Showing posts with label buddhist path. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buddhist path. Show all posts

Sunday, May 25, 2025

The Three Buddhisms: A Great Divide


The THREE SCHOOLS of BUDDHISM explained: Theravāda, Mahāyāna, Vajrayāna
(Buddha's Wisdom) May 25, 2025: 🔍 THE 3 PATHS TO ENLIGHTENMENT: WHICH ONE SPEAKS TO YOU?

How did one teacher's simple message create three different paths to enlightenment? Three monks sit in meditation...but they’re not seeking the same thing.

One follows the Buddha’s exact words (Theravada). Another vows to save every living being (Mahayana). The third uses esoteric [Vedic, Brahminical, Hindu, tantric] practices hidden for centuries.

How did Buddhism split into three radically different paths — and what does it mean for our spiritual journey today?


TIMESTAMPS
  • 00:00 - Three monks, different goals
  • 03:16 - Chapter 1: Theravada - The Way of the Elders
  • 07:25 - Chapter 2: Mahayana - The Great Vehicle
  • 11:33 - Chapter 3: Vajrayana - The Diamond Vehicle
  • 15:44 - Chapter 4: When Buddhism meets itself
  • 18:53 - The One Mind: Which path did the Buddha intend?
DISCOVER
  • Why Buddhism split into three schools after the Buddha's passing into final nirvana
  • The dangerous mission that saved Theravada Buddhism from extinction
  • How Avalokiteshvara's broken heart created the Mahayana revolution
  • The secret tantric techniques that promise enlightenment in a single lifetime
  • Why mixing Buddhist traditions might be exactly what the modern world needs [at least that's what we as Americans seem to think]
🙏 Subscribe to Buddha’s Wisdom for weekly stories, history, and teachings that bring ancient insight into modern life. Join community: Instagram: buddhaswizdom. Facebook: buddhaswizdom. Support the channel: buymeacoffee.com/buddhaswisdom

SOURCES
  • The Pali canon (Theravada texts)
  • Lotus Sutra (Mahayana literature)
  • Tibetan Book of the Dead (Vajrayana teachings) 
  • Buddhism: A Very Short Introduction by Damien Keown
  • The Heart of Buddhist Meditation by Ven. Nyanaponika Thera
#buddhism #theravada #mahayana #vajrayana #buddhawisdom #spiritualjourney #mindfulness #buddhistexplained #easternphilosophy
  • Buddha's Wisdom, May 25, 2025; Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

Wednesday, August 10, 2022

Intro to Shinzen Young on Paths of Awakening


Introduction to Shinzen Young: A Conversation on Paths of Awakening
(Deep Mindfulness, 12/23/21) Register for the "Progress of Shinsight" course here: 🌱 DeepMindfulness.io/pos. In Part 1 of this wide-ranging discussion with American meditation master Shinzen Young, we discuss the relationship of his system and the Progress of Insight meditation map, The Mind Illuminated, and other views on awakening. We also discuss the philosophy behind the experiential path of awakening. Finally, we begin talking about the relationship between art and awakening.
Content: Timecodes:
  • 0:00 - Intro
  • 1:01 - The Progress of Shinsight class:
  • 3:36 - Shared Lineage, Shinzen, Bill Hamilton, Daniel Ingram, and Kenneth Folk
  • 6:40 - From pre-Buddhism to modern mindfulness. Good News/ Bad News
  • 9:03 - Polarities in Art History and in Buddhism
  • 10:13 - The Mind Illuminated - How do “Attention and Awareness” fit into your system?
  • 16:18 - How is the Unified Mindfulness (UM) is a skeleton key of meditation practices?
  • 21:07 - UM is system for awakening in any meditation system.
  • 26:53 - Comparing Attention/ Awareness and Nama/Rupa
  • 30:00 - Visiting Teacher from Burma - Ven. Taungpulu Sayadaw
  • 33:24 - “There is Nothing but Nama/Rupa
  • 36:37 - The problem communicating great teachings.
  • 39:12 - How Conceptual Art and Meditation are talking about the same thing (intro - cut for technical difficulties)
🌱 FREE: The 15 Foundation Guided Meditations (in my opinion)

Saturday, August 15, 2020

The Buddha's Gradual Training (video)

Doug Smith (Doug's Dharma, 7/27/20); Dhr. Seven, Ananda (Dharma B Med), Wisdom Quarterly


The Gradual Training: An Early Buddhist Map of the Path
A map of the Buddhist path is a useful tool.
What is the "gradual" training"? It's a map of the path to enlightenment and liberation found in early Buddhism, leading from a first inkling of the dharma (the way things really are) all the way up to nirvana.

Here the gradual training is presented as an idea then the map itself, with its major landmarks as found in the early sutras.
If this material is useful, check out the Patreon page that supports its for fun benefits like exclusive behind-the-scenes videos, audio-only versions, and extensive show notes: patreon.com/dougsseculardharma.
Videos mentioned
Sutras (discourses) mentioned:
Facebook.com/onlinedharma. Twitter.com/dougsdharma. Thanks to Patreon Patrons: Anonymous (1), Matthew Smith, Kathy Voldstad, Bob Snead, JC, Pritom Phookun, Shantha Wengappuli, Margo, Karma_CAC, Johan Thelander, Michael Roe, Jorge Seguel, Christopher Apostolof, GailJM, Steven Kopp, Brett Merritt, David Bell, T Pham, VCR, LaShanda Williams, Upayadhi, Andi and Erik, Steve Marlor, ATGuerrero686, Michael Scherrer, Michael Seefeld, Ernie. #onlinedharmainstitute #buddhism #earlybuddhism #secularbuddhism

Tuesday, March 26, 2019

In Buddhism what is the "Truth"?

Ven. Nyanatiloka (palikanon.com) edited by Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Wisdom Quarterly

What is the Truth? First of all, there are two truths, the conventional truth and the ultimate Truth (sacca).

The ultimate is explained in a portion of the Buddha's Teachings known as the Abhidharma, the Dharma spoken of in ultimate terms, the "Higher Doctrine" as distinguished from the sutras, the discourses taught in conventional terms.
 
There are Four Noble (ennobling, enlightening) Truths -- the truths leading to liberation from all pain and suffering.

The Four Noble Truths are the briefest statement of the entire Buddhist Teaching. Why? They contain all of the manifold doctrines of the threefold canon. They, without exception, contain in their root forms. [Buddhism spells out 37 Requisites of Enlightenment implicit in the Buddha's Teaching.]

What are the Four Noble Truths? They are:
  1. PROBLEM: all things disappoint (are unsatisfactory),
  2. CAUSE: the origin of disappointment,
  3. CESSATION: the extinction of disappointment,
  4. CURE: the Noble (ennobling) Eightfold Path leads to the extinction of disappointment.
  1. The first truth, stated briefly, teaches that all states of existence are unsatisfactory and constantly subject to disappointment (dukkha).
  2. The second truth teaches that all disappointment and all rebirth is produced by craving [and clinging rooted in ignorance].
  3. The third truth teaches that the removal of craving necessarily results in the extinction (nirodha) of all further rebirth and suffering; that is to say, it results in nirvana.
  4. The fourth truth of the Noble Eightfold Path points out the means by which this extinction is attained.
What is the Noble Eightfold Path?
The usual text found in the sutra collection runs as follows:
  1. "What, O meditators, is the [first] noble truth of suffering [disappointment]? Birth is suffering, decay is suffering, death is suffering, sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief and despair are suffering; in short, the Five Aggregates Clung to as Self are suffering.
  2. ''What, O meditators, is the noble truth of the origin of suffering? It is craving that gives rise to fresh rebirth and, bound up with lust and greed, now here, now there, seeks ever fresh delight. This craving is threefold: sensual-craving (kāma-tanhā), the craving for eternal-existence (bhava-tanhā), the craving for self-annihilation (vibhava-tanhā).
  3. "What, O meditators, is the noble truth of the extinction of suffering? It is the complete fading away and extinction of this [threefold] craving, its abandoning and giving up, liberation and letting go of it.
  4. "What, O meditators, is the noble truth of the PATH leading to the extinction of all suffering? It is this Noble Eightfold Path that leads to the extinction of all suffering, namely:
The Noble Eightfold Path to Enlightenment
1. Right view
2. Right thought
III. Wisdom (paññā)
3. Right speech
4. Right action
5. Right livelihood

I. Virtue (sīla)
6. Right effort
7. Right mindfulness
8. Right concentration

II. Concentration (samādhi)

1. "What now, O meditators, is right understanding (right view)? It is the understanding of suffering, of the origin of suffering, of the extinction of suffering, and of the path leading to the extinction of suffering.
 
2. "What now, O medtiators, is right thought (intention)? It is a mind free of sensual lust, ill-will, and cruelty.
 
3. "What now, O medtiators, is right speech? Abstaining from lying (perjury), tale-bearing, harsh words, and foolish babble (cf. animal talk).
 
4. "What now, O medtiators, is right action? Abstaining from harming living beings, from stealing, and from sexual misconduct.
 
5. "What now, O meditators, is right livelihood? If the noble disciple rejects a wrong means of earning a living and gains one in a right way [it is right livelihood; see Path, 5).
 
6. "What now, O meditators, is right effort? If a disciple rouses the will to avoid the arising of unwholesome/demeritorious things that have not yet arisen... if one rouses the will to overcome the unwholesome/demeritorious things that have already arisen... if one rouses the will to produce wholesome/meritorious things that have not yet arisen... if one rouses the will to maintain the wholesome/meritorious things that have already arisen and not to let them disappear but instead bring them to growth, maturity, and full perfection of development. One thus makes effort, stirs up energy, exerts mind, and strives. (See padhāna).
 
7. "What now, O meditators, is right mindfulness? If a disciple dwells in contemplation of [corporeal] form... feeling... mind... mind-objects, ardent, clearly conscious, and mindful after setting aside worldly greed and grief. (See satipatthāna).

8. "What now, O meditators, is right concentration? If a disciple lets go of sensual objects, lets go of unwholesome things, and enters into the first absorption... the second absorption... the third absorption... the fourth absorption." (Absorption = jhāna).

In the Buddha's first discourse (Dhammacakkappavattana Sutra) he said that:
  • the first truth (suffering) is to be fully understood;
  • the second truth (craving) is to be abandoned;
  • the third truth (nirvana) is to be realized;
  • the fourth truth (the path) is to be cultivated.
"The truth of suffering can be compared with a DISEASE, the truth of the ORIGIN of suffering with the CAUSE of the disease, the truth of the EXTINCTION of suffering with the CURE of the disease, the truth of the PATH with the MEDICINE" (The Path of Purification, Vis.M. XVI).

In the ultimate sense, all of the Four Noble Truths are to be considered as empty of a self because there is no feeling agent, no doer, no one who follows the path, no liberated one. Therefore, it is said:
"Mere suffering exists; no sufferer is found.
The deed is, but no doer of the deed is there.
Nirvana is but not the person who enters it.
The Path is, but no traveler on it is seen.
"The first and second truths are empty
Devoid of permanence, joy, self, and beauty;
The Deathless [nirvana] is free of ego.
The Path is free of permanence and self."

(Path of Purification, Vis.M. XVI)
It must be pointed out that the first noble truth of suffering does not refer merely to actual suffering, that is, suffering as feeling. But in consequence of the universal law of impermanence, all phenomena related to existence, even the sublimest states of existence, are subject to change and dissolution.

Hence, they are disappointing, liable to suffering, unsatisfactory, and miserable. Thus, without exception, they all contain in themselves the germ of disappointment/suffering. Cf. Guide through the Abhidhamma Pitaka by Ven. Nyanatiloka (3rd ed., 1971, BPS.lk), pp. 101 f. Regarding the true nature of the Path, see magga. 

LITERATURE 
  • Dhammacakkappavattana Sutra (Wheel 17 and Bodhi Leaves)
  • MN 141; Sacca Samyutta
  • (S. LVI); Sacca Vibhanga
  • The Word of the Buddha by Ven. Nyanatiloka (BPS.lk); Vis.M. XVI:
  • The Four Noble Truths by Francis Story (Wheel #34/35)
  • The Significance of the Four Noble Truths by V. F. Gunaratna (Wheel 123)

Monday, March 25, 2019

The Buddha's Path and Ajahn Chah

Ajahn Lee, Ajahn Chah via Ven. Sujato; Ellie Askew, Dhr. Seven (ed.), Wisdom Quarterly

The Path of Purification
Most of us tend to concern ourselves only with short, small, and narrow things.

For instance, we think that there isn't much to human life: We're reborn then we die -- so we pay attention only to our stomachs and appetites.
 
There's hardly anyone who thinks further than that, who thinks out past death.

This is why we're short-sighted and don't think of developing any goodness or virtues within ourselves. We don't see the truth and the extremely important benefits we'll gain from these things in the future.
 
Ajahn Chah's advice
The Buddha's Ancient Path
If we have a look at ourselves, we’ll encounter certain experiences. There’s a Path to guide us and offer direction.

As we carry on, the situation changes, and we have to adjust our approach to remedy the problems that arise.

It can be a long time before we see a clear signpost. If others are going to walk the same Path as I did, the journey definitely has to take place in their own heart. If not, one will encounter numerous obstacles.

Friday, August 10, 2018

The Buddhist Path

Ven. Nyanatiloka (palikanon.com); Dhr. Seven, Eliza Darcey (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

The "Path" (magga) in Buddhism can refer to the four supermundane paths (lokuttara-magga of the "noble ones" or ariya-puggala) or the Noble Eightfold Path (atthangika-magga) leading to the end of all suffering, the Middle Way described as the fourth of the Four Noble Truths. This ennobling (enlightenment-making) path is divided into three sections:

WISDOM (III)
  • 1. Right view
  • 2. Right intention or thought
VIRTUE (I)
  • 3. Right speech
  • 4. Right action
  • 5. Right livelihood
CONCENTRATION (II)
  • 6. Right effort
  • 7. Right mindfulness
  • 8. Right concentration
1. Right view or understanding (sammā-ditthi) is directly penetrating or understanding the Four Noble Truths with regard to the universality of:
  1. unsatisfactoriness (disappointment, suffering, pain)
  2. its origin in craving (or in greed, aversion, and delusion)
  3. its cessation in nirvana 
  4. the PATH leading to its cessation.
  • See "The Discourse on Right View" (MN 9, translation and Commentary in "Right Understanding").
2. Right intention or thought: thoughts free of sensuous desire (letting go, renunciation), ill-will, cruelty.

3. Right speech (sammā-vācā): abstaining from perjury, tale-bearing, harsh speech, and foolish babble.

4. Right bodily action (sammā-kammanta): abstaining from taking the life of living beings, taking what is not given (stealing), and sexual misconduct (intercourse with the ten forbidden people).
  • "Ten forbidden people"? There are ten types of person who are off limits, such as those dependent on others (family, community, etc.), married people, engaged people, promised people, those not permitted by law... Penetration with these constitute serious "sexual misconduct." Note that it is not one's own state but the state of the other person that figures more prominently. If that person is married, that person is off limits for me whether or not I'm married.
5. Right livelihood (sammā-ājīva): abstaining from a means of earning a living that brings harm to other beings, such as trading in weapons, in living beings, in intoxicants, in poisons; slaughtering, butchering, fishing, soldiering, deceit, treachery, soothsaying, trickery, usury (charging interest on loans), and so on.

6. Right effort (sammā-vāyāma, see padhāna): the effort to avoid (unarisen) harmful and unwholesome things, the effort to overcome (arisen) ones; to develop wholesome things, to maintain (and bring them to full maturity).
 
7. Right mindfulness (sammā-sati): mindfulness and awareness in contemplating the four supports: body, feelings, mind, and mind-objects (see satipatthāna).
 
8. Right concentration (sammā-samādhi): coherence (and thereby purification) of heart/mind associated with wholesome (kusala) consciousness, which eventually may reach the meditative absorptions (jhānas).

COMMENTARY
Who sees the truth is freed by the truth.
NOTE: As with all of the other factors, two kinds of "concentration" are to be distinguished, the mundane (lokiya) and the supermundane (lokuttara). The second is associated with those states of consciousness known as the Four Supermundane Paths and Fruits (ariya-puggala).
 
 As the Buddha says in MN 117: "O meditators, I say to you there are two kinds of right view: the understanding that it is good to give alms and offerings, that both good and harmful actions will bear fruit and will be followed by karmic results.... This, O meditators, is a view which, though still subject to the defilements/cankers, is meritorious, yields worldly fruits, and brings about good results.
 
"But whatever there is of wisdom, of penetration, of right view conjoined with the Path -- the Path to enlightenment being pursued -- this is called 'supermundane right view,' which is not of the world, which is above the mundane and part of the Path."
 
In a similar way the remaining factors of the Path are to be understood. As many of those who have written about the Noble Eightfold Path have misunderstood its true nature, it is therefore appropriate to add here a few elucidating remarks about it.
 
This Path is fundamental for the understanding and practice of the Dharma, the Buddha's Teachings. First of all, the figurative expression "Path" should not be interpreted to mean that one advances step by step in the sequence of the enumeration until, after successively passing through all the eight stages, one finally may realize or reach one's destination, nirvana.
 
If this were the case, one should have first realized right view with penetration of the truth, even before one could hope to proceed to the next steps, right thought and right speech.
 
Each preceding stage would be the indispensable condition and foundation for each succeeding stage.
 
In reality, however, Links 3-5 -- constituting training in virtue (sīla) -- are the first three links cultivated. Thereafter come Links 6-8 -- constituting mental training (samādhi) -- and at last right view and so on -- constituting wisdom (paññā).
 
It is, however, true that a really unshakable and safe foundation for the Path is provided only by right view. For, starting from the tiniest glimmer of confidence and insight (faith and knowledge), gradually, step by step, develops into penetrating-insight (vipassanā) and so forms the immediate condition for entrance into the Four Supermundane Paths and Fruits of enlightenment for the direct realization of nirvana.
 
Only with regard to this highest form of supermundane insight may we indeed say that all of the remaining links of the Path are nothing but the outcome and the accompaniments of right view.
 
Regarding the mundane Noble Eightfold path, however, its links may arise without the first link, right view.
 
Here it must also be emphasized that the links of the Path not only DO NOT ARISE one after the other, as already said, they partly arise simultaneously as inseparable, associated mental factors in one and the same state of consciousness.
 
So, for instance, under all circumstances at least four links are inseparably bound up with any karmically wholesome consciousness, namely 2, 6, 7 and 8 -- that is, right thought, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration (MN 117). This means that as soon as any one of these links arises, the three others do also.
 
On the other hand, right view is not necessarily present in every wholesome state of consciousness.
  • Path (magga) is one of the 24 conditions (see paccaya 18)
  • The Noble Eightfold Path and its Factors Explained, Ledi Sayadaw (BPS.lk, Wheel 245/247)
  • The Buddha's Ancient Path, by Piyadassi Thera (BPS.lk)
  • The Noble Eightfold Path, by Bhikkhu Bodhi (Wheel 308/311)

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

Knowing and Seeing (sutra)

Pa Auk Sayadaw, Knowing & Seeing (4th ed.); Dhr. Seven, Ananda M. (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
The 12 causal links (nidanas) of Dependent Origination are typically shown along outer rim of a Bhavachakra in Buddhist art (Wonderlane, Sakya Monastery, Seattle, USA/traditional wall mural of Yama/Death holding the Wheel of Rebirth, the Buddha pointing the way out)

.
THE BUDDHA'S DISPENSATION
Now I know. Now I see.
On one occasion, the Blessed One was dwelling among the Vajjians in Kotigama. There he addressed the meditators [bhikkhus] with the following words:

"Meditators, it is because of not understanding and not penetrating the Four Noble Truths that you and I have for a long time wandered the round of rebirth. What are the four?
  1. It is because of not understanding and not penetrating the Noble Truth of Suffering (dukkha, disappointment) that you and I have for a long time wandered the round of rebirth.
  2. It is because of not understanding and not penetrating the Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering (samudaya) that you and I have for a long time wandered the round of rebirth.
  3. It is because of not understanding and not penetrating the Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering (nirodha) that you and I have for a long time wandered the round of rebirth.
  4. It is because of not understanding and not penetrating the Noble Truth of the Path Leading to the Cessation of Suffering [magga] that you and I have for a long time wandered the round of rebirth. 
The eight-spoked wheel of the Dharma
The Four Noble Truths are the foundation of the Buddha's Teaching (the Dharma), this Dispensation (sasana). He then explains:
  1. "The Noble Truth of Suffering, meditators, has been understood and penetrated [personally realized, directly grasped].
  2. The Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering has been understood and penetrated.
  3. The Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering has been understood and penetrated (nirvana).
  4. The Noble Truth of the Path Leading to the Cessation of Suffering has been understood and penetrated.
Craving for continued becoming [continued wandering on, rebirth, impermanent-unsatisfactory-impersonal existence, bhava] has been cut off; the tendency to rebirth has been destroyed; now there is no more renewed becoming" (S.V.XII.iii.l).
 
Let us then see how the Four Noble Truths are related to each other.
  • This introduction is an addition to Knowing and Seeing (4th ed.); for the untranslated Pali version, see Appendix 1 "Glossary of Untranslated Pali Terms," p. 283.
Knowing and Seeing
WHAT NEEDS TO BE FULLY REALIZED?
The Buddha taught the Four Noble Truths for us to realize the Third Noble Truth, nirvana, which is to put a complete end to rebirth and therefore to all suffering. But that is not possible without the right conditions. 
 
In the Kutidgodra Sutra ("Peaked-House Discourse"), the Buddha explains first the conditions that make it impossible to put a complete end to suffering:
  • A peaked house is here a single-storied house with four outside pillars that are surmounted with beams that support a high roof that peaks (S.V.XII.v.4).
Indeed, meditators, if anyone were to say, "Without having built the lower [foundation, support, bottom] structure of a peaked house, I shall erect the upper structure [roof, top]," such a thing is impossible. So, too, if anyone were to say:
  1. 'Without penetrating the Noble Truth of Suffering as it really is,
  2. without penetrating the Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering as it really is,
  3. without penetrating the Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering as it really is,
  4. without penetrating the Noble Truth of the [Noble Eightfold] Path Leading to the Cessation of Suffering as it really is,
I shall put a complete end to suffering,' such a thing is impossible."

This means that we cannot put a complete end to suffering (i.e., attain the Third Noble Truth, nirvana) unless we have first fully realized the First Noble Truth (dukkha), and fully realized the Second Noble Truth (the origin of suffering, samudaya). Only then are we able to realize also the supramundane Fourth Noble Truth, the supramundane Noble Eightfold Path.
 
The only way to attain these realizations is to first practice the mundane Fourth Noble Truth, the mundane path truth (lokiya magga-sacca), which is the mundane Noble Eightfold Path often called the Threefold Training:
  1. Virtue (morality, ethics, sila)
  2. Calm (coherence, collectedness, concentration, samadhi)
  3. Wisdom (panna)
For monastics, morality is Patimokkha (direct "path to liberation") restraint, and for laypeople, it is the Eight or Five Precepts. When we are established in morality, we can develop access-concentration and full-concentration (appana-samadhi), which is "absorption" (meditation, jhana), and we can then proceed to develop wisdom, which is insight meditation (vipassana).
 
First samadhi (jhana) then insight
Insight meditation is nothing other than to realize the impermanent, unsatisfactory (disappointing, unfulfilling), and impersonal (non-self) nature of the Noble Truth of Suffering and Noble Truth of the Origin of Suffering.

Only when we practice insight meditation well and thoroughly, and fully realize these two noble truths, are we able to realize the supramundane Fourth Noble Truth, the Noble Eightfold Path associated with supramundane Path Truth (lokuttara magga-sacca): the Path (magga) of Stream-Entry, Once-Returning, Non-Returning, and Arahantship (full enlightenment).

In summary, the aim of the Fourth Noble Truth (the Eightfold Noble Path) is to realize the Third Noble Truth (nirvana), which is achieved only by fully realizing the First and Second Noble Truths (Suffering and the Origin of Suffering).
 
"This is explained in the commentary to Maha Gopalaka Suttam ("The Great Cowherd Sutra," M.I.iv.3), where The Buddha explains the eleven qualities in a monastic that make it impossible for him/her to progress in this Doctrine and Discipline (Dhamma-Vinaya)." More

Monday, October 30, 2017

Meditation: The Language of the Heart

Straight from the Heart: Thirteen Talks on the Practice of Meditation by Ven. Ajahn Maha Boowa Ñanasampanno, Ven. Thanissaro; Amber Larson, Dhr. Seven (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
Buddhism is about the heart (mind)and the breath (prana or chi) = compassion + wisdom.

Ajahn Mun taught that all hearts (minds) have the same language. No matter what one's language or nationality, the heart has nothing but simple awareness, which is why he said that all hearts have the same language. When a thought arises, we understand it.
But when we put it into words, it has to become this or that language, so that we don't really understand one another. The feelings within the heart, though, are the same for everyone. This is why the Dharma (Pali Dhamma) fits the heart perfectly. The Dharma isn't any particular language. The Dharma is the language of the heart. The Dharma resides with the heart.

Pleasure and pain reside within the heart. The acts that create pleasure and pain are thought up by the heart. The heart is what knows the results that appear as pleasure and pain, and the heart is burdened with the outcome of its own thoughts. This is why the heart and the Dharma fit perfectly. No matter what our language or nationality, we can all understand the Dharma. It is because the heart and the Dharma are a natural pair.

The heart forms the core within the body. It's the core, the substance, the primary essence within the body. It's the basic foundation. The conditions that arise from the mind, such as thought-formations, appear and vanish again and again.

Here I'm referring to the rippling [vrittis] of the mind. When the mind ripples, that's the formation of a thought. Labels, which deal with conjecturing, memorizing, and recognizing, are termed sañña. "Long" thoughts are sañña; short thoughts are sankhara. In other words, when a thought forms — "blip" — that's a sankhara. Sañña refers to labeling and recognizing.

Viññana refers to the act of taking note when anything external comes and makes contact with the senses, as when visible forms make contact with the eye and cognition results. All of these things are constantly arising and vanishing of their own accord, and so the Buddha called them khandhas (heaps, groups, aggregates). Each "heap" or "group" is called a khandha. These Five Heaps of Khandhas are constantly arising and vanishing all the time.

Even arahants (arhats, enlightened beings)have these same conditions — just like ordinary people everywhere — the only difference being that the arahants' khandhas are khandhas pure and simple, without any defilements giving them orders, making them do this or think that. Instead, their khandhas think out of their own free nature, with nothing forcing them to think this or that, unlike the minds of ordinary people in general.

To make a comparison, the khandhas of ordinary people are like prisoners, constantly being ordered about. Their various thoughts, labels, assumptions, and interpretations have something that orders and forces them to appear, making them think, assume, and interpret in this way or that. In other words, they have defilements as their boss, their leader, ordering them to appear.

Arahants, however, do not. When a thought forms, it simply forms. Once it forms, it simply disappears. There's no seed to continue it, no seed to weigh the mind (heart) down, because there's nothing to force it, unlike the khandhas governed by defilements or under the leadership of defilements. This is where the difference lies.

But their basic nature is the same: All the khandhas mentioned are inconstant (aniccam). In other words, instability and changeability are a regular part of their nature, beginning with the rupa khandha [form aggregate], our body, and the vedana khandha [feeling or sensation group], feelings of pleasure, pain, and neutrality. These things appear and vanish, again and again. Sañña, sankhara, and viññana are also always in a state of appearing and vanishing as a normal part of their nature.

But as for actual awareness — which forms the basis of our knowledge of the various things that arise and vanish — that does not vanish. We can say that the mind cannot vanish. We can say that the mind cannot arise. A mind that has been purified thus has no more problems concerning the [re]birth and death of the body and the khandhas; thus, there is no more rebirth here and there, appearing in crude forms such as individuals or as living beings, for those whose minds have been purified.

But those whose minds are not purified, they are the ones who take rebirth and die, setting their sights on cemeteries without end, all because of this undying mind.

This is why the Buddha taught the world, and in particular the world of human beings, who know right from wrong, good from evil, who know how to foster the one and remedy the other, who understand the language of the Dharma he taught.

This is why he taught the human world above and beyond the other worlds. It was so that we could try to remedy the things that are harmful and detrimental, removing them from our thoughts, words, and deeds. It was so we could try to nourish and foster whatever goodness we might already have and give rise to whatever goodness we do not yet have.

He taught us to foster and develop the goodness we already have so as to nourish the heart, giving it refreshment and well-being, giving it a standard of quality, or goodness, so that when it leaves its present body to head for whatever place or level of being, this mind that has been constantly nourished with goodness will be a good mind.

Wherever it fares, it will fare well. Wherever it takes rebirth, it will be reborn well. Wherever it lives, it will live well. It will keep on experiencing well-being and happiness until it gains the capacity, the potential, the accumulation of merit it has developed progressively from the past into the present.

In other words, yesterday is today's past, today is tomorrow's past, all of which are days during which we have fostered and developed goodness step by step — to the point where the mind has firm strength and ability, from the supporting power of this goodness, that enables it to pass over and gain release [from rebirth and suffering].

The forest monastic tradition rediscovered in the 20th century, Isan, Thailand: famous monks

Such a mind has no more rebirth, not even in the most quiet or refined levels of being that contain any latent traces of conventional reality (sammati) — namely, rebirth and death as we currently experience it. Such a mind goes completely beyond all such things. Here the reference is to the minds of buddhas and arahants.

There's a story about Ven. Vangisa that has a bearing on this. Ven. Vangisa, when he was a layperson, was very talented at divining the level of being at which the mind of a dead person was reborn — no matter who the person was. One ould not quite say he was a fortuneteller. Actually, he was more of a master of psychic skills.

When anyone died, he would take that person's skull and knock on it — knock, knock, knock — focus his mind, and then know that this person was reborn here or there, on this plane or that. If the person was reborn in a hell or a heaven, or as a common animal or hungry ghost, he could tell in every case, without hesitation. All he needed was to knock on the skull.

When he heard his friends say that the Buddha was many times more talented than this, he wanted to expand on his knowledge. So he went into the Buddha's presence to ask for further training in this science. When he reached the Buddha, the Buddha gave him the skull of an arahant to knock on.


"All right, see if you can tell where he was reborn."

Ven. Vangisa knocked on the skull and listened.

Silence.

He knocked again and listened.

Silence.

He thought for a moment.

Silence.

He focused his mind.

Silence.

He couldn't see where the owner of the skull was reborn. At his wit's end, he confessed frankly that he didn't know where the arahant was reborn.

At first, Ven. Vangisa had thought himself talented and smart and had planned to challenge the Buddha before asking for further training. But when he reached the Buddha, the Buddha gave him the skull of an arahant to knock on — and right then he was stymied. So now he genuinely wanted further training.

Once he had further training, he'd really be something special. This being the way things stood, he asked to study with the Buddha. So the Buddha taught him the science, taught him the method — in other words, the science of the Dharma. Ven. Vangisa practiced and practiced until finally he attained arahantship. From then on he was no longer interested in knocking on anyone's skull except for his own. Once he had known clearly, that was the end of the matter. This is called "knocking on the right skull."

Once the Buddha had brought up the topic of the mind that does not undergo rebirth — the skull of one whose mind is purified — no matter how many times Ven. Vangisa knocked on it, he could not know where the mind was reborn, even though he had been very talented before. For the place of a pure mind's rebirth [since rebirth does not take place] cannot be found.

The same is true in the case of Ven. Godhika. This story should serve as quite some food for thought. Ven. Godhika went to practice meditation, made progress step by step, then regressed. They say this happened six times. After the seventh time, he took a razor to slash his throat. That's how depressed he was — but then he came to his senses, contemplated the Dharma, and became an arahant at the last minute. That's the story in brief.

When he passed into final nirvana, Mara's hordes searched for his "spirit" (gandhabba, relinking consciousness, continuation). To put it simply, they stirred up a storm but couldn't tell where he had been reborn.

So the Buddha said, "No matter how much you dig or search or investigate to find the spirit of our son, Godhika, who has completely finished his task, you won't be able to find it — even if you turn the world upside down. This is because such a task lies beyond the scope of conventional reality." How could they possibly find it? It's beyond the capacity of people with defilements to know the power of an arahant's mind.

In the realm of conventional speech, there is no one who can trace the path of an arahant's mind. This is because an arahant lies beyond convention, even though such a being's mind is just the same. Think about it: Even our stumbling and crawling mind, when it is continually cleansed without stop, without ceasing, without letting perseverance lag, will gradually become more and more refined until it reaches the limits of refinement.

Then the refinement will disappear — because refinement is a matter of conventional reality — revealing a nature of solid gold, or solid Dhrmma, called a pure mind. We, too, will then have no more problems, just like the arahants, because our mind will have become a superlative mind, just like the minds of those who have already gained release from rebirth and suffering.

All minds of this sort are the same, with no distinction between women and men, which is simply a matter of sex or convention. With the mind, there is no distinction between women and men, and thus both women and men have the same capacity in the area of the Dharma.

Both are capable of attaining the various levels of Dharma all the way to final release. There are no restrictions that can be imposed in this area. All that is needed is that we develop enough ability and potential, and then we can all go beyond the beyond.

For this reason, we should all make an effort to train our hearts/minds. At the very least, we should get the mind to attain stillness and peace with any of the meditation themes that can lull it into a state of calm, giving rise to peace and well being within it.

For example, mindfulness of breathing, which is one of the primary themes in meditation, seems to suit the temperaments of more people than any other theme. But whatever the theme, take it as a governing principle, a guide, a mainstay for the mind, putting it into practice within the mind so as to attain rest and peace.

When the mind begins to settle down, we will begin to see its essential nature and worth. We will begin to see what the heart is and how it is. In other words, when the mind gathers all of its currents into a single point, as simple awareness within itself. This is what is called the "mind" (citta).

The gathering [coherence, coming together in harmony and coordination] of the mind occurs on different levels, corresponding to the mind's ability and to the different stages of its refinement.

Even if the mind is still on a crude level, we can nevertheless know it when it gathers inwardly. When the mind becomes more and more refined, we will know its refinement: "This mind is refined... This mind is radiant... This mind is extremely still... This mind is something extremely amazing," more and more, step by step, this very same mind!

In cleansing and training the mind for the sake of stillness, in investigating, probing, and solving the problems of the mind with discernment (pañña, wisdom, understanding) — which is the way of making the mind progress, of enabling us to reach the truth of the mind, step by step, through the means already mentioned — no matter how crude the mind may be, don't worry about it.

If we get down to making the effort and persevere continually with what diligence and persistence we have, that crudeness will gradually fade away and vanish. Refinement will gradually appear through our own actions or our own striving until we are able to go beyond and gain release by slashing the defilements to bits. This holds true for all of us, men and women alike.

But while we aren't yet able to do so, we nevertheless should not be anxious. All that is asked is that we make the mind principled so that it can be a guide and a mainstay for itself. As for this body, we've been relying on it ever since the day we were reborn. This is something we all know. We've made it live, lie down, urinate, defecate, work, earn a living. We've used it, and it has used us. We order it around, and it orders us around.

For instance, we've made it work, and it has made us suffer with aches here and pains there so that we have to search for medicine to relieve it. It's the one that hurts, and it's the one that searches for medicine. It's the one that provides the means. And so we keep supporting each other back and forth in this way.

It's hard to tell who is in charge, the body or us. We can order it around part of the time, but it orders us around all of the time. Illness, hunger, thirst, sleepiness, these are nothing but a heap of suffering and distress in which the body orders us around from every side. We can order it around only a little bit. So when the time is right for us to give the orders, we should make it meditate.

So get to work. As long as the body is functioning normally, then no matter how much or how heavy the work, get right to it. But if the body isn't functioning normally, if you're ill, you need to be conscious of what it can take. As for the mind, however, keep up the effort within, unflaggingly, because it's your essential duty.

You've depended on the body for a long time. Now that it's wearing down, know that it's wearing down — which parts still work, which parts no longer work. You're the one in charge, and you know it full well, so make whatever compromises you should.

But as for the heart, which isn't ill along with the body, it should step up its efforts within so that it won't lack the benefits it can gain.

Make the mind have standards and be principled — principled in its living, principled in its dying. Wherever it's reborn, make it have good principles and satisfactory standards. What they call "merit" (puñña) will not betray our hopes and expectations.

It will provide us with satisfactory circumstances at all times, in keeping with the fact that we've accumulated the merit — the well being — that all the world wants and of which no one has enough. In other words, what the world wants is well being, whatever the sort, and in particular the well-being of the mind that will arise step by step from having done things, such as meditation, which are noble, virtuous, and good.

This is the well being that forms a core or an important essence within the heart. We can strive, then, while the body is still functioning, for when life comes to an end, nothing more can be done. No matter how little or how much we have accomplished, we must stop at that point. We stop our work, put it aside, and then reap its rewards and consequences — there, in the next life.

Whatever we are capable of doing, we do. If we can go beyond or gain release from suffering and rebirth, that's the end of every problem. There will then be nothing to involve us in any further turmoil.

Here I've been talking about the mind because the mind is the primary issue. That which will make us fare well or ill, meet with pleasure or pain, is nothing but the mind.

As for what they call bad karma, it lies within the mind that has made it. Whether or not we can remember, these seeds — which lie in the heart — cannot be prevented from bearing fruit. This is because they are rooted in the mind. We have to accept our karma. Don't find fault with it. Once it's done, it's done, so how can we find fault with it? The hand writes, and so the hand must erase. We have to accept it like a good sport. This is the way it is with karma until we can gain release — which will be the end of the problem. More

Sunday, July 2, 2017

The Buddha's Noble Eightold Path (explained)



Chapter I: The Way to the End of Suffering
Noble Eightfold Path
The search for a spiritual path is born out of suffering [dukkha, disappointment, unsatisfactoriness, lack of fulfillment].

It does not start with lights and ecstasy but with the hard knocks of pain, disappointment, and confusion.

However, for suffering to give birth to a genuine spiritual search, it must amount to more than something passively received from outside ourselves. It has to trigger an inner realization, a perception that pierces through the complacency of our usual encounter with the world.

It has to do something so that we glimpse the insecurity perpetually underfoot. We are never on sure footing -- even by rebirth in the heavens. When this insight dawns, even if only momentarily, it can lead to a profound personal crisis.

The Path of Freedom
The realization overturns accustomed goals and values, mocks our routine preoccupations, leaves old enjoyments suddenly unsatisfying.
 
At first such changes are generally unwelcome. We try to deny this vision, smother our doubts; we struggle to drive away our discontent with new and more exciting pursuits.

But the flame of inquiry, once lit, continues to shine. If we keep from being swept away by superficialities, eventually the original glimmering of insight will again flare up.

Even if we slouch back into some patched up version of our desperate optimism, we will again confront our essential plight. It is precisely at that point, with all escape routes blocked, that we are ready to seek a way to bring our suffering to an end.
 
No longer can we continue to drift complacently through life, driven blindly by our thirst for sense pleasures oppressed by the pressure of prevailing (and changing) social norms. A deeper reality beckons us; we have heard the call of a more stable, more authentic happiness, and until we arrive at our goal we cannot rest contented.
 
But it is just then that we find ourselves facing a new difficulty. Once we come to recognize the need for a spiritual path we discover that spiritual teachings are by no means the same or even mutually compatible.

When we browse the shelves of humanity's spiritual heritage, ancient and contemporary, we find not a single tidy volume but a bazaar of spiritual systems and disciplines each offering themselves as the highest, fastest, most powerful, most profound "solution" to our quest for The Ultimate

Confronted with this variety, we fall into confusion trying to size them up -- to decide which truly leads to liberation, a real final solution to our need for freedom from suffering.
 
One approach to resolving this problem popular today is the eclectic solution: to pick and choose from the various traditions whatever seems cool or useful or easy or fast.

We weld together different practices and techniques into a synthetic whole that is personally satisfying. We might combine Buddhist "mindfulness meditation" (or MBSR, "mindfulness-based stress reduction" like at UCLA's MARC) with sessions of Hindu mantra recitation, Christian prayer with Sufi dancing, Jewish Kabbala with Tibetan Buddhist visualization exercises.

Eclecticism, however, while it may sometimes be helpful as we make a transition from a predominantly worldly and materialistic way of life to one that is spiritual and otherworldly, eventually wears thin.

While it may serve as a comfortable "halfway house," it is uncomfortable as a final vehicle.
 
There are two interrelated flaws in eclecticism that account for its ultimate inadequacy. One is that it compromises the very traditions it draws upon. The great spiritual traditions themselves do not propose their disciplines as independent techniques that can be excised from their setting and freely recombined to enhance the felt quality of our lives. (This is particularly true about the Buddha's teaching of mindfulness, satipatthana).

They present them, rather, as parts of an integral whole, a coherent vision regarding the fundamental nature of reality and the final goal of a spiritual quest.

A spiritual tradition is not some shallow stream one can wet one's feet in then beat a quick retreat to the shore. It is a mighty, tumultuous river that rushes through the entire landscape of one's life. If one truly wishes to travel it, one must be courageous enough to launch one's boat and head out according to all of the instructions for success.
  • The Buddha's path to enlightenment has as many as 37 factors or requisites, the bodhipakkhiya-dharma implicit in the Noble Eightfold Path, with virtue (sila) and mindfulness (sati) being the most fundamental.
The second defect in eclecticism follows from the first. As spiritual practices are built on visions regarding the nature of reality and the final good, such visions are not mutually compatible.

When we honestly examine the teachings of various traditions, we find that major differences in perspective reveal themselves, differences that cannot be easily dismissed as alternative ways of saying the same thing.

Rather, they point to very different experiences constituting the supreme goal and the path that must be trodden to reach that goal.
 
Hence, because of the differences in perspectives and practices that the different spiritual traditions propose, once we decide that we have outgrown eclecticism and feel that we are ready to make a serious commitment to one particular path, we find ourselves confronted with the challenge of choosing a path that will lead us to true enlightenment and liberation.

One cue to resolving this dilemma is to clarify to ourselves our fundamental aim, to determine what we seek in a genuine path to liberation. If we reflect carefully, it will become clear that the prime requirement is a way to the end of suffering.

All problems can ultimately be reduced to the problem of suffering. So what we need is a way that will end this problem finally and completely.

Both of these qualifying words are important. The path has to lead to a complete end of suffering, to an end of suffering in ALL its forms, and to a final end of suffering, to bring suffering to an irreversible stop.
 
But here we run up against another question. How are we to find such a path -- a path that has the capacity to lead us to the full and final end of suffering?