During an informal gathering at his residence one evening, the Master
said, ''When you listen to the Dhamma, you must open up your heart
and compose yourself in its centre. Don't try and accumulate what
you hear, or make painstaking efforts to retain it through your memory.
Just let the Dhamma flow into your heart as it reveals itself, and
keep yourself continuously open to the flow in the present moment.
What is ready to be retained will remain. It will happen of its own
accord, not through forced effort on your part.
Similarly, when you expound the Dhamma, there must be no force involved.
The Dhamma must flow spontaneously from the present moment according
to circumstances. You know, it's strange, but sometimes people come
to me and really show no apparent desire to hear the Dhamma, but there
it is - it just happens. The Dhamma comes flowing out with no effort
whatsoever. Then at other times, people seem to be quite keen to listen.
They even formally ask for a discourse, and then, nothing! It just
won't happen. What can you do? I don't know why it is, but I know
that things happen in this way. It's as though people have different
levels of receptivity, and when you are there at the same level, things
just happen.
If you must expound the Dhamma, the best way is not to think about
it at all. Simply forget it. The more you think and try to plan, the
worse it will be. This is hard to do, though, isn't it? Sometimes,
when you're flowing along quite smoothly, there will be a pause, and
someone may ask a question. Then, suddenly, there's a whole new direction.
There seems to be an unlimited source that you can never exhaust.
I believe without a doubt in the Buddha's ability to know the temperaments
and receptivity of other beings. He used this very same method of
spontaneous teaching. It's not that he needed to use any superhuman
power, but rather that he was sensitive to the needs of the people
around him and so taught to them accordingly. An instance demonstrating
his own spontaneity occurred when once, after he had expounded the
Dhamma to a group of his disciples, he asked them if they had ever
heard this teaching before. They replied that they had not. He then
went on to say that he himself had also never heard it before.
Just continue your practice no matter what you are doing. Practice
is not dependent on any one posture, such as sitting or walking. Rather,
it is a continuous awareness of the flow of your own consciousness
and feelings. No matter what is happening, just compose yourself and
always be mindfully aware of that flow.''
Later, the Master went on to say, ''Practice is not moving forward,
but there is forward movement. At the same time, it is not moving
back, but there is backward movement. And, finally, practice is not
stopping and being still, but there is stopping and being still. So
there is moving forward and backward as well as being still, but you
can't say that it is any one of the three. Then practice eventually
comes to a point where there is neither forward nor backward movement,
nor any being still. Where is that?''
On another informal occasion, he said, ''To define Buddhism without
a lot of words and phrases, we can simply say, 'Don't cling or hold
on to anything. Harmonize with actuality, with things just as they
are.''' |