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Appearances are determined into existence. Why must we determine them?
Because they don't intrinsically exist. For example, suppose somebody
wanted to make a marker. He would take a piece of wood or a rock and
place it on the ground, and then call it a marker. Actually it's not
a marker. There isn't any marker, that's why you must determine it
into existence. In the same way we ''determine'' cities, people,
cattle - everything! Why must we determine these things? Because
originally they do not exist.
Concepts such as ''monk'' and ''layperson'' are also ''determinations.''
We determine these things into existence because intrinsically they
aren't here. It's like having an empty dish - you can put anything
you like into it because it's empty. This is the nature of determined
reality. Men and women are simply determined concepts, as are all
the things around us.
If we know the truth of determinations clearly, we will know that
there are no beings, because ''beings'' are determined things.
Understanding that these things are simply determinations, you can
be at peace. But if you believe that the person, being, the ''mine,''
the ''theirs,'' and so on are intrinsic qualities, then you must
laugh and cry over them. These are the proliferation of conditioning
factors. If we take such things to be ours there will always be suffering.
This is micchāditthi, wrong view. Names are
not intrinsic realities, they are provisional truths. Only after we
are born do we obtain names, isn't that so? Or did you have your name
already when you were born? The name comes afterwards, right? Why
must we determine these names? Because intrinsically they aren't there.
We should clearly understand these determinations. Good, evil, high,
low, black and white are all determinations. We are all lost in determinations.
This is why at the funeral ceremonies the monks chant, Aniccā
vata sankhārā... Conditions are impermanent, they
arise and pass way. That's the truth. What is there that, having arisen,
doesn't cease? Good moods arise and then cease. Have you ever seen
anybody cry for three or four years? At the most, you may see people
crying a whole night, and then the tears dry up. Having arisen, they
cease....
Tesam vūpasamo sukho6.... If we understand sankhāras, proliferations,
and thereby subdue them, this is the greatest happiness. This is true
merit, to be calmed of proliferations, calmed of ''being,'' calmed
of individuality, of the burden of self. Transcending these things
one sees the Unconditioned. This means that no matter what happens,
the mind doesn't proliferate around it. There's nothing that can throw
the mind off its natural balance. What else could you want? This is
the end, the finish.
The Buddha taught the way things are. Our making offerings and listening
to Dhamma talks and so on is in order to search for and realize this.
If we realize this, we don't have to go and study vipassanā
(insight meditation), it will happen of itself. Both samatha
(calm) and vipassanā are determined into being, just
like other determinations. The mind which knows, which is beyond such
things, is the culmination of the practice.
Our practice, our inquiry, is in order to transcend suffering. When
clinging is finished with, states of being are finished with. When
states of being are finished with, there is no more birth or death.
When things are going well, the mind does not rejoice, and when things
are going badly, the mind does not grieve. The mind is not dragged
all over the place by the tribulations of the world, and so the practice
is finished. This is the basic principle for which the Buddha gave
the teaching.
The Buddha taught the Dhamma for use in our lives. Even when we die
there is the teaching Tesam vūpasamo sukho... but
we don't subdue these conditions, we only carry them around, as if
the monks were telling us to do so. We carry them around and cry over
them. This is getting lost in conditions. Heaven, hell and Nibbāna
are all to be found at this point. |
Footnotes
- ...1
- Given on a lunar observance night (Uposatha) at Wat Pah Pong, 1976
- ...uposatha2
- Uposatha (or observance) days, are the days on which practicing
Buddhists usually go to the monastery to practice meditation, listen
to a Dhamma talk and keep the eight uposatha precepts -
to refrain from killing, stealing, all sexual activity, lying, taking
intoxicants, eating food after midday, enjoying entertainments and
dressing up, and sitting or sleeping on luxurious seats or beds.
- ...kusala3
- Kusala: wholesome or skillful actions or mental states.
- ...pariyatti4
- Pariyatti, the teachings as laid down in the scriptures,
or as passed down from one person to another in some form; the ''theoretical''
aspect of Buddhism. Pariyatti is often mentioned in reference
to two other aspects of Buddhism - patipatti, the practice,
and pativedha, the realization. Thus: Study - Practice
- Realization.
- ... reality5
- Sammuti sacca, a difficult term to translate. It refers to
the dualistic, or nominal reality, the reality of names, determinations
or conventions. For instance, a cup is not intrinsically a cup, it
is only determined to be so.
- ... sukho6
- ''Cessation is true happiness,'' or ''the calming of conditions
is true happiness.''
- ... consciousness7
- The five khandhas.
- ...tipitaka8
- The Buddhist Pāli Canon.
- ...abhidhamma9
- The third of the ''Three Baskets,'' the Tipitaka,
being the section on the higher philosophy of Buddhism.
- ...10
- A Pāli phrase said at the end the traditional giving of the precepts.
- ...sīlabbata-parāmāsa11
- Self-view, doubt, and attachment to rites and practices.
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