We must contemplate. Whenever eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body
or mind
make contact we should be collected and circumspect. When suffering
arises, who is suffering? Why did this suffering arise? The abbot
of a monastery has to supervise many disciples. Now that may be
suffering.
We must know suffering when it arises. Know suffering. If we are afraid
of suffering and don't want to face it, where are we going to do battle
with it? If suffering arises and we don't know it, how are we going
to deal with it? This is of utmost importance - we must know suffering.
Escaping from suffering means knowing the way out of
suffering, it
doesn't mean running away from wherever suffering arises. By doing
that you just carry your suffering with you. When suffering arises
again somewhere else you'll have to run away again. This is not
transcending
suffering, it's not knowing suffering.
If you want to understand suffering you must look into the
situation
at hand. The teachings say that wherever a problem arises it must
be settled right there. Where suffering lies is right where
non-suffering
will arise, it ceases at the place where it arises. If suffering arises
you must contemplate right there, you don't have to run away. You
should settle the issue right there. One who runs away from suffering
out of fear is the most foolish person of all. He will simply increase
his stupidity endlessly.
We must understand: suffering is none other than the First
Noble Truth,
isn't that so? Are you going to look on it as something bad? Dukkhasacca,
samudayasacca,
nirodha sacca,
magga sacca....6
Running away from these things isn't practicing according to the
true Dhamma. When will you ever see the truth of suffering? If we
keep running away from suffering we will never know it. Suffering
is something we should recognize - if you don't observe it when will
you ever recognize it? Not being content here you run over there,
when discontent arises there you run off again. You are always running.
If that's the way you practice you'll be racing with the Devil all
over the country!
The Buddha taught us to ''run away'' using wisdom. For
instance:
suppose you had stepped on a thorn or splinter and it got embedded
in your foot. As you walk it occasionally hurts, occasionally not.
Sometimes you may step on a stone or a stump and it really hurts,
so you feel around your foot. But not finding anything you shrug it
off and walk on a bit more. Eventually you step on something else,
and the pain arises again.
Now this happens many times. What is the cause of that pain?
The cause
is that splinter or thorn embedded in your foot. The pain is constantly
near. Whenever the pain arises you may take a look and feel around
a bit, but, not seeing the splinter, you let it go. After a while
it hurts again so you take another look.
When suffering arises you must note it, don't just shrug it
off. Whenever
the pain arises... ''Hmm... that splinter is still there.'' Whenever
the pain arises there arises also the thought that that splinter has
got to go. If you don't take it out there will only be more pain later
on. The pain keeps recurring again and again, until the desire to
take out that thorn is constantly with you. In the end it reaches
a point where you make up your mind once and for all to get out that
thorn - because it hurts!
Now our effort in the practice must be like this. Wherever it
hurts,
wherever there's friction, we must investigate. Confront the problem,
head on. Take that thorn out of your foot, just pull it out. Wherever
your mind gets stuck you must take note. As you look into it you will
know it, see it and experience it as it is.
But our practice must be unwavering and persistent. They call
it viriyārambha
- putting forth constant effort. Whenever an unpleasant feeling arises
in your foot, for example, you must remind yourself to get out that
thorn, don't give up your resolve. Likewise, when suffering arises
in our hearts we must have the unwavering resolve to try to uproot
the defilements, to give them up. This resolve is constantly there,
unremitting. Eventually the defilements will fall into our hands where
we can finish them off.
So in regard to happiness and suffering, what are we to do? If
we
didn't have these things what could we use as a cause to precipitate
wisdom? If there is no cause how will the effect arise? All dhammas
arise because of causes. When the result ceases it's because the cause
has ceased. This is how it is, but most of us don't really understand.
People only want to run away from suffering. This sort of knowledge
is short of the mark. Actually we need to know this very world that
we are living in, we don't have to run away anywhere. You should have
the attitude that to stay is fine... and to go is fine. Think about
this carefully.
Where do happiness and suffering lie? Whatever we don't hold
fast
to, cling to or fix on to, as if it weren't there, suffering doesn't
arise. Suffering arises from existence (bhava). If
there
is existence then there is birth. Upādāna -
clinging
or attachment - this is the pre-requisite which creates suffering.
Wherever suffering arises look into it. Don't look too far away, look
right into the present moment. Look at your own mind and body. When
suffering arises... ''Why is there suffering?'' Look right now.
When happiness arises, what is the cause of that happiness? Look right
there. Wherever these things arise be aware. Both happiness and
suffering
arise from clinging.
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