Actually, while on the road in the past, when it has been necessary
I've even been prepared to stay in one of the village or city monasteries4. In the course of your travels when you are alone and have to pass
through different monastic communities that have varying standards
of training and discipline, recite the verse to yourself: ''suddhi
asuddhi paccattam'' (the purity or impurity of one's virtue
is something one knows for oneself), both as a protection and as a
guideline for reflection. You might end up having to rely on your
own integrity in this way.
When you are moving through an area you haven't been to before you
might have to make a choice over the place you are going to stay for
the night. The Buddha taught that monks and nuns should live in peaceful
places. So, depending on what's available, you should try and find
a place to stay and meditate that is peaceful. If you can't find a
really quiet place, you can, as second best, at least find a place
where you are able to be at peace internally. So, if for some reason
it's necessary to stay in a certain place, you must learn how to live
there peacefully - without letting craving (tanhā)
overcome the mind. If you then decide to leave that monastery or forest,
don't leave because of craving. Similarly, if you are staying somewhere,
don't stay there because of craving. Understand what is motivating
your thinking and actions. It's true that the Buddha advised monastics
to lead a lifestyle and find living conditions that are conducive
to peace and suitable for meditation. How will you cope on those occasions
when you can't find a peaceful place? In the end the whole thing could
just drive you crazy. Where will you go next? Stay right where you
are; stay put and learn to live in peace. Train yourself until you
are able to stay and meditate in the place you are in. The Buddha
taught that you should know and understand proper time and place according
to conditions; he didn't encourage monks and nuns to roam around all
over the place without any real purpose. Certainly he recommended
that we find a suitable quiet place, but if that's not possible, it
might be necessary to spend a few weeks or a few months in a place
that isn't so quiet or suitable. What would you do then? You would
probably just die from the shock of it!
So learn to know your own mind and know your intentions. In the end,
travelling around from place to place is only that much. When you
move on to somewhere else, you tend to find more of the same of what
you left behind, and you're always doubting about what might lie ahead
at the next place. Then, before you know it, you could find yourself
with malaria or some other unpleasant illness, and you'd have to find
a doctor to treat you, give you drugs and injections. In no time at
all, your mind would be more agitated and distracted than ever!
Actually, the secret to successful meditation is to bring your way
of viewing things in line with the Dhamma; the important thing is
to establish right view (sammā ditthi) in
the mind. It isn't anything more complicated than that. But you have
to keep putting forth effort to investigate and seek out the correct
way for yourself. Naturally, this involves some difficulty, because
you still lack maturity of wisdom and understanding.
So, what do you think you'll do? Try giving thudong a go
and see what happens... you might get fed up with wandering about
again; it's never a sure thing. Or maybe you're thinking that if you
really get into the meditation, you won't want to go on thudong,
because the whole proposition will seem uninteresting - but that
perception is uncertain. You might feel totally bored with the idea
of going on thudong, but that can always change and it might
not be long before you start wanting to go off moving about again.
Or you might just stay out on thudong indefinitely and continue
to wander from place to place with no time limits or any fixed destination
in mind - again, it's uncertain. This is what you have to reflect
upon as you meditate. Go against the flow of your desires. You might
attach to the view that you'll go on thudong for certain,
or you might attach to the view that you will stay put in the monastery
for certain, but either way you are getting caught in delusion. You
are attaching to fixed views in the wrong way. Go and investigate
this for yourself. I have already contemplated this from my own experience,
and I'm explaining the way it is as simply and directly as I can.
So listen to what I am saying, and then observe and contemplate for
yourself. This really is the way things are. In the end you will be
able to see the truth of this whole matter for yourself. Then, once
you do have insight into the truth, whatever decision you make will
be accompanied by right view and in accordance with the Dhamma.
Whatever you decide to do, whether to go on thudong or stay
on in the monastery, you must wisely reflect first. It isn't that
you are forbidden from going off wandering in the forest, or going
to find quiet places to meditate. If you do go off walking, really
make a go of it and walk until you are worn out and ready to drop
- test yourself to the limits of your physical and mental endurance.
In the old days, as soon as I caught sight of the mountains, I'd feel
elated and be inspired to take off. Nowadays when I see them, the
body starts moaning just at the sight of them and all I want to do
is turn around and go back to the monastery. There's not much enthusiasm
for all that any more. Before, I'd be really happy to live up in the
mountains - I even thought I'd spend my whole life living up there!
The Buddha taught to be mindful of what's arising in the present moment.
Know the truth of the way things are in the present moment. These
are the teachings he left you and they are correct, but your own thoughts
and views are still not correctly in line with the Dhamma, and that's
why you continue to suffer. So try out thudong if it seems
like the right thing to do. See what its like moving around from place
to place and how that affects your mind.
I don't want to forbid you from going on thudong, but I don't
want to give you permission either. Do you understand my meaning?
I neither want to prevent you, nor allow you to go, but I will share
with you some of my experience. If you do go on thudong,
use the time to benefit your meditation. Don't just go like a tourist,
having fun travelling around. These days it looks like more and more
monks and nuns go on thudong to indulge in a bit of sensual
enjoyment and adventure rather than to really benefit their own spiritual
training. If you do go, then really make a sincere effort to use the
dhutanga practices to wear away the defilements. Even
if you stay in the monastery, you can take up these dhutanga
practices. These days, what they call ''thudong''
tends to be more a time for seeking excitement and stimulation than
training with the thirteen dhutanga practices. If you
go off like that you are just lying to yourself when you call it ''thudong''.
It's an imaginary thudong. Thudong can actually
be something that supports and enhances your meditation. When you
go you should really do it. Contemplate what is the true purpose and
meaning of going on thudong. If you do go, I encourage you
to use the experience as an opportunity to learn and further your
meditation, not just waste time. I won't let monks go off if they
are not yet ready for it, but if someone is sincere and seriously
interested in the practice, I won't stop them.
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Footnotes
- ...1
- A talk given to a group of monks preparing to leave the monastery and go off wandering after their fifth year under the guidance of Ajahn Chah
- ... consciousness2
- The five khandhas: the five groups or aggregates in which
the Buddha has summed up all physical and mental phenomena of existence,
and which appear to the deluded person as a self or personality. They
are physical form (rūpa), feeling (vedanā),
memory and perception (saññā), mental formations (sankhārā)
and sense consciousness (viññāna).
- ...thudong3
- Thudong (Thai Language) generally refers to the practice
of wandering. It is derived from the Pāli word dhutanga,
which refers to the thirteen austere practices. These are strict observances
recommended by the Buddha to monks, as a help to cultivate contentedness,
renunciation, energy and other wholesome qualities. One or more of
them may be observed for a shorter or longer period of time. They
include the vows of: wearing patched-up robes, wearing only three
robes, going for alms, not omitting any house while going for alms,
eating at one sitting, eating only from the almsbowl, refusing all
further food, living in the forest, living under a tree, living in
the open air, living in a cemetery, being satisfied with whatever
dwelling and sleeping in sitting position.
- ... monasteries4
- Generally the monks living in the village and city monasteries in
Thailand will spend more time studying the Pāli language and
the Buddhist scriptures than training in the rules of discipline or
meditation, which is more emphasized in the forest tradition.
- ...āsava)5
- The four āsava or taints include: the taint of sense-desire
(kāmāsava), of desiring eternal existence (bhavāsava),
of wrong views (ditthāsava), and of ignorance
(avijjāsava).
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