Seekers of goodness who have gathered here please listen
in peace. Listening to the Dhamma in peace means to listen with a
one-pointed mind, paying attention to what you hear and then letting
go. Listening to the Dhamma is of great benefit. While listening to
the Dhamma we are encouraged to firmly establish both body and mind
in samādhi, because it is one kind of Dhamma practice.
In the time of the Buddha people listened to Dhamma talks intently,
with a mind aspiring to real understanding, and some actually realized
the Dhamma while listening.
This place is well suited to meditation practice. Having stayed here
a couple of nights I can see that it is an important place. On the
external level it is already peaceful, all that remains is the internal
level, your hearts and minds. So I ask all of you to make an effort
to pay attention.
Why have you gathered here to practice meditation? It's because your
hearts and minds do not understand what should be understood. In other
words, you don't truly know how things are, or what is what. You don't
know what is wrong and what is right, what it is that brings you suffering
and causes you to doubt. So first you have to make yourselves calm.
The reason that you have come here to develop calm and restraint is
that your hearts and minds are not at ease. Your minds are not calm,
not restrained. They are swayed by doubting and agitation. This is
why you have come here today and are now listening to the Dhamma.
I would like you to concentrate and listen carefully to what I say,
and I ask permission to speak frankly because that's how I am. Please
understand that even if I do speak in a forceful manner, I am doing
so out of good will. I ask your forgiveness if there is anything I
say that upsets you, because the customs of Thailand and those of
the West are not the same. Actually, speaking a little forcefully
can be good because it helps to stir people up who might otherwise
be sleepy or drowsy, and rather than rousing themselves to hear the
Dhamma allow themselves to drift instead into complacency and as a
result never understand anything.
Although there may appear to be many ways to practice really there
is only one. As with fruit trees, it is possible to get fruit quickly
by planting a cutting, but the tree would not be resilient or long
lasting. Another way is to cultivate a tree right from the seed, which
produces a strong and resilient tree. Practice is the same.
When I first began to practice I had problems understanding this.
As long as I still didn't know what's what, sitting meditation was
a real chore, even bringing me to tears on occasion. Sometimes I would
be aiming too high, at others not high enough, never finding the point
of balance. To practice in a way that's peaceful means to place the
mind neither too high or too low, but at the point of balance. |