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Therefore the right path to peace, the path the Buddha laid down,
which leads to peace of mind and the pacification of the defilements,
is sīla (moral restraint), samādhi (concentration)
and paññā (wisdom). This is the path of practice. It
is the path that leads you to purity and leads you to realise and
embody the qualities of the samana. It is the way to
the complete abandonment of greed, hatred and delusion. The practice
does not differ from this whether you view it internally or externally.
This way of training and maturing the mind - which involves the chanting,
the meditation, the Dhamma talks and all the other parts of the practice
- forces you to go against the grain of the defilements. You have
to go against the tendencies of the mind, because normally we like
to take things easy, to be lazy and avoid anything which causes us
friction or involves suffering and difficulty. The mind simply doesn't
want to make the effort or get involved. This is why you have to be
ready to endure hardship and bring forth effort in the practice. You
have to use the dhamma of endurance and really struggle.
Previously your bodies were simply vehicles for having fun, and having
built up all sorts of unskilful habits it's difficult for you to start
practising with them. Before, you didn't restrain your speech, so
now it's hard to start restraining it. But as with that wood, it doesn't
matter how troublesome or hard it seems: before you can make it into
tables and chairs, you have to encounter some difficulty. That's not
the important thing; it's just something you have to experience along
the way. You have to work through the rough wood to produce the finished
pieces of furniture.
The Buddha taught that this is the way the practice is for all of
us. All of his disciples who had finished their work and become fully
enlightened, had, (when they first came to take ordination and practise
with him) previously been puthujjana (ordinary worldlings).
They had all been ordinary unenlightened beings like ourselves, with
arms and legs, eyes and ears, greed and anger - just the same as
us. They didn't have any special characteristics that made them particularly
different from us. This was how both the Buddha and his disciples
had been in the beginning. They practised and brought forth enlightenment
from the unenlightened, beauty from the ugliness and great benefit
from that which was virtually useless. This work has continued through
successive generations right up to the present day. It is the children
of ordinary people - farmers, traders and businessmen - who, having
previously been entangled in the sensual pleasures of the world, go
forth to take ordination. Those monks at the time of the Buddha were
able to practise and train themselves, and you must understand that
you have the same potential. You are made up of the five khandhas6 (aggregates), just the same. You also have a body, pleasant and unpleasant
feelings, memory and perception, thought formations and consciousness
- as well as a wandering and proliferating mind. You can be aware
of good and evil. Everything's just the same. In the end, that combination
of physical and mental phenomena present in each of you, as separate
individuals, differs little from that found in those monastics who
practised and became enlightened under the Buddha. They had all started
out as ordinary, unenlightened beings. Some had even been gangsters
and delinquents, while others were from good backgrounds. They were
no different from us. The Buddha inspired them to go forth and practise
for the attainment of magga (the Noble Path) and phāla
(Fruition)7, and these days, in similar fashion, people like yourselves are inspired
to take up the practice of sīla, samādhi
and paññā.
Sīla, samādhi and paññā
are the names given to the different aspects of the practice. When
you practise sīla, samādhi and paññā,
it means you practise with yourselves. Right practice takes place
here within you. Right sīla exists here, right samādhi
exists here. Why? Because your body is right here. The practice of
sīla involves every part of the body. The Buddha taught
us to be careful of all our physical actions. Your body exists here!
You have hands, you have legs right here. This is where you practise
sīla. Whether your actions will be in accordance with
sīla and Dhamma depends on how you train your body.
Practising with your speech means being aware of the things you say.
It includes avoiding wrong kinds of speech, namely divisive speech,
coarse speech and unnecessary or frivolous speech. Wrong bodily actions
include killing living beings, stealing and sexual misconduct.
It's easy to reel off the list of wrong kinds of behaviour as found
in the books, but the important thing to understand is that the potential
for them all lies within us. Your body and speech are with you right
here and now. You practise moral restraint, which means taking care
to avoid the unskilful actions of killing, stealing and sexual misconduct.
The Buddha taught us to take care with our actions from the very coarsest
level. In the lay life you might not have had very refined moral conduct
and frequently transgressed the precepts. For instance, in the past
you may have killed animals or insects by smashing them with an axe
or a fist, or perhaps you didn't take much care with your speech:
false speech means lying or exaggerating the truth; coarse speech
means you are constantly being abusive or rude to others - 'you scum,'
'you idiot,' and so on; frivolous speech means aimless chatter, foolishly
rambling on without purpose or substance. We've indulged in it all.
No restraint! In short, keeping sīla means watching
over yourself, watching over your actions and speech.
So who will do the watching over? Who will take responsibility for
your actions? When you kill some animal, who is the one who knows?
Is your hand the one who knows, or is it someone else? When you steal
someone else's property, who is aware of the act? Is your hand the
one who knows? This is where you have to develop awareness. Before
you commit some act of sexual misconduct, where is your awareness?
Is your body the one who knows? Who is the one who knows before you
lie, swear or say something frivolous? Is your mouth aware of what
it says, or is the one who knows in the words themselves? Contemplate
this: whoever it is who knows is the one who has to take responsibility
for your sīla. Bring that awareness to watch over your
actions and speech. That knowing, that awareness is what you use to
watch over your practice. To keep sīla, you use that
part of the mind which directs your actions and which leads you to
do good and bad. You catch the villain and transform him into a sheriff
or a mayor. Take hold of the wayward mind and bring it to serve and
take responsibility for all your actions and speech. Look at this
and contemplate it. The Buddha taught us to take care with our actions.
Who is it who does the taking care? The body doesn't know anything;
it just stands, walks around and so on. The hands are the same; they
don't know anything. Before they touch or take hold of anything, there
has to be someone who gives them orders. As they pick things up and
put them down there has to be someone telling them what to do. The
hands themselves aren't aware of anything; there has to be someone
giving them orders. The mouth is the same - whatever it says, whether
it tells the truth or lies, is rude or divisive, there must be someone
telling it what to say.
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Footnotes
- ...samana1
- Recluse, monk or holy one - one who has left the home life to pursue
the Higher Life.
- ...ārammana2
- Ārammana: mind-objects; the object which is presented
to the mind (citta) at any moment. This object is derived
from the five senses or direct from the mind (memory, thought, feelings).
It is not the external object (in the world), but that object after
having been processed by one's preconceptions and predispositions.
- ...bhikkhus'3
- Bhikkhu: Buddhist monk, alms mendicant.
- ...Arahants4
- Arahant: Worthy one, one who is full enlightened.
- ...5
- Venerable: in Thai, 'Phra'.
- ...khandhas6
- Khandhas: Groups or aggregates: form (rūpa),
feeling (vedanā), perception (saññā),
thought formations (sankhārā) and consciousness
(viññāna). These groups are the five groups that constitute
what we call a person.
- ...7
- Magga-phāla: Path and fruition: the four transcendent
paths - or rather one path and four different levels of refinement
- leading to 'nobility' (ariya) or the end of suffering, i.e., the
insight knowledge which cuts through the fetters (samyojana);
and the four corresponding fruitions arising from those paths - refers
to the mental state, cutting through defilements, immediately following
the attainment of any of these paths.
- ...pāramı8
- Pāramī: refers to the ten spiritual perfections:
generosity, moral restraint, renunciation, wisdom, effort, patience,
truthfulness, determination, kindness and equanimity.
- ...upaparamı9
- Upapāramī: refers to the same ten spiritual perfections,
but practised on a deeper, more intense and profound level (practised
to the highest degree, they are called paramattha
pāramī)
- ...jhāna10
- Jhāna: Various levels of meditative absorption. The
five factors of jhāna are initial and sustained application
of mind, rapture, pleasure and equanimity.
- ...dhātu11
- Dhātu: Elements, natural essence. The elementary properties
which make up the inner sense of the body and mind: earth (material),
water (cohesion), fire (energy) and air (motion), space and consciousness.
- ...citta12
- Gotrabhū citta: Change-of-lineage (state of
consciousness preceding jhāna or Path).
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