At this stage, you should make the mind unshakeable in its concentration
and be especially mindful. Some people become startled when they notice
that the breath has disappeared, because they're used to having the
breath there. When it appears that the breath has gone, you might
panic or become afraid that you are going to die. Here you must establish
the understanding that it is just the nature of the practice to progress
in this way. What will you observe as the object of meditation now?
Observe this feeling that there is no breath and sustain it as the
object of awareness as you continue to meditate. The Buddha described
this as the firmest, most unshakeable form of samādhi.
There is just one firm and unwavering object of mind. When your practice
of samādhi reaches this point, there will be many unusual
and refined changes and transformations taking place within the mind,
which you can be aware of. The sensation of the body will feel at
its lightest or might even disappear altogether. You might feel like
you are floating in mid-air and seem to be completely weightless.
It might be like you are in the middle of space and wherever you direct
your sense faculties they don't seem to register anything at all.
Even though you know the body is still sitting there, you experience
complete emptiness. This feeling of emptiness can be quite strange.
As you continue to practise, understand that there is nothing to worry
about. Establish this feeling of being relaxed and unworried, securely
in the mind. Once the mind is concentrated and one-pointed, no mind-object
will be able to penetrate or disturb it, and you will be able to sit
like this for as long as you want. You will be able to sustain concentration
without any feelings of pain and discomfort.
Having developed samādhi to this level, you will be
able to enter or leave it at will. When you do leave it, it's at your
ease and convenience. You withdraw at your ease, rather than because
you are feeling lazy, unenergetic or tired. You withdraw from samādhi
because it is the appropriate time to withdraw, and you come out of
it at your will.
This is samādhi: you are relaxed and at your ease. You
enter and leave it without any problems. The mind and heart are at
ease. If you genuinely have samādhi like this, it means
that sitting meditation and entering samādhi for just
thirty minutes or an hour will enable you to remain cool and peaceful
for many days afterwards. Experiencing the effects of samādhi
like this for several days has a purifying effect on the mind - whatever
you experience will become an object for contemplation. This is where
the practice really begins. It's the fruit which arises as samādhi
matures.
Samādhi performs the function of calming the mind. Samādhi
performs one function, sīla performs one function and
paññā performs another function. These characteristics
which you are focusing attention on and developing in the practice
are linked, forming a circle. This is the way they manifest in the
mind. Sīla, samādhi and paññā
arise and mature from the same place. Once the mind is calm, it will
become progressively more restrained and composed due to the presence
of paññā and the power of samādhi. As
the mind becomes more composed and refined, this gives rise to an
energy which acts to purify sīla. Greater purity of
sīla facilitates the development of stronger and more
refined samādhi, and this in turn supports the maturing
of paññā. They assist each other in this way. Each aspect
of the practice acts as a supporting factor for each other one -
in the end these terms becoming synonymous. As these three factors
continue to mature together, they form one complete circle, ultimately
giving rise to Magga. Magga is a synthesis of these
three functions of the practice working smoothly and consistently
together. As you practise, you have to preserve this energy. It is
the energy which will give rise to vipassanā (insight)
or paññā. Having reached this stage (where paññā
is already functioning in the mind, independent of whether the mind
is peaceful or not) paññā will provide a consistent
and independent energy in the practice. You see that whenever the
mind is not peaceful, you shouldn't attach, and even when it is peaceful,
you shouldn't attach. Having let go of the burden of such concerns,
the heart will accordingly feel much lighter. Whether you experience
pleasant mind-objects or unpleasant mind-objects, you will remain
at ease. The mind will remain peaceful in this way. |
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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