Although Ajahn Chah passed away in 1992, the training which he established
is still carried on at Wat Pah Pong and its branch monasteries, of
which there are currently more than two hundred in Thailand. Discipline
is strict, enabling one to lead a simple and pure life in a harmoniously
regulated community where virtue, meditation and understanding may
be skillfully and continuously cultivated. There is usually group
meditation twice a day and sometimes a talk by the senior teacher,
but the heart of the meditation is the way of life. The monastics
do manual work, dye and sew their own robes, make most of their own
requisites and keep the monastery buildings and grounds in immaculate
shape. They live extremely simply following the ascetic precepts of
eating once a day from the almsbowl and limiting their possessions
and robes. Scattered throughout the forest are individual huts where
monks and nuns live and meditate in solitude, and where they practice
walking meditation on cleared paths under the trees.
Wisdom is a way of living and being, and Ajahn Chah has endeavored
to preserve the simple monastic life-style in order that people may
study and practice the Dhamma in the present day.
Ajahn Chah's wonderfully simple style of teaching can be deceptive.
It is often only after we have heard something many times that suddenly
our minds are ripe and somehow the teaching takes on a much deeper
meaning. His skillful means in tailoring his explanations of Dhamma
to time and place, and to the understanding and sensitivity of his
audience, was marvelous to see. Sometimes on paper though, it can
make him seem inconsistent or even self-contradictory! At such times
the reader should remember that these words are a record of a living
experience. Similarly, if the teachings may seem to vary at times
from tradition, it should be borne in mind that the Venerable Ajahn
spoke always from the heart, from the depths of his own meditative
experience.
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