INSlGHT, BY THE NATURE METHOD
In this chapter
we shall see how concentration may come about naturally on the one hand, and as
a result of organized practice on the other. The end result is identical in the
two cases: the mind is concentrated and fit to be used for carrying out close
introspection. One thing must be noticed, however: the intensity of concentration
that comes about naturally is usually sufficient and appropriate for introspection
and insight, whereas the concentration resulting from organized training is usually
excessive, more than can be made use of. Furthermore, misguided satisfaction with
that highly developed concentration may result. While the mind is fully concentrated,
it is likely to be experiencing such a satisfying kind of bliss and well- being
that the meditator may become attached to it, or imagine it to be the Fruit of
the Path. Naturally occurring concentration, which is sufficient and suitable
for use in introspection, is harmless, having none of the disadvantages inherent
in concentration developed by means of intensive training.
In the Tipitaka,
there are numerous references to people attaining naturally all states of Path
and Fruit. This generally came about in the presence of the Buddha himself but
also happened later with other teachers. These people did not go into the forest
and sit, assiduously practicing concentration on certain objects in the way described
in later manuals.
Clearly no organized effort was involved when arahantship
was attained by the first five disciples of the Buddha on hearing the Discourse
on Non - selfhood, or by the one thousand hermits on hearing the Fire Sermon.
In these cases, keen, penetrating insight came about quite naturally. These examples
clearly show that natural concentration is liable to develop of its own accord
while one is attempting to understand clearly some question, and that the resulting
insight, as long as it is firmly established must be quite intense and stable.
It happens naturally, automatically in just the same way as the mind becomes concentrated
the moment we set about doing arithmetic. Likewise in firing a gun, when we take
aim, the mind automatically becomes concentrated and steady. This is how naturally
occurring concentration comes about. We normally overlook it completely because
it does not appear the least bit magical, miraculous, or awe inspiring. But through
the power of just this naturally occurring concentration, most of us could actually
attain liberation. We could attain the Fruit of the Path, Nirvana, arahantship,
just by means of natural concentration.
So don't overlook this naturally occurring
concentration. It is something most of us either already have, or can readily
develop. We have to do everything we can to cultivate and develop it, to make
it function perfectly and yield the appropriate results, just as did most of the
people who succeeded in becoming arahants, none of whom knew anything of modern
concentration techniques.
Now let us have a look at the nature of the states
of inner awareness leading up to full insight into "the world," that
is, into the five aggregates. The first stage is joy (piti), mental happiness
or spiritual well being. Doing good in some way, even giving alms, considered
the most basic form of merit-making, can be a source of joy. Higher up, at the
level of morality, completely blameless conduct by way of word and action brings
an increase in joy. Then in the case of concentration, we discover that there
is a definite kind of delight associated with the lower stages of concentration.
This
rapture has in itself the power to induce tranquillity. Normally the mind is quite
unrestrained, continually falling slave to all sorts of thoughts and feelings
associated with enticing things outside. It is normally restless, not calm. But
as spiritual joy becomes established, calm and steadiness are bound to increase
in proportion. When steadiness has been perfected, the result is full concentration.
The mind becomes tranquil, steady, flexible, manageable, light and at ease, ready
to be used for any desired purpose, in particular for the elimination of the defilements.
It
is not a case of the mind's being rendered silent, hard and rocklike. Nothing
like that happens at all. The body feels normal, but the mind is especially calm
and suitable for use in thinking and introspection. It is perfectly clear, perfectly
cool, perfectly still and restrained. In other words, it is fit for work, ready
to know. This is the degree of concentration to be aimed for, not the very deep
concentration where one sits rigidly like a stone image, quite devoid of awareness.
Sitting in deep concentration like that, one is in no position to investigate
anything. A deeply concentrated mind cannot practice introspection at all. It
is in a state of unawareness and is of no use for insight. DEEP CONCENTRATION
IS A MAJOR OBSTACLE TO INSIGHT PRACTICE. To practice introspection one must first
return to the shallower levels of concentration; then one can make use of the
power the mind has acquired. Highly developed concentration is just a tool. In
this developing of insight by the nature method, we don't have to attain deep
concentration and sit with the body rigid. Rather, we aim at a calm, steady mind,
one so fit for work that when it is applied to insight practice, it gains right
understanding with regard to the entire world. Insight so developed is natural
insight, the same sort as was gained by some individuals while sitting listening
to the Buddha expounding Dhamma. It is conducive to thought and introspection
of the right kind, the kind that brings understanding. And it involves neither
ceremonial procedures nor miracles.
This doesn't mean, however, that insight
will arise instantaneously. One can't be an arahant straight off. The first step
in knowledge may come about at any time, depending once again on the intensity
of the concentration. It may happen that what arises is not true insight, because
one has been practicing wrongly or has been surrounded by too many false views.
But however it turns out, the insight that does arise is bound to be something
quite special, for instance extraordinarily clear and profound. If the knowledge
gained is right knowledge, corresponding with reality, corresponding with Dhamma,
then it will progress, developing ultimately into right and true knowledge of
all phenomena. If insight develops in only small measure, it may convert a person
into an Aryian at the lowest stage; or if it is not sufficient to do that, it
will just make him a high- minded individual, an ordinary person of good qualities.
If the environment is suitable and good qualities have been properly and adequately
established, it is possible to become an arahant. It all depends on the circumstances.
But however far things go, as long as the mind has natural concentration, this
factor called insight is bound to arise and to correspond more or less closely
with reality. Because we, being Buddhists, have heard about, thought about and
studied the world, the five aggregates and phenomena, in the hope of coming to
under stand their true nature, it follows that the knowledge we acquire while
in a calm and concentrated state will not be in any way misleading. It is bound
to be always beneficial.
The expression "insight into the true nature
of things" refers to seeing transience, unsatisfactoriness and non-selfhood,
seeing that nothing is worth getting, nothing is worth being, seeing that no object
whatsoever should be grasped at and clung to as being a self or as belonging to
a self, as being good or bad, attractive or repulsive. Liking or disliking anything,
even if it is only an idea or a memory, is clinging. To say that nothing is worth
getting or being is the same as to say that nothing is worth clinging to. "Getting"
refers to setting one's heart on property, position, wealth, or any pleasing object.
"Being" refers to the awareness of one's status as husband, wife, rich
man, poor man, winner, loser, or human being, or even the awareness of being oneself.
If we really look deeply at it, even being oneself is no fun, is wearisome, because
it is a source of suffering. If one can completely give up clinging to the idea
of being oneself, then being oneself will no longer be suffering. This is what
it is to see the worthlessness of being anything, and is the gist of the statement
that being anything, no matter what, is bound to be suffering in a way appropriate
to that particular state of being. Any state of being, if it is to continue as
such, has to be made to last, to endure. At the very least, it must endure in
one's mind in the form of a belief in that particular state of being. When there
exists "oneself," there are bound to exist things which are other than
that self and belong to it. Thus one has one's children, one's wife, one's this,
that and the other. Then one has one's duty as husband or wife, master or servant,
and so on. All this points to the truth of the statement that there is no state
of being such that to maintain it will not involve struggle. The trouble and struggle
necessary to maintain one's state of being are simply the result of blind infatuation
with things, of clinging to things. If we were to give up trying to get or to
be anything, how could we continue to exist? This is bound to be a major source
of skepticism for anyone who has not given much thought to the matter. The words
"getting" and "being" as used here refer to getting and being
based on mental defilements, on craving, on the idea of "worth getting, worth
being," so that the mind does get and be in real earnest. This is bound to
lead to depression, anxiety, distress and upset, or at least a heavy burden on
the mind, right from beginning to end. Knowing this truth, we shall be constantly
on the alert, keeping watch over the mind to see that it doesn't fall slave to
getting and being through the influence of grasping and clinging. Aware that in
reality things are just not worth getting or being, we shall be smart enough to
stay aloof from them.
If, however, we are not yet in a position to withdraw
completely from having and being, we must be mindful and wide awake, so that when
we do get or become something, we do so without emotional upset. We must not be
like those people who, turning a blind eye and a deaf ear, go ahead brainlessly
and inexpertly getting or becoming, with the result that they fall right into
the pit of their own stupidity and attachment, and end up having to commit suicide.
The
world and all things have the property of impermanence, of worthlessness and of
not belonging to anyone. Any individual who grasps at and clings to anything will
be hurt by it, in the very beginning when he first desires to get it or to be
it, later while he is in the process of getting it and being it, and then again
after he has got it or been it. All the time, before, during and after, when anyone
grasps and clings with deaf ear and blind eye, he will receive his full measure
of suffering, just as can be seen happening to all deluded worldlings. It is the
same even with goodness, which everyone values highly. If anyone becomes involved
with goodness in the wrong way and clings to it too much, he will derive just
as much suffering from goodness as he would from evil. In becoming involved with
goodness, we have to bear in mind that it possesses this property.
A skeptic
may ask: "If nothing at all is worth getting or being, does it follow that
nobody ought to do any work or build up wealth, position and property?" Anyone
who comprehends this subject can see that a person equipped with right knowledge
and understanding is actually in a far better position to carry out any task than
one who is subject to strong desires, foolish, and lacking in understanding. Very
briefly, in becoming involved in things, we must do so mindfully; our actions
must not be motivated by craving. The result will follow accordingly.
The Buddha
and all the other arahants were completely free of desire, yet succeeded in doing
many things far more useful than what any of us are capable of. If we look at
accounts of how the Buddha spent his day, we find that he slept for only four
hours and spent all the rest of the time working. We spend more than four hours
a day just amusing ourselves. If the defilements responsible for the desire to
be and get things had been completely eliminated, what was the force that motivated
the Buddha and all Arahants to do all this? They were motivated by discrimination
coupled with goodwill (metta). Even actions based on natural bodily wants such
as receiving and eating alms food were motivated by discrimination They were free
of defilements, free of all desire to keep on living in order to be this or to
get that, but they did have the ability to discriminate between what was worthwhile
and what was not as the motivating force that sent their bodies out to find food.
If they found food, well and good; if not, never mind. When they were suffering
with fever, they knew how to treat it and did so as well as possible on the basis
of this knowledge. If the fever was quite overpowering and they were not strong,
they recalled that to die is natural. Whether they lived or died was of no significance
to them; they were of equal value in their eyes
If one is to be completely
free of suffering, this is the very best attitude to have. There need not be any
self as master of the body. Discrimination alone enables the body to carry on
by its natural power. The example of the Buddha shows that the power of pure discrimination
and pure goodwill alone is sufficient to keep an arahant living in the world,
and, what is more, doing far more good for others than people still subject to
craving. Defiled people are likely to do only what benefits themselves since they
act out of selfishness. By contrast, the deeds of arahants are entirely selfless
and so are perfectly pure. In desiring to get and be, one is acting quite inappropriately,
one is mistaking evil for good, not knowing what is what. Let us all, then, go
about things intelligently, always bearing in mind that, in reality, nothing is
worth getting or being, nothing is worth becoming infatuated with, nothing is
worth clinging to. Let us act in a manner in keeping with the knowledge that things
are by their very nature not worth getting or being. If we do have to become involved
in things, then let us go about it the right way, acting appropriately. This is
the way to keep the mind always pure, unobscured, tranquil and cool. It allows
us to become involved in the world, in things, without doing ourselves any harm
in the process. When the ordinary worldly man hears that nothing is worth getting
or being, he is not convinced, he doesn't believe it. But anyone who understands
the real meaning of this statement becomes emboldened and cheered by it. His mind
becomes master of things and independent of them. He becomes capable of going
after things sure in the knowledge that he will not become enslaved by them. His
actions are not motivated by desire and he is not so blind with passion that he
comes to be a slave to things. In getting anything or being anything, let us always
be aware that we are getting or being something which, in terms of absolute truth,
we cannot get or be at all, because there is nothing that we can really get or
be as we might wish. All things are transient and unsatisfactory and can never
belong to us; and yet we go foolishly ahead, grasping at them and craving for
them. In other words, we act inappropriately, or in a way which does not accord
with the true nature of things, simply because we become involved in them while
ignorant of their true nature. The result is bound to be all manner of suffering
and trouble. The reason a person is incapable of doing his job perfectly, faultlessly,
is that he is always far too concerned with getting something and being something,
always motivated entirely by his own desires. As a result, he is not master of
himself and cannot be consistently good, honest and fair. In every case of failure
and ruin, the root cause is slavery to desire. To come to know the true nature
of things is the true objective of every Buddhist. It is the means by which we
can liberate ourselves. Regardless of whether we are hoping for worldly benefits,
such as wealth, position and fame; or for benefits in the next world, such as
heaven; or for the supra-mundane benefit, the Fruit of the Path, Nirvana--whatever
we are hoping for, the only way to achieve it is by means of this right knowledge
and insight. We thrive on insight. In the Texts it is said that we may become
purified through insight and not by any other means. Our path to freedom lies
in having the insight, the clear vision, that in all things there neither is nor
has ever been anything at all that is worth grasping at or clinging to, worth
getting or being, worth risking life and limb for. We have things and are things
only in terms of worldly, relative truth. In worldly language, we say we are this
or that, just because in any society it is expedient to recognize by names and
occupations. But we mustn't go believing that we really are this or that, as is
assumed at the level of relative truth. To do so is to behave like the crickets,
which, when their faces become covered with dirt, become disoriented and muddled,
and proceed to bite each other until they die. We humans, when our faces become
covered in dirt, when we are subject to all sorts of delusions, become so bewildered
and disoriented that we do things no human being could ever do under ordinary
circumstances--killing for instance. So let us not go blindly clinging to relative
truths; rather let us be aware that they are just relative truths, essential in
a society but nothing more. We have to be aware of what this body and mind really
is, what its true nature is. In particular, we have to be aware of its impermanence,
unsatisfactoriness, and non-selfhood, and make sure we always remain independent
of it.
As for the wealth, position and so on, which we can't do without, let
us regard these too as relative truths so that we can break free from the existing
custom of saying, for instance: "This belongs to So - and - so. That belongs
to Such and - such." The law watches over ownership rights for us; there
is no need for us to cling to the idea of "mine." We ought to possess
things purely and simply for the sake of convenience and ease, and not so that
they can be master over our minds. When we have this clear knowledge, things will
become our servants and slaves and we shall remain on top of them. If our thoughts
go the way of craving and attachment, so that we become conscious of having such
- and - such and being so - and - so, clinging firmly to these ideas, things will
get on top of us, and we shall be the servants and slaves, under their control
instead. The tables can quite easily be turned in this way, so we have to be careful.
We have to arrange things in such a way that we are sure of staying independent
and on top of things. If we don't, we may find ourselves in a most pitiable position
and feel very sorry for ourselves indeed. When we have really come to perceive
clearly that nothing is worth getting or being, disenchantment (nibbida) develops
in proportion to the intensity of the insight. It is a sign that the clinging
has become less firm and is starting to give way. It is a sign that we have been
slaves for so long that the idea of trying to escape has at last occurred to us.
This is the onset of disenchantment and disillusionment, when one becomes fed
up with one's own stupidity in grasping at and clinging to things, believing things
to be worth having and being. As soon as disenchantment has set in, there is bound
to come about a natural, automatic process of disentanglement (vimutti), as if
a rope with which one had been tightly bound were being untied; or a rinsing out,
as when the dye that had been firmly fixed in a piece of cloth is washed out by
soaking it in the appropriate substances. This process whereby clinging gives
way to a breaking free from, or a dissolving out from the world, or from the objects
of that clinging, was called by the Buddha, emancipation (vimutti). This state
is most important. Though not the final stage, it is a most important step towards
complete liberation. When one has broken free to this extent, complete liberation
from suffering is assured.
Once broken free from slavery, one need never again
be a slave to the world. One becomes pure and uncontaminated whereas previously
one was defiled in every way. To be enslaved to things is to be defiled in body,
speech and thought. To break free from slavery to the delightful tastes of the
world is to achieve the pure condition and never be defiled again. This real purity
(Visuddhi), once it has been attained, will give rise to a genuine calm and coolness
free from all turbulence, strife and torment. This state of freedom from oppression
and turbulence was called by the Buddha simply peace (Santi), that is, stillness,
coolness in all situations, which is virtually the same thing as Nirvana.
"Nirvana"
has been translated as "absence of any instrument of torture." Taken
another way, it means "extinction without remainder." So the word "Nirvana"
has two very important meanings; firstly, absence of any source of torment and
burning, freedom from all forms of bondage and constraint and secondly, extinction,
with no fuel for the further arising of suffering. The combination of these meanings
indicates a condition of complete freedom from suffering. There are several other
useful meanings for the word "Nirvana." It can be taken to mean the
extinction of suffering, or the complete elimination of defilements, or the state,
realm, or condition that is the cessation of all suffering, all defilements and
all karmic activity. Though the word "Nirvana" is used by numerous different
sects, the sense in which they use it is often not the same at all. For instance,
one group takes it to mean simply calm and coolness, because they identify Nirvana
with deep concentration. Other groups even consider total absorption in sensuality
as Nirvana.
The Buddha defined Nirvana as simply that condition of freedom
from bondage, torment and suffering which results from seeing the true nature
of the worldly condition and all things, and so being able to give up all clinging
to them. It is essential, then, that we recognize the very great value of insight
into the true nature of things and endeavor to cultivate this insight by one means
or another. Using one method, we simply encourage it to come about of its own
accord, naturally, by developing, day and night, the joy that results from mental
purity, until the qualities we have described gradually come about. The other
method consists in developing mental power by following an organized system of
concentration and insight practice. This latter technique is appropriate for people
with a certain kind of disposition, who may make rapid progress with it if conditions
are right. But we can practice the development of insight by the nature method
in all circumstances and at all times just by making our own way of daily living
so pure and honest that there arise in succession spiritual joy (piti and pamoda),
calm (passaddhi), insight into the true nature of things (yathabhutananadassana),
disenchantment (nibbida), withdrawal (viraga), escape (vimutti), purification
from defilements (visuddhi), and coolness (santi), so that we come to get a taste
of freedom from suffering (nibbana)- steadily, naturally, day by day, month by
month, year by year, gradually approaching closer and closer to Nirvana.
Summing
up, natural concentration and insight, which enable a person to attain the Path
and the Fruit, consist in verifying all day and every day the truth of the statement
that nothing is worth getting or being. Anyone who wishes to get this result must
strive to purify himself and to develop exemplary personal qualities, so that
he can find perpetual spiritual joy in work and leisure. That very joy induces
clarity and freshness, mental calm and stillness, and serves, naturally and automatically,
to give the mind ability to think and introspect. With the insight that nothing
is worth getting or being constantly present, the mind loses all desire for the
things it once used to grasp at and cling to. It is able to break free from the
things it used to regard as "me and mine," and all blind craving for
things ceases. Suffering, which no longer has anywhere to lodge, dwindles right
away, and the job of eliminating suffering is done. This is the reward, and it
can be gained by anyone of us.