The Seven Factors of Enlightenment
BECOMING
A NOBLE ONE
One does not become enlightened by merely gazing into the sky.
One does not become enlightened by reading or studying the scriptures, nor by
thinking, nor by wishing for the enlightened state to burst into one's mind. There
are certain necessary conditions or prerequisites which cause enlightenment to
arise. In Pali these are known as the bojjha?gas, or factors of enlightenment,
and there are seven of them.
The word bojjha?ga is made up of bodhi, which
means enlightenment or an enlightened person, and a?ga, causative factor. Thus
a bojjha?ga is a causative factor of an enlightened being, or a cause for enlightenment.
A second sense of the word bojjha?ga is based on alternative meanings of its two
Pali roots. The alternative meaning of bodhi is the knowledge that comprehends
or sees the Four Noble Truths: the truth of universal suffering or unsatisfactoriness;
the truth that desire is the cause of this suffering and dissatisfaction; the
truth that there can be an end to this suffering; and the truth of the path to
the end of this suffering, or the Noble Eightfold Path. The second meaning of
a?ga is part or portion. Thus, the second meaning of bojjha?ga is the specific
part of knowledge that sees the Four Noble Truths.
All vipassana yogis come
to understand the Four Noble Truths to some extent, but true comprehension of
them requires a particular, transforming moment of consciousness, known as path
consciousness. This is one of the culminating insights of vipassana practice.
It includes the experience of nibbana. Once a yogi has experienced this, he or
she deeply knows the Four Noble Truths, and thus is considered to contain the
bojjha?gas inside him or herself. Such a person is called noble. Thus, the bojjha?gas
or enlightenment factors also are parts or qualities of a noble person. Sometimes
they are known as the sambojjha?gas, the prefix sam- meaning full, complete, correct,
or true. The prefix is an honorific and intensifier, and adds no crucial difference
in meaning.
These seven factors of enlightenment, or seven qualities of a noble
person, are: mindfulness, investigation, effort, rapture, calm, concentration
and equanimity. In Pali, the list would be sati, dhamma vicaya, viriya, piti,
passaddhi, samadhi, upekkha. These seven can be found in all phases of vipassana
practice. But if we take as a model the progressive stages of insight, we can
say that the seven enlightenment factors begin to be very clear at the stage of
insight where a yogi begins to see the arising and passing of phenomena.
How
can one develop these factors in himself or herself? By means of satipa??hana
meditation. The Buddha said, "Oh bhikkhus, if the four foundations of mindfulness
are practiced persistently and repeatedly, the seven types of bojjha?gas will
be automatically and fully developed."
Practicing the four foundations
of mindfulness does not mean studying them, thinking of them, listening to discourses
about them, nor discussing them. What we must do is be directly and experientially
aware of the four foundations of mindfulness, the four bases on which mindfulness
can be established. The satipa??hana Sutta names them: first, the sensations of
the body; second, feeling; the painful, pleasant or neutral quality inherent in
each experience; third, the mind and thought; and fourth, all other objects of
consciousness; feelings seen, heard, tasted and so forth. The Buddha said, furthermore,
that one should practice this awareness not intermittently, but rather persistently
and repeatedly. This is exactly what we try to do in vipassana meditation. The
tradition of vipassana meditation taught and developed by Mahasi Sayadaw is oriented
toward developing fully the seven factors of enlightenment, and eventually experiencing
noble path consciousness, in accordance with the Buddha's instructions.
MINDFULNESS:
THE FIRST ENLIGHTENMENT FACTOR
Sati, mindfulness, is the first factor of enlightenment.
"Mindfulness" has come to be the accepted translation of sati into English.
However, this word has a kind of passive connotation which can be misleading.
"Mindfulness" must be dynamic and confrontative. In retreats, I teach
that mindfulness should leap forward onto the object, covering it completely,
penetrating into it, not missing any part of it. To convey this active sense,
I often prefer to use the words "observing power" to translate sati,
rather than "mindfulness." However, for the sake of ease and simplicity,
I will consistently use the word "mindfulness" in this volume, but I
would like my readers to remember the dynamic qualities it should possess.
Mindfulness
can be well understood by examining its three aspects of characteristic, function
and manifestation. These three aspects are traditional categories used in the
Abhidhamma, the Buddhist description of consciousness, to describe factors of
mind. We will use them here to study each of the enlightenment factors in turn.
Nonsuperficiality
The
characteristic of mindfulness is nonsuperficiality. This suggests that mindfulness
is penetrative and profound. If we throw a cork into a stream, it simply bobs
up and down on the surface, floating downstream with the current. If we throw
a stone instead, it will immediately sink to the very bed of the stream. So, too,
mindfulness ensures that the mind will sink deeply into the object and not slip
superficially past it.
Say you are watching your abdomen as the object of your
satipa??hana practice. You try to be very firm, focusing your attention so that
the mind will not slip off, but rather will sink deeply into the processes of
rising and falling. As the mind penetrates these processes, you can comprehend
the true natures of tension, pressure, movement and so on.
Keeping the Object
in View
The function of mindfulness is to keep the object always in view, neither
forgetting it nor allowing it to disappear. When mindfulness is present, the occurring
object will be noted without forgetfulness.
In order for nonsuperficiality
and nondisappearance, the characteristic and function of mindfulness, to appear
dearly in our practice, we must try to understand and practice the third aspect
of mindfulness. This is the manifestation aspect, which develops and brings along
the other two. The chief manifestation of mindfulness is confrontation: it sets
the mind directly face to face with the object.
Face to Face with the Object
It
is as if you are walking along a road and you meet a traveler, face to face, coming
from the opposite direction. When you are meditating, the mind should meet the
object in just this way. Only through direct confrontation with an object can
true mindfulness arise.
They say that the human face is the index of character.
If you want to size up a person, you look at his or her face very carefully and
then you can make a preliminary judgment. If you do not examine the face carefully
and instead become distracted by other parts of his or her body, then your judgment
will not be accurate.
In meditation you must apply a similar, if not sharper,
degree of care in looking at the object of observation. Only if you look meticulously
at the object can you understand its true nature. When you look at a face for
the first time, you get a quick, overall view of it. If you look more carefully,
you will pick up details - say, of the eyebrows, eyes and lips. First you must
look at the face as a whole, and only later will details become clear.
Similarly,
when you are watching the rising and falling of your abdomen, you begin by taking
an overall view of these processes. First you bring your mind face to face with
the rising and falling. After repeated successes you will find yourself able to
look closer. Details will appear to you effortlessly, as if by themselves. You
will notice different sensations in the rise and fall, such as tension, pressure,
heat, coolness, or movement.
As a yogi repeatedly comes face to face with the
object, his or her efforts begin to bear fruit. Mindfulness is activated and becomes
firmly established on the object of observation. There are no misses. The objects
do not fall away from view. They neither slip away nor disappear, nor are they
absent-mindedly forgotten. The kilesas cannot infiltrate this strong barrier of
mindfulness. If mindfulness can be maintained for a significant period of time,
the yogi can discover a great purity of mind because of the absence of kilesas.
Protection from attack by the kilesas is a second aspect of the manifestation
of mindfulness. When mindfulness is persistently and repeatedly activated, wisdom
arises. There will be insight into the true nature of body and mind. Not only
does the yogi realize the true experiential sensations of the rise and fall, but
she or he also comprehends the individual characteristics of the various physical
and mental phenomena happening inside herself or himself.
Seeing the Four Noble
Truths
The yogi may see directly that all physical and mental phenomena share
the characteristic of suffering. When this happens we say that the First Noble
Truth is seen.
When the First Noble Truth has been seen, the remaining three
are also seen. Thus it is said in the texts, and we can observe the same in our
own experience. Because there is mindfulness at the moment of occurrence of mental
and physical phenomena, no craving arises. With this abandoning of craving, the
Second Noble Truth is seen. Craving is the root of suffering, and when craving
is absent, suffering, too, disappears. Seeing the Third Noble Truth, the cessation
of suffering, is fulfilled when ignorance and the other kilesas fall away and
cease. All this occurs on a provisional or moment-to-moment basis when mindfulness
and wisdom are present. Seeing the Fourth Noble Truth refers to the development
of the Eightfold Path factors. This development occurs simultaneously within each
moment of mindfulness. We will discuss the factors of the Eightfold Path in more
detail in the next chapter, "Chariot to nibbana."
Therefore, on one
level, we can say that the Four Noble Truths are seen by the yogi at any time
when mindfulness and wisdom are present. This brings us back to the two definitions
of bojjha?ga given above. Mindfulness is part of the consciousness that contains
insight into the true nature of reality; it is a part of enlightenment knowledge.
It is present in the mind of one who knows the Four Noble Truths. Thus, it is
called a factor of enlightenment, a bojjha?ga.
Mindfulness is the Cause of
Mindfulness
The first cause of mindfulness is nothing more than mindfulness
itself. Naturally, there is a difference between the weak mindfulness that characterizes
one's early meditative efforts and the mindfulness at higher levels of practice,
which becomes strong enough to cause enlightenment to occur. In fact, the development
of mindfulness is a simple momentum, one moment of mindfulness causing the next.
Four
More Ways to Develop Mindfulness
Commentators identify four additional factors
which help develop and strengthen mindfulness until it is worthy of the title
bojjha?ga.
1. Mindfulness and Clear Comprehension
The first is satisampajañña,
usually translated as "mindfulness and clear comprehension." In this
term, sati is the mindfulness activated during formal sitting practice, watching
the primary object as well as others. Sampajañña, clear comprehension,
refers to mindfulness on a broader basis: mindfulness of walking, stretching,
bending, turning around, looking to one side, and all the other activities that
make up ordinary life.
2. Avoiding Unmindful People
Dissociation from persons
who are not mindful is the second way of developing mindfulness as an enlightenment
factor. If you are doing your best to be mindful, and you run across an unmindful
person who corners you into some long-winded argument, you can imagine how quickly
your own mindfulness might vanish.
3. Choosing Mindful Friends
The third
way to cultivate mindfulness to associate with mindful persons. Such people can
serve as strong sources of inspiration. By spending time with them, in an environment
where mindfulness is valued, you can grow and deepen your own mindfulness.
4.
Inclining the Mind Toward Mindfulness
The fourth method is to incline the mind
toward activating mindfulness. This means consciously taking mindfulness as a
top priority, alerting the mind to return to it in every situation. This approach
is very important; it creates a sense of unforgetfulness, of non-absentmindedness.
You try as much as possible to refrain from those activities that do not particularly
lead to the deepening of mindfulness. Of these there is a wide selection, as you
probably know.
As a yogi only one task is required of you, and that is to be
aware of whatever is happening in the present moment. In an intensive retreat,
this means you set aside social relationships, writing and reading, even reading
scriptures. You take special care when eating not to fall into habitual patterns.
You always consider whether the times, places, amounts and kinds of food you eat
are essential or not. If they are not, you avoid repeating the unnecessary pattern.
INVESTIGATION:
THE SECOND ENLIGHTENMENT FACTOR
We say that the mind is enveloped by darkness,
and as soon as insight or wisdom arises, we say that the light has come. This
light reveals physical and mental phenomena so that the mind can see them clearly.
It is as if you were in a dark room and were given a flashlight. You can begin
to see what is present in the room. This image illustrates the second enlightenment
factor, called "investigation" in English and dhamma vicaya sambojjha?ga
in Pali.
The word "investigation" may need to be elucidated. In meditation,
investigation is not carried out by means of the thinking process. It is intuitive,
a sort of discerning insight that distinguishes the characteristics of phenomena.
Vicaya is the word usually translated as "investigation"; it is also
a synonym for "wisdom" or "insight." Thus in vipassana practice
there is no such thing as a proper investigation which uncovers nothing. When
vicaya is present, investigation and insight coincide. They are the same thing.
What
is it we investigate? What do we see into? We see into dhamma. This is a word
with many meanings that can be experienced personally. Generally when we say "dhamma"
we mean phenomena, mind and matter. We also mean the laws that govern the behavior
of phenomena. When "Dharnma" is capitalized, it refers more specifically
to the teaching of the Buddha, who realized the true nature of "dhamma"
and helped others to follow in his path. The commentaries explain that in the
context of investigation, the word "dhamma" has an additional, specific
meaning. It refers to the individual states or qualities uniquely present in each
object, as well as the common traits each object may share with other objects.
Thus, individual and common traits are what we should be discovering in our practice.
Knowing
the True Nature of Dhammas
The characteristic of investigation is the ability
to know, through discernment by a nonintellectual investigation, the true nature
of dhammas.
Dispelling Darkness
The function of investigation is to dispel
darkness. When dhamma vicaya is present, it lights up the field of awareness,
illuminating the object of observation so that the mind can see its characteristics
and penetrate its true nature. At a higher level, investigation has the function
of totally removing the envelope of darkness, allowing the mind to penetrate into
nibbana. So you see, investigation is a very important factor in our practice.
When it is weak, or absent, there is trouble.
Dissipating Confusion
As you
walk into a pitch-dark room, you may feel a lot of doubt. "Am I going to
trip over something? Bang my shins? Bang into the wall?" Your mind is in
confusion because you do not know what things are in the room or where they are
located. Similarly, when dhamma vicaya is absent, the yogi is in a state of chaos
and confusion, filled with a thousand and one doubts. "Is there a person,
or is there no person? Is there a self, or no self? Am I an individual or not?
Is there a soul, or is there no soul? Is there a spirit or not?"
You,
too, may have been plagued by doubts like this. Perhaps you doubted the teaching
of impermanence, suffering, and absence of self. "Are you sure that everything
is impermanent? Maybe some things aren't quite so unsatisfactory as others. Maybe
there's a self-essence we haven't found yet." You may feel that nibbana is
a fairy tale invented by your teachers, that it does not really exist.
The
manifestation of investigation is the dissipation of confusion. When dhamma vicaya
sambojjhanga arises, everything is brightly lit, and the mind sees clearly what
is present. Seeing clearly the nature of mental and physical phenomena, you no
longer worry about banging into the wall. Impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and
absence of self will become quite clear to you. Finally, you may penetrate into
the true nature of nibbana, such that you'll not need to doubt its reality.
Ultimate
Realities
Investigation shows us the characteristics of paramattha dhamma,
or ultimate realities, which simply means objects that can be experienced directly
without the mediation of concepts. There are three types of ultimate realities:
physical phenomena, mental phenomena, and nibbana.
Physical phenomena are composed
of the four great elements, earth, fire, water and air. Each element has separate
characteristics which are peculiar to and inherent in it.
When we say "characterized"
we could also say "experienced as," for we experience the characteristics
of each of these four elements in our own bodies, as sensations.
Earth's specific
or individual characteristic is hardness. Water has the characteristic of fluidity
and cohesion. Fire's characteristic is temperature, hot and cold. Air, or wind,
has characteristics of tightness, tautness, tension or piercing, and an additional
dynamic aspect, movement.
Mental phenomena also have specific characteristics.
For example, the mind, or consciousness, has the characteristic of knowing an
object. The mental factor of phassa, or contact, has the characteristic of impingement.
Please
bring your attention right now to the rising and falling of your abdomen. As you
are mindful of the movement, you may perhaps come to know that it is composed
of sensations. Tightness, tautness, pressure, movement - all these are manifestations
of the wind element. You may feel heat or cold as well, the element of fire. These
sensations are objects of your mind; they are the dhammas which you investigate.
If your experience is perceived directly, and you are aware of the sensations
in a specific way, then we can say dhamma vicaya is present.
Investigation
can also discern other aspects of the Dhamma. As you observe the rising and falling
movements, you may spontaneously notice that there are two distinct processes
occurring. On the one hand are physical phenomena, the sensations of tension and
movement. On the other hand is consciousness, the noting mind which is aware of
these objects. This is an insight into the true nature of things. As you continue
to meditate, another kind of insight will arise. You will see that all dhammas
share characteristics of impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and absence of self.
The factor of investigation has led you to see what is universal in nature, in
every physical and mental object.
With the maturation of this insight into
impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and absence of self, wisdom becomes able to penetrate
nibbana. In this case, the word dhamma takes nibbana as its referent. Thus, dhamma
vicaya can also mean discerning insight into nibbana.
There is something outstanding
about nibbana in that it has no characteristics in common with phenomena that
can be perceived. It has specific characteristics of its own, however: permanence,
eternity, nonsuffering, bliss and happiness. Like other objects, it is called
anatta, nonself, but the nonself nature of nibbana is different from the nonself
of ordinary phenomena in that it does not rest upon suffering and impermanence.
It rests instead on bliss and permanence. When the mind penetrates nibbana, this
distinction becomes evident through dhamma vicaya, the investigative discerning
insight into the dhamma, which has led us to this place and now allows us to see
it clearly.
Spontaneous Insight is the Cause of Investigation
We might be
interested in knowing how we can get this factor of investigation to arise. According
to the Buddha, there is only one cause of it: there must be a spontaneous insight,
a direct perception. To realize such an insight, you must activate mindfulness.
You must be aware in a penetrative manner of whatever arises. Then the mind can
gain insight into the true nature of phenomena. This accomplishment requires wise
attention, appropriate attention. You direct the mind toward the object, mindfully.
Then you will have that first insight or direct perception. The factor of investigation
arises, and because of it, further insights will follow naturally in order, as
a child progresses from kindergarten through high school and college and finally
graduates.
Seven More Ways to Develop Investigation
The commentaries speak
of seven additional ways to support the arising of investigation as a factor of
enlightenment.
The first is to ask questions about the Dhamma and the practice.
This means finding a person who is knowledgeable about the Dhamma and speaking
with him or her. There is no doubt that Westerners can quite easily fulfill this
first requirement. They are adept at asking complicated questions. This capacity
is good; it will lead to the development of wisdom.
2. Cleanliness
The
second support is cleanliness of what are called the internal and external bases.
These are nothing more than the body and the environment. Keeping the internal
base, or body, clean means bathing regularly, keeping hair and nails well groomed,
and making sure the bowels are free of constipation. Keeping the external base
clean means wearing clean and neat clothes and sweeping, dusting and tidying your
living quarters. This helps the mind become bright and clear. When the eyes fall
upon dirt and untidiness, mental confusion tends to arise. But if an environment
is clean, the mind becomes bright and clear. This mental state is ideally conducive
to the development of wisdom.
3. A Balanced Mind
The third support for the
arising of investigation is balancing the controlling faculties of faith, wisdom,
mindfulness, energy and concentration. We treated them at length in an earlier
chapter. Four of these five faculties are paired: wisdom and faith, effort and
concentration. The practice depends in fundamental ways upon the equilibrium of
these pairs.
If faith is stronger than wisdom, one is apt to become gullible
or to be carried away by excessive devotional thoughts, a hindrance to practice.
Yet, on the other hand, if knowledge or intelligence is in excess, a cunning and
manipulative mind results. One can deceive oneself in many ways, even about the
truth.
The balance between effort and concentration works like this: if one
is overenthusiastic and works too hard, the mind becomes agitated and cannot focus
properly on the object of observation. Slipping off, it wanders about, causing
much frustration. Too much concentration, however, can lead to laziness and drowsiness.
When the mind is still and it seems easy to remain focused on the object, one
might begin to relax and settle back. Soon one dozes off.
This balancing of
faculties is an aspect of meditation that teachers must understand quite thoroughly
in order to guide their students. The most basic way of maintaining balance, and
of reestablishing it when it is lost, is to strengthen the remaining controlling
faculty, mindfulness.
4-5. Avoiding Fools, Making Friends with the Wise
The
fourth and fifth supports for investigation are to avoid foolish, unwise persons
and to associate with wise ones. What is a wise person? One person may be learned
in the scriptures. Another may be able to think things through with great clarity.
If you associate with these people, your theoretical learning will surely increase
and you will cultivate a philosophical attitude. This activity is not at all bad.
Another sort of wise person, however, can give you knowledge and wisdom beyond
what is found in books. The scriptures tell us that the minimum prerequisite defining
such a person is that he or she must have practiced meditation and reached the
stage of insight into the arising and passing away of all phenomena. If one has
not reached this stage, it goes without saying that one should never try to teach
meditation, since associating with one's students will not foster the arising
of dhamma vicaya in them.
6. Reflection on Profound Truth
The sixth support
for investigation is reflection on profound Dhamma. This instruction to think
about something might seem contradictory. Basically it means reflecting on the
nature of physical and mental phenomena from the vipassana point of view: as aggregates,
elements and faculties, all of them impersonal.
7. Total Commitment
The
last important support for the arising of investigation is total commitment to
cultivating this factor of enlightenment. One should always have the inclination
toward investigation, toward direct intuitive insight. Remember that it is not
necessary to rationalize or intellectualize your experiences. Just practice meditation,
so that you can gain a firsthand experience of your own mind and body.
COURAGEOUS
EFFORT: THIRD FACTOR OF ENLIGHTENMENT
The third enlightenment factor, effort
or viriya, is the energy expended to direct the mind persistently, continuously,
toward the object of observation. In Pali, viriya is defined as virana? bhavo,
which means "the state of heroic ones." This gives us an idea of the
flavor, the quality, of effort in our practice. It should be courageous effort.
People who are hardworking and industrious have the capacity to be heroic
in whatever they do. It is effort itself, in fact, that gives them a heroic quality.
A person endowed with courageous effort will be bold in going forward, unafraid
of the difficulties he or she may encounter in executing a chosen task. Commentators
say that the characteristic of effort is an enduring patience in the face of suffering
or difficulty. Effort is the ability to see to the end no matter what, even if
one has to grit one's teeth.
Yogis need patience and acceptance from the very
beginning of practice. If you come to a retreat, you leave behind the pleasant
habits and hobbies of ordinary life. You sleep little, on makeshift mattresses
in tiny cells. Then you get up and spend the day trying to sit immobile and cross-legged,
hour upon hour. On top of the sheer austerity of practice, you must be patient
with your mind's dissatisfaction, its longing for the good things of home.
Anytime
you actually get down to the work of meditation, moreover, you are likely to experience
bodily resistance and some level of pain. Say you are trying to sit still for
an hour with your legs crossed. Just fifteen minutes into the sitting, a nasty
mosquito comes and bites you. You itch. On top of that, your neck is a bit stiff
and there's a creeping numbness in your foot. You may start to feel irritated.
You are used to a luxurious life. Your body is so pampered and spoon-fed that
you usually shift its position whenever it feels the slightest discomfort. Now,
alas, your body must suffer. And because it is suffering, you suffer as well.
Unpleasant
sensations have the uncanny ability to exhaust and wither the mind. The temptation
to give up can be very great. Your mind may fill with rationalizations:
"I'll
just move my foot a tiny inch; it'll improve my concentration." It may be
only a matter of time before you give in.
Patient Endurance
You need courageous
effort, with its characteristic of forbearance in the face of difficulty. If you
raise your energy level, the mind gains strength to bear with pain in a patient
and courageous way. Effort has the power to freshen the mind and keep it robust,
even in difficult circumstances. To increase your energy level, you can encourage
yourself, or perhaps seek out the inspiration of a spiritual friend or guide.
Fed with a bit more energy, the mind grows taut and strong once more.
Support
for the Exhausted Mind
Commentators say that effort has the function of supporting.
It supports the mind when it withers under attack by pain.
Consider an old,
dilapidated house on the point of collapse. A slight gust of wind will bring it
tumbling down. If you prop it up with two-by-fours, though, the house can continue
to stand. Similarly, a mind withered by pain can be supported by courageous effort
and can continue the practice with freshness and vigilance. You may have experienced
this benefit personally.
Yogis who suffer from chronic ailments may have difficulty
practicing in a regular way. Confronting an ailment again and again saps physical
and mental energy; it is taxing and discouraging. It is no surprise that yogis
who have sicknesses often come to interviews full of despair and disappointment.
They feel they are making no progress. They merely hit a wall again and again.
It all seems so futile. Little thoughts occur to them, wanting to give up, wanting
to leave the retreat or just stop meditating. Sometimes I can save this situation
with a little discourse or a word of encouragement. The yogi's face lights up
and he or she is on the road again for a day or two.
It is very important to
have encouragement and inspiration, not only from yourself but from someone else
who can help you along, give you a push when you get stuck.
Courageous Mind:
The Story of Citta
The manifestation of effort is a bold, brave and courageous
mind. To illustrate this quality, there is a story from the Buddha's time of a
bhikkhuni named Citta. One day she reviewed the suffering inherent in mind and
body and was seized by a great spiritual urgency. As a result she renounced the
world and took nun's robes, hoping to free herself from suffering. Unfortunately,
she had a chronic ailment which came in spasms, without warning. One day she would
feel fine, and then suddenly she would fall ill. She was a determined lady, though.
She wanted liberation and was not one to call it quits. Whenever she was healthy
she would strive intensely, and when she was sick she continued, though at a lesser
pace. Sometimes her practice was very dynamic and inspired. Then the ailment attacked,
and she would regress.
Her sister bhikkhunis worried that Citta would overstrain
herself. They warned her to take care of her health, to slow down, but Citta ignored
them. She meditated on, day after day, month after month, year after year. As
she grew older she had to lean on a staff to move around. Her body was weak and
bony, but her mind was robust and strong.
One day Citta decided she was sick
of putting up with all this impediment, and made a totally committed decision.
She said to herself, "Today I'm going to do my very best without considering
my body at all. Either I die today or the kilesas will be vanquished."
Citta
started walking up a hill with her staff. Very mindfully, step by step, she went.
Old and thin and feeble, at times she had to get down and crawl. But her mind
was persistent and heroic. She was absolutely, totally committed to the Dhamma.
Every step she took, every inch she crawled, toward the peak of the hill was made
with mindfulness. When she reached the top, she was exhausted, but her mindfulness
had not been broken.
Citta made again her resolution to vanquish the kilesas
once and for all or to be vanquished by death. She practiced on as hard as she
could, and it seems that on that very day she reached her goal. She was filled
with joy and rapture, and when she descended the hill it was with strength and
clarity of mind. She was a very different person from the Citta who had crawled
up the hill. Now she was fresh and robust, with a clear and calm expression. The
other bhikkhunis were astounded to see Citta like this. They asked her by what
miracle she had been transformed. When Citta explained what had happened to her,
the bhikkhunis were filled with awe and praise.
The Buddha said, "Far
better is it to live a day striving in meditation than one hundred years without
striving." In business, politics, social affairs and education, we always
find that the leaders are people who work hard. Hard work brings you to the peak
of any field. This is a fact of life. Effort's role is obvious in meditation as
well. Meditation practice takes a great deal of energy. You have to really work
to establish continuity of mindfulness and maintain it from moment to moment without
a break. In this endeavor there is no room for laziness.
A Heat that Vaporizes
Defilements
The Buddha spoke of energy as a kind of heat, atapa. When the mind
is filled with energy, it becomes hot. This mental temperature has the power to
dry up defilements. We can compare the kilesas to moisture; a mind devoid of energy
is easily dampened and weighed down by them. If effort is strong, however, the
mind can vaporize kilesas before it is even touched by them. Thus, when the mind
is energized by effort, mental defilements cannot touch it, or even come near.
Unwholesome states cannot attack.
On matter's molecular level, heat appears
as increased vibration. A red-hot iron bar is actually vibrating rapidly, and
it becomes flexible and workable. This is so in meditation, too. When effort is
strong, the increased vibration in the mind is manifested as agility. The energized
mind jumps from one object to another with ease and quickness. Contacting phenomena,
it heats them up, melting the illusion of solidity, so that passing away is clearly
seen.
Sometimes when momentum is strong in practice, effort carries on by itself,
just as an iron bar remains red-hot for a long time after it has left the fire.
With the kilesas far away, clarity and brightness appear in the mind. The mind
is pure and clear in its perception of what is happening. It becomes sharp, and
very interested in catching the details of phenomena as they arise. This energetic
mindfulness allows the mind to penetrate deeply into the object of observation
and to remain there without scattering and dispersing. With mindfulness and concentration
established, there is space for clear intuitive perception, wisdom, to arise.
Through
diligent effort, then, the wholesome factors of mindfulness, concentration and
wisdom arise and strengthen, and bring with them other wholesome, happy states.
The mind is clear and sharp, and it begins to enter more deeply into the true
nature of reality.
Disadvantages of Laziness and Delights of Freedom
If
instead there is sloppiness and laziness, your attention becomes blunt and noxious
states of mind creep in. As you lose focus, you do not care whether you are in
a wholesome state of mind or not. You might think your practice can coast along
with no help from you. This kind of audacity, a lazy sort of boldness, can undermine
you, slow you down. Your mind becomes damp and heavy, full of negative and unwholesome
tendencies, like a mildewed horse blanket that has been left out in the rain.
Ordinarily
the kilesas pull the mind into their field of sensual pleasures. This is especially
true for raga, lust, one aspect of desire. People who are devoid of courageous
effort are helpless in raga's grip. They sink again and again into the field of
sensual pleasures. If effort is injected into the mind, though, the mind can free
itself from this harmful energy field. The mind becomes very light, like a rocket
that has succeeded in entering the weightlessness of outer space. Freed from the
heaviness of desire and aversion, the mind fills instead with rapture and calm,
as well as other delightful, free states of mind. This kind of delight can only
be enjoyed through the fire of one's own efforts.
You may have experienced
this freedom personally. Perhaps one day you were meditating while someone was
baking cookies nearby. A delicious smell came floating into your nostrils. If
you were really mindful, you simply noted this smell as an object. You knew it
was pleasant, but no attachment or clinging arose. You weren't compelled to get
up from your cushion and ask for one of those cookies. It might have been similar
had an unpleasant object come to you. You would have felt no aversion. Confusion
and delusion may also have been absent. When you see clearly the nature of mind
and matter, unwholesome factors cannot control you.
Food can be one of the
most difficult areas for meditators, especially on retreat. Leaving aside the
whole problem of greed, yogis often feel strong disgust toward food. When one
is really mindful, one can make the shocking discovery that food is quite tasteless
on the tongue. As practice deepens, some yogis begin to find food so repulsive
that they are unable to eat more than one or two bites. Alternatively, when yogis
experience strong rapture, this rapture becomes a nourishment for their minds,
such that they entirely lose their appetite. Both of these types of yogis should
try to overcome their initial reactions and make a concerted effort to eat sufficient
food to maintain their energy. When the body is deprived of physical nutriment
it loses strength and stamina, and eventually this undermines the meditation practice.
One
may dream of getting the benefits of viriya, but if one does not actually strive
for them, it is said that one wallows in disgust. The Pali word for such a person
is kusita. In the world a person who does not work to support him or herself and
family will be looked down upon by others. He or she might be called a lazybones
or insulted in various ways. The word kusita refers specifically to someone who
is abused verbally. In practice it is the same. At times energy is essential.
A yogi who cannot muster the effort to confront a difficult experience, but cringes
instead, could be said to be "chickening out." He or she has no courage,
no sense of boldness, no bravery at all.
A lazy person lives in misery, lives
with suffering. Not only is he or she held in low esteem by others, but also kilesas
arise easily when effort is low. Then the mind is assailed by the three kinds
of wrong thoughts: thoughts of craving, of destruction and of cruelty. These mental
states are oppressive, painful and unpleasant in themselves. A lazy person can
easily be pounced upon by sloth and torpor, another unpleasant state. Furthermore,
without energy it may be difficult to maintain the basic precepts. One breaks
the precepts at one's own expense; one loses the joy and benefit of moral purity.
The
work of meditation is seriously undermined by laziness. It robs a yogi of the
chance to see into the true nature of things, or to raise his or her mind to greater
heights. Therefore, the Buddha said, a lazy person loses many beneficial things.
Persistence
For
effort to develop to the point of being a factor of enlightenment, it must have
the quality of persistence. This means that energy doesn't drop or stagnate. Rather,
it continually increases. With persistent effort, the mind is protected from wrong
thoughts. There is so much energy that sloth and torpor cannot arise. Yogis feel
a sort of durability of precepts, as well as of concentration and insight. They
experience the benefit of effort, a mind that is bright and clear and full of
strength, active and energetic.
Understanding about good effort is clear just
after one has enjoyed a major success in meditation. Perhaps one has watched extremely
painful sensations and penetrated them without reacting or becoming oppressed
by them. The mind feels a great satisfaction and heroism in its own accomplishment.
The yogi realizes for himself or herself that, thanks to effort, the mind has
not succumbed to difficulty but has gone beyond it and has emerged victorious.
Wise
Attention is the Cause of Energy
The Buddha was brief in describing how effort
or energy arises. It is caused by wise attention, he said, wise reflection on
being committed to arousing the three elements of effort.
Stages of Energy:
Leaving the Field of the Kilesas
The Buddha's three elements of effort are
launching effort, liberating effort, and persistent effort.
Launching effort
is needed at the beginning of a period of practice, particularly on a retreat.
At first the mind is overwhelmed by the new situation, and may long for all the
things left behind. To get moving on the path of meditation, you reflect on the
benefits of your task and then start really putting in the effort to be mindful.
When a yogi first starts to practice, only very basic objects are prescribed.
You are directed just to watch the primary object and only to attend to other
objects when they become distracting. This simple yet fundamental endeavor comprises
the first kind of effort, launching effort. It is like the first stage of a rocket
which gets the rocket off the ground.
Once you can be mindful of the primary
object for some time, you still do not always have smooth sailing. Hindrances
come up, or painful sensations, or sleepiness. You find yourself an innocent victim
of pain, impatience, greed, drowsiness and doubt. Perhaps you have been enjoying
some degree of calm and comfort because you have been able to stay with the primary
object, but suddenly difficult objects assault you. At this time the mind has
a tendency to become discouraged and lazy. Launching effort is no longer enough.
You need an extra boost to face pain and sleepiness, to get above the hindrances.
The
second stage of energy, liberating energy, is like the second stage of a rocket
which pushes through the earth's atmosphere. Encouragement from a teacher might
help here, or you can reflect for yourself on the good reasons to arouse liberating
energy. Armed with internal and external encouragements, you now make a concerted
effort to observe the pain. If you are able to overcome your difficulty, you will
feel very exhilarated; your energy will surge. You will be ready to go for anything
that comes into your field of awareness. Perhaps you overcome a back pain, or
you look into an attack of drowsiness and see that it vanishes like a little wisp
of cloud. The mind grows refreshed, bright and clear. You may feel an energy high.
This is the direct experience of liberating energy.
After this the practice
may go smoothly, and the mind may feel satisfied. Do not be surprised if the teacher
suddenly assigns you extra homework, such as asking you to pay attention to several
touch points on the body. This guidance is to encourage persistent energy, the
third kind of energy. Persistent energy is necessary to keep deepening your practice,
drawing you toward your goal. It is like the third stage of a rocket which gives
it the energy to escape altogether from the earth's gravitational field. As you
develop persistent energy, you will begin to travel through the stages of insight.
It
is easy to forget that the temporary happiness you feel today in practice will
pass away when you return to the world, unless you attain some deeper level of
peace. You might reflect on this for yourself. Why are you practicing? I feel
that the minimum goal is to become a sotapanna, or stream enterer, to reach the
first stage of enlightenment, which frees you from rebirth in dangerous and painful
lower realms. Whatever your goal is, you should never be complacent until you
reach it. For this you need to develop a persistent effort that neither decreases
nor stagnates. It grows and grows until it finally brings you to your destination.
When effort is well developed in this way, it is called in Pali paggahita viriya.
Finally,
at the end of practice, effort achieves a fourth aspect, called fulfilling effort.
This is what takes you completely beyond the gravity field of sense pleasures
into the freedom of nibbana. Perhaps you are interested to see what this is like?
Well, make an effort and you might find out.
Eleven More Ways to Arouse Energy
The
commentaries list eleven ways to arouse energy.
1. Reflecting on States of
Misery
The first is to reflect on the fearsomeness of the states of apaya,
or misery, which you can fall into if you are lazy. The meaning of apa is "devoid
of." Aya, in turn, refers to the wholesome kamma that can bring about happiness
- specifically, the kinds of happiness that can be experienced as a human, as
a deva, as a brahma, and in nibbana.
Thus, if you do not practice, you might
go into states and realms where you only have the chance to produce unwholesome
kamma. There are several realms of unfortunate rebirths. Of these, the easiest
for you to observe, and therefore accept, is the animal world. Consider the animals
on earth, in the sea, in the air. Can any of them perform wholesome kamma, activities
that are free from blame?
Animals live in a haze of delusion. They are covered
by a tremendously thick layer of ignorance, of unknowing. Insects, for example,
are rather like machines, programmed by their genetic material to carry out certain
activities without the slightest capacity for choice, learning, or discernment.
Most animals' mental processes are restricted to concerns about mating and survival.
In their world, character roles are incredibly simple. You are predator or prey
or both. It is a vicious realm where only the fittest survive. Imagine the fear
and paranoia there must be in the mind of a being living under such pitiless conditions.
Imagine the distress and suffering when one creature dies in the jaws of another.
Dying with so much suffering, how can animals gain rebirth in a good life? The
quality of the mind at death determines the quality of the next rebirth. How can
animals ever escape from their fearful existence?
Do animals have the capacity
to be generous? Can they be moral? Can they keep precepts? Not to mention this
noble and demanding task of meditation. How can animals ever learn to control
and develop their minds to maturity? It is frightening and fearful to contemplate
a life where the only option is to behave in unwholesome ways.
Reflecting thus
may encourage your effort. "I'm a yogi right now. This is my chance. How
can I waste time lazing about? Imagine if my next rebirth was as an animal. I
wouldn't ever develop the enlightenment factor of effort. I must not waste time!
Now is the time to strive!"
2. Reflecting on the Benefits of Energy
A
second way to arouse energy is to reflect on energy's benefits, some of which
have been described above. You have a precious opportunity to come into contact
with the Dhamma, the Buddha's teaching. Having gotten into this incomparable world
of Dhamma, you should not waste the opportunity to walk the path that leads to
the essence of his teaching! You can attain supramundane states, four successive
levels of noble path and fruition, nibbana itself. Through your own practice,
you can conquer suffering.
Even if you do not work to become completely free
from all suffering in this lifetime, it would be a great loss not to become at
least a sotapanna, or stream enterer, and thus never again be reborn in a state
of misery. Walking this path isn't just for any Dick or Jane, however. A yogi
needs a lot of courage and effort. He or she must be an exceptional person. Strive
with diligence and you can attain the great goal! You should not waste a chance
to walk a path that leads to the essence of the Buddha's teaching. If you reflect
in this way, perhaps energy and inspiration will arise, and you will put in more
effort in your practice.
3. Remembering the Noble Ones
Thirdly, you can
remind yourself of the noble persons who have walked this path before you. This
path is no dusty byway. Buddhas from time immemorial, the silent Buddhas, the
great disciples, the arahants and all the rest of the noble ones, all have walked
here. If you want to share this distinguished path, fortify yourself with dignity
and be diligent. No room for cowards or the lazy; this is a road for heroes and
heroines.
Our ancestors on this path were not just a bunch of misfits who renounced
the world to escape from debts and emotional problems. The Buddhas and noble ones
were often quite wealthy, and came from loving families. If they had continued
their lives as lay persons they would undoubtedly have had a good time. Instead,
they saw the emptiness of the worldly life and had the foresight to conceive of
a greater happiness and fulfillment, beyond common sensual pleasures. There also
have been many men and women whose humble origin, consciousness of oppression
by society or a ruler, or battle against ill health has granted them a radical
vision - a wish to uproot suffering, rather than to alleviate it only on the worldly
level, or to seek revenge for the wrongs done against them. These people joined
their more privileged counterparts on the road to liberation. The Buddha said
that real nobility depends on inner purity, not on social class. All of the Buddhas
and noble disciples possessed a noble spirit of inquiry and a desire for higher
and greater happiness, because of which they left home to walk on this path which
leads to nibbana. It is a noble path, not for the wayward or for dropouts.
You
might say to yourself: "People of distinction have walked this path, and
I must try to live up to their company. I can't be sloppy here. I shall walk with
as much care as possible, fearlessly. I have this chance to belong to a great
family, the group of distinguished people who walk on this noble path. I should
congratulate myself for having the opportunity to do this. People like me have
walked on this path and attained the various stages of enlightenment. So I, too,
will be able to reach the same attainment."
Through such reflection, effort
can arise and lead you to the goal of nibbana.
4. Appreciation for Support
A
fourth causative means for arousing effort is respect and appreciation for alms
food and the other requisites essential to a renunciate's way of life. For ordained
monks and nuns, this means respecting the donations of lay supporters, not only
at the moment that the gift is made, but also by having a continuous awareness
that the generosity of others makes possible the continuation of one's practice.
Lay
yogis also may be dependent on others' support in many ways. Parents and friends
may be helping you, either financially or by taking care of your business so that
you can participate in intensive retreats. Even if you pay your own way on a retreat,
nonetheless many things are provided to support your practice. The building which
shelters you is ready-made; water and electricity are taken care of. Food is prepared
by volunteers, and your other needs are cared for. You should have a deep respect
and appreciation for the service given to you by people who may not owe you anything,
people who have good hearts and deep benevolence.
You can say to yourself,
"I should practice as hard as possible to live up to the goodness of those
people. This is the way to reciprocate and return the goodwill shown by faithful
supporters. May their efforts not go to waste. I will use what I am given with
mindfulness so that my kilesas will be slowly trimmed and uprooted, so that my
benefactors' meritorious deeds will bring about an equally meritorious result."
The
Buddha laid down rules of conduct to govern the orders of bhikkhus and bhikkhunis,
monks and nuns. One of these rules was permission to receive what is offered by
well-wishing lay supporters. This was not to enable monks and nuns to live a luxurious
life. Requisites could be accepted and used in order that monks and nuns might
care for their bodies appropriately, giving them the basic right conditions for
striving to get rid of the kilesas. Receiving support, they could devote all their
time to practicing the threefold training of sila, samadhi and pañña,
eventually gaining liberation from all suffering.
You might reflect that it
is only by practicing diligently that you can reciprocate or return the goodwill
shown by your supporters. Seen in this way, energetic mindfulness becomes an expression
of gratitude for all the help you have received in your meditation practice.
5.
Receiving a Noble Heritage
The fifth means to arouse energy is reflection on
having received a noble heritage. The heritage of a noble person consists of seven
nonmaterial qualities: faith or saddha; morality or sila; moral shame and moral
dread or hiri and ottappa, discussed at length in "Chariot to nibbana,"
the last chapter of this book; knowledge of the Dhamma, and generosity - one is
very generous in giving up the kilesas, and in giving gifts to others; and lastly,
wisdom, which refers to the series of vipassana insights and finally the wisdom
of penetrating into nibbana.
What is extraordinary about this inheritance is
that these seven qualities are nonmaterial and therefore not impermanent. This
contrasts with the heritage you may receive from your parents upon their death,
which is material and therefore subject to loss, decay and dissolution. Further
more, material inheritances may be unsatisfying in various ways. Some people quickly
squander whatever they receive. Others do not find their new possessions useful.
The heritage of a noble one is always beneficial; it protects and ennobles. It
follows its heir through the gates of death, and throughout the remainder of his
or her sa?saric wanderings.
In this world, however, if children are unruly
and wayward, their parents may disown them so that the children receive no material
inheritance. Similarly in the world of the Dhamma, if one has come into contact
with the Buddha's teaching, and then is sloppy and lazy in practice, one will
again be denied the seven types of noble heritage. Only a person endowed with
enduring and persistent energy will be worthy of this noble inheritance.
Energy
is fully developed only when one is able to go through all the levels of insight,
up to the culmination of the series in noble path consciousness. This developed
energy, or Fulfilling Energy as it is called, is precisely what makes one worthy
of the full benefits of the noble heritage.
If you continue to perfect the
effort of your practice, these qualities will become permanently yours. Reflecting
in this way, you may be inspired to practice more ardently.
6. Remembering
the Greatness of the Buddha
A sixth reflection which develops energy is considering
the greatness and ability of the person who discovered and taught this path to
liberation. The Buddha's greatness is demonstrated by the fact that Mother Earth
herself trembled on seven occasions during his life. The earth first trembled
when the Bodhisatta (Sanskrit: Bodhisattva), the future Buddha, was conceived
for the last time in his mother's womb. It trembled again when Prince Siddhattha
left his palace to take up the homeless life of a renunciate, and then when he
attained supreme enlightenment. The earth trembled a fourth time when the Buddha
gave his first sermon, a fifth time when he succeeded in overcoming his opponents,
a sixth time when he returned from Tavati?sa Heaven, having given a discourse
on Abhidhamma to his mother who had been reborn there. The earth trembled for
the seventh time when the Buddha attained Parinibbana, when he passed from conditioned
existence forever at the moment of his physical death.
Think of the depth of
compassion, the depth of wisdom the Buddha possessed! There are innumerable stories
of his perfections: how long and devotedly the Bodhisatta worked toward his goal,
how perfectly he attained it, how lovingly he served humanity afterwards. Remember
that if you continue to strive, you too can share the magnificent qualities the
Buddha had.
Before the Buddha's great enlightenment, beings were engulfed in
clouds of delusion and ignorance. The path to liberation had not yet been discovered.
Beings groped in the dark. If they sought liberation, they had to invent a practice
or follow someone who made a claim to truth that was, in fact, unfounded. In this
world a vast array of pursuits have been devised for the goal of attaining happiness.
These range from severe sell-mortification to limit less indulgence in sense pleasure.
A
Vow to Liberate All Beings
One of the Buddha's previous existences was as a
hermit named Sumedha. This was during a previous eon and world system, when the
Buddha immediately previous to this one, Dipa?kara, was alive. The hermit Sumedha
had a vision of how much beings suffered in darkness prior to the appearance of
a samma sambuddha, a fully enlightened Buddha. He saw that beings needed to be
led safely across to the other shore; they could not arrive alone. Due to this
vision, the hermit renounced his own enlightenment, for which he had a strong
potential in that particular existence. He vowed instead to spend incalculable
eons, however long it would take, to perfect his own qualities to the level of
a samma sambuddha. This would give him the power to lead many beings to liberation,
not just himself.
When this being finally completed his preparations and arrived
at his lifetime as the present Buddha, he was truly an extraordinary and outstanding
person. Upon his great enlightenment, he was endowed with what are known as "the
three accomplishments": the accomplishment of cause, the accomplishment of
result, and the accomplishment of service.
He was accomplished by virtue of
the cause which led to his enlightenment, that is, the effort he put forth during
many existences to perfect his paramis, the forces of purity in his mind. There
are many stories of the bodhisatta's tremendous acts of generosity, compassion
and virtue. In lifetime after lifetime, he sacrificed himself for the benefit
of others. Thus developed, his purity of mind was the foundation for his attainment
under the Bo Tree of enlightenment and omniscient knowledge. That attainment is
called the accomplishment of result because it was the natural result of his accomplishment
of cause, or the development of very strong powers of purity in his mind. The
Buddha's third accomplishment was that of service, helping others through many
years of teaching. He was not complacent about his enlightenment, but out of great
compassion and loving care for all those beings who were trainable, he set forth
after his enlightenment and tirelessly shared the Dhamma with all those beings
who were ready for it, until the day of his Parinibbana.
Reflecting on various
aspects of the Buddha's three great accomplishments may inspire you to greater
effort in your own practice.
Compassion Leads to Action
Compassion was the
Bodhisatta Sumedha's sole motivation for sacrificing his own enlightenment in
favor of making the incredible effort to become a Buddha. His heart was moved
when he saw, with the eye of great compassion, how beings suffered as a result
of misguided activities. Thus he vowed to attain the wisdom necessary to guide
them as perfectly as possible.
Compassion must lead to action. Furthermore,
wisdom is required so that action may bear useful fruit. Wisdom distinguishes
the right path from the wrong path. If you have compassion but no wisdom, you
may do more harm than good when you try to help. On the other hand, you may have
great wisdom, may have become enlightened, but without compassion you will not
lift a finger to help others.
Both wisdom and compassion were perfectly fulfilled
in the Buddha. Because of his great compassion for suffering beings, the Bodhisatta
was able to go through his samsaric wanderings with enduring patience. Others
insulted and injured him, yet he was able to bear these actions with perseverance
and endurance. It is said that if you were to combine the compassion that all
the mothers on this planet feel for their children, it would still not come near
the Buddha's great compassion. Mothers have a great capacity for forgiveness.
It is no easy task to bring up children. Children can be very cruel, and at times
they can inflict emotional and physical harm on their mothers. Even when harm
is grievous, however, a mother's heart usually has space to forgive her child.
In the Buddha's heart this forgiving space was boundless. His capacity for forgiveness
was one of the manifestations of his great compassion.
Once upon a time the
Bodhisatta was born as a monkey. One day he was swinging around in the forest
and happened upon a Brahman who had fallen in a crevice. Upon seeing the poor
Brahman helpless, the monkey was filled with compassion. This feeling had a great
deal of momentum behind it, for by then the Bodhisatta had spent many lifetimes
cultivating his parami, or perfection, of compassion.
The Bodhisatta prepared
to leap into the crevice to save the Brahman but he wondered if he had the strength
to carry the Brahman out. Wisdom arose in his mind. He decided he should test
his capability on a boulder he saw lying nearby. Lifting the boulder and setting
it down again, he learned that he would be able to accomplish the rescue.
Down
the Bodhisatta went and bravely carried the Brahman to safety. Having carried
first the boulder and then the Brahman himself, the monkey fell to the ground
in exhaustion. Far from being grateful, the Brahman picked up a rock and smashed
the monkey's head, so that he could take home the meat for his supper. Awakening
to find himself near death, the monkey realized what had happened but did not
get angry. This response was due to his perfected quality of forgiveness. He did
say to the Brahman, "Is it proper for you to kill me when I've saved your
life?"
Then the Bodhisatta remembered that the Brahman had lost his way
in the forest and would not be able to get home without help. The monkey's compassion
knew no bounds. Clenching his teeth, he refused to die until he had led the Brahman
out of the forest. A trail of blood fell from his wound as the monkey instructed
the Brahman which way to turn. Upon reaching the right trail, the monkey expired.
If
the Buddha had this much compassion and wisdom even as a monkey, you can imagine
how much more he had developed these perfections by the time of his enlightenment.
Full
Illumination
After innumerable existences as a Bodhisatta, the Buddha-to-be
was born as a human being in his last existence. Having perfected all the paramis,
he began searching for the true path to liberation. He endured many trials before
he finally discovered the noble path by which he came to see deeply impermanence,
unsatisfactoriness and absence of self in all conditioned phenomena. Deepening
his practice, he went through the various stages of enlightenment and eventually
became an arahant, completely purified of greed, hatred and delusion. Then, the
omniscient knowledge he had cultivated arose in him, together with the other knowledges
particular to Buddhas. His omniscience meant that if there was anything the Buddha
wished to know about, he had only to reflect upon the question, and the answer
would come to his mind spontaneously.
As a result of his illumination, the
Buddha was now endowed with "The Accomplishment by Virtue of Fruition of
Result," as its full title is known. This accomplishment came about because
of the fulfillment of certain causes and prerequisites he had cultivated in his
previous lives.
Having become a perfectly enlightened Buddha, he did not forget
the intention he had resolved upon so many eons ago when he'd been the hermit
Sumedha. The very purpose of his working so hard and long was to help other beings
cross the ocean of suffering. Now that the Buddha was completely enlightened,
you can imagine how much more powerful and effective his great compassion and
wisdom had become. Based on these two qualities, he began to preach the Dhamma
and continued to do so for forty-five years, until his death. He slept only two
hours a night, dedicating the rest of his time to the service of the Dhamma, helping
other beings in various ways so that they could benefit and enjoy well-being and
happiness. Even on his deathbed he showed the path to Subhadda, a renunciate of
another sect, who thereby became the last of many disciples to be enlightened
by the Buddha.
The full title of this third accomplishment is "The Accomplishment
of Seeing to the Welfare of Other Beings," and it is a natural consequence
of the previous two. If the Buddha could become enlightened and totally freed
from the kilesas, why did he continue to live in this world? Why did he mingle
with people at all? One must understand that he wanted to relieve beings of their
suffering and put them on the right path. This was the purest compassion and the
deepest wisdom on his part.
The Buddha's perfect wisdom enabled him to distinguish
what was beneficial and what was harmful. If one cannot make this crucial distinction,
how can one be of any help to other beings? One may be wise indeed, knowing full
well what leads to happiness and what to misery, but then, without compassion
one might feel quite indifferent to the fates of other beings. Thus it was the
Buddha's practical compassion which led him to exhort people to avoid unskillful
actions that bring harm and suffering. And it was wisdom that allowed him to be
selective, precise and effective in what he admonished people to do. The combination
of these two virtues, compassion and wisdom, made the Buddha an unexcelled teacher.
The
Buddha had no selfish thoughts of gaining honor, fame or the adulation of many
followers. He did not mingle with people as a socialite. He approached beings
with the sole intention of pointing out the correct way to them so that they could
be enlightened to the extent of their capacities. This was his great compassion.
When he had finished this duty, the Buddha would retire to a secluded part of
the forest. He did not stay among the crowds, bantering and mixing freely like
a common person. He did not introduce his pupils to each other, saying, "Here's
my disciple the wealthy merchant; here's the great professor." It is not
easy to live a solitary and secluded life. No ordinary worldling can enjoy total
seclusion. But then, the Buddha was not ordinary.
Advice for Spiritual Teachers
This
is an important point for anyone aspiring to become a preacher of the Dhamma or
a meditation teacher. One should exercise great discretion in relating with students.
If
one has any relationship at all with them, one must remember always to be motivated
by great compassion, following the footsteps of the Buddha. There is danger in
becoming too close and familiar with those who are being helped. If a meditation
teacher becomes too close to his or her students, disrespect and irreverence may
be the result.
Meditation teachers should also take the Buddha as their model
for the proper motivation in sharing the Dhamma with others. One should not be
satisfied with becoming a popular or successful Dhamma teacher. One's motivation
must be, instead, genuinely benevolent. One must strive to benefit one's students
through presenting a technique whose actual practice can tame the behavior of
body, speech and mind, thereby bringing true peace and happiness. Teachers must
continually examine their own motivations in this regard.
Once I was asked
what was the most effective way to teach meditation. I replied, "First and
foremost, one should practice until one is dexterous in one's own practice. Then
one must gain a sound theoretical knowledge of the scriptures. Finally, one must
apply these two, based on a motivation of genuine lovingkindness and compassion.
Teaching based on these three factors will doubtless be effective."
In
this world many people enjoy fame, honor and success due to uncanny strokes of
fate or kamma. They may not really have fulfilled the accomplishment of cause,
as the Buddha did. That is, they may not have worked hard, but simply became successful
or wealthy by a fluke. Such people are likely to receive a lot of criticism. People
might say, "It's a wonder how he or she got into that position, considering
how sloppy and lazy he or she is. He or she doesn't deserve such luck."
Other
people may work very hard. But perhaps because they are neither intelligent nor
gifted, they attain their goal slowly, if at all. They are unable to fulfill the
accomplishment of result. People like this are not free from blame either. "Poor
old so-and-so. He or she works hard, but does not have much for brains."
Yet
another group of people work very hard and become successful. Having fulfilled
their ambition, they then rest upon their laurels, so to speak. Unlike the Buddha,
who turned his own glorious achievements to the service of humanity, they do not
take any further steps by helping society or other beings. Again, these people
will be criticized. "Look how selfish he or she is. He or she's got so much
property, wealth, and talent, but no compassion or generosity."
In this
world it is difficult to be free from blame or criticism. People will always talk
behind one another's backs. Some criticisms are merely gossip, and others are
deserved, pointing to some real flaw or lack in a person. The Buddha was indeed
an exceptional human being in having fulfilled the accomplishments of cause, of
result, and of service.
One could write an entire book describing the greatness
and perfection of the Buddha, the discoverer and teacher of the path to freedom.
Here, I only wish to open the doors for you to contemplate his virtues so that
you can develop effort in your practice.
Contemplating the Buddha's greatness,
you may be filled with awe and adoration. You may feel deep appreciation for the
wonderful opportunity to walk the path which such a great individual discovered
and taught. Perhaps you will understand that in order to walk on such a path,
you cannot be sloppy, nor sluggish, nor lazy.
May you be inspired. May you
be brave, strong and enduring, and may you walk this path to its end.
9. Avoiding
Lazy People
The ninth way to arouse effort is to avoid the company of lazy
persons. There are people who are not interested in mental development, who never
try to purify themselves. They just eat, sleep and make merry as much as they
want. They are like pythons, who swallow their prey and remain immobile for hours.
How will you ever be inspired to put forth energy in the company of such people?
You should try to avoid becoming a member of their gang. Avoiding their company
is a positive step in developing energy.
10. Seeking Energetic Friends
Now
you should take another step and choose to associate instead with yogis who are
endowed with developed, enduring and persevering energy. This is the tenth way
of arousing effort. Most specifically it refers to a yogi in retreat, but in fact,
you will be well off spending time with anyone who is totally committed to the
Dhamma, enduring and resolute, trying to activate mindfulness from moment to moment,
and maintaining a high standard of progressive or persistent energy. People who
give top priority to mental health are your best companions. In a retreat you
can learn from the people who seem to be model yogis. You can emulate their behavior
and practice, and this will lead to your own development. You should allow others'
diligence to be contagious. Take in the good energy, and allow yourself to be
influenced by it.
11. Inclining the Mind toward Developing Energy
The last
and best way to arouse energy is persistently to incline the mind toward developing
energy. The key to this practice is to adopt a resolute stand. "I will be
as mindful as I can at each moment, sitting, standing, walking, going from place
to place. I will not allow the mind to space out. I will not allow a moment of
mindfulness to be missing." If, on the contrary, you have a careless, self-defeating
attitude, your practice will be doomed from the start.
Every moment can be
charged with this courageous effort, a very consistent and enduring energy. If
a moment of laziness dares to tiptoe in, you will catch it right away and shoo
it out! Kosajja, laziness, is one of the most undermining and subversive elements
in meditation practice. You can eradicate it by effort: courageous, persistent,
persevering, enduring effort.
I hope you will arouse energy through any and
all of these eleven ways, so that you will make swift progress in the path and
eventually attain that consciousness which uproots defilements forever.
©
Saddhamma Foundation 1993