Dhamma
Greetings everyone.
This sutta is
rich in it’s support for the practice you are now learning in the Foundation
training.
Although this recipe is usually used for the description of an Arahat, it
can be applied in this way to show you how the practice should bring about
results too.
This sutta
was about what the Buddha told Sakka when he asked him to explain what he
teaches people.
An
interesting thing about this sutta
is that it gives you some guidelines for what the practice should be doing
for you as an end result. This
is good.
It answered a lot of questions for me when I first began to practice.
Hope you enjoy it.
Where should you be going with this practice of meditation?
This practice should be helping you to see deeply how things work.
This sutta supports the idea of personal ‘knowledge and vision’, which
means ‘knowing by seeing’, as being the way to learn this.
It turns out that it is the truth of this knowledge that helps mind calm
down and rest.
With the support of the universe, Knowledge and Vision is what sets you
free.
Here are some questions you may want to discover answers to:
What is your potential if you become fearless?
What could you accomplish if you were set free from worries of the past,
the future and able to lovingly accept the present just as it is?
Would life become more peaceful if you never again took anything
personally?
Would you be able to co-exist with people more peacefully?
Would you be more inclined to help your neighbor?
Would you live differently without so much tension and stress on you all
the time?
These are things worth thinking a little bit about in these times of
economic challenge we live in. It is good to have a cool head that is
grounded. We can better help ourselves and others.
This sutta gives us the guidelines of what can happen when we just “DO THE
PRACTICE and keep it going!” .
I hope you have fun with this little Dhamma exercise of investigation.
Metta and smiles.
Rev. Sister Khema
The following is taken out of MN- 37-The Shorter Discourse on
the Destruction of Craving (Culatanhasankaya Sutta) page 344 in the
translation of the Majjhima Nikaya by Venerable Nanamoli and Bhikkhu Bodhi
from Wisdom Publications. Available at
www.amazon.com. If purchasing this book,
please go to Amazon through
www.dhammasukha.org to help build the study center.
MN-37:2
…….Then Sakka, ruler of the gods, [ He was Ruler of the Heaven of the 33
which is one of the Realms you can be reborn into….]
Then Sakka, ruler of the gods, went to the Blessed One, and after paying
homage to him he asked him :
“Venerable sir, how in brief is a monk liberated in the
destruction of craving, one who has reached the ultimate end, the ultimate
security from bondage, the ultimate holy life, the ultimate goal, one who is
foremost among gods and humans?
[This was the
main question Sakka put to the Buddha]
The following is taken out of MN- 37-The
Shorter Discourse on the Destruction of Craving (Culatanhasankaya Sutta)
page 344 in the translation of the Majjhima Nikaya by Venerable Bhikkhu
Bodhi; Wisdom Publications.
3. "Here, Sakka, a monk has
heard that nothing is worth adhering to. When a monk has heard that
nothing is worth adhering to, he directly knows everything;
having directly known
everything, he fully understands everything; having fully
understood everything, whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or
painful or neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he abides contemplating
impermanence in those feelings, contemplating fading away, contemplating
cessation, contemplating relinquishment.
Contemplating thus, he is not agitated.
When he is not agitated, he personally attains Nibbana.
He understands:
'Birth is destroyed, the holy life has been lived, what had to be done
has been done,
there is no more coming into any state of being.
In brief, it is in this way that a
monk is liberated in the destruction of craving,
one who has reached the ultimate end, the ultimate security from
bondage, the ultimate holy life, the ultimate goal,
one who is foremost among Gods
and humans.'
-------
Now let’s
investigate together how this little section correlates with the training
you are now receiving. As we do
when we do research of the texts in the center, let’s break it down piece by
piece to see if aligns with the training as we are learning to do.
3. "Here, Sakka, a monk has heard that nothing is worth
adhering to
SK: Nothing is worth holding onto beyond the present moment !
When a monk has heard that nothing is worth adhering to,
he directly knows everything;
SK: How can we know everything at this point?
Because the sum total of the teaching is to LET GO and see what is left.
When the meditator hears there is nothing worth holding onto past the moment
when it happens, then the meditator begins to directly see this for
themselves in the meditation practice.
This is ‘Knowledge and Vision’ which means ‘knowing by seeing’.
having directly known everything, he
fully understands everything;
Q: Is that clear vision?
SK: Yes. Full understanding is clear vision.
Having seen it for themselves through Knowledge and Vision, they
completely understand the true nature of it.
having fully understood everything,
whatever feeling he feels, whether pleasant or painful or
neither-painful-nor-pleasant, he abides contemplating
impermanence in those feelings,
Q: Does this mean the meditator comes to know the nature of Impermanence
too?
SK: Yes. Coming to this clear understanding, when a feeling arises, no
matter what it is, they now abide in meditation noticing the impermanent
nature of these feelings without a mind that is disturbed and they no longer
‘re-act’ to them.
contemplating fading away,
SK: This is noticing the impermanence of ALL feelings which arise, how
they fade away in the same impersonal way. They do not arise and remain.
This affirms impermanence.
contemplating cessation,
SK: If practicing the 6R’s,
each time the meditator RELEASES and RELAXES, they reach the state of
cessation and observe how it also arises and fades away.
They realize the benefit of Right Striving/Right Effort.
This tells us that the Buddha’s practice made it possible for you to
witness pure mind or cessation of feeling….while you were meditating.
contemplating relinquishment.
SK: This means the meditator is taught to investigate the letting go
(releasing) of any arising feeling by noticing it without attention placed
onto the feeling itself, but rather, they begin to notice HOW this happens.
Contemplating thus, he is not
agitated.
When he is not agitated, he personally attains Nibbana.
SK: Once the meditator sees this for themselves, mind no longer gets
disturbed, upset, agitated about something arising anymore.
Mind becomes imperturbable. It cannot
be disturbed.
Once we see the truth of how things work, fear vanishes. We are no longer
afraid.
There are no longer any more surprises and we can accept the present
moment just as it is.
The Truth is now beginning to set us free!
]
He understands:
'Birth is destroyed,
the holy life has been lived,
what had to be done has been done,
there is no more coming into any state of being.
SK: This means when the meditator
sees clearly how everything is working, having
seen fully the process of Dependent Origination like a slow movie film,
frame by frame, they wake up about how the Impersonal this process of
cognition is working.
The meditator has reached full anatta perspective and no longer takes
anything personally.
Rather they now see HOW things actually are happening.
They begin to see how the Craving link tension and tightness in mind and
in body which makes suffering happen.
They see how this tension and tightness is driving the wheel of samsara
forward so that they were caught in a cycle of reactions in life and that
this movement pushes the wheel of life around !
Understanding is revealed about how this Birth of action can be destroyed
by RELEASING the craving and clinging
and the wheel can be stopped from moving forward into more lifetimes by
letting go and relaxing.
This is very significant. In such a relaxed state of tranquility there is
no more energy to push the wheel around!
We cannot enter a doorway to peaceful co-existence in this world if we are
caught in a reactionary cycle. This
is not possible.
Reactions will only drive us into further war in this world.
If we do not fully understand the working structure of War and how it
begins, how can we ever develop peace in the world?
I am speaking of the War between two people, towns, cities, nations or any
situation you face in life with conflict out of control.
in brief, it is in this way that a
monk is liberated in the destruction of craving,
SK: We must remember how Craving arises.
CRAVING
always shows up first as Tension and tightness in Mind and in Body.
If a monk is liberated by the destruction of craving, this means they have
developed awareness of this tension and tightness as it arises and they know
how to retrain and purify mind by letting go of it.
They know what to do before it reaches serious clinging and develops into
reactionary behavior.
By letting go, they are ending craving!
At some point, they no longer have any thoughts of “I” like this, ‘I’ want
that, OR, ‘I’ don’t like this, and ‘I’ don’t want that anymore. There is no
more reaction. There is only response.
Now, they release, let go, relinquishing any kind of control while
observing clearly how things really work.
They become free to intelligently develop new and creative responses to
critical situations because of this relinquishment.
one who has reached the ultimate end,
SK: The ultimate end is when one naturally sees in this way, by letting go
in this way and there is no more to see; no more struggle to understand… one
naturally ‘lives in this impersonal
perspective’ through everything and life gets easier.
the ultimate security from bondage,
SK: ‘Bondage’ means that a person is trapped in reliving their reactions
all the time. but now they are set free to respond in the present moment as
needed.
Without a re-trained mind, one is not really ‘alive’ but rather, they are
caught in this way of repeating reactions over and over again in life.
When you see the truth of how things work, you then can RECOGNIZE and
RELEASE the Craving as it is arising.
Then you can RELAX any left over tension or tightness in mind or body.
You will feel inclined to SMILE in the next step which will lighten up
your mind and sharpen awareness as you RETURN mind’s attention over to your
object of meditation (the breath or sending out loving kindness) without as
much tension as before.
This cycle literally purifies mind a little more each time it runs.
As the meditator practices, they are experiencing a stillness that is the
CESSATION of suffering in brief.
CESSATION is a point of NO CRAVING. Mind
likes this position.
Mind is happy to retrain itself in this wholesome direction.
What is really happening here is that the meditator is ending an old
habitual tendency of attachment.
They are developing a new tendency in the wholesome direction of
Relinquishment of all tension and tightness.
the ultimate holy life,
SK: ‘The ultimate holy life’ is ‘the time in your life where this retraining
work is fully practiced and accomplished to reach purely wholesome states of
living.”
The meditator has taken the time, become curious and persistent enough to
understand the 4 Noble Truths.
They have inquired within the texts and investigated to see what suffering
is, what causes it, what the cessation of it is like and how to reach
cessation of suffering.
They have listened to the guiding teacher, followed the instructions, run
their investigation in the meditation and discovered the truth of how things
work.
As a result, they let go of their own suffering with the remainderless
fading away and cessation of it.
the ultimate goal,
SK: the ultimate goal is not to Crave or Cling to anything that arises.
This means you choose to impersonally observe things as they essentially
are. Mind remains calm and undisturbed.
You learn the difference between a completely balanced mind and body
versus an un-trained mind and body.
You give up tension, concepts and opinions and stop holding onto the story
about things.
You give up demanding that things be as you want them to be.
This is letting go of the unessential! You begin to ‘be here now’!
That person who Craves and Clings suffers a lot from the tension and
tightness that causes dis-ease in their mind and in body.
one who is foremost among Gods and humans.'
SK: Both Gods and humans suffer.
The being who endeavors to succeed at this practice is to be cherished
because they have developed the ability to compassionately help other people
to learn this too.
Because they let go and are acting more impersonally, their inclination
will tend towards loving kindness and compassion for all beings.
With an open heart, they will open the doorway for others and help them to
discover peaceful non-violent co-existence.
They will become capable of clear communication and be able to accomplish
great things for human beings and the planet once they achieve this level of
understanding.
This is why it’s good and fun to keep the 6R’s going and why it’s worth it
too.
They can transport you through the doorway to Peace.
To review the practice one more time…. They 6R’s are:
RECOGNIZE whenever
mind’s attention is being pulled away from what you are doing in life, OR
your object of meditation;
RELEASE any
attention on what has arisen. Just let it be there. No need to identify it.
No need to understand anything about it through thinking about it even for a
second;
RELAX any
tension or tightness that is left over in mind of body; briefly notice the
relief.
RE-SMILE
and RETURN to the object of meditation OR what task you were doing
when mind’s attention was pulled away.
Remember that lightly smiling and having fun with this investigation helps
you progress very much.
SO STAY LIGHT, SMILE, and keep it going. Remember to SMILE.
It’s a Powerful tool. Watch what it
does for people in the world. See how it opens up doors for you everywhere
and shifts happiness back into your own life.
REPEAT this cycle as needed.
Following these 6 steps is actually keeping the practice of RIGHT EFFORT
towards reaching a very wholesome goal all the time.
Q: What is
Right Effort precisely?
A: Right effort is described
in the texts in many suttas in the Majjhima Nikaya:
1.
Recognizing an unwholesome is in mind;
2.
Release the unwholesome, let it be, without
thinking about it;
3.
Bring up a wholesome into mind. The MOST wholesome thing you can bring up
is the object of mediation
[such as the breath or sending out
Loving Kindness to your loved ones and the universe. ]
4.
Keep that wholesome going….. [ STAY on the object of meditation; keep the
meditation going]
You can see that if you keep Right Effort going, the 6 steps can help
carry you through to the end of your journey.
They ground you and help bring you back to basics.
The best advice is to follow the precise instructions the Buddha gave,
very closely, and you will eventually reach comleate clarity ab out life and
tranquility and peace of mind. The ancients called this state nibbana.
Patience
leads to Nibbana. This is an ultimate
state of wholesomeness and purity of mind.
May you reach
Nibbana quickly and easily in this very lifetime!
Metta and smiles to you all.
Rev. Sister Khema
Page last edited: 27-Sep-10