Now please pay attention, not allowing your mind to
wander off after other things. Create the feeling that right now you
are sitting on a mountain or in a forest somewhere, all by yourself.
What do you have sitting here right now? There are body and mind,
that's all, only these two things. All that is contained within this
frame sitting here now is called ''body.'' The ''mind'' is
that which is aware and is thinking at this very moment. These two
things are also called ''nāma'' and ''rūpa.''
''Nāma'' refers to that which has no ''rūpa,''
or form. All thoughts and feelings, or the four mental khandhas
of feeling, perception, volition and consciousness, are nāma,
they are all formless. When the eye sees form, that form is called
rūpa, while the awareness is called nāma.
Together they are called nāma and rūpa,
or simply body and mind.
Understand that sitting here in this present moment are only body
and mind. But we get these two things confused with each other. If
you want peace you must know the truth of them. The mind in its present
state is still untrained; it's dirty, not clear. It is not yet the
pure mind. We must further train this mind through the practice of
meditation.
Some people think that meditation means to sit in some special way,
but in actual fact standing, sitting, walking and reclining are all
vehicles for meditation practice. You can practice at all times. Samādhi
literally means ''the firmly established mind.'' To develop samādhi
you don't have to go bottling the mind up. Some people try to get
peaceful by sitting quietly and having nothing disturb them at all,
but that's just like being dead. The practice of samādhi
is for developing wisdom and understanding.
Samādhi is the firm mind, the one-pointed mind. On
which point is it fixed? It's fixed onto the point of balance. That's its
point. But people practice meditation by trying to silence their minds.
They say, ''I try to sit in meditation but my mind won't be still
for a minute. One instant it flies off one place, the next instant
it flies off somewhere else... How can I make it stop still?'' You
don't have to make it stop, that's not the point. Where there is
movement is where understanding can arise. People complain, ''It runs off
and I pull it back again; then it goes off again and I pull it back
once more...'' So they just sit there pulling back and forth like
this.
They think their minds are running all over the place, but actually
it only seems like the mind is running around. For example, look at
this hall here... ''Oh, it's so big!'' you say... actually it's
not big at all. Whether or not it seems big depends on your perception
of it. In fact this hall is just the size it is, neither big nor small,
but people run around after their feelings all the time. |