Therefore, understand the importance of sati, practice constantly.
Right practice is steady practice. Whether standing, walking, sitting
or reclining the practice must continue. This means that practice,
meditation, is done in the mind, not in the body. If our mind has
zeal, is conscientious and ardent, then there will be awareness. The
mind is the important thing. The mind is that which supervises everything
we do.
When we understand properly then we practice properly. When we practice
properly we don't go astray. Even if we only do a little that is still
all right. For example, when you finish sitting in meditation, remind
yourselves that you are not actually finishing meditation, you are
simply changing postures. Your mind is still composed. Whether standing,
walking, sitting or reclining you have sati with you. If
you have this kind of awareness you can maintain your internal practice.
In the evening when you sit again the practice continues uninterrupted.
Your effort is unbroken, allowing the mind to attain calm.
This is called steady practice. Whether we are talking or doing other
things we should try to make the practice continuous. If our mind
has recollection and self-awareness continuously, our practice will
naturally develop, it will gradually come together. The mind will
find peace, because it will know what is right and what is wrong.
It will see what is happening within us and realize peace.
If we are to develop sīla (moral restraint) or samādhi
(firmness of mind) we must first have paññā (wisdom).
Some people think that they'll develop moral restraint one year, samādhi
the next year and the year after that they'll develop wisdom. They
think these three things are separate. They think that this year they
will develop, but if the mind is not firm (samādhi),
how can they do it? If there is no understanding (paññā),
how can they do it? Without samādhi or paññā,
sīla will be sloppy.
In fact these three come together at the same point. When we have
sīla we have samādhi, when we
have samādhi we have paññā. They
are all one, like a mango. Whether it's small or fully grown, it's
still a mango. When it's ripe it's still the same mango. If we think
in simple terms like this we can see it more easily. We don't have
to learn a lot of things, just to know these things, to know our practice.
When it comes to meditation some people don't get what they want,
so they just give up, saying they don't yet have the merit to practice
meditation. They can do bad things, they have that sort of talent,
but they don't have the talent to do good. They throw it in, saying
they don't have a good enough foundation. This is the way people are,
they side with their defilements.
Now that you have this chance to practice, please understand that
whether you find it difficult or easy to develop samādhi
is entirely up to you, not the samādhi. If it
is difficult, it is because you are practicing wrongly. In our practice
we must have ''right view'' (sammā-ditthi).
If our view is right then everything else is right: right view, right
intention, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort,
right recollection, right concentration - the Eightfold Path. When
there is right view all the other factors will follow on.
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