It's like that. That's what's good in
the way of the impure. Evil is the food of bad people. If you teach
them about doing good they're not interested, but prefer to stay as
they are because they don't see the harm in it. Without seeing the
harm there's no way things can be rectified. If you recognize it,
then you think, ''Oh! My whole pile of dung doesn't have the value
of a small piece of gold!'' And then you will want gold instead;
you won't want the dung anymore. If you don't recognize this you remain
the owner of a pile of dung. Even if you are offered a diamond or
a ruby, you won't be interested.
That's the 'good' of the impure. Gold, jewels and diamonds are considered
something good in the realm of humans. The foul and rotten is good
for flies and other insects. If you put perfume on it they would all
flee. What those with wrong view consider good is like that. That's
the 'good' for those with wrong view, for the defiled. It doesn't
smell good, but if we tell them it stinks they'll say it's fragrant.
They can't reverse this view very easily. So it's not easy to teach
them.
If you gather fresh flowers the flies won't be interested in them.
Even if you tried to pay them, they wouldn't come. But wherever there's
a dead animal, wherever there's something rotten, that's where they'll
go. You don't need to call them - they just go. Wrong view is like
that. It delights in that kind of thing. The stinking and rotten is
what smells good to it. It's bogged down and immersed in that. What's
sweet smelling to a bee is not sweet to a fly. The fly doesn't see
anything good or valuable in it and has no craving for it.
There is difficulty in practice, but in anything we undertake we have
to pass through difficulty to reach ease. In Dhamma practice we begin
with the truth of dukkha, the pervasive unsatisfactoriness
of existence. But as soon as we experience this we lose heart. We
don't want to look at it. Dukkha is really the truth, but
we want to get around it somehow. It's similar to the way we don't
like to look at old people, but prefer to look at those who are young.
If we don't want to look at dukkha we will never understand
dukkha, no matter how many births we go through. Dukkha
is a noble truth. If we allow ourselves to face it then we will start
to seek a way out of it. If we are trying to go somewhere and the
road is blocked we will think about how to make a pathway. Working
at it day after day we can get through. When we encounter problems
we develop wisdom like this. Without seeing dukkha we don't
really look into and resolve our problems; we just pass them by indifferently.
My way of training people involves some suffering, because suffering
is the Buddha's path to enlightenment. He wanted us to see suffering
and to see origination, cessation and the path. This is the way out
for all the ariya, the awakened ones. If you don't go this
way there is no way out. The only way is knowing suffering, knowing
the cause of suffering, knowing the cessation of suffering and knowing
the path of practice leading to the cessation of suffering. This is
the way that the ariya, beginning with Stream Entry, were
able to escape. It's necessary to know suffering.
If we know suffering, we will see it in everything we experience.
Some people feel that they don't really suffer much. Practice in Buddhism
is for the purpose of freeing ourselves from suffering. What should
we do not to suffer anymore? When dukkha arises we should
investigate to see the causes of its arising. Then once we know that,
we can practice to remove those causes. Suffering, origination, cessation
- in order to bring it to cessation we have to understand the path
of practice. Then once we travel the path to fulfillment, dukkha
will no longer arise. In Buddhism, this is the way out.
|