Ask yourselves, are you confident about the practice yet? These days
there are all sorts of meditation teachers around, both monks and lay
teachers, and I’m afraid it will cause you to be full of doubts and uncertainty
about what you are doing. This is why I am asking. As far as Buddhist
practice is concerned, there is really nothing greater or higher than
these teachings of the Buddha which you have been practising with here.
If you have a clear understanding of them, it will give rise to an absolutely
firm and unwavering peace in your heart and mind.
Making the mind peaceful is known as practising meditation, or practising
samadhi (concentration). The mind is something which is extremely changeable
and unreliable. Observing from your practice so far, have you seen this
yet? Some days you sit meditation and in no time at all the mind is calm,
others, you sit and whatever you do there’s no calm – the mind constantly
struggling to get away, until it eventually does. Some days it goes well,
some days it’s awful. This is the way the mind displays these different
conditions for you to see. You must understand that the eight factors
of the Noble Eight-fold Path (ariya magga) merge in sila (moral restraint),
samadhi and pañña (wisdom). They don’t come together anywhere else. This
means that when you bring the factors of your practice together, there
must be sila, there must be samadhi and there must be pañña present together
in the mind. It means that in practising meditation right here and now,
you are creating the causes for the Path to arise in a very direct way.
In sitting meditation you are taught to close your eyes, so that you
don’t spend your time looking at different things. This is because the
Buddha was teaching that you should know your own mind. Observe the mind.
If you close your eyes, your attention will naturally be turned inwards
towards the mind – the source of many different kinds of knowledge. This
is a way of training the mind to give rise to samadhi.
Once sitting with the eyes closed, establish awareness with the breath
– make awareness of the breath more important than anything else. This
means you bring awareness to follow the breath, and by keeping with it,
you will know that place which is the focal point of sati (mindfulness),
the focal point of the knowing and the focal point of the mind’s awareness.
Whenever these factors of the path are working together, you will be able
to watch and see your breath, feelings, mind and arammana (mind-objects),
as they are in the present moment. Ultimately, you will know that place
which is both the focal point of samadhi and the unification point of
the path factors.
When developing samadhi, fix attention on the breath and imagine that
you are sitting alone with absolutely no other people and nothing else
around to bother you. Develop this perception in the mind, sustaining
it until the mind completely lets go of the world outside and all that
is left is simply the knowing of the breath entering and leaving. The
mind must set aside the external world. Don’t allow yourself to start
thinking about this person who is sitting over here, or that person who
is sitting over there. Don’t give space to any thoughts that will give
rise to confusion or agitation in the mind – it’s better to throw them
out and be done with them. There is no one else here, you are sitting
all alone. Develop this perception until all the other memories, perceptions
and thoughts concerning other people and things subside, and you’re no
longer doubting or wandering about the other people or things around you.
Then you can fix your attention solely on the in-breaths and out-breaths.
Breathe normally. Allow the in-breaths and the out-breaths to continue
naturally, without forcing them to be longer or shorter, stronger or weaker
than normal. Allow the breath to continue in a state of normality and
balance, and then sit and observe it entering and leaving the body.
Once the mind has let go of external mind-objects, it means you will
no longer feel disturbed by the sound of traffic or other noises. You
won’t feel irritated with anything outside. Whether it’s forms, sounds
or whatever, they won’t be a source of disturbance, because the mind won’t
be paying attention to them – it will become centred upon the breath.
If the mind is agitated by different things and you can’t concentrate,
try taking an extra-deep breath until the lungs are completely full, and
then release all the air until there is none left inside. Do this several
times, then re-establish awareness and continue to develop concentration.
Having re-established mindfulness, it’s normal that for a period the mind
will be calm, then change and become agitated again. When this happens,
make the mind firm, take another deep breath and subsequently expel all
the air from your lungs. Fill the lungs to capacity again for a moment
and then re-establish mindfulness on the breathing. Fix sati on the in-breaths
and the out-breaths, and continue to maintain awareness in this way.
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 sila, samadhi and pañña 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 samadhi. 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.
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 samadhi. There is just one firm and unwavering object of mind.
When your practice of samadhi 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 samadhi 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 samadhi because it is the appropriate time
to withdraw, and you come out of it at your will.
This is samadhi: 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 samadhi like this, it means that sitting meditation and entering
samadhi for just thirty minutes or an hour will enable you to remain cool
and peaceful for many days afterwards. Experiencing the effects of samadhi
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 samadhi matures.
Samadhi performs the function of calming the mind. Samadhi performs one
function, sila performs one function and pañña 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. Sila, samadhi and pañña 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 pañña and the power of samadhi. As the
mind becomes more composed and refined, this gives rise to an energy which
acts to purify sila. Greater purity of sila facilitates the development
of stronger and more refined samadhi, and this in turn supports the maturing
of pañña. 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 vipassana (insight) or
pañña. Having reached this stage (where pañña is already functioning in
the mind, independent of whether the mind is peaceful or not) pañña 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.
Another important thing is to see that when you stop doing the formal
meditation practice, if there is no wisdom functioning in the mind, you
will give up the practice altogether without any further contemplation,
development of awareness or thought about the work which still has to
be done. In fact, when you withdraw from samadhi, you know clearly in
the mind that you have withdrawn. Having withdrawn, continue to conduct
yourself in a normal manner. Maintain mindfulness and awareness at all
times. It isn’t that you only practise meditation in the sitting posture
– samadhi means the mind which is firm and unwavering. As you go about
your daily life, make the mind firm and steady and maintain this sense
of steadiness as the object of mind at all times. You must be practising
sati and sampajañña (all round knowing) continuously. After you get up
from the formal sitting practice and go about your business – walking,
riding in cars and so on – whenever your eyes see a form or your ears
hear a sound, maintain awareness. As you experience mind-objects which
give rise to liking and disliking, try to consistently maintain awareness
of the fact that such mental states are impermanent and uncertain. In
this way the mind will remain calm and in a state of ‘normality’.
As long as the mind is calm, use it to contemplate mind-objects. Contemplate
the whole of this form, the physical body. You can do this at any time
and in any posture: whether doing formal meditation practice, relaxing
at home, out at work, or in whatever situation you find yourself. Keep
the meditation and the reflection going at all times. Just going for a
walk and seeing dead leaves on the ground under a tree can provide an
opportunity to contemplate impermanence. Both we and the leaves are the
same: when we get old, we shrivel up and die. Other people are all the
same. This is raising the mind to the level of vipassana, contemplating
the truth of the way things are, the whole time. Whether walking, standing,
sitting or lying down, sati is sustained evenly and consistently. This
is practising meditation correctly – you have to be following the mind
closely, checking it at all times.
Practising here and now at seven o’clock in the evening, we have sat
and meditated together for an hour and now stopped. It might be that your
mind has stopped practising completely and hasn’t continued with the reflection.
That’s the wrong way to do it. When we stop, all that should stop is the
formal meeting and sitting meditation. You should continue practising
and developing awareness consistently, without letting up.
I’ve often taught that if you don’t practise consistently, it’s like
drops of water. It’s like drops of water because the practice is not a
continuous, uninterrupted flow. Sati is not sustained evenly. The important
point is that the mind does the practice and nothing else. The body doesn’t
do it. The mind does the work, the mind does the practice. If you understand
this clearly, you will see that you don’t necessarily have to do formal
sitting meditation in order for the mind to know samadhi. The mind is
the one who does the practice. You have to experience and understand this
for yourself, in your own mind.
Once you do see this for yourself, you will be developing awareness
in the mind at all times and in all postures. If you are maintaining sati
as an even and unbroken flow, it’s as if the drops of water have joined
to form a smooth and continuous flow of running water. Sati is present
in the mind from moment to moment and accordingly there will be awareness
of mind-objects at all times. If the mind is restrained and composed with
uninterrupted sati, you will know mind-objects each time that wholesome
and unwholesome mental states arise. You will know the mind that is calm
and the mind that is confused and agitated. Wherever you go you will be
practising like this. If you train the mind in this way, it means your
meditation will mature quickly and successfully.
Please don’t misunderstand. These days it’s common for people to go
on vipassana courses for three or seven days, where they don’t have to
speak or do anything but meditate. Maybe you have gone on a silent meditation
retreat for a week or two, afterwards returning to your normal daily life.
You might have left thinking that you’ve ‘done vipassana’ and, because
you feel that you know what it’s all about, then carry on going to parties,
discos and indulging in different forms of sensual delight. When you do
it like this, what happens? There won’t be any of the fruits of vipassana
left by the end of it. If you go and do all sorts of unskilful things,
which disturb and upset the mind, wasting everything, then next year go
back again and do another retreat for seven days or a few weeks, then
come out and carry on with the parties, discos and drinking, that isn’t
true practice. It isn’t patipada or the path to progress.
You need to make an effort to renounce. You must contemplate until you
see the harmful effects which come from such behaviour. See the harm in
drinking and going out on the town. Reflect and see the harm inherent
in all the different kinds of unskilful behaviour which you indulge in,
until it becomes fully apparent. This would provide the impetus for you
to take a step back and change your ways. Then you would find some real
peace. To experience peace of mind you have to clearly see the disadvantages
and danger in such forms of behaviour. This is practising in the correct
way. If you do a silent retreat for seven days, where you don’t have to
speak to or get involved with anybody, and then go chatting, gossiping
and overindulging for another seven months, how will you gain any real
or lasting benefit from those seven days of practise?
I would encourage all the lay people here, who are practising to develop
awareness and wisdom, to understand this point. Try to practise consistently.
See the disadvantages of practising insincerely and inconsistently, and
try to sustain a more dedicated and continuous effort in the practice.
Just this much. It can then become a realistic possibility that you might
put an end to the kilesa (mental defilements). But that style of not speaking
and not playing around for seven days, followed by six months of complete
sensual indulgence, without any mindfulness or restraint, will just lead
to the squandering of any gains made from the meditation – there won’t
be any thing left. It’s like if you were to go to work for a day and earned
twenty pounds, but then went out and spent thirty pounds on food and things
in the same day; where would there be any money saved? It would be all
gone. It’s just the same with the meditation.
This is a form of reminder to you all, so I will ask for your forgiveness.
It’s necessary to speak in this way, so that those aspects of the practice
which are at fault will become clear to you and accordingly, you will
be able to give them up. You could say that the reason why you have come
to practise is to learn how to avoid doing the wrong things in the future.
What happens when you do the wrong things? Doing wrong things leads you
to agitation and suffering, when there’s no goodness in the mind. It’s
not the way to peace of mind. This is the way it is. If you practise on
a retreat, not talking for seven days, and then go indulging for a few
months, no matter how strictly you practised for those seven days, you
won’t derive any lasting value from that practice. Practising that way,
you don’t really get anywhere. Many places where meditation is taught
don’t really get to grips with or get beyond this problem. Really, you
have to conduct your daily life in a consistently calm and restrained
way.
In meditation you have to be constantly turning your attention to the
practice. It’s like planting a tree. If you plant a tree in one place
and after three days pull it up and plant it in a different spot, then
after a further three days pull it up and plant it in yet another place,
it will just die without producing anything. Practising meditation like
this won’t bear any fruit either. This is something you have to understand
for yourselves. Contemplate it. Try it out for yourselves when you go
home. Get a sapling and plant it one spot, and after every few days, go
and pull it up and plant it in a different place. It will just die without
ever bearing any fruit. It’s the same doing a meditation retreat for seven
days, followed by seven months of unrestrained behaviour, allowing the
mind to become soiled, and then going back to do another retreat for a
short period, practising strictly without talking and subsequently coming
out and being unrestrained again. As with the tree, the meditation just
dies – none of the wholesome fruits are retained. The tree doesn’t grow,
the meditation doesn’t grow. I say practising this way doesn’t bear much
fruit.
Actually, I’m not fond of giving talks like this. It’s because I feel
sorry for you that I have to speak critically. When you are doing the
wrong things, it’s my duty to tell you, but I’m speaking out of compassion
for you. Some people might feel uneasy and think that I’m just scolding
them. Really, I’m not just scolding you for its own sake, I’m helping
to point out where you are going wrong, so that you know. Some people
might think, ‘Luang Por is just telling us off,’ but it’s not like that.
It’s only once in a long while that I’m able to come and give a talk –
if I was to give talks like this everyday, you would really get upset!
But the truth is, it’s not you who gets upset, it’s only the kilesa that
are upset. I will say just this much for now.
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