Showing posts with label return to basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label return to basics. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

What is an 'enlightened' person?

Blissful, effervescent yogi as a result of persistent effort and letting go (yogatailor.com)

   
When I began, it wasn't easy then a breakthrough
  1. personality-belief or the wrong view that there is, ultimately speaking, a self
  2. pernicious skeptical doubt about the path
  3. clinging to the belief that enlightenment can be gained by the practice of mere rules and rituals
  4. sensuous craving or strong five-sense strand desire
  5. ill-will or aversion
  6. craving for fine-material existence
  7. craving for immaterial existence
  8. conceit, the subtle, persistent habit of conceiving in terms of self
  9. restlessness
  10. ignorance
    The Buddha gave very exact meanings for each of these impediments as well as the stages of Buddhist sanctity as these ten bonds are uprooted and cut off. How this is accomplished is also not a matter of speculation. The Buddha laid out the path, and as one progresses one has a vision of what is path and not-path.
      
    There is no entering upon the first stage of enlightenment without an experiential grasp of not-self or egolessness. This is the hardest thing. And it is on account of it that the Buddha did not recognize "saints" in traditions outside the Dharma he made known. Indeed, there were very great beings with great attainments in concentration, wisdom, and mystical powers -- yet they were not free, liberated, emancipated from the cycle of rebirth and suffering. They were, at best, only temporarily sojourning in exalted heavens to fall again after staggering lifespans.

    In many Christian schools today, "saint" simply means someone in heaven or guaranteed to be reborn in heaven. There are relatively few, while we comfort ourselves that every nice person ends up among the elect. The sad fact is that this is simply a comforting belief we cling to because the truth, and our associated views, are too much to bear.
    1. Meditators free of the first three bonds are stream-enterers or stream-winners -- capable of being reborn a maximum of seven more times, guaranteed to become arhats.
    2. Those who have in addition abandoned the grosser forms of the fourth and fifth as well are called once-returners, who might return to (be reborn in) this world, the lowest good rebirth within the Sensual Sphere, no more than once.
    3. Those who are fully freed from the first five "lower" fetters (binding beings to the Sensual Sphere) are non-returners, who do not return to (are not reborn in) this sphere.
    4. Those who are freed from all ten bonds are called arhats, that is, worthy ones, perfected ones, "holy" (whole, with integrity, integrated, wholesome) or accomplished ones.
    Later schools developed different goals, such as the bodhisattva ideal -- the idea that vowing to strive to be a teaching buddha was not only possible but preferable to the goal the historical Buddha encouraged and taught the way to, that of the arhat who reaches safety (the stream) in this very life. Becoming a stream winner (one who has glimpsed nirvana) means that for the first time in this beginningless samsara one has put a limit on suffering. With no more than seven lives to undergo, which can mean millions of years of suffering (i.e., being disappointed) in delightful sensual and fine-material (even a few immaterial) "heavens" before nirvana. The Buddha was an arhat.

    In the Early Buddhist schools
    Bodhisattva Simpson (Concerning Art)
    A range of views on the relative "perfection" of arhats existed among early Buddhist schools. In general, the Mahāsāṃghika branch -- such as the Ekavyāvahārikas, Lokottaravādins,[9] Bahuśrutīyas,[10] Prajñaptivādins, and Caitika[11] schools -- advocated the transcendental and supermundane nature of buddhas and bodhisattvas, and the fallibility of arhats.[12] The Caitikas, for example, advocated the ideal "career" choice of the bodhisattva (bodhisattva-yāna) over that of the arhat (śrāvaka-yāna) and viewed arhats as fallible and still subject to ignorance.[13]
       
    According to A.K. Warder, the Sarvāstivādins held the same position as the Mahāsāṃghika branch regarding arhats, considering them imperfect and fallible.[14]
      
    The Kāśyapīya school also held the doctrine that arhats were fallible and imperfect, similar to the view of the Sarvāstivādins and the various Mahāsāṃghika sects.[15] Moreover, the Kāśyapīyas believed that arhats have not fully eliminated desires, that their "perfection" is incomplete, and that it is possible for them to relapse.[16]
      
    How the word is derived
    Guru Homer (livejournal.com)
    The exact etymology and interpretation of Sanskrit words such as arhat remains disputed. In the Theravada tradition, and in early PTS publications, the word is interpreted to mean "worthy one."
      
    This has been challenged by more recent research. Comparing ancient Indian forms arahanta and arihanta[2] in Pali and early Jain Prakrit languages results in the alternative etymology "foe-destroyer" or "vanquisher of enemies."
      
    This corresponds to the Jain definition.[3] The latter challenges the assumption that the root of the word is Pali araha (Sanskrit, arha). Richard Gombrich has proposed an etymology of ari + hanta, bringing the root meaning closer to jina (an epithet commonly used for both the Buddha and Mahavira, the leaders of the Jains and Buddhists.[4]
      
    Arhat was translated into East Asian languages phonetically as a transliterated term, exemplified in the Chinese āluóhàn, often shortened to simply lohan. However, the Tibetan term was translated by meaning from Sanskrit as dgra bcom pa, which translates as, "one who has destroyed the foes of afflictions."[5] This Tibetan translation of the meaning conforms with the Jain definition as well.
      
    Arhat occurs as arhattā in the Rigveda[6] and as the first offer of salutation in the main Jain prayer, the Namokar Mantra. Based on a possible Sanskrit etymology, Arhant can be translated as deathless since hant in Sanskrit means "death or killing" and ar is often used for negation, implying "cannot be killed" or "beyond death" or "deathless."
    • Buddhist Podcast, June 10, 2025; Dhr. Seven, Amber Larson, Pat Macpherson (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly Wiki edit Arhat (Buddhism), 7/11/12

    Wednesday, April 2, 2025

    Learn to meditate this spring (How to)

    Beginning meditators are babies in white, so go easy. Meditation may make one sleepy at first.
    .
    An outfit just for practice helps.
    It's spring. This is a good time, maybe the best time, to begin a regular meditation practice,. Well, actually the best time would have been seven years ago, but the second-best time is right now. Sitting can graduate to walking meditation, mindfulness in nature, then deep stillness and clarity to see things (vipassana) as they truly are.

    Do the basics: Put on all white. Find a quiet spot apart from distractions. Use this spot over and over again. It becomes powerful. Set down a mat and cushion (a bundle of leaves or grass is enough to get the tailbone higher than the knees). Sit. Inhale deeply. Release. Do it again a few times, without forcing the air out. It's just about letting go completely, so completely that the body hangs as if held up by a clothing hanger, not stiff, not slack.

    Straighter is more comfortable, even though it doesn't seem like it at first. Posture is important to attention. Bring (advert) the attention to the present moment, this moment, and to stay in just this moment, remain aware of the breath. Which breath? This breath, just the one happening now all by itself. Become the watcher (not the commenter, fixer, improver, slowdowner, or anything else), just the watcher. This is mindfulness -- clear awareness of the present without evaluation.

    Whoa, what a trip! What was that? I want that again!
    Set a time limit in advance and keep it. Even if it would be nice to go longer because it is going so well, know the time of rising. Even if it is going horribly with raving lunatic thoughts of a psychopath with lurid fantasies and wrath, lust and revenge, delusion and a lightshow, know the time of rising. The mind will thank you later.

    Ten minutes is a good start time, slowly working up to an hourlong sit. That seems impossible now, but in time, whaddyaknow, it suddenly is possible. What changed? I'dunno. This practice is about persistence. It does itself and then there is no effort. The enemies of that are expectations, unsettled greed or desire for achieving something, and the Five Hindrances. They will come to hinder. They are already present. They can be overcome. But whether or not they have been overcome, persist. This is spring. This is the beginning. Have "beginner's mind" in place of the "monkey mind" that usually rules the cage. Smile. It helps.

    Instructions are confusing because it's so simple.
    It is easy to say that "meditation is NOT about thinking." That's clear. That's easy to see. Don't indulge thought; just let them be by turning your attention to this subtle breath that keeps changing. What is difficult to grasp is that "meditation is NOT about not-thinking." Not-thinking may happen. It doesn't matter. As that is not the goal, if it doesn't happen, it's okay. Giving attention to one object and bringing attention back and back again and again ("Begin again" as Sharon Salzberg says) is what is important.

    The mind like a petulant and insolent child will resist. Let it. Bring it back. Do not scold it or become upset. Let it be. Surrender completely to this moment, whatever is in this moment, not being moved to do anything no matter what the mind says it must do. See what happens. Could the mind be wrong no matter what it feels or demands or insists is true?

    How did Siddhartha Gautama do it?
    We'll never see things as they really are so long as we keep believing that we already are seeing them that way. We have never been seeing them that way. If we had, we'd awaken. We'd be enlightened, which is to say, Dependent Origination would make sense. And it doesn't, does it? (Hint: It's a practice, not a theory). That's a whole different kind of meditation called insight (vipassana) after getting good at this kind, which is called serenity (samatha). Don't jump ahead. Let it go. (If all else fails, sign up for a free 10-day Goenka retreat. Everyone should do at least one in life).

    Thursday, February 13, 2025

    Play main stage at Warped Tour '25

    But we don't know how to become a band that can win! - Then watch this new doc about Led Zep
    Forget just attending the show. Perform on the main stage like a boss at the show! How?

    Get warped, Man, and wear Vans to skate.
    While many punk rockers are excited about the resuscitated Vans Warped Tour returning this summer (2025), the touring festival’s highly anticipated comeback has spurred another iconic event to follow suit. Welcome back the Ernie Ball Battle of the Bands for 2025!

    Over the years, the Ernie Ball Battle of the Bands has often provided emerging talent with a platform to further their careers and acts such as Nothing More, Mayday Parade, PVRIS, James Valentine, and others have benefitted from taking part in Ernie Ball Battle of the Bands competitions before finding greater fame.

    Ernie Ball 'Battle of the Bands' returns
    I would totally fall for someone in a band 💖
    Tying in with the Vans Warped Tour’s return, the Ernie Ball Battle of the Bands competition will be back for 2025 with one band eventually being selected to perform on the main stage of Vans Warped Tour at all three of the 2025 stops in Washington, D.C., Long Beach (Los Angeles/Orange County), and Orlando, Florida.
    And that's just the beginning of what the winner will receive. There are over $100,000 in prizes and the potential for a record label contract on the line.

    Live Nation and Kevin Lyman envision new format. - Rolling Stone writes an article about it.

    About the Prizes + Contract
    You don't have to look like a dipsh*t, but it helps. Just ask Post or poseur Travis Kardashian.
    .
    FTW. Let's start a new life as hedonistic rockers
    The 2025 Ernie Ball Battle of the Bands winner has an incredible prize pool for taking home top honors. Some of the items include:
    • High-end guitar and bass gear from Ernie Ball, Ernie Ball Music Man, Sterling By Music Man, Marshall, Orange, Revv, Galien Krueger, and BOSS
    • Top-tier drum equipment from SJC, Gibraltar, Zildjian, Vic Firth, Remo, and Humes & Berg
    • Keyboard equipment from Roland and Korg
    • Live and Studio equipment from Universal Audio, Electrovoice, Mackie, and Sennheiser
    • A $1,000 Vans gift card for each main stage performer
    • A feature in an episode of the Ernie Ball's Big Sound
    In addition, one grand prize winner will have the chance to sign a record deal with EDGEOUT Records/Universal Music Group.

    That’s a pretty great haul for an unsigned group looking for one of their first big breaks. If your band or you think you have what it takes, go ahead and sign up to compete for the Vans Warped Tour slot.
    Danger! It's all fun and games till someone gets hurt. - Kevin Lyman, who's going to be playing?

    How to enter
    Submissions are now open at battleofthebands.com and will run through May 1, 2025. A panel of industry pros will judge entries based on technique, creativity, originality, and entertainment value — but fan support matters, too!

    I listen to so much music that I can create some.

    Advice on winning
    We're not that good yet, but we came up with this claptrap "Dazed and Confused" by not worrying

    Man, why not me? I should just go for it.
    Rally a [social media] crew, spread the word, and let the votes roll in! [What do those things mean? A) Tell your mom to tell her friends on Facebook. B) Listen to lots of eclectic, obscure, and popular bands for inspiration because YOU will be a blend of all of those. C) Imagine you're totally original, unique, and the Greek Gods' gift to the audience. How? If Ghostemane can believe in himself, then you can get delusional about your chances of stealing the spotlight for attention. It's as easy as ABC. It helps to be very troubled.]
    FILM REVIEW: Becoming Led Zeppelin

    Becoming Led Zeppelin (Sony)
    We saw it on an IMAX screen, sitting in the front row heads cranked up to take in the whole screen, for it to be in our faces and extra loud. And that it was. It's good, really good. It's no The Song Remains the Same, which is the first Led Zeppelin movie, a filmed concert at Madison Square Garden, New York, in the 1970s with the conceit of introducing them as legendary, bigger-than-life figures, particularly Page, who lived in a castle... More

    Monday, February 12, 2024

    Jon Stewart returns to The Daily Show (NEW)

    Jon Stewart (CBS Mornings/ 2/12/24); Seth Auberon, Pfc. Sandoval (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly

    Jon Stewart is back on TDS to tackle the Biden-Trump rematch that nobody wants
    (The Daily Show) Feb. 12, 2024: Original host Jon Stewart returns and kicks off his Daily Show Monday night residency by coming to grips with the reality of America's two chronologically challenged presidential candidates: Joe Trump and Donald Biden. #DailyShow #JonStewart #Election2024. Subscribe to The Daily Show: @thedailyshow

    Jon Stewart on why he's going back to "The Daily Show" anchor desk
    (CBS Mornings) Feb. 12, 2024: Former and newest Daily Show host Jon Stewart opens up on CBS Mornings about his return to The Daily Show (same corporate owner Paramount Global), revealing why he decided to go back for this election year, his first-day feelings, and what fans of the show can expect.

    ABOUT: Each weekday morning, "CBS Mornings" co-hosts Gayle King, Tony Dokoupil, and Nate Burleson bring the latest breaking news, smart conversation, and in-depth feature reporting. CBS Mornings airs weekdays at 7:00 am on CBS and streams at 8:00 am ET on the CBS News app.

    Monday, December 25, 2023

    The Buddha's Second Coming: The Maitreya

    Wisdom Tellers, Nov. 24, 2023; Eds., Wisdom Quarterly

    The Future Buddha: The Tale of Bodhisattva Maitreya
    (Wisdom Tellers) Discover the incredible story of Maitreya, the future Buddha known for boundless love and wisdom! Follow his journey towards enlightenment and learn about his teachings that promise hope and kindness. Let's uncover the legacy of this compassionate figure and his impact on the world.

    #Maitreya #Metteyya #MílèPúsa #MirokuBosatsu #MireukBosal #JampéGönpo #Buddha #Compassion #Enlightenment #wisdom

    Messianic Buddhism?
    Apocalyptic Buddhists await the Maitreya
    Could there really be a Messianic Buddhism? There certainly is. (Tibetan Buddhism, for example, is obsessed with the Future Buddha and not so much interested in the historical one and his Teachings, even though they'll be the same Teachings).

    There is a belief in the Buddha's "second coming." Of course, this is an oversimplification because it is not the historical Buddha Shakyamuni returning so much as it is another bodhisattva ("being bent on supreme enlightenment") arising. That buddha's name will be Maitreya, the "Messiah" of sorts, the Buddha-to-come.

    In the Pali canon of Theravada Buddhism, pejoratively referred to as Hinayana or "Lesser Vehicle" Buddhism, which it is not, he is known as Metteyya. The last Hinayana tradition was the Sarvastivada, which was destroyed by Mahayana Buddhism.

    Ninety percent of the Buddhism in the world today is of the Mahayana sort, with only ten percent being Theravada or "Teaching of the Earliest Enlightened Elders" of the Buddha's time. Theravada is a back to basics revivalism of what the historical person taught, whereas Mahayana is a kind of catholicism or universalist teaching, more Hinduism than Gautama-Buddha-Dharma.

    Wednesday, August 9, 2023

    Buddhist Summer School w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (3)

    Bhikkhu Bodhi (BAUS); Eds., Wisdom Quarterly BUDDHIST SUMMER SCHOOL

    Bhikkhu Bodhi: Introduction to Buddhism, As It Is (3): The True Nature of Existence
    (AudioBuddha) The series lecturer is American Theravada Buddhist scholar-monk Ven. Bodhi, who now resides and teaches at Chuang Yen Monastery (baus.org) in Carmel, Upstate New York. Recorded in the Washington Buddhist Vihara in 1981. Source: Dharma Seed, Sept. 3, 2021.

    These audio recordings, books, and videos are for educational purposes only. Public domain. For enquiries or copyright issues, please contact audiobuddho@gmail.com.

    Thursday, August 3, 2023

    Buddhist Summer School w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (2)



    This is Part 2 of our Buddhist Summer School with American scholar monk Bhikkhu Bodhi, from his recorded series As It Is. See Part 1. The topic today is the outline or summary of the Teaching (Dharma) famously known as the Four Noble Truths (Four Ennobling Truths).
    The (united) Buddhist flag
    What is the Dhamma (the Buddha's Dharma or "Doctrine")? It is the Teaching of the Buddha relating to liberation (moksha), freedom from suffering (dukkha), awakening from illusion (maya), and enlightenment in a benighted universe of ignorance. There are stages to this awakening. And there are many related teachings concerning enlightenment/awakening (bodhi).

    The whole of the Buddha-Dharma may be summarized in four densely packed statements called the Four Noble Truths. Noble means "enlightened," so it is more useful to call them the Four Ennobling Truths, as direct realization of them leads to awakening.
    1. There is disappointment.
      American Bhikkhu Bodhi
    2. There is a cause of this.
    3. There is an end to this.
    4. There is a path leading to the end of disappointment.
    When one awakens from ignorance, what one knows for certain is the deep meaning of these four statements. The first is very troubling to us as "ordinary, uninstructed worldlings." Who can say that all things are ultimately disappointing, unfulfilling, or "suffering"? What does this mean? What about pleasure, of which there are many kinds?

    There is suffering, okay. That makes sense. We can feel that even in our own comfortable lives. We have no idea how far it goes, so it's nice to know that there's a reason or cause of all this disappointment or dukkha.

    Hooray, there's an end to it at some point. When we know the cause, we can stem it and arrive at the cessation of ALL suffering. How?

    There is a path leading to the cessation of all suffering, and it is called the Ennobling (Noble) Eightfold Path. Each of its factors are explained with the Four Ennobling Truths. (Enlightenment is said to depend on the cultivation of the 37 Requisites of Enlightenment or bodhi-pakkhiyā-dhammā). There is much to unpack. And Bhikkhu Bodhi lays out the basics.

    Monday, July 31, 2023

    Buddhist Summer School w/ Bhikkhu Bodhi (1)


    The great translator: scholar-monk Ven. Bodhi
    Nina and I were talking about the Dharma, her vipassana practice (or what she thought was insight), having convinced herself that no one is enlightened, no one would ever talk about it if they were, and what is enlightenment (bodhi) anyway? So much sincerity with so much uncertainty, doubt, and confusion about BASIC Buddhist Teachings was frustrating. How is anyone to learn the essentials without confounding later teachings, innovations, and confabulations (mixing the historical Buddha's Dharma with yoga, Taoism, Zen, Hinduism, Sufism, and the fake Buddha quotes that abound on the internet). The Dharma is not just whatever we want it to be, our interpolations, our Western logic, our New Age movement... So let's get back to basics. It's summer, and we're returning to American Theravada scholar-monk, the most prolific and faithful translator of Buddhist sutras and other texts, Bhikkhu Bodhi.

    As It Is: Buddhism Series
    Bhikkhu Bodhi: Introduction to Buddhism Series: 01. The Buddha | Lectures. (AudioBuddha) Aug. 17, 2021. Bhikkhu Bodhi: Introduction to Buddhism | Lecture Series Lecturer: Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi. Place: Washington Buddhist Vihara. Date: 1981. Source: Dharma Seed.

    Reference book for first lecture
    In the fall of 1979, while living at the Washington Buddhist Vihara, American monk Ven. Bhikkhu Bodhi gave a series of lectures on the fundamental teachings of Early Buddhism. Bhante G (Ven. Gunaratana, now abbot of Bhavana Society in West Virginia), at the time the president of the Buddhist Vihara Society, suggested he record the lectures so that the vihara (monastery, hermitage) could distribute them as a set of cassette tapes.

    In the summer of 1981, Bhikkhu Bodhi recorded his ten lectures in the basement of the Washington Buddhist Vihara, using an ordinary, nonprofessional recorder. An enthusiastic lay supporter had the master copies reproduced in large quantities for expanded distribution. [Wisdom Quarterly asked Bhikkhu Bodhi in Sri Lanka bout the possibility of distributing those original tapes widely and received his blessings to do so freely.]

    They have continued to be distributed on tape and as CDs for over 25 years and are now considered “public domain” for any entity to copy and distribute freely. [Wisdom Quarterly came into excellent cleaned up versions put on CD by Chaung Yen Monastery (BAUS.org) was living and teaching, having returned from Sri Lanka, where he served as editor of the Buddhist Public Society (BPS.lk).]

    INTRODUCTION TO LECTURER
    Venerable Bhikkhu Bodhi (born Jeffrey Block on December 10, 1944), from New York, who received his Ph.D. at Claremont College in California, is an American Theravada Buddhist monk, ordained in Sri Lanka, and currently teaching in the Upstate New York and New Jersey areas.

    He was appointed the second president of the Buddhist Publication Society and has edited and authored several publications grounded in the Theravada Buddhist tradition. Bhikkhu Bodhi is founder of the charitable organization Buddhist Global Relief, which funds projects to fight hunger and to empower women across the world.


    These audio, book, and/or video items are for educational purposes only and are not intended to violate any copyrighted material. For enquiries or copyright issues, please contact audiobuddho@gmail.com.

    Tuesday, November 20, 2018

    The return of "Dukkha Girl" (video)

    Ellie Askew's Complaint to the Universe, Dhr. Seven, Ashley Wells (eds.), Wisdom Quarterly
    Perplexity (2010) used to be "Dukkha Girl," but until she comes back, we have a new one.
    You know what really "grinds my gears," to borrow Peter Griffin phrase? Being hungry all the time! Every time I meditate, I have to be thinking of food and how fat and famished and exhausted it's making me. I eat, but I still crave. I eat and eat more, mad gluttony. I still crave. I'm not fat yet, but I worry. And when I worry...you guessed it. I want to fast, I want to starve, I want to become a breatharian or, at least, juice everything to stop craving tempting tastes and textures. But if I did, I might get hungry. Then I'd obsess and eat. Who/what might I forgive? Myself?

    May I be well, may I be happy, may I be free, may I look after myself with joy and ease. May ALL living beings (who eat) be well, happy, free, and look after themselves with joy and ease.

    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 17, 2009

    Move to Yogaville

    NPR Radio "Day to Day," Your Money segment



    Where do you go when you run out of money? One alternative to mom's couch is an ashram in rural Virginia. People who were recently laid off are welcome, so long as they're willing to clean, forsake beer and meditate daily.

    Day to Day (March 17, 2009) · Where would you go when you're running out of money? As the economy continues to sputter, I've turned this question into a hypothetical game of sorts.

    At gatherings held by my (mostly unemployed journalist) friends in Los Angeles, a city where the jobless rate now stands at 20 percent, we'd rank the obvious options: parents' house, friends' futon, military. Then there's the less obvious ones: laboring on an organic farm... More>>