Ajahn Chah; Seth MacFarlane (Family Guy); Dhr. Seven, Seth Auberon (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
If the mind is happy then it's happy everywhere. |
All they're looking to know is what's right and wrong: "I'm going to take only what's right. I won't take what's wrong. Why should I?"
If you try to take only what's right, in a short while it'll go wrong. It's right for the sake of wrong. People keep searching for what's right and wrong, but they don't try to find what's neither-rightness-nor-wrongness.
They study about good and bad, they search for merit and evil, but they don't study the point where there's neither merit nor evil. They study issues of long and short, but the issue of neither-long-nor-short they don't study.
Just lift the blade not the handle or back. - How? |
The handle is the handle of the knife. The back is the back of the knife. The blade is the blade of the knife. When you pick up "the knife," you pick up all three parts simultaneously.
In the same way, if you pick up what's good, what's bad must follow. People search for what's good and try to throw away what's bad, but they don't study what's neither-good-nor-bad.
Stewie takes revenge on Brian: "Where's my money?"
If you don't study this, things never come to an end.
If you pick up goodness, badness comes along with it. It follows right along. If you pick up happiness, suffering follows along. They're connected.
The practice of clinging to what's good and rejecting what's bad is the Dharma of children, Dharma for children to toy around with.
Sure, if you want, you can take just this much, but if you grab onto what's good, what's bad will follow. The culmination of this path gets all cluttered up.
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