So I've used the example of a tree. The students will look at a tree,
and they want to know all about the parts of the tree. Well, a tree
has roots, it has leaves. It lives because of the roots. The students
have to know, how many roots does it have? Major roots, minor roots,
branches, leaves, they want to know all the details and numbers. Then
they will feel they have clear knowledge about the tree. But the Buddha
said that a person who wants such knowledge is actually pretty stupid.
These things aren't necessary to know. Just knowing that there are
roots and leaves is sufficient. Do you want to count all the leaves
on a tree? If you look at one leaf, you should be able to get the
picture.
It's the same with people. If we know ourselves, then we understand
all people in the universe without having to go and observe them.
The Buddha wanted us to look at ourselves. As we are, so are others.
We are all sāmaññalakkhana, all being of the same characteristics.
All sankhāras are like this.
So we practice samādhi to be able to give up the defilements,
to give birth to knowledge and vision and let go of the five khandhas.
Sometimes people talk about samatha. Sometimes they talk
about vipassanā. I feel this can become confusing. Those
who practice samādhi will praise samādhi.
But it is just for making the mind tranquil so it can know those things
we have been talking about.
Then there are those who will say, ''I don't need to practice samādhi
so much. This plate will break one day in the future. Isn't that good
enough? That will work, won't it? I'm not very skilled in samādhi,
but I already know that the plate must break someday. Yes, I take
good care of it, because I'm afraid it will break, but I know that
such is its future, and when it does break, I won't be suffering over
that. Isn't my view correct? I don't need to practice a lot of samādhi,
because I already have this understanding. You practice samādhi
only for developing this understanding. After training your mind through
sitting, you came to this view. I don't sit much, but I am already
confident that this is the way of phenomena.''
This is a question for us practitioners. There are many factions of
teachers promoting their different methods of meditation. It can get
confusing. But the real point of it all is to be able to recognize
the truth, seeing things as they really are and being free of doubt.
As I see it, once we have correct knowledge, the mind comes under
our command. What is this command about? The command is in anicca,
knowing that everything is impermanent. Everything stops here when
we see clearly, and it becomes the cause for us letting go. Then we
let things be, according to their nature. If nothing is occurring,
we abide in equanimity, and if something comes up, we contemplate:
does it cause us to have suffering? Do we hold onto it with grasping
attachment? Is there anything there? This is what supports and sustains
our practice. If we practise and get to this point, I think every
one of us will realize genuine peace.
Whether we are undertaking vipassanā meditation or samatha
meditation, just this is what it's really about. But these days, it
seems to me that when Buddhists talk about these things according
to the traditional explanations, it becomes vague and mixed up. But
the truth (saccadhamma) isn't vague or mixed up. It remains
as it is.
So I feel it's better to seek out the source, looking at the way things
originate in the mind. There's not a lot to this.
Birth, aging, illness, and death: it's brief, but it's a universal
truth. So see it clearly and acknowledge these facts. If you acknowledge
them, you will be able to let go. Gain, rank, praise, happiness, and
their opposites - you can let them go, because you recognize them
for what they are.
If we reach this place of 'recognizing truth', we will be uncomplicated,
undemanding people, content with simple food, dwelling, and other
requisites for life, easy to speak to and unassuming in our actions.
Without difficulty or trouble, we will live at ease. One who meditates
and realizes a tranquil mind will be like this.
At present we are trying to practise in the way of the Buddha and
his disciples. Those beings had achieved awakening, yet they still
maintained their practice as long as they were living. They acted
for the benefit of themselves and for the benefit of others, yet even
after they had accomplished all that they could, they still kept up
their practice, seeking their own and others' well-being in various
ways. I think we should take them as the model for our practice. It
means not becoming complacent - that was their deeply ingrained nature.
They never slackened their efforts. Effort was their way, their natural
habit. Such is the character of the sages, of genuine practitioners.
We can compare it to rich people and poor people. The rich are especially
hard-working, much more so than the poor. And the less effort poor
people make, the less chance they have of becoming rich. The rich
have knowledge and experience of a lot of things, so they maintain
the habit of diligence in all they do.
|