''Is his mind purified?''
''Well, it is somewhat, but not 100%.''
How else could I answer? He said that later on he would come and question
me about it further. He can look into it, the standard is there.
Don't be careless. Be alert. The Lord Buddha exhorted us to be alert.
In regards to this training of the heart, I've had my moments of temptation
too, you know. I've often been tempted to try many things but they've
always seemed like they're going astray of the path. It's really just
a sort of swaggering in one's mind, a sort of conceit. Ditthi,
views, and māna, pride, are there. It's hard enough
just to be aware of these two things.
There was once a man who wanted to become a monk here. He carried
in his robes, determined to become a monk in memory of his late mother.
He came into the monastery, laid down his robes, and without so much
as paying respects to the monks, started walking meditation right
in front of the main hall... back and forth, back and forth, like
he was really going to show his stuff.
I thought, ''Oh, so there are people around like this, too!''
This is called saddhā adhimokkha
- blind faith. He must have determined to get enlightened before
sundown or something, he thought it would be so easy. He didn't look
at anybody else, just put his head down and walked as if his life
depended on it. I just let him carry on, but I thought, ''Oh, man,
you think it's that easy or something?'' In the end I don't know
how long he stayed, I don't even think he ordained.
As soon as the mind thinks of something we send it out, send it out
every time. We don't realize that it's simply the habitual proliferation
of the mind. It disguises itself as wisdom and waffles off into minute
detail. This mental proliferation seems very clever, if we didn't
know we would mistake it for wisdom. But when it comes to the crunch
it's not the real thing. When suffering arises where is that so-called
wisdom then? Is it of any use? It's only proliferation after all.
So stay with the Buddha. As I've said before many times, in our practice
we must turn inwards and find the Buddha. Where is the Buddha? The
Buddha is still alive to this very day, go in and find him. Where
is he? At aniccam, go in and find him there, go and
bow to him: aniccam, uncertainty. You can stop right
there for starters.
If the mind tries to tell you, ''I'm a sotāpanna
now,'' go and bow to the sotāpanna. He'll tell you
himself, ''It's all uncertain.'' If you meet a sakadāgāmī
go and pay respects to him. When he sees you he'll simply say, ''Not
a sure thing!'' If there is an anāgāmī go
and bow to him. He'll tell you only one thing... ''Uncertain.''
If you meet even an arahant, go and bow to him, he'll tell
you even more firmly, ''It's all even more uncertain!'' You'll
hear the words of the Noble Ones... ''Everything is uncertain,
don't cling to anything.''
Don't just look at the Buddha like a simpleton. Don't cling to things,
holding fast to them without letting go. Look at things as functions
of the apparent and then send them on to transcendence. That's how
you must be. There must be appearance and there must be transcendence.
So I say, ''Go to the Buddha.'' Where is the Buddha? The Buddha
is the Dhamma. All the teachings in this world can be contained in
this one teaching: aniccam. Think about it. I've searched
for over forty years as a monk and this is all I could find. That
and patient endurance. This is how to approach the Buddha's teaching...
aniccam: it's all uncertain.
No matter how sure the mind wants to be, just tell it, ''Not sure!''
Whenever the mind wants to grab on to something as a sure thing, just
say, ''It's not sure, it's transient.'' Just ram it down with
this. Using the Dhamma of the Buddha it all comes down to this. It's
not that it's merely a momentary phenomenon. Whether standing, walking,
sitting or lying down, you see everything in that way. Whether liking
arises or dislike arises you see it all in the same way. This is getting
close to the Buddha, close to the Dhamma.
Now I feel that this is a more valuable way to practice. All my practice
from the early days up to the present time has been like this. I didn't
actually rely on the scriptures, but then I didn't disregard them
either. I didn't rely on a teacher but then I didn't exactly ''go
it alone.'' My practice was all ''neither this nor that.''
Frankly it's a matter of ''finishing off,'' that is, practicing
to the finish by taking up the practice and then seeing it to completion,
seeing the apparent and also the transcendent.
I've already spoken of this, but some of you may be interested to
hear it again: if you practice consistently and consider things thoroughly,
you will eventually reach this point... At first you hurry to go forward,
hurry to come back, and hurry to stop. You continue to practice like
this until you reach the point where it seems that going forward is
not it, coming back is not it, and stopping is not it either! It's
finished. This is the finish. Don't expect anything more than this,
it finishes right here. Khīnāsavo - one who is
completed. He doesn't go forward, doesn't retreat and doesn't stop.
There's no stopping, no going forward and no coming back. It's finished.
Consider this, realize it clearly in your own mind. Right there you
will find that there is really nothing at all.
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