by
Phra Ajaan Thate Desaransi
(Phra Rajanirodharansi)
Translated from the Thai by
Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Copyright © 1994 The Abbot, Metta Forest Monastery
For free distribution only.
You may reprint this work for free distribution.
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provided that you charge no fees for its distribution or use.
Otherwise, all rights reserved.
This electronic edition was transcribed from the print edition in 1994
by Eileen Santer under the auspices of the DharmaNet Dharma Book
Transcription Project, with the kind permission of the translator.
Preface
The little book you are now holding in your hand grew from the faith
and conviction of a Westerner of Jewish extraction, named
Dr. Philip, who came to study Buddhism in Thailand in 1963, when I
was staying on Phuket Island. He studied meditation with
me for a full six months, and seemed to develop not only peace of mind
but also a great appreciation for Buddhism's worth.
Before returning to Hawaii, he asked me to write down a few short and
simple points for him to take and continue practicing, so
I wrote down ten points. Afterwards, I learned that he had had them
printed abroad in a periodical whose name slips my mind
at the moment.
The thought has occurred to me that this little book might be of use
to those who are interested in practicing meditation, as it is
small, easy to carry and read through quickly without taxing the brain.
So I have edited it, polishing the style and adding more
points -- in particular, point 11 and onwards (i.e., how to deal with
visions and signs in meditation) -- in order to make the book
more complete, fit to be a guide to the practice of meditation: showing
the worth of meditation, the way to meditate, which ways
of meditation are right, which are wrong, and in detail how to correct
those things which should be corrected in the practice. I
hope that this little book will be of use to those who are interested.
If anything written here deviates from the truth, I ask for all the
responsibility to be placed on me alone, since I still lack
experience in terms of education, practice, writing skills and knowledge
of many fields. If knowledgeable people should come
across this book, I would be very grateful if they would correct and
enlighten me.
1.
A basic tenet of the Buddha's teachings is that the mind and body work
together, but that the body lies under the control of the
mind. The mind is what orders the body to do this or that activity,
but when the body wears down, the mind is of necessity put
to some hardship as well. It doesn't lie under the control of the nervous
system, although the brain can be regarded as a central
office. When the body dies, disintegrating in line with the nature
of its various elements, the mind -- if the necessary conditions of
unawareness, craving, attachment and kamma are still present -- will
have to reappear in this or that plane of existence and to
continue experiencing suffering and stress.
2.
In order to do away with unawareness, craving, attachment and kamma
-- which are the chief instigators -- we must first of all
practice abandoning the elementary evils of word and deed by observing
the principles of morality that correspond to our
station in life. In other words, laypeople should observe the five
precepts and, periodically, the eight precepts; novices should
observe the ten or the twenty precepts; and monks, all 227 precepts
of the basic monastic code, together with the principles of
pure livelihood, restraint of the senses and proper use of the requisites
of life as formulated by the Buddha.
As long as your precepts aren't being kept pure, your mind isn't yet
ready for training. Even if it is trained, its training won't lead
to progress and development in the Dhamma, for its foundations aren't
yet firm enough to advance along the Noble Path -- and
we can say that it hasn't yet reached the refuge of the Triple Gem
(ti-ratana). A true Buddhist must before all else be firmly
based in the Triple Gem and the principles of morality.
The Noble Eightfold Path and the three teachings at the heart of Buddhism
-- the avoidance of all evil, the perfection of
goodness and the purification the heart -- have to be established first
on the principles of morality. This is why, for the Buddha's
teachings, morality is the beginning of the religious life.
The next step is to train the mind to develop concentration (samadhi)
and absorption (jhana) through the practice of tranquillity
meditation. Once the mind is adept at maintaining a steady focus, we
can then develop clear insight (vipassana) based on an
understanding of the Three Characteristics of inconstancy, stress and
not-self. This will lead us to pure knowledge and vision of
things as they actually are, and thus to release from all things detrimental
and defiling.
3.
For Buddhism, the true aim in developing concentration and absorption
is to gather one's mental energies and make them steady
and strong in a single point. This then forms the basis for the knowledge
and discernment capable of gaining true insight into all
conditions of nature and eliminating all that is detrimental and defiling
from the heart. Thus, stillness of mind is developed not
simply for other, external purposes, such as the various fields of
science. Instead, it is meant specifically for use in cleansing the
heart of such defilements as the five Hindrances (nivarana). But when
you have practiced to the point of proficiency, you can
use your stillness of mind in any way you like, as long as that use
isn't detrimental to yourself or to others.
4.
In training the mind -- which is a mental phenomenon -- material objects
such as chains and leashes are of no use. The mind has
to be trained by tutoring it, first by listening to the explanation
of those who are already skilled and then by being determined to
practice in line with those explanations, basing your initial efforts
on a sense of trust and conviction if your own independent
explorations into cause and effect don't succeed.
By and large, people who start out by exploring cause and effect on
their own don't reach their desired goal because they lack
the proper approach. They miss the true path, tending instead to be
biased in favor of their own ideas. To develop first a sense
of trust and faith in the individual giving the training and in the
practices in which one is being trained until the mind is firm and
unwavering, and then to begin exploring and figuring things out, in
line with the way they really are: This is what will give
satisfactory results.
This is because to begin by exploring cause and effect is usually a
matter of looking at things from the outside, following external
influences -- i.e., "This person says that...That person says this."
But to investigate and explore cause and effect exclusively
within the bounds of the body -- i.e., "What is this body of mine made
of? How does it come about so that its parts are
complete and able to perform their duties well? What is it to be used
for? What keeps it going? Is its fate to develop or to
deteriorate? Is it really mine?" -- and then, going on to mental phenomena
-- "Do greed, anger, delusion, love, hatred and so
forth, arise at the body or at the mind? What do they come from? When
they arise, are they pleasant or stressful?" -- to reason
and explore things strictly internally in this way is, in and of itself,
training the mind.
But if your stillness of mind isn't yet strong enough, don't go reasoning
in line with books you may have read or the things you
may have heard other people say, because even though you may think
things through, it won't lead you to the truth. In other
words, it won't lead you to a sense of dispassion and detachment. So
instead, explore and investigate things in line with the
causes and effects that actually arise from the mind in the present.
5.
The mind which is investigating and figuring things out in line with
its own personal reasonings in this way will tend to focus
exclusively on examining a single spot in a single object. This is
called one-pointed concentration. This is a gathering of the
mind's energies so that they have great strength, able to uproot attachments
-- mistaken presuppositions -- and to cleanse the
mind so that it is, for the moment, bright and clear. At the very least,
you will experience peace -- an extreme sense of
well-being in body and mind -- and perhaps knowledge of one sort or
another: knowledge of a strange and striking sort, since it
arises, not from mental imaginings, but from the causes and effects
of the truth acting in the present, in a way that has never
happened before. Even if it is knowledge of something you may have
suspected all along, only now is it your own, making your
mind bright, driving away all doubt and uncertainty about matters that
may have been occupying your thoughts.
You will say to yourself with a sense of deep satisfaction and relief, "So that's how it is!"
Those whose sensitivities are dull, though, won't be convinced and delighted
with their knowledge until someone else confirms it
or they see teachings of the Buddha in books bearing witness to what
they have learned. This is in line with the fact that the
Buddha's followers are of various sorts.
This type of knowledge -- no matter how much or how wide-ranging it
is -- won't weigh on your nerves. On the contrary, it is a
form of calm and true well-being which will greatly brighten and refresh
your nerves. At the same time, it will refine your mind
and manners in a way that will be very inspiring to others. Whatever
you say or do, you will do mindfully, with hardly any
careless lapses. Once this happens to you, you should then try to maintain
all these traits, and not grow careless or complacent.
These are all individual matters, and won't occur in every case. But
at any rate, when you have trained the mind as explained
above, even if you don't receive results in full measure, you will
still experience a striking sense of peace and well-being in
proportion to the extent of your own individual practice. You should
then try to maintain this mental state. Don't let feelings of
greed or desire, disappointment or dejection arise. Keep the mind neutral
and continue practicing as I have explained from the
beginning with a sense of trust and conviction. Be mindful, careful
and observant at every stage of your practice, and you will
then meet with the results you hope for.
6.
If training the mind in line with points 4 and 5 doesn't produce results,
then gather your awareness and focus it firmly with a
single object or mental image as its target. For example, focus on
an aspect of the body -- the bones or one of its internal
organs -- so as to see its objectionable nature. Or you may simply
focus the mind on bare awareness itself -- for the mind is
something which can't be seen with the physical eyes. If it isn't focused
on a single spot, you won't know whether or not it's
present. The mind is like the wind: If the wind doesn't come into contact
with anything, you won't know whether or not it's there.
So it is with the mind. If a new trainee doesn't have a target for the
mind, he or she won't really be able to catch hold of the
mind. But please don't choose anything outside of the body as your
target. Make your target -- i.e., the object of the mind -- an
aspect of the body, as already mentioned. And when you take aim, focus
on a single object which seems right for you. Don't be
greedy, first taking some of this and then a little of that.
In focusing, examine the object in line with the principals of the foundation
of mindfulness (satipatthana). In other words, sort
out the body's various aspects until you can see, "This isn't me. This
isn't myself."
The sort of focused examination which gives rise to this realization you can do in two ways:
a. When focused exclusively on the target,
don't give any thought to what the target is or who is focusing. Let there
simply be awareness and the act of focusing.
Don't let there be any naming or labeling of anything at all. There will
simply be the single sensation which makes
you feel that you are sticking with the target, but don't think about what
the target is.
b. When focused exclusively on the target,
at the same time keep yourself aware that, "This is the target of the
mind. This is the mind examining. This is
mindfulness, i.e., the act of remembering to keep the target in mind. This
is
discernment, which sees into the truth of
the object under consideration."
Both methods work, although method (a) is suited for beginners and those
whose sensitivities are not yet developed, while
method (b) is suited for those who are sensitive and experienced. Both
methods, though, if you practice them diligently, give rise
to the same results, namely concentration and discernment.
7.
In training the mind as explained above, no matter which method you
choose, please don't let yourself wonder about whether or
not you're going to attain concentration and discernment. And put aside
all desires based on the various rumors and reports that
get passed around by word of mouth. Just follow correctly the method
mentioned in point 6, and you'll be doing fine.
At the same time, observe the approach you've been practicing to see
how you brought the mind to the object, how you
maintained mindfulness, and what happened to the mind as a result.
If acting in that particular manner made the mind open and
bright, keep at it until you're adept and able to do it all the time.
But if the results weren't like that, i.e., just the opposite, then
without delay use your powers of observation, in the way already mentioned,
to make adjustments and corrections.
In observing how the mind behaves under training, some people will be
able to observe their state of mind while the mind is still
in that state; others, only after the mind has withdrawn from that
state and stopped still for a moment. Both ways work. They
are simply a matter of individual temperament. But if you don't use
your powers of observation at all, progress in mental training
will be hard to achieve and -- even if you do achieve it -- hard to
maintain.
8.
While you are training the mind, one thing -- strange and striking --
may occur without your intending it. That is, the mind will
withdraw from its external objects and gather into a single whole,
letting go of all labels and attachments dealing with past or
future. There will be just bare awareness paired with its preoccupation
in the present. This is something with no sense of inside
or outside -- a condition whose features are peculiar to the mind itself.
It is as if everything has undergone a revolution.
This is the mind coming to its own level, the bhavanga.
In this moment, everything has reference only to the mind. Even though
life may still be going on, the mind when it reaches this
level lets go of all attachments to the body, and goes inward to experience
nothing but its own object, all by itself. This is termed
bhava-citta, the mind on its own level. The mind on its own level still
has a refined version of the five khandha complete within
it, and so can still experience birth and states of becoming, and give
rise to continued births in the future.
Reaching this state is somewhat like dozing off and dreaming. The difference
depends on how much self-awareness there is.
Those who are collected and perceptive will -- when the event first
occurs -- be aware of what is happening and what they are
experiencing, and so won't get excited or upset. Those who are gullible
and not very mindful, though, will be just like a person
who dozes off and dreams. When they come to, they will tend to be startled
or get misled by the visions they may happen to
see. But when they have trained themselves until they are skilled at
giving rise to this state often, their sense of mindfulness will
improve and their various visions will go away. Gradually they will
gain insight until they see into natural conditions as they
actually are.
9.
The phenomenon discussed in point 8 -- even though it doesn't give rise
to discernment capable of exploring into the logic of
cause and effect in a wide-ranging way -- is still a preliminary stage
in training the mind. It can suppress the five Hindrances and
at the same time give rise to a sense of peace and well-being in the
present. If it is properly developed so that it doesn't
deteriorate, it will lead to a good rebirth in a future stage, in line
with one's karmic background.
Incidentally, when visions and signs of various sorts appear, it's usually
in the mental moment we are discussing here. But this
doesn't mean that when the mind reaches this stage there will have
to be visions of signs in every case. With some people and at
some times, they will occur. With others and at other times, they won't.
This is another matter of individual temperament -- and
of other factors as well.
To be perfectly truthful, when it comes to the question of visions and
signs that arise in the course of meditation, you can say that
they're good only in the case of meditators who are quick-witted and
astute enough to see through them; who -- when they see
visions -- don't fall for them or latch onto them as being the self
or as really belonging to themselves. They see the visions simply
as visions, enough to use them as tools or a temporary dwelling place
for the mind, and then let go.
As for people who aren't especially mindful or alert -- and who are
gullible to boot -- when a vision arises they will get
extremely excited and may even become so deluded as to lose touch with
reality because they believe the visions to be
something real and true. (How to deal with visions and signs will be
discussed in point 11, below.)
In addition, people who have trained their minds to this stage are usually
stubborn and bull-headed in their opinions, due to their
strength of mind. When they think about something, they tend to see
it from one side only.
They won't easily give any heed to the opinions of others, because they
believe that their own opinions are perfectly reasonable
and trust-worthy -- even though their opinions are self-serving and
very much lacking in reason, and so easily pervert the way
they see things.
But at any rate, whether or not visions and signs arise, they're not
really what you want here, because aside from being
defilements, clouding your discernment, they are also obstacles to
the development of clear insight. The aim of training the mind
is to let go of the five Hindrances and then to examine the khandha
so that they become clear, to see them as they actually are
to the point where you grow disenchanted with them, loosen your passion
and fascination with them, and let them go, never to
enter into and take hold of them again.
10.
When you have trained the mind to be firmly established in absorption
and concentration to the point where it is able to
suppress the five Hindrances, then you should work at developing clear
insight. Actually, clear insight may arise at the same time
that you are working on tranquillity. In other words, discernment may
brighten so as to know and see clearly the truth that all
conditioned things (sankhara) which arise are bound to disintegrate
and pass away. They can't last. They aren't me or myself,
but are simply natural conditions acting on their own.
When this sort of knowledge arises, it will make the mind become disenchanted
and dispassionate with regard to all conditioned
things. The mind will dwell entirely in a state of matured and chastened
dispassion, no matter what it sees or hears, and no
matter where. This is called clear insight occurring together with
tranquillity.
If, however, insight doesn't arise in this way, then when you have practiced
tranquillity meditation until the mind is firmly
established, then you can select either a part of the body -- such
as the bones or the intestines -- or else a topic which is
occupying your thoughts at the moment, and examine it so as to see
that all the things which the mind fastens onto as stable and
real, as leading to true happiness, actually fall under the sway of
the Three Characteristics. The way we assume things, saying,
"This is this, and that is that," in line with our imaginings, is not
in any way true. All conditioned things simply arise from their
causes: unawareness, craving, attachment and kamma. When their causes
are exhausted, they disband of their own accord. No
one forces them to disband. Even the body we are living in is able
to survive only in dependence on causes, such as breath and
food. When these things are exhausted, the body has no meaning at all.
When you examine things in this way, using the power of a fully concentrated
mind, you will reach the goal of the mind's training.
The light of discernment will arise, complete with the insight into
cause and effect you have discovered totally on your own. This
is something which arises not from appropriating labels or theories
remembered from other people, but from realizing the causes
and effects that are entirely within your own heart. The mind will
never again be deluded into becoming attached, passionate,
pleased or displeased with any conditioned thing at all.
Incidentally, we can say that if the mind hasn't truly and clearly seen
into the object of its meditation, then it hasn't really yet
gathered itself together and settled down. But the reason why the training
of the mind isn't called insight meditation before this
point is because one's discernment is still weak in terms of cause
and effect, and lacks circumspection.
To summarize: The purification of one's words and deeds has to begin
with training in moral virtue. The purification of the mind
has to begin with training in tranquillity -- concentration and absorption
-- until the mind has enough strength to suppress the five
Hindrances. When the mind is adept at concentration and absorption,
able to enter, withdraw and stay in place at will, then
discernment -- the light of knowledge seeing into the truth of all
natural conditions (sabhava dhamma), together with the causes
for their arising and passing away -- will arise in a remarkable way.
This sort of knowledge may arise only to certain individuals in certain
circumstances. But in any case, those who have trained
their minds to this level should realize that a mind which has reached
this point is fit to be trained to give rise to clear insight.
They should thus take any aspect of the body or any mental phenomenon
which occupies their thoughts, and examine it from the
standpoint of the Three Characteristics, as explained above. Then they
too will develop the light of insight, seeing clearly into all
conditioned things -- and be able to uproot attachments to physical
and mental phenomena of every sort.
Even though the mind is intangible, it has influence over the body and
all things in the world. It is capable of bringing everything
in the world under its control. Still, it isn't so vicious or savage
as to lack all sense of good and evil. When a person of good
intentions trains the mind to enter correctly into the path of the
Buddha's teachings as explained above, it will be tractable and
quick to learn, developing the wisdom to bring the body, which may
be behaving without any principles, back into line. In
addition, it can cleanse itself to be bright and clean, free from defilements,
able to realize by itself truths that are subtle and
profound, and to bring dazzling light into this world which is dark
with blindness.
This is because the true substance of the mind has been, from the very
beginning, something bright and clear. But because of the
preoccupations which have seeped into it and clouded it, the brightness
of the mind has been temporarily darkened, making the
world dark as well. If the mind were originally dark, there probably
wouldn't be anyone able to cleanse it to the point where it
could give rise to the light of discernment at all.
So whether the world is to be dark or bright, whether it is to experience
well-being or suffering, depends on the mind of
each individual. We as individuals should thus first train our own
minds well, and then train the minds of others. The world will
then be free from turmoil.
11.
The visions and signs that arise from the practice of meditation are
a strange and uncanny affair. They may delude a gullible
person of weak judgment into being so convinced of their truth as to
lose touch with reality. For this reason, those who practice
meditation should be cautious, examining and reflecting on them carefully,
as I will now explain.
The signs that arise from meditation are of two sorts: visions and signs.
a. Visions: sometimes, when the mind gathers
itself into its own level while we are considering our own body to
see its unattractiveness, we will see the
body as completely foul and decomposing, or as nothing more than a
skeleton or a pile of ashes, etc. There are
cases where this has caused people to become so repelled that they
commit suicide.
In other cases, visions of divine beings or of hell and hungry shades may sometimes appear.
b. As for signs: When the mind gathers, as
already mentioned, a whispering voice may appear. It may be the voice
of a person we respect, telling us to examine
a particular truth, or to beware of a coming event; or else it may be
the voice of an enemy who means to harm us,
appearing to us just before he/she will come to do us harm -- which
shows how the mental currents of different
individuals impinge on one another. On the other hand, the same sort of
thing may occur involving a person who means
us well. Sometimes an unidentified voice may come to tell a truth
which is thought-provoking and worthy of consideration,
which meditators in general call the teachings and
warnings of the Dhamma, or abhiñña.
It's not the case that visions and signs will occur to all meditators.
With some people, no matter how refined a level their minds
attain, visions and signs won't appear. With others, the mind may gather
in a flash for a brief moment, and all sorts of visions and
signs will appear. (Be careful not to concoct too many, though.) This
depends on the individual's temperament. With people
who are gullible and don't give much thought to what is reasonable,
visions and signs tend to occur quickly and to grow all out
of bounds, to the point where they can lose their bearings. So treat
them with caution.
Question: Are visions and signs true?
Answer: Sometimes yes, and sometimes no, because they arise exclusively
from jhana, and jhana is a mundane phenomenon
-- and thus undependable. That is to say, they arise to a person practicing
meditation whose mind gathers into the bhavanga
without knowing what level it has reached or how it focused on, examined
and put down its object. Visions and signs, whether
or not they arise intentionally, are composed of a great deal of mental
concocting and attachment, and are therefore unreliable --
because the visions and signs that arise when the mind is in the bhavanga
are like the dreams of a person who lies down to
sleep or simply dozes off. By and large, when they first occur, there
tends to be some truth to them, but not much.
Question: Is jhana mundane or transcendent?
Answer: Jhana has only twelve or thirteen component factors, and they
are entirely mundane. But if the person entering jhana
is a Noble One using it as a tool or a dwelling place for the mind,
then he or she will be able to use this mundane jhana at will,
and dependably as well -- like an expert sharpshooter as opposed to
a commoner, whose sword is just a sword.
Question: Are visions and signs a good thing?
Answer: Only for a person who knows how to make use of them in the proper
way, without being taken in by them or
attached to them. They aren't good for a person who doesn't know how
to use them properly, who gets taken in by them,
believing them to be true. Once attachment latches on, the act of mental
concoction can make these visions and signs proliferate
to the point where a meditator may lose control over his or her sense
of reality. So they should be treated with caution and care,
as I will now explain.
Visions and signs arise from the power of mundane jhana and are sustained
by attachment and mental concocting. They thus
fall under the Three Characteristics: They are inconstant -- they can't
last; they are stressful; and they are not-self -- i.e., they
aren't yours or anyone else's. They are conditions which do nothing
but constantly arise and fall away in their own way at all
times. Examine them so as to see their true nature in this way, and
then let them go. Don't be deluded into latching onto visions
and signs, which are the results. Instead, work at the cause, jhana,
so that you become more and more adept to the point
where you can attain it at will. The visions and signs will then take
care of themselves.
Also learn to see the drawbacks of visions and signs. Once they arise
and we get engrossed and deluded into latching onto
them, they will cause our jhana to deteriorate, just as sound waves
are an obstacle to a person trying to quiet the mind and
explore phenomena which are subtle and deep, or as waves in clear water
prevent us from seeing our reflection on the water's
surface.
The visions and signs which appear to a meditator just beginning to
attain jhana tend to be extraordinary and amazing. The acts
of mental grasping and concocting will tend to fasten tightly to them,
and they will be indelibly impressed on one's inner eye. If
the above methods for curing and removing these visions and signs don't
produce results, then try not to have the mind enter
jhana. In other words, don't put your mind to it, don't let the mind
be still, don't take a liking to the visions or signs. Sleep and
eat as much as you like, perform heavy tasks until the body is very
tired, think of objects that will give rise to defilements, such
as beautiful sights or sounds that will give rise to desire -- and
once the mind withdraws from its absorption, the visions and
signs will disappear of their own accord.
If the student meditator can't solve the problem with these methods,
then the teacher should try to help by using the same sort of
approach. The quickest and most effective way is to find an issue that
will provoke the person attached to visions and signs to
extreme anger. The visions and signs will immediately disappear.
The basis for giving rise to knowledge into the Dhamma is threshold concentration (upacara samadhi), which is of two sorts:
a. As a meditator is working with a particular
object of meditation, the mind will gradually withdraw from external
preoccupations and gather into one spot, right
at the mind itself, but without being completely cut off from all
objects. It is still sensing, thinking and
considering, trying to withdraw from its very refined object, but as yet
unable to let go completely. This is threshold
concentration before reaching fixed penetration (appana samadhi).
b. The mind becomes more and more refined until
it is able to let go and withdraw from the object it is considering,
so that the object disappears. This is called
fixed penetration. There is full mindfulness and awareness of a sense of
emptiness, not grasping after or fastening
onto anything at all, simply partaking of its own exclusive object. When
the mind comes out of this state and is again
considering the Dhamma -- objects, cause and effect -- this is
threshold concentration coming out of fixed
penetration.
Both sorts of threshold concentration can form a good basis for insight
into particular truths and various events, which is
different from the knowledge which arises from the visions and signs
mentioned above, because visions and signs arise from
mundane jhana, whereas the knowledge we are discussing here, even though
it arises from mundane concentration, gives more
dependable results. (Scientists use this level in doing their research.)
And if your concentration becomes transcendent, it will do
away, step by step, with all the effluents (asava) of the mind.
In short, the knowledge which arises from visions and signs, and that
which arises from threshold concentration, differ in terms
both of origin and of quality.
An item which deserves a little more explanation here is the term fixed
penetration (appana samadhi). Fixed penetration is a
superior human attainment. By and large, people who reach fixed penetration
tend to focus on the in-and-out breath (anapana)
as their object of meditation. As they focus on the breath and come
to pay attention to its arising and falling away, or just to its
falling away, the mind gradually becomes more and more refined until,
step by step, it lets go of all its preoccupations and
gathers together to become fixed, as explained above. The stilling
of the in-and-out breath is what indicates fixed penetration. In
some instances it is called fixed jhana because it comes from the act
of becoming absorbed in the breath. It is called fixed
concentration because even though there is no in-and-out breath when
the mind reaches that point, mindfulness is still absolutely
full.
When you are in this state you can't examine anything, because the mind
is totally uninvolved with anything at all. Only when the
mind comes out of this state and enters threshold concentration can
you begin examining things again. You will then see clearly
into all the truths that the Buddha said are to be known, and into
other matters as well. There will be no visions and signs, as
mentioned above, but the knowledge here will be based on cause and
effect, complete with analogies and similes that will utterly
erase all doubt.
In some cases, meditators will be considering objects of meditation
other than the in-and-out breath, and yet will still be able to
reach fixed penetration in the same way that those who practice mindfulness
of breathing. When the mind gathers to a point
where there is no more in-and-out breathing, that's fixed penetration.
This, at any rate, is my opinion on the matter. Meditators shouldn't
take my opinion as their criterion, because the thoughts and
opinions of people in this world -- even when we see the same things
under the same conditions in the same place -- can
formulate different names for, and reach different understandings about,
those same things, and thus give rise to endless disputes
and arguments. Simply let us all work with our own objects of meditation
so as to reach fixed penetration as discussed above
and then -- with a fair mind free from bias -- compare what we experience
with what has been formulated in the various texts.
Our knowledge will then be paccatam -- arising exclusively from within
ourselves. That is what I would like to see in this
regard.
Parting Thoughts
All transcendent phenomena are rooted in mundane phenomena. The 37 components
conducive to Awakening
(bodhi-pakkhiya-dhamma), which are classified entirely as transcendent,
have to begin first with mental and physical
phenomena, i.e., this mundane body and mind.
Visions, signs and the knowledge which results from jhana are obstacles
to the one-eyed -- those who are simply developing
jhana -- but can provoke insight for those with two eyes, i.e., those
who are developing discernment along with concentration.
Every sword and ax is made with both a sharp and dull edge, each with
its own different uses, but a person who confuses those
uses, aside from getting nowhere with the sword or ax, may actually
harm himself or the work he is doing. Insight and the
defilements of insight come from one and the same basis. When people
without discernment consider things wrongly, they will
give rise to the defilements of insight; but when they consider things
rightly, using the proper approach, the same things will
become true insight.
Mundane phenomena -- when we clearly see and know them and their causes
for what they are, and when seeing their
drawbacks we grow disenchanted with them, not being deluded into latching
onto them -- then turn into Dhamma. But when we
get taken in by them and are unwilling to let them go...It's not the
cause that the world will stay the way it is forever. The world
of the Brahmas may degenerate into the world of the Devas; the world
of the Devas, into the human world; the human world,
into the lower realms. Just as liquids tend to seek out low-lying places,
so it is easy for the minds of living beings to seek out
what's low -- namely, evil.
Even though the practice of meditation is a self-revolution, you must
be willing to risk your life. At the very least, if you don't
succeed, you should threaten yourself with self-exile. Those who don't
make such a vow can look forward only to being a slave
to others -- the defilements -- through time.
Glossary
Abhiñña: Intuitive powers that come from the practice of concentration.
Asava: Mental effluent; defilement in its role of giving rise to the
flood of the cycle of rebirth. There are four sorts: sensuality,
becoming, views and unawareness.
Bhavanga: The mind's underlying preoccupation or resting state, which
determines its state of being and to which it reverts in
between its responses to stimuli.
Bodhi-pakkhiya-dhamma: Wings of Awakening; principles conducive to the
attainment of enlightenment. There are 37 in all,
and they constitute the Buddha's own summary of the essential points
of his teachings: four foundations of mindfulness, four right
exertions, four bases for achievement, five strengths, five dominant
factors, seven factors of awakening and the Noble Eightfold
Path.
Brahma: An inhabitant of the heavens of form and formlessness.
Deva: An inhabitant of the heavens of sensual bliss.
Dhamma: Phenomenon; event; things as they are in and of themselves;
the right natural order of things. By extension, Dhamma
is used also to refer to any doctrine which teaches such matters.
Jhana: Meditative absorption in a single sensation or mental notion.
Kamma: Intentional acts which lead to states of being and birth.
Khandha: Heap, aggregate, group; the component factors of the personality,
and of sensory experience in general -- physical
phenomena, feelings, mental labels, thought-formations (see sankhara)
and cognizance.
Nivarana: Hindrance to concentration -- sensual desire, ill will, torpor & lethargy, restlessness & anxiety, and uncertainty.
Sabhava dhamma: Natural condition; phenomenon; qualities and events as they are directly experienced in and of themselves.
Samadhi: Concentration; the act of centering the mind in a single object or topic.
Sankhara: Conditioned phenomena; formation; fashioning. This term covers
all things, physical or mental, fashioned by causes
or conditions, as well as the forces which fashion them and the processes
by which they are fashioned.
Satipatthana: Foundation of mindfulness; frame of reference. The contemplation
of body, feelings, mind and mental events as
they are in and of themselves.
Ti-ratana: The triple Gem -- the Buddha, the Dhamma (his teachings,
their practice and the realization of liberation at which
they are aimed) and the Sangha (those of his followers who have gained
at least a glimpse of that liberation). To take refuge in
the Triple Gem means to take them as guide in one's pursuit of happiness
and to give rise to their qualities in one's life and heart.
Vipassana: Clear insight into things as they actually are, seeing them
in terms of the characteristics of inconstancy, stress and
not-selfness.
Revised: 10 November 1999
http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/thai/thate/stepsalong.html