The Power of Samādhi
Everything I've been relating to you concerns the mind following the
way of nature. This was no theoretical description of the mind or
of psychological states. There's no need for that. When there's faith
or confidence, you get in there and really do it. Not just playing
around, you put your life on the line. And when your practice reaches
the stage that I've been describing, afterwards the whole world is
turned upside down. Your understanding of reality is completely different.
Your view is utterly transformed. If someone saw you at that moment,
they might think you were insane. If this experience happened to someone
who didn't have a thorough grip on themselves, they might actually
go crazy, because nothing is the same as it was before. The people
of the world appear differently than they used to. But you're the
only one who sees this. Absolutely everything changes. Your thoughts
are transmuted: other people now think in one way, while you think
in another. They speak about things in one way, while you speak in
another. They're descending one path while you're climbing another.
You're no longer the same as other human beings. This way of experiencing
things doesn't deteriorate. It persists and carries on. Give it a
try. If it really is as I describe, you won't have to go searching
very far. Just look into your own heart. This heart is staunchly courageous,
unshakably bold. This is the heart's power, it's source of strength
and energy. The heart has this potential strength. This is the power
and force of samādhi.
At this point it's still just the power and purity that the mind derives
from samādhi. This level of samādhi is
samādhi at its ultimate. The mind has attained the summit
of samādhi; it's not mere momentary concentration. If
you were to switch to vipassanā meditation at this point,
the contemplation would be uninterrupted and insightful. Or you could
take that focused energy and use it in other ways. From this point
on you could develop psychic powers, perform miraculous feats or use
it anyway you wanted. Ascetics and hermits have used samādhi
energy for making holy water, talismans or casting spells. These things
are all possible at this stage, and may be of some benefit in their
own way; but it's like the benefit of alcohol. You drink it and then
you get drunk.
This level of samādhi is a rest stop. The Buddha stopped
and rested here. It forms the foundation for contemplation and vipassanā.
However, it's not necessary to have such profound samādhi
as this in order to observe the conditions around us, so keep on steadily
contemplating the process of cause and effect. To do this we focus
the peace and clarity of our minds to analyze the sights, sounds,
smells, tastes, physical sensations, thoughts, and mental states we
experience. Examine moods and emotions, whether positive or negative,
happy or unhappy. Examine everything. It's just like someone else
has climbed up a mango tree and is shaking down the fruit while we
wait underneath to gather them up. The ones which are rotten, we don't
pick up. Just gather the good mangoes. It's not exhausting, because
we don't have to climb up the tree. We simply wait underneath to reap
the fruit.
Do you get the meaning of this simile? Everything experienced with
a peaceful mind confers greater understanding. No longer do we create
proliferating interpretations around what is experienced. Wealth,
fame, blame, praise, happiness, and unhappiness come of their own
accord. And we're at peace. We're wise. It's actually fun. It becomes
fun to sift through and sort out these things. What other people call
good, bad, evil, here, there, happiness, unhappiness, or whatever
- it all gets taken in for our own profit. Someone else has climbed
up the mango tree and is shaking the branches to make the mangoes
fall down to us. We simply enjoy ourselves gathering the fruit without
fear. What's there to be afraid of anyway? It's someone else who's
shaking the mangoes down to us. Wealth, fame, praise, criticism, happiness,
unhappiness, and all the rest are no more than mangoes falling down,
and we examine them with a serene heart. Then we'll know which ones
are good and which are rotten.
Working in Accord with Nature
When we begin to wield the peace and serenity we've been developing
in meditation to contemplate these things, wisdom arises. This is
what I call wisdom. This is vipassanā. It's not something
fabricated and construed. If we're wise, vipassanā will
develop naturally. We don't have to label what's happening. If there's
only a little clarity of insight, we call this ''little vipassanā.''
When clear seeing increases a bit, we call that ''moderate vipassanā.''
If knowing is fully in accordance with the Truth, we call that ''ultimate
vipassanā.'' Personally I prefer to use the word wisdom
(paññā) rather than ''vipassanā.''
If we think we are going to sit down from time to time and practise
''vipassanā meditation,'' we're going to have a
very difficult time of it. Insight has to proceed from peace and tranquility.
The entire process will happen naturally of its own accord. We can't
force it.
The Buddha taught that this process matures at its own rate. Having
reached this level of practice, we allow it to develop according to
our innate capabilities, spiritual aptitude and the merit we've accumulated
in the past. But we never stop putting effort into the practice. Whether
the progress is swift or slow is out of our control. It's just like
planting a tree. The tree knows how fast it should grow. If we want
it to grow more quickly than it is, this is pure delusion. If we want
it to grow more slowly, recognize this as delusion as well. If we
do the work, the results will be forthcoming - just like planting
a tree. For example, say we wanted to plant a chilli bush. Our responsibility
is to dig a hole, plant the seedling, water it, fertilize it and protect
it from insects. This is our job, our end of the bargain. This is
where faith then comes in. Whether the chilli plant grows or not is
up to it. It's not our business. We can't go tugging on the plant,
trying to stretch it and make it grow faster. That's not how nature
works. Our responsibility is to water and fertilize it. Practising
Dhamma in the same way puts our hearts at ease.
If we realize enlightenment in this lifetime, that's fine. If we have
to wait until our next life, no matter. We have faith and unfaltering
conviction in the Dhamma. Whether we progress quickly or slowly is
up to our innate capabilities, spiritual aptitude, and the merit we've
accumulated so far. Practising like this puts the heart at ease. It's
like we're riding in a horse cart. We don't put the cart before the
horse. Or it's like trying to plow a rice paddy while walking in front
of our water buffalo rather than behind. What I'm saying here is that
the mind is getting ahead of itself. It's impatient to get quick results.
That's not the way to do it. Don't walk in front of your water buffalo.
You have to walk behind the water buffalo.
It's just like that chilli plant we are nurturing. Give it water and
fertilizer, and it will do the job of absorbing the nutrients. When
ants or termites come to infest it, we chase them away. Doing just
this much is enough for the chilli to grow beautifully on its own,
and once it is growing beautifully, don't try to force it to flower
when we think it should flower. It's none of our business. It will
just create useless suffering. Allow it to bloom on its own. And once
the flowers do bloom don't demand that it immediately produce chilli
peppers. Don't rely on coercion. That really causes suffering! Once
we figure this out, we understand what our responsibilities are and
are not. Each has their specific duty to fulfill. The mind knows its
role in the work to be done. If the mind doesn't understand its role,
it will try to force the chilli plant to produce peppers on the very
day we plant it. The mind will insist that it grow, flower, and produce
peppers all in one day.
This is nothing but the second Noble Truth: craving causes suffering
to arise. If we are aware of this Truth and ponder it, we'll understand
that trying to force results in our Dhamma practice is pure delusion.
It's wrong. Understanding how it works, we let go and allow things
to mature according to our innate capabilities, spiritual aptitude
and the merit we've accumulated. We keep doing our part. Don't worry
that it might take a long time. Even if it takes a hundred or a thousand
lifetimes to get enlightened, so what? However many lifetimes it takes
we just keep practicing with a heart at ease, comfortable with our
pace. Once our mind has entered the stream, there's nothing to fear.
It will have gone beyond even the smallest evil action. The Buddha
said that the mind of a sotāpanna, someone who
has attained the first stage of enlightenment, has entered the stream
of Dhamma that flows to enlightenment. These people will never again
have to experience the grim lower realms of existence, never again
fall into hell. How could they possibly fall into hell when their
minds have abandoned evil? They've seen the danger in making bad kamma.
Even if you tried to force them to do or say something evil, they
would be incapable of it, so there's no chance of ever again descending
into hell or the lower realms of existence. Their minds are flowing
with the current of Dhamma.
Once you're in the stream, you know what your responsibilities are.
You comprehend the work ahead. You understand how to practise Dhamma.
You know when to strive hard and when to relax. You comprehend your
body and mind, this physical and mental process, and you renounce
the things that should be renounced, continually abandoning without
a shred of doubt.
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