The practice tends to be this way, so it will have to take many sittings
and much effort before you become proficient. Once you are, the mind
will let go of the external world and remain undisturbed. Mind-objects
from the outside will be unable to penetrate inside and disturb the
mind itself. Once they are unable to penetrate inside, you will see
the mind. You will see the mind as one object of awareness, the breath
as another and mind-objects as another. They will all be present within
the field of awareness, centred at the tip of your nose. Once sati
is firmly established with the in-breaths and out-breaths, you can
continue to practise at your ease. As the mind becomes calm, the breath,
which was originally coarse, correspondingly becomes lighter and more
refined. The object of mind also becomes increasingly subtle and refined.
The body feels lighter and the mind itself feels progressively lighter
and unburdened. The mind lets go of external mind-objects and you
continue to observe internally.
From here onwards your awareness will be turned away from the world
outside and is directed inwards to focus on the mind. Once the mind
has gathered together and become concentrated, maintain awareness
at that point where the mind becomes focused. As you breathe, you
will see the breath clearly as it enters and leaves, sati
will be sharp and awareness of mind-objects and mental activity will
be clearer. At that point you will see the characteristics of sīla,
samādhi and paññā and the way in which
they merge together. This is known as the unification of the Path
factors. Once this unification occurs, your mind will be free from
all forms of agitation and confusion. It will become one-pointed and
this is what is known as samādhi. When you focus attention
in just one place, in this case the breath, you gain a clarity and
awareness because of the uninterrupted presence of sati.
As you continue to see the breath clearly, sati will become
stronger and the mind will become more sensitive in many different
ways. You will see the mind in the centre of that place (the breath),
one-pointed with awareness focused inwards, rather than turning towards
the world outside. The external world gradually disappears from your
awareness and the mind will no longer be going to perform any work
on the outside. It's as if you've come inside your 'house,' where
all your sense faculties have come together to form one compact unit.
You are at your ease and the mind is free from all external objects.
Awareness remains with the breath and over time it will penetrate
deeper and deeper inside, becoming progressively more refined. Ultimately,
awareness of the breath becomes so refined that the sensation of the
breath seems to disappear. You could say either that awareness of
the sensation of the breath has disappeared, or that the breath itself
has disappeared. Then there arises a new kind of awareness - awareness
that the breath has disappeared. In other words, awareness of the
breath becomes so refined that it's difficult to define it.
So it might be that you are just sitting there and there's no breath.
Really, the breath is still there, but it has become so refined that
it seems to have disappeared. Why? Because the mind is at its most
refined, with a special kind of knowing. All that remains is the knowing.
Even though the breath has vanished, the mind is still concentrated
with the knowledge that the breath is not there. As you continue,
what should you take up as the object of meditation? Take this very
knowing as the meditation object - in other words the knowledge that
there is no breath - and sustain this. You could say that a specific
kind of knowledge has been established in the mind.
At this point, some people might have doubts arising, because it is
here that nimitta1 can arise. These can be of many kinds, including both forms and sounds.
It is here that all sorts of unexpected things can arise in the course
of the practice. If nimitta do arise (some people have them,
some don't) you must understand them in accordance with the truth.
Don't doubt or allow yourself to become alarmed. |
Footnotes
- ...nimitta1
- Nimitta: a sign or appearance, that may take place in terms
of seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching or mental impression,
and which arises based on the citta (mind), rather than the
relevant sense faculty. Examples of nimitta include: the
seeing or hearing of beings in other realms of existence, precognition,
clairvoyance, etc.
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