The way people think is that having been born, they don't want to
die. Is that correct? It's like pouring water into a glass but not
wanting it to fill up. If you keep pouring the water, you can't expect
it not to be full. But people think like this: they are born but don't
want to die. Is that correct thinking? Consider it. If people are
born but never die, will that bring happiness? If no one who comes
into the world dies, things will be a lot worse. If no one ever dies,
we will probably all end up eating excrement! Where would we all stay?
It's like pouring water into the glass without ceasing yet still not
wanting it to be full. We really ought to think things through. We
are born but don't want to die. If we really don't want to die, we
should realize the deathless (amatadhamma), as the Buddha
taught. Do you know what amatadhamma means?
It is the deathless - though you die, if you have wisdom it is as
if you don't die. Not dying, not being born. That's where things can
be finished. Being born and wishing for happiness and enjoyment without
dying is not the correct way at all. But that's what people want,
so there is no end of suffering for them. The practitioner of Dhamma
does not suffer. Well, practitioners such as ordinary monks still
suffer, because they haven't yet fulfilled the path of practice. They
haven't realized amatadhamma, so they still suffer. They
are still subject to death.
Amatadhamma is the deathless. Born of the womb, can we avoid
death? Apart from realizing that there is no real self, there is no
way to avoid death. ''I'' don't die; sankhāras
undergo transformation, following their nature.
This is hard to see. People can't think like this. You need to get
free of worldliness, like Sumedho did. You need to leave the big,
comfortable home and the world of progress. Like the Buddha did. If
the Buddha had remained in his royal palace, he wouldn't have become
the Buddha. It was by leaving the palace and going to live in forests
that he attained that. The life of pleasure and amusement in the palace
was not the way to enlightenment.
Who is it that tells you about the astrological predictions?
AS: A lot of people talk about it, often just like a hobby or a casual
interest.
AC: If it really is as they say, then what should people do? Are they
offering any path to follow? From my point of view, the Buddha taught
very clearly. He said that the things we can't be sure about are many,
starting from the time we were born. Astrology may talk about months
or years in the future, but the Buddha points to the moment of birth.
Predicting the future may make people anxious about what could happen,
but the truth is that the uncertainty is always with us, right from
birth.
People aren't likely to believe such talk, are they?
If you (speaking to a layperson who was present) are afraid, then
consider this: suppose that you were convicted of a crime that calls
for capital punishment, and in seven days you will be executed. What
would go through your mind? This is my question for you. If in seven
days you will be executed, what will you do? If you think about it
and take it a step further, you will realize that all of us right
now are sentenced to die, only we don't know when it will happen.
It could be sooner than seven days. Are you aware that you are under
this death sentence?
If you were to violate the law of the land and be sentenced to death,
you would certainly be most distressed. Meditation on death is recollecting
that death is going to take us and that it could be very soon. But
you don't think about it, so you feel you are living comfortably.
If you do think about it, it will cause you to have devotion to the
practice of Dhamma. So the Buddha taught us to practice the recollection
of death regularly. Those who don't recollect it live with fear. They
don't know themselves. But if you do recollect and are aware of yourself,
it will lead you to want to practise Dhamma seriously and escape from
this danger.
If you are aware of this death sentence, you will want to find a solution.
Generally, people don't like to hear such talk. Doesn't that mean
they are far from the true Dhamma? The Buddha urged us to recollect
death, but people get upset by such talk. That's the kamma
of beings. They do have some knowledge of this fact, but the knowledge
isn't yet clear. |