Take a simple example. You have children - now suppose you want to
only love them and never experience hatred. This is the thinking of
one who doesn't know human nature. If you hold onto love, hatred will
follow. In the same way, people decide to study the Dhamma to develop
wisdom, studying good and evil as closely as possible. Now, having
known good and evil, what do they do? They try to cling to the good,
and evil follows. They didn't study that which is beyond good and
evil. This is what you should study.
''I'm going to be like this,'' ''I'm going to be like that''...
but they never say ''I'm not going to be anything because there
really isn't any 'I'.'' This they don't study. All they want is
goodness. If they attain goodness, they lose themselves in it. If things get
too good they'll start to go bad, and so people end up just swinging
back and forth like this.
In order to calm the mind and become aware of the perceiver of sense
impressions, we must observe it. Follow the ''one who knows.''
Train the mind until it is pure. How pure should you make it? If it's
really pure the mind should be above both good and evil, above even
purity. It's finished. That's when the practice is finished.
What people call sitting in meditation is merely a temporary kind
of peace. But even in such a peace there are experiences. If an
experience arises there must be someone who knows it, who looks into it, queries
it and examines it. If the mind is simply blank then that's not so
useful. You may see some people who look very restrained and think
they are peaceful, but the real peace is not simply the peaceful mind.
It's not the peace which says, ''May I be happy and never experience
any suffering.'' With this kind of peace, eventually even the
attainment of happiness becomes unsatisfying. Suffering results. Only when you
can make your mind beyond both happiness and suffering will you find
true peace. That's the true peace. This is the subject most people
never study, they never really see this one.
The right way to train the mind is to make it bright, to develop
wisdom. Don't think that training the mind is simply sitting quietly. That's
the rock covering the grass. People get drunk over it. They think
that samādhi is sitting. That's just one of the
words for samādhi. But really, if the mind has samādhi,
then walking is samādhi, sitting is samādhi...
samādhi in the sitting posture, in the walking
posture, in the standing and reclining postures. It's all practice.
Some people complain, ''I can't meditate, I'm too restless. Whenever
I sit down I think of this and that... I can't do it. I've got too
much bad kamma. I should use up my bad kamma
first and then come back and try meditating.'' Sure, just try it. Try using
up your bad kamma....
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