However, even though simply listening to the Dhamma may not lead to
realization, it is beneficial. There were, in the Buddha's time, those
who realized the Dhamma, even realizing the highest realization -
arahantship - while listening to a discourse. But those people were
already highly developed, their minds already understood to some extent.
It's like a football. When a football is pumped up with air it expands.
Now the air in that football is all pushing to get out, but there's
no hole for it to do so. As soon as a needle punctures the football
the air comes bursting out.
This is the same. The minds of those disciples who were enlightened
while listening to the Dhamma were like this. As long as there was
no catalyst to cause the reaction this ''pressure'' was within
them, like the football. The mind was not yet free because of this
very small thing concealing the truth. As soon as they heard the Dhamma
and it hit the right spot, wisdom arose. They immediately understood,
immediately let go and realized the true Dhamma. That's how it was.
It was easy. The mind uprighted itself. It changed, or turned, from
one view to another. You could say it was far, or you could say it
was very near.
This is something we must do for ourselves. The Buddha was only able
to give techniques on how to develop wisdom, and so with the teachers
these days. They give Dhamma talks, they talk about the truth, but
still we can't make that truth our own. Why not? There's a ''film''
obscuring it. You could say that we are sunk, sunk in the water. Kāmogha
- the ''flood'' of sensuality. Bhavogha - the ''flood''
of becoming.
''Becoming'' (bhava) means ''the sphere of birth.''
Sensual desire is born at sights, sounds, tastes, smells, feelings
and thoughts, identifying with these things. The mind holds fast and
is stuck to sensuality.
Some cultivators get bored, fed up, tired of the practice and lazy.
You don't have to look very far, just look at how people can't seem
to keep the Dhamma in mind, and yet if they get scolded they'll hold
on to it for ages. They may get scolded at the beginning of the Rains,
and even after the Rains Retreat has ended they still haven't forgotten
it. Their whole lives they still won't forget it if it goes down deep
enough.
But when it comes to the Buddha's teaching, telling us to be moderate,
to be restrained, to practice conscientiously... why don't people
take these things to their hearts? Why do they keep forgetting these
things? You don't have to look very far, just look at our practice
here. For example, establishing standards such as: after the meal
while washing your bowls, don't chatter! Even this much seems to be
beyond people. Even though we know that chattering is not particularly
useful and binds us to sensuality... people still like talking. Pretty
soon they start to disagree and eventually get into arguments and
squabbles. There's nothing more to it than this.
Now this isn't anything subtle or refined, it's pretty basic, and
yet people don't seem to really make much effort with it. They say
they want to see the Dhamma, but they want to see it on their own
terms, they don't want to follow the path of practice. That's as far
as they go. All these standards of practice are skillful means for
penetrating to and seeing the Dhamma, but people don't practice accordingly.
To say ''real practice'' or ''ardent practice'' doesn't necessarily
mean you have to expend a whole lot of energy - just put some effort
into the mind, making some effort with all the feelings that arise,
especially those which are steeped in sensuality. These are our enemies.
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