of developing the heart as taught by the Buddha is the exact opposite of the way of the world, because his teachings come from a pure heart. A pure heart, unattached to defilements, is the Way of the Buddha and his disciples.

If you practice the Dhamma, you must bow your heart to the Dhamma. You must not make the Dhamma bow to you. When you practice this way. suffering arises. There isn't a single person who can escape this suffering. So when you commence your practice suffering is right there.

The duties of meditators are mindfulness, collectedness and contentment. These things stop us. They stop the habits of the hearts of those who have never trained. And why should we bother to do this? If you don't bother to train your heart, then it remains wild, following the ways of nature. It's possible to train that nature so that it can be used to advantage. This is comparable to the example of trees. If we just left trees in their natural state, then we would never be able to build a house with them. We couldn't make planks or anything of use in building a house. 

However, if a carpenter came along wanting to build a house, he would go looking for trees such as these. 

He would take this raw material and use it to advantage. In a short time he could have a house built.

Meditation and developing the heart are similar to this. You must take this untrained heart, the same as you would take a tree in its natural state in the forest, and train this natural heart so that it is more refined, so that it's more aware of itself and is more sensitive. Everything is in its natural state. When we understand nature, then we can change it, we can detach from it, we can let go of it. 

Then we won't suffer anymore.

The nature of our heart is such that whenever it clings and grasps there is agitation and confusion. First it might wander over there, then it might wander over here. 

When we come to observe this agitation, we might think that it's impossible to train the heart and so we suffer accordingly. We don't understand that this is the way the heart is. There will be thought and feelings moving about like this even though we are practicing, trying to attain peace. That's the way it is.

When we have contemplated many times the nature of the heart, then we will come to understand that this heart is just as it is and can't be otherwise. 

We will know that the heart's ways are just as they are. That's its nature. If we see this clearly, then we can detach from thoughts and feelings. And we don't have to add on anything more by constantly having to tell ourselves that that's just the way it is. When the heart truly understands, it lets go of everything. 

Thinking and feeling will still be there, but that very thinking and feeling will be deprived of power.

This is similar to a child who likes to play and frolic in ways that annoy us, to the extent that we scold or spank him. We should understand that it's natural for a child to act that way. Then we could let go and leave him to play in his own way. So our troubles are over. How are they over? 

Because we accept the ways of children. Our outlook changes and we accept the true nature of things. We let go and our heart becomes more peaceful. We have right understanding.

If we have wrong understanding, then even living in a deep, dark cave would be chaos, or living high up in the air would be chaos. 

The heart can only be at peace when there is right understanding. Then there are no more riddles to solve and no more problems to arise.

This is the way it is. You detach. You let go. Whenever there is any feeling of clinging, we detach from it, because we know that that very feeling is just as it is. It didn't come along especially to annoy us. 

We might think that it did, but in truth it is just that way. If we start to think and consider it further, that too, is just as it is. If we let go, then form is merely form, sound is merely sound, odor is merely odor, taste is merely taste, touch is merely touch and the heart is merely the heart. It's similar to oil and water. If you put the two together in a bottle, they won't mix because of the difference in their nature.

Oil and water are different in the same way that a wise man and an ignorant man are different. 

The Buddha lived with form, sound, odor, taste, touch and thought. He was an arahant (enlightened one), so He turned away from rather than toward these things. He turned away and detached little by little since 

He understood that the heart is just the heart and thought is just thought. He didn't confuse and mix them together.

The heart is just the heart; thoughts and feelings are just thoughts and feelings. Let things be just as they are! Let form be just form, let sound be just sound, let thought be just thought. 

Why should we bother to attach to them? If we think and feel in this way, then there is detachment and separateness. Our thoughts and feelings will be on one side and our heart will be on the other. Just like oil and water they are in the same bottle but they are separate."

#ajahnchah


21 May 2023




Tuesday, 2 May 2023

The Teachings of Ajahn Chah


The Teachings of Ajahn Chah


The log or mind that flows trascending indulgence and its extremes can surely reach the ocean.

---

If we cut a log of wood and throw it into the river, and that log doesn’t sink or rot, or run aground on either of the banks of the river, that log will definitely reach the sea. 

Our practice is comparable to this. If you practise according to the path laid down by the Buddha, following it straight, you will transcend two things. What two things? Just those two extremes that the Buddha said were not the path of a true meditator: indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain. These are the two banks of the river. One of the banks of that river is hate, the other is love. Or you can say that one bank is happiness, the other unhappiness. The ‘log’ is this mind. As it ‘flows down the river’ it will experience happiness and unhappiness. If the mind doesn’t cling to that happiness or unhappiness it will reach the ‘ocean’ of Nibbāna. 

You should see that there is nothing other than happiness and unhappiness arising and disappearing. If you don’t ‘run aground’ on these things then you are on the path of a true meditator.

This is the teaching of the Buddha. Happiness, unhappiness, love and hate are simply established in nature according to the constant law of nature. The wise person doesn’t follow or encourage them, he doesn’t cling to them. This is the mind which lets go of indulgence in pleasure and indulgence in pain. It is the right practice. Just as that log of wood will eventually flow to the sea, so will the mind which doesn’t attach to these two extremes inevitably attain peace.


~ Ajahn Chah


15 May 2023



Friday, 28 April 2023

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah


Only three lines, hardly anything to it: Sabba papassa akaranam: refraining from all wrong doing. That's the teaching of all Buddhas. This is the heart of Buddhism. But people keep jumping over it, they don't want this one. The renunciation of all wrongdoing, great and small, from bodily, verbal and mental actions... this is the teaching of the Buddhas.

If we were to dye a piece of cloth we'd have to wash it first. But most people don't do that. 

Without looking at the cloth, they dip it into the dye straight away. If the cloth is dirty, dying it makes it come out even worse than before. Think about it. Dying a dirty old rag, would that look good?

You see? This is how Buddhism teaches, but most people just pass it by. They just want to perform good works, but they don't want to give up wrongdoing. It's just like saying "the hole is too deep." Everybody says the hole is too deep, nobody says their arm is too short. We have to come back to ourselves. With this teaching you have to take a step back and look at yourself.


~ Ajahn Chah



16 April 2023




Tuesday, 15 November 2022

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah.


You practice letting go. You don't have to become a stream-winner or a once-returner. You don't have to make those suppositions. You don't have to be those things. If you are anything, it's a turmoil. If you are this or are that, you are a problem. So you don't have to be anything. 

There's nothing but letting go — letting go and then knowing in line with what things do. When you know in line with what things do in every way, there's no more doubt. And you aren't anything.

Think about it in a simple way. If someone yells at you but you don't rear up in response, that's the end of the matter. It doesn't reach you. But if you grab hold of it and won't let go, you're in bad shape. Why put their words into yourself? If they yell at you, just leave it at that. But if they yell at you over there in the ordination hall and you bring it into your ears while you're sitting here, it's as if you like to suffer. This is called not understanding suffering. You stir things up with your thinking and give rise to all kinds of issues.

The practice is actually something short, and not at all long. If you say it's long, it's longer than long. If you say it's short, it's shorter than short. When it comes to the practice, you can't use your ordinary ways of thinking.

You need to have patience and endurance. You need to make an effort. Whatever happens, you don't have to pick it up and carry it around. When things are a certain way, that's all they are. 

When we see the Dhamma in this way, we don't hold onto anything. Pleasure we know. Pain we know.


~ Ajahn Chah


23rd November, 2022




Friday, 28 October 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



Sunday, 16 October 2022

The Teaching of Luang Poh Chah

The Teaching of Luang Poh Chah


The Buddha wanted us to contact the Dhamma, but people only contact the words, the books and the scriptures. 

พระพุทธเจ้าอยากให้เราสัมผัสธรรมะดว้ยตรอง แต่คนสัมผัสได้เฉพาะคำ หนังสือ และคัมภีร์เท่านั้น 

That is contacting that which is "about" Dhamma, and not contacting the "real" Dhamma as taught by our Great Teacher. How can people say that they are practicing well and properly if they only do that? They are a long way off.

ยังนี้คือการสัมผัสที่ "เกี่ยวกับ" ธรรมะ ไม่ได้สัมผัสกับธรรมะที่ "แท้จริง" ตามที่ครูใหญ่ของเราสอน ผู้คนจะพูดได้อย่างไรว่าพวกเขาฝึกฝนได้ดีและถูกต้องหากพวกเขาทำอย่างนั้น? พวกเขาอยู่ไกล


– Luang Poh Chah


 https://www.dhammatalks.net/Books/Ajahn_Chah_No_Ajahn_Chah.htm


29th October, 2022




The Teaching of Ajahn Chah.

 The Teaching of Ajahn Chah.


Another example I could mention is that a young novice I once encountered wanted to practice living in a cemetery completely alone. As he was still more or less a child, hardly into his teens, I was quite concerned for his well-being, and kept an eye on him to see how he was doing. In the morning he would go on almsround in the village, and afterwards bring his food back to the cremation ground where he would eat his meal alone, surrounded by the pits where the corpses of those who hadn’t been burned were buried. Every night he would sleep quite alone next to the remains of the dead. After I had been staying nearby for about a week I went along to check and see how he was. On the outside he seemed at ease with himself, so I asked him:

‘So you’re not afraid staying here then?’

‘No I’m not afraid,’ he replied.

‘How come you’re not frightened?’

‘It seems to me unlikely that there’s anything much to be afraid of.’

All it needed was this one simple reflection for the mind to stop proliferating. That novice didn’t need to think about all sorts of different things that would merely complicate the matter. He was ‘cured’ straight away. His fear vanished. You should try meditating in this way.


~ Ajahn Chah


26th October, 2022





Sunday, 9 October 2022

Refuge to the Triple Gem The traveler by Ven. Ajahn Chah

Refuge to the Triple Gem
The traveler by Ven. Ajahn Chah


Naturally people who wish to reach their home are not those who merely sit and think about traveling. 

They must actually undertake the process of traveling step by step, and in the right direction as well, in order to finally reach home. If they take the wrong path, they may eventually run into difficulties, such as swamps or other obstacles, which are hard to get around. Or they may run into dangerous situations and thereby possibly never reach home. 

Those who reach home can relax and sleep comfortably. Home is a place of comfort. But if the traveler only passed by the front of his home or only walked around it, he would not receive any benefit from having traveled all the way home. 

In the same way, walking the path to reach the Buddha-Dhamma is something each one of us must do individually ourselves, for no one can do it for us. And we must travel along the proper path of morality, concentration and wisdom until we find the blessings of purity, radiance and peacefulness of mind that are the fruits of traveling the path. 

However if one only has knowledge of books, sermons, and sutras, that is, only knowledge of the map or plans for the journey, even in hundreds of lifetimes one will never know purity, radiance and peacefulness of mind. Instead one will just waste time and never get to the real benefits of practice. 

Teachers are those who point out the direction of the Path. After listening to the teachers, whether or not we walk the Path by practicing ourselves, and thereby reap the fruits of practice, is strictly up to each one of us.


Source: 

http://www.dhammatalks.net/Books/Ajahn_Chah_Tree_in_a_Forest.pdf




Monday, 26 September 2022

The Knower Can Change

The Knower Can Change 


Ajahn Chah: You use thinking, but you also see. You see above and beyond your thinking right there. And then you don't believe in line with that kind of thing any more. Do you understand? 

We suppose that the mind knows sensations. But when we really speak about the mind, this is something above the mind. Whatever the mind arises from, we call it the mind. The mind arises and disbands. It arises and disbands, this mind.

But this other thing isn’t the mind that arises and disbands. It’s a different experience. All the things that are that truth: They don’t arise and don’t disband. They’re just the way they are. 

They go past the issues of arising and disbanding. 

But when you call them the mind, it’s just in terms of suppositions. When you speak in terms of suppositions, you believe in your own mind—and then what happens? Where does this mind come from? 

You’ve believed in this mind for so long, and there’s no ease. Right?

In the beginning you know about inconstancy, stress, and not-self. These are issues of the mind. But that reality doesn’t have any issues. It lets go. It lets go of the things that the mind arises with and depends on, but it doesn’t arise or disband at all. The things that arise and disband depend on perceptions and fabrications. 

We think that because contemplation uses perceptions, then they must be discernment. And so we latch onto fabrications, thinking they’re discernment. But that’s not genuine discernment. 

Genuine discernment puts an end to issues. It knows, and that’s the end of issues. There are still fabrications, but you don’t follow in line with them. There are sensations, you’re aware of them, but you don’t follow in line with them. You keep knowing that they’re not the path any more.

Question: What do we do to find this point, the point of the genuine mind?

Ajahn Chah: You keep track of this mind, first. You see that it’s inconstant, not for sure. See that clearly. 

You see that there’s nothing to take hold of, and so you let go. The mind lets go of itself. 

It understands itself. It lets go of this mind. 

At that point, there’s no more need to fabricate it, but there are no more doubts about anything. 

That’s called… Whatever name you call it, it’s a matter of supposition and formulation. You make suppositions about it for people to learn about it, but that nature is just the way it is. 

It’s like the ground. What spins around is on top of the ground. But this thing is the ground. 

What doesn’t arise or disband is the ground. What arises and runs around on top, we call “the mind,” or “perception,” or “fabrication.” 

To put it in simple terms, there are no forms, feelings, perceptions, fabrications, or consciousness in the ground. In terms of supposition, form, feelings, perceptions, fabrications, and consciousness arise and disband. But they’re not in this. They disband.

It’s like the question that Ven. Sāriputta asked Ven. Puṇṇa Mantāniputta. Have you ever read that? 

Ven. Puṇṇa Mantāniputta was going out into the forest to follow the ascetic practices. His teacher had taught him about the ascetic practices. 

So Ven. Sāriputta asked him, “Puṇṇa Mantāniputta, when you go out into the forest, suppose someone asks you this question, ‘When an arahant dies, what is he?’ How would you answer?”

That’s because this had already happened.

Ven. Puṇṇa Mantāniputta said, “I’ll answer that form, feeling, perceptions, fabrications, and consciousness arise and disband. That’s all.”

Ven. Sāriputta said, “That’ll do. That’ll do.”

When you understand this much, that’s the end of issues. When you understand it, you take it to contemplate so as to give rise to discernment. See clearly all the way in. 

It’s not just a matter of simply arising and disbanding, you know. That’s not the case at all. You have to look into the causes within your own mind. You’re just the same way: arising and disbanding. 

Look until there’s no pleasure or pain. Keep following in until there’s nothing: no attachment. 

That’s how you go beyond these things. 

Really see it that way; see your mind in that way. This is not just something to talk about. Get so that wherever you are, there’s nothing. Things arise and disband, arise and disband, and that’s all. 

You don’t depend on fabrications. You don’t run after fabrications. But normally, we monks fabricate in one way; lay people fabricate in crude ways. But it’s all a matter of fabrication. If we always follow in line with them, if we don’t know, they grow more and more until we don’t know up from down.

Question: But there’s still the primal mind, right?

Ajahn Chah: What?

Question: Just now when you were speaking, it sounded as if there were something aside from the five aggregates. What else is there? You spoke as if there were something. What would you call it? The primal mind? Or what?

Ajahn Chah: You don’t call it anything. Everything ends right there. There’s no more calling it “primal.” 

That ends right there. “What’s primal” ends.

Question: Would you call it the primal mind?

Ajahn Chah: You can give it that supposition if you want. When there are no suppositions, there’s no way to talk. There are no words to talk. But there’s nothing there, no issues. It’s primal; it’s old. There are no issues at all. 

But what I’m saying here is just suppositions. “Old,” “new”: These are just affairs of supposition. 

If there were no suppositions, we wouldn’t understand anything. We’d just sit here silent without understanding one another. So understand that.


~•~•~•~

Still Flowing Water: 

Eight Dhamma Talks, by Venerable Ajahn Chah, and translated by Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu.

https://www.dhammatalks.org/ebook_index.html#StillFlowingWater





Monday, 19 September 2022

Bottle of Medicine - by Ajahn Chah

Bottle of Medicine 
- by Ajahn Chah


"We can compare practice to a patient who does not take the medicine that his doctor has left for him. Although detailed instructions have been written on the bottle, all the patient does is read them and doesn't actually take the medicine."


😁😍🙏


MEDICINE

It's like a doctor handing a bottle of medicine to a patient with a fever. On the outside of the bottle is a label telling the different diseases the medicine can cure. As for the medicine that cures the diseases, it's inside the bottle. If the patient spends all his time reading the label - even if he reads it a hundred times, a thousand times - he'll end up dying and never get any benefit out of the medicine. He'll then go around making a big fuss, complaining that the doctor is bad, the medicine can't cure the diseases it's claimed to cure, even though he never opened the cap on the bottle to take the medicine.


Ajahn Chah

In Simple Terms






Friday, 15 July 2022

Ajahn Sumedho

Ajahn Sumedho


Q : What most impressed you about Ajahn Chah?

A : Luang Por Chah had a great deal of mettā (loving-kindness) and I felt welcomed by the way he received me at Wat Pah Pong – he seemed to be interested in me. I felt intuitively that this was a very wise man. At the time I couldn’t understand Thai very well, but what I saw of how he lived his life and his general way of being was very pleasing to me. His teaching was very direct and he was able to see very quickly where I was at.

He didn’t want me to spend time reading or studying, just to practise. He emphasized everybody’s paṭipat (practice). When I first came to him, he told me to put my books away and to just read the citta, my mind. I was happy to do that, because I was weary of studying Buddhism and wanted to practise it instead of just reading about it. This was what he was encouraging me to do.

Though he gave a lot of talks, which I couldn’t properly understand for the first two years, he emphasized kor wat (monastic duties), the way you live in the monastery: paying attention, being mindful with food and the robes, and with the kuṭī (hut) and the monastery. He was like a mirror that would reflect my state of mind. He always seemed to be completely present. I’d get carried away with thoughts and emotions sometimes, but by just being around him, I found that I could suddenly let go – I could drop what I was holding onto without even telling him. His presence helped me to see what I was doing and what I was attached to. So I decided that I would live with him as long as I could, since such monks are hard to find. I stayed with him for ten years at Wat Pah Pong and at various branch monasteries.





Wednesday, 11 May 2022

The Teaching of Ajahn Chah

 The Teaching of Ajahn Chah


Take note, some of you may not be aware that this is a Dhamma teaching. I’m going to give you some Dhamma that’s outside the scriptures. Most people read the scriptures but don’t see the Dhamma. Today I am going to give you a teaching that’s outside the scriptures. Some people may miss the point or not be able to understand it.

Suppose two people are walking together and see a duck and a chicken. One of them says, ‘Why isn’t that chicken like the duck, why isn’t the duck like the chicken?’ He wants the chicken to be a duck and the duck to be a chicken. It’s impossible. If it’s impossible, then even if that person were to wish for the duck to be a chicken and the chicken to be a duck for the rest of his life it would not come to pass, because the chicken is a chicken and the duck is a duck. As long as that person thought like that he would suffer. The other person might see that the chicken is a chicken and the duck is a duck, and that’s all there is to it. 

There is no problem. He sees rightly. If you want the duck to be a chicken and the chicken to be a duck, you are really going to suffer.

In the same way, the law of aniccaṃ states that all things are impermanent. If you want things to be permanent you’re going to suffer. Whenever impermanence shows itself you’re going to be disappointed. 

One who sees that things are naturally impermanent will be at ease, there will be no conflict. The one who wants things to be permanent is going to have conflict, maybe even losing sleep over it. This is to be ignorant of aniccaṃ, impermanence, the teaching of the Buddha.


(Ajahn Chah)




Thursday, 14 April 2022

Dhamma Question and Answers

Dhamma Question and Answers


Question: I am tired of failing. Failing to maintain mindfulness, failing to remain centered and at ease in the face of irritation, anger, sensual desire, and laziness. I am starting to think that my Theravada practice is not compatible with living the householder's life. Can anyone offer some insight, readings, dhamma talks, etc. that might strengthen my resolve to stay on the path? 

Metta to all.


Reflections 1

“There’s a passage in the Dhammapada where the Buddha says that life as a householder is difficult, life as a monk gone forth is difficult. Then he ends by saying, “So be neither.” Of course, what he means by that is to find a way of not having to be anything at all. That requires practice. It’s a skill — the skill we’re working on right here, the skill that takes you out of having to live the household life or have to live the life of a monk. Without this skill, those are the only choices you have. Derived from them are lots of other little choices, but they’re all trapped inside those two categories.

What we’re looking for is a path of practice that leads to freedom from any kind of category at all. As the Buddha said, what you are is limited, measured by what you cling to. So the path beyond categories has to be a path that gets rid of clinging. When you hold onto the body, that’s what you are. When you hold onto any of the other aggregates, you’re classified as a feeling-clinger, a perception-clinger, a mental-fabrication-, or consciousness-clinger. You create your identity by what you cling to. This is why the Buddha never answered questions about what a human being is, because a human being can be almost anything.

So this noble eightfold path that we’re following here is a path that gets us out of having to be identified with anything, of having to be limited to anything. That’s the skill we’re working on. 

It’s not an easy skill, but when you realize that all of the alternatives out there are difficult, then you realize that it doesn’t make much sense to focus on the difficulties of the path, for at the very least this is a path that leads to a way out."

~ Thanissaro Bhikkhu "Freedom Undefined" (Meditations3) 

https://www.dhammatalks.org/books/Meditations3/Section0049.html


Reflections 2

I see everything that in my life as training, training to be mindful, training to be equanimity. I listened to dhamma talk by different bhikku. I started with 62 wrong views, then the law of kamma, then abdhidhamma. I converted the dhamma talks to mp3, so I can listened while I’m driving or hiking. As I understood more about dhamma, I have more peace with my surroundings. Whenever I got irritated by something, I noted it in my mind, and meditated and contemplated on it, as why I felt that way. Lots of time I found my answers, when I couldn’t find the answers, I just let myself rest, and remind myself, there are work or practice to be done here. I think do everything in daily life with mindfulness and meditation routinely really help. As I listened more to abhidhamma (one of them about the purification of ourselves), I deleted all the games and entertainment apps, except YouTube where I watched the dhamma talk. It’s hard first for me, as I was really fond of Korean drama and C-drama. But now, I’m glad I left that behind. 

Leaving the games was easy for me. 

My journey was how I found this group, and enjoy reading the dhamma posts.

Hope my experiences can help you find your way.


Reflections 3

This topic was addressed by some dharma teachers and I will try my best to convey the gist of the message:

Try letting go of the idea that you must always succeed, let go of the idea that you need to maintain mindfulness, let go of trying to remain centered and at ease in the face of irritation, anger, sensual desire, and laziness.

Let go of all these concepts of what you should be and how you should react. Let go of trying to be a certain way. LET GO. 

And just observe the mind - observe all its 'flaws' and imperfections. Just let go and observe.

What you are experiencing IS (a big IS) natural and merely a part of the process.


Reflections 4

It's normal to feel this way after you are familiar with the Buddha Dharma. So cut yourself some slack here. There are similar and different mode of cultivation for both monks and nuns and lay ppl even though the training and teachings are the same. The different conditions facing both means different mode of transport but they do get to the same destination eventually. One can't rush it. Buddha spoke of the ease of practise more favourable in a  recluse setup as the household life is crowded and dusty with many responsibilities. Yet there r many lay ppl who attained to paths and fruits. The teachings lead to the same results, though with varying speed.. AJ Chah said the right way to practise is steady practice. To progress and not regress. 

If this is visible and clearly discerned in your life as a lay follower, it shd be something to be gladdened. 

Be it a monk or nun or lay person, the practise is the steady progression of increasing wholesome states and decreasing unwholesome states, each in their own time.


Reflection 5

Patience - listen to more Dhamma talks 

Patience - practice more all postures 

Patience and more Patience 

If it was easy everybody will be enlightened .

If it was easy there will be less anger , hatred, aversion, greed and delusion in the world.

Patience , trust and more patience .

Everyday listen to Dhamma talks , everyday practice , when I fail - I’m gentle and kid towards myself - because I cultivated Patience and trust in the path.

🙏🏽🙏🏽🙏🏽

#fromexperience


Reflections 6

Sorry to hear about the difficulties. Many have been there, I would think. Do you like reading? 

"Awareness alone is not enough" is a compilation of snippets from the talks and Q&As of the Burmese monk Sayadaw U Tejaniya. The way he teaches, with a focus on awareness of mind states/minds (citanupassana) in various situations, is highly compatible with the life of a householder. He was a businessman on the busy market in Yangon (then Rangoon) before becoming a monastic and later having been asked to teach. He practiced mid-business, mid-market, mid-stress, mid-depression. The Shwe Oo Min monastery is sometimes also called the Meditators' Hospital - people who get stuck with efforting through various structured ways of approaching practice are sometimes like to end up there for decompression and unlearning. I don't know if input from other Theravadin teachers is welcome here, apologies if not, but just putting it out there, as he has helped many a practitioner to reframe their practice.

 A lot of focus on Right view and Right effort.  

https://ashintejaniya.org/books-awareness-is-not-enough


Reflections 7

The four foundations of achievement (iddhipada):

Chanda — feeling an affinity for one's meditation theme.

Viriya — persistence.

Citta — intentness on one's goal.

Vimangsa — circumspection in one's activities and interests.

~ Ajahn Lee


Reflections 8

I think the fact that you realize that keeping mindfulness is difficult and identifying yourself as scattered, in itself is mindfulness, that you are travelling the right path as you are. 

Metta 🙏

ps - I cannot keep my mind centered and get carried away with emotions too 😊





Thursday, 6 January 2022

The Teachings of Venerable Ajahn Chah What’s That?

The Teachings of Venerable Ajahn Chah
What’s That?


With the Dhamma, it’s not the case that you’ll awaken because someone else tells you about it. 

You already know that you can’t get serious about asking whether this is that or that is this. 

These things are really personal. We talk just enough for you to contemplate.

It’s like a child who’s never seen anything. He comes out to the countryside and sees a chicken. 

“Daddy, what’s that over there?” He sees a duck. “Daddy, what’s that?” He sees a pig. “Daddy, what’s that over there?” 

The father gets tired of answering. The more he answers, the more the child keeps asking—because it’s never seen these things. After a while, the father simply says, “Hmm.” 

If you keep playing along with the child’s every question, you die of fatigue. The child doesn’t get fatigued. Whatever it sees, “What’s that? What’s this?” It never comes to an end. 

Finally the father says, “When you grow bigger, you’ll know for yourself.”

That’s the way it is with meditation. I used to be like that. I really was. But when you understand, there are none of those questions. You’ve grown up. 

So be intent on contemplating until you understand, and things will gradually unravel themselves. That’s the way it is. Keep watch over yourself as much as you can. Keep watch over yourself as much as you can, to see if you’re lying to yourself. That’s what’s called keeping watch over yourself.


~•~•~•~


In Simple Terms: 108 Dhamma Similes, by Venerable Ajahn Chah, and translated by Ṭhānissaro Bhikkhu.




Saturday, 18 December 2021

“Tuccho Pothila”. Venerable Empty-Scripture

 “Tuccho Pothila”. Venerable  Empty-Scripture


An informal talk given at Ajahn Chah’s kuti, to a group of lay people, one evening in 1978 

There are two ways to support Buddhism. One is known as ¯amisap¯uj¯a, supporting through material offerings. These are the four requisites of food, clothing, shelter and medicine. This is to support Buddhism by giving material offerings to the Sa˙ngha of monks and nuns, enabling them to live in reasonable comfort for the practice of Dhamma. This fosters the direct  realization of the Buddha’s teaching, in turn bringing continued prosperity to the Buddhist  religion.

Buddhism can be likened to a tree. A tree has roots, a trunk, branches, twigs and leaves. All the leaves and branches, including the trunk depend on the roots to absorb nutriment from the soil and send it out to them. In the same way as the tree depends on the roots to sustain it, our actions and our speech are like “branches” and “leaves,”which depend on the mind, the  “root,”absorbing nutriment, which it then sends out to the “trunk”, “branches” and “leaves.”  

These in turn bear fruit as our speech and actions. Whatever state the mind is in, skillful or unskillful, it expresses that quality outwardly through our actions and speech.

Therefore the support of Buddhism through the practical application of the teaching is the most important kind of support. For example, in the ceremony of determining the precepts on observance days,the teacher describes those unskillful actions which should be avoided. But if  you simply go through the ceremony of determining the precepts without reflecting on their meaning, progress is difficult. You will be unable to find the true practice. The real support of Buddhism must therefore be done through patipattipuj .¯ a¯, the “offering” of practice, cultivating true restraint, concentration and wisdom. Then you will know what Buddhism is all about. If you don’t understand through practice you still won’t know, even if you learn the whole Tipitaka.

In the time of the Buddha there was a monk known as Tuccho Pothila. Tuccho Pothila was very learned, thoroughly versed in the scriptures and texts. He was so famous that he was revered by people everywhere and had eighteen monasteries under his care. When people heard the name “Tuccho Pothila” they were awe-struck and nobody would dare question anything he  taught, so much did they revere his command of the teachings. Tuccho Pothila was one of the Buddha’s most learned disciples.

One day he went to pay respects to the Buddha. As he was paying his respects, the Buddha  said, “Ah, hello, Venerable Empty Scripture!”... just like that! They conversed for a while until it was time to go, and then, as he was taking leave of the Buddha, the Buddha said, “Oh, leaving now, Venerable Empty Scripture?”

That was all the Buddha said. On arriving, “Oh, hello, Venerable Empty Scripture.” When it was time to go, “Ah, leaving now, Venerable Empty Scripture?” The Buddha didn’t expand on it, that was all the teaching he gave. Tuccho Pothila, the eminent teacher, was puzzled, “Why did the Buddha say that? What did he mean?” He thought and thought, turning over everything he had  learned, until eventually he realized...“It’s true! Venerable Empty Scripture  –  a monk who  studies but doesn’t practice.”When he looked into his heart he saw that really he was no different from lay people. Whatever they aspired to he also aspired to, whatever they enjoyed  he also enjoyed. There was no real samana within him, no truly profound quality capable of firmly establishing him in the Noble Way and providing true peace.

So he decided to practice. But there was nowhere for him to go to. All the teachers around were his own students, no-one would dare accept him. Usually when people meet their teacher they become timid and deferential, and so no-one would dare become his teacher.

Finally he went to see a certain young novice, who was enlightened, and asked to practice under him. The novice said, “Yes, sure you can practice with me, but only if you’re sincere. If you’re not sincere then I won’t accept you.”Tuccho Pothila pledged himself as a student of the novice.

The novice then told him to put on all his robes. Now there happened to be a muddy bog nearby. When Tuccho Pothila had neatly put on all his robes, expensive ones they were, too, the novice said, “Okay, now run down into this muddy bog. If I don’t tell you to stop, don’t stop.  

If I don’t tell you to come out, don’t come out. Okay...run!” 

Tuccho Pothila, neatly robed, plunged into the bog. The novice didn’t tell him to stop until he was completely covered in mud. Finally he said, “You can stop, now”...so he stopped. “Okay, come on up!”...and so he came out.

This clearly showed that Tuccho Pothila had given up his pride. He was ready to accept the teaching. If he wasn’t ready to learn he wouldn’t have run into the bog like that, being such a famous teacher, but he did it. The young novice, seeing this, knew that Tuccho Pothila was sincerely determined to practice. 

When Tuccho Pothila had come out of the bog, the novice gave him the teaching. He taught him to observe the sense objects, to know the mind and to know the sense objects, using the simile of a man catching a lizard hiding in a termite mound. If the mound had six holes in it, how would he catch it? He would have to seal off five of the holes and leave just one open. Then he would have to simply watch and wait, guarding that one hole. When the lizard ran out he could catch it. 

Observing the mind is like this. Closing off the eyes, ears, nose, tongue and body, we leave only the mind. To “close off” the senses means to restrain and compose them, observing only the mind. Meditation is like catching the lizard. We use sati to note the breath. Sati is the quality of recollection, as in asking yourself, “What am I doing?” Sampajañña is the awareness that “now I am doing such and such.” 

We observe the in and out breathing with sati and sampajañña. 

This quality of recollection is something that arises from practice, it’s not something that can be learned from books. Know the feelings that arise. The mind may be fairly inactive for a while and then a feeling arises. Sati works in conjunction with these feelings, recollecting them. 

There is sati, the recollection that “I will speak,” “I will go,” “I will sit” and so on, and then there  is sampajañña, the awareness that “now I am walking,” “I am lying down,” “I am experiencing such and such a mood.”With these two things, sati and sampajañña, we can know our minds in the present moment. 

We will know how the mind reacts to sense impressions. 

That which is aware of sense objects is called “mind.” Sense objects “wander into” the mind. 

For instance, there is a sound, like the electric planer here. It enters through the ear and travels inwards to the mind, which acknowledges that it is the sound of an electric planer. That which acknowledges the sound is called “mind.”