Sense Contact - the Fount of Wisdom
All of us have made up our minds to become bhikkhus
and sāmaneras in the
Buddhist Dispensation in order to find peace. Now what is
true peace? True peace, the Buddha said, is not very far away, it
lies right here within us, but we tend to continually overlook it.
People have their ideas about finding peace but still tend to
experience
confusion and agitation, they still tend to be unsure and haven't
yet found fulfillment in their practice. They haven't yet reached
the goal. It's as if we have left our home to travel to many different
places. Whether we get into a car or board a boat, no matter where
we go, we still haven't reached our home. As long as we still haven't
reached home we don't feel content, we still have some unfinished
business to take care of. This is because our journey is not yet
finished,
we haven't reached our destination. We travel all over the place in
search of liberation.
All of you bhikkhus and sāmaneras
here
want peace, every one of you. Even myself, when I was younger, searched
all over for peace. Wherever I went I couldn't be satisfied. Going
into forests or visiting various teachers, listening to Dhamma talks,
I could find no satisfaction. Why is this?
We look for peace in peaceful places, where there won't be
sights,
or sounds, or odors, or flavors... thinking that living quietly like
this is the way to find contentment, that herein lies peace.
But actually, if we live very quietly in places where nothing
arises,
can wisdom arise? Would we be aware of anything? Think about it. If
our eye didn't see sights, what would that be like? If the nose didn't
experience smells, what would that be like? If the tongue didn't
experience
flavors, what would that be like? If the body didn't experience
feelings
at all, what would that be like? To be like that would be like being
a blind and deaf man, one whose nose and tongue had fallen off and
who was completely numb with paralysis. Would there be anything there?
And yet people tend to think that if they went somewhere where nothing
happened they would find peace. Well, I've thought like that myself,
I once thought that way....
When I was a young monk just starting to practice, I'd sit in
meditation
and sounds would disturb me, I'd think to myself, ''What can I
do to make my mind peaceful?'' So I took some beeswax and stuffed
my ears with it so that I couldn't hear anything. All that remained
was a humming sound. I thought that would be peaceful, but no, all
that thinking and confusion didn't arise at the ears after all. It
arose at the mind. That is the place to search for peace.
To put it another way, no matter where you go to stay, you
don't want
to do anything because it interferes with your practice. You don't
want to sweep the grounds or do any work, you just want to be still
and find peace that way. The teacher asks you to help out with the
chores or any of the daily duties but you don't put your heart into
it because you feel it is only an external concern.
I've often brought up the example of one of my disciples who
was really
eager to ''let go'' and find peace. I taught about ''letting
go'' and he accordingly understood that to let go of everything would
indeed be peaceful. Actually right from the day he had come to stay
here he didn't want to do anything. Even when the wind blew half the
roof off his kuti he wasn't interested. He said
that
that was just an external thing. So he didn't bother fixing it up.
When the sunlight and rain streamed in from one side he'd move over
to the other side. That wasn't any business of his. His business was
to make his mind peaceful. That other stuff was a distraction, he
wouldn't get involved. That was how he saw it.
One day I was walking past and saw the collapsed roof.
''Eh? Whose kuti is this?''
Someone told me whose it was, and I thought, ''Hmm.
Strange....''
So I had a talk with him, explaining many things, such as the duties
in regard to our dwellings, the senāsanavatta.
''We must have a dwelling place, and we must look after it. 'Letting
go' isn't like this, it doesn't mean shirking our responsibilities.
That's the action of a fool. The rain comes in on one side so you
move over to the other side, then the sunshine comes out and you move
back to that side. Why is that? Why don't you bother to let go there?''
I gave him a long discourse on this; then when I'd finished, he said,
''Oh, Luang Por, sometimes you teach me to cling and sometimes
you teach me to let go. I don't know what you want me to do. Even
when my roof collapses and I let go to this extent, still you say
it's not right. And yet you teach me to let go! I don't know what
more you can expect of me....''
You see? People are like this. They can be as stupid as this.
Are there visual objects within the eye? If there are no
external
visual objects would our eyes see anything? Are there sounds within
our ears if external sounds don't make contact? If there are no smells
outside would we experience them? Where are the causes? Think about
what the Buddha said: All dhammas
arise because of causes. If we didn't have ears would we experience
sounds? If we had no eyes would we be able to see sights? Eyes, ears,
nose, tongue, body and mind - these are the causes. It is said that
all dhammas arise because of conditions, when they
cease
it's because the causal conditions have ceased. For resulting
conditions
to arise, the causal conditions must first arise.
If we think that peace lies where there are no sensations
would wisdom
arise? Would there be causal and resultant conditions? Would we have
anything to practice with? If we blame the sounds, then where there
are sounds we can't be peaceful. We think that place is no good.
Wherever
there are sights we say that's not peaceful. If that's the case then
to find peace we'd have to be one whose senses have all died, blind,
and deaf. I thought about this....
''Hmm. This is strange. Suffering arises because of eyes,
ears,
nose, tongue, body and mind. So should we be blind? If we didn't see
anything at all maybe that would be better. One would have no
defilements
arising if one were blind, or deaf. Is this the way it is?''...
But, thinking about it, it was all wrong. If that was the case
then
blind and deaf people would be enlightened. They would all be
accomplished
if defilements arose at the eyes and ears. There are the causal
conditions.
Where things arise, at the cause, that's where we must stop them.
Where the cause arises, that's where we must contemplate.
Actually, the sense bases of the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body,
and
mind are all things which can facilitate the arising of wisdom, if
we know them as they are. If we don't really know them we must deny
them, saying we don't want to see sights, hear sounds, and so on,
because they disturb us. If we cut off the causal conditions what
are we going to contemplate? Think about it. Where would there be
any cause and effect? This is wrong thinking on our part.
This is why we are taught to be restrained. Restraint is sıla.
There is the sīla of sense restraint: eyes, ears,
nose,
tongue, body and mind: these are our sīla, and they
are our samādhi. Reflect on the
story of
Sāriputta. At the time before he became a bhikkhu
he saw Assaji Thera going on almsround. Seeing him, Sāriputta
thought,
''This monk is most unusual. He walks neither too fast nor too slow, his robes are neatly worn, his bearing is restrained.'' Sāriputta was inspired by him and so approached Venerable Assaji, paid his respects and asked him,
''Excuse me, sir, who are you?''
''I am a samana.''
''Who is your teacher?''
''Venerable Gotama is my teacher.''
''What does Venerable Gotama teach?''
''He teaches that all things arise because of conditions.
When they cease it's because the causal conditions have ceased.''When asked about the Dhamma by Sāriputta, Assaji explained only in brief, he talked about cause and effect. Dhammas arise because of causes. The cause arises first and then the result. When the result is to cease the cause must first cease. That's all he said, but it was enough for Sāriputta.
Now this was a cause for the arising of Dhamma. At that time Sāriputta
had eyes, he had ears, he had a nose, a tongue, a body and a mind.
All his faculties were intact. If he didn't have his faculties would
there have been sufficient causes for wisdom to arise for him? Would
he have been aware of anything? But most of us are afraid of contact.
Either that or we like to have contact but we develop no wisdom from
it: instead we repeatedly indulge through eyes, ears, nose, tongue,
body and mind, delighting in and getting lost in sense objects. This
is how it is. These sense bases can entice us into delight and
indulgence
or they can lead to knowledge and wisdom.
They have both harm and benefit, depending on our wisdom.
So now let us understand that, having gone forth and come to
practice,
we should take everything as practice. Even the bad things. We should
know them all. Why? So that we may know the truth. When we talk of
practice we don't simply mean those things that are good and pleasing
to us. That's not how it is. In this world some things are to our
liking, some are not. These things all exist in this world, nowhere
else. Usually whatever we like we want, even with fellow monks and
novices. Whatever monk or novice we don't like we don't want to
associate
with, we only want to be with those we like. You see? This is choosing
according to our likes. Whatever we don't like we don't want to see
or know about.
Actually the Buddha wanted us to experience these things. Lokavidū
- look at this world and know it clearly. If we don't know the truth
of the world clearly then we can't go anywhere. Living in the world
we must understand the world. The Noble Ones of the past, including
the Buddha, all lived with these things, they lived in this world,
among deluded people. They attained the truth right in this very world,
nowhere else. They didn't run off to some other world to find the
truth. But they had wisdom. They restrained their senses, but the
practice is to look into all these things and know them as they are.
Therefore the Buddha taught us to know the sense bases, our
points
of contact. The eye contacts forms and sends them ''in'' to become
sights. The ears make contact with sounds, the nose makes contact
with odors, the tongue makes contact with tastes, the body makes
contact
with tactile sensations, and so awareness arises. Where awareness
arises is where we should look and see things as they are. If we don't
know these things as they really are we will either fall in love with
them or hate them. Where these sensations arise is where we can become
enlightened, where wisdom can arise.
But sometimes we don't want things to be like that. The Buddha
taught
restraint, but restraint doesn't mean we don't see anything, hear
anything, smell, taste, feel or think anything. That's not what it
means. If practicers don't understand this then as soon as they see
or hear anything they cower and run away. They don't deal with things.
They run away, thinking that by so doing those things will eventually
lose their power over them, that they will eventually transcend them.
But they won't. They won't transcend anything like that. If they run
away not knowing the truth of them, later on the same stuff will pop
up to be dealt with again.
For example, those practicers who are never content, be they
in monasteries,
forests, or mountains. They wander on ''dhutanga
pilgrimage'' looking at this, that and the other, thinking they'll
find contentment that way. They go, and then they come back... didn't
see anything. They try going to a mountain top... ''Ah! This is
the spot, now I'm right.'' They feel at peace for a few days and
then get tired of it. ''Oh, well, off to the seaside.'' ''Ah,
here it's nice and cool. This'll do me fine.'' After a while they
get tired of the seaside as well... Tired of the forests, tired of
the mountains, tired of the seaside, tired of everything. This is
not being tired of things in the right sense5, as
right view, it's simply boredom, a kind of wrong view. Their
view is not in accordance with the way things are.
When they get back to the monastery... ''Now, what will I do?
I've
been all over and came back with nothing.'' So they throw away their
bowls and disrobe. Why do they disrobe? Because they haven't got any
grip on the practice, they don't see anything; go to the north and
don't see anything; go to the seaside, to the mountains, into the
forests and still don't see anything. So it's all finished... they
''die.'' This is how it goes. It's because they're continually
running away from things. Wisdom doesn't arise.
Now take another example. Suppose there is one monk who
determines
to stay with things, not to run away. He looks after himself. He knows
himself and also knows those who come to stay with him. He's
continually
dealing with problems. For example, the abbot. If one is an abbot
of a monastery there are constant problems to deal with, there's a
constant stream of things that demand attention. Why so? Because people
are always asking questions. The questions never end, so you must
be constantly on the alert. You are constantly solving problems, your
own as well as other people's. That is, you must be constantly awake.
Before you can doze off they wake you up again with another problem.
So this causes you to contemplate and understand things. You become
skillful: skillful in regard to yourself and skillful in regard to
others. Skillful in many, many ways.
This skill arises from contact, from confronting and dealing
with
things, from not running away. We don't run away physically but we
''run away'' in mind, using our wisdom. We understand with wisdom
right here, we don't run away from anything.
This is a source of wisdom. One must work, must associate with
other
things. For instance, living in a big monastery like this we must
all help out to look after the things here. Looking at it in one way
you could say that it's all defilement. Living with lots of monks
and novices, with many lay people coming and going, many defilements
may arise. Yes, I admit... but we must live like this for the
development
of wisdom and the abandonment of foolishness. Which way are we to
go? Are we going to live in order to get rid of foolishness or to
increase our foolishness?
We must contemplate. Whenever eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body
or mind
make contact we should be collected and circumspect. When suffering
arises, who is suffering? Why did this suffering arise? The abbot
of a monastery has to supervise many disciples. Now that may be
suffering.
We must know suffering when it arises. Know suffering. If we are afraid
of suffering and don't want to face it, where are we going to do battle
with it? If suffering arises and we don't know it, how are we going
to deal with it? This is of utmost importance - we must know suffering.
Escaping from suffering means knowing the way out of
suffering, it
doesn't mean running away from wherever suffering arises. By doing
that you just carry your suffering with you. When suffering arises
again somewhere else you'll have to run away again. This is not
transcending
suffering, it's not knowing suffering.
If you want to understand suffering you must look into the
situation
at hand. The teachings say that wherever a problem arises it must
be settled right there. Where suffering lies is right where
non-suffering
will arise, it ceases at the place where it arises. If suffering arises
you must contemplate right there, you don't have to run away. You
should settle the issue right there. One who runs away from suffering
out of fear is the most foolish person of all. He will simply increase
his stupidity endlessly.
We must understand: suffering is none other than the First
Noble Truth,
isn't that so? Are you going to look on it as something bad? Dukkhasacca,
samudayasacca,
nirodha sacca,
magga sacca....
Running away from these things isn't practicing according to the
true Dhamma. When will you ever see the truth of suffering? If we
keep running away from suffering we will never know it. Suffering
is something we should recognize - if you don't observe it when will
you ever recognize it? Not being content here you run over there,
when discontent arises there you run off again. You are always running.
If that's the way you practice you'll be racing with the Devil all
over the country!
The Buddha taught us to ''run away'' using wisdom. For
instance:
suppose you had stepped on a thorn or splinter and it got embedded
in your foot. As you walk it occasionally hurts, occasionally not.
Sometimes you may step on a stone or a stump and it really hurts,
so you feel around your foot. But not finding anything you shrug it
off and walk on a bit more. Eventually you step on something else,
and the pain arises again.
Now this happens many times. What is the cause of that pain?
The cause
is that splinter or thorn embedded in your foot. The pain is constantly
near. Whenever the pain arises you may take a look and feel around
a bit, but, not seeing the splinter, you let it go. After a while
it hurts again so you take another look.
When suffering arises you must note it, don't just shrug it
off. Whenever
the pain arises... ''Hmm... that splinter is still there.'' Whenever
the pain arises there arises also the thought that that splinter has
got to go. If you don't take it out there will only be more pain later
on. The pain keeps recurring again and again, until the desire to
take out that thorn is constantly with you. In the end it reaches
a point where you make up your mind once and for all to get out that
thorn - because it hurts!
Now our effort in the practice must be like this. Wherever it
hurts,
wherever there's friction, we must investigate. Confront the problem,
head on. Take that thorn out of your foot, just pull it out. Wherever
your mind gets stuck you must take note. As you look into it you will
know it, see it and experience it as it is.
But our practice must be unwavering and persistent. They call
it viriyārambha
- putting forth constant effort. Whenever an unpleasant feeling arises
in your foot, for example, you must remind yourself to get out that
thorn, don't give up your resolve. Likewise, when suffering arises
in our hearts we must have the unwavering resolve to try to uproot
the defilements, to give them up. This resolve is constantly there,
unremitting. Eventually the defilements will fall into our hands where
we can finish them off.
So in regard to happiness and suffering, what are we to do? If
we
didn't have these things what could we use as a cause to precipitate
wisdom? If there is no cause how will the effect arise? All dhammas
arise because of causes. When the result ceases it's because the cause
has ceased. This is how it is, but most of us don't really understand.
People only want to run away from suffering. This sort of knowledge
is short of the mark. Actually we need to know this very world that
we are living in, we don't have to run away anywhere. You should have
the attitude that to stay is fine... and to go is fine. Think about
this carefully.
Where do happiness and suffering lie? Whatever we don't hold
fast
to, cling to or fix on to, as if it weren't there, suffering doesn't
arise. Suffering arises from existence (bhava). If
there
is existence then there is birth. Upādāna -
clinging
or attachment - this is the pre-requisite which creates suffering.
Wherever suffering arises look into it. Don't look too far away, look
right into the present moment. Look at your own mind and body. When
suffering arises... ''Why is there suffering?'' Look right now.
When happiness arises, what is the cause of that happiness? Look right
there. Wherever these things arise be aware. Both happiness andsuffering
arise from clinging.
The cultivators of old saw their minds in this way. There is
only
arising and ceasing. There is no abiding entity. They contemplated
from all angles and saw that there was nothing much to this mind,
nothing is stable. There is only arising and ceasing, ceasing and
arising, nothing is of any lasting substance. While walking or sitting
they saw things in this way. Wherever they looked there was only
suffering,
that's all. It's just like a big iron ball which has just been blasted
in a furnace. It's hot all over. If you touch the top it's hot, touch
the sides and they're hot - it's hot all over. There isn't any place
on it which is cool.
Now if we don't consider these things we know nothing about
them.
We must see clearly. Don't get ''born'' into things, don't fall
into birth. Know the workings of birth. Such thoughts as, ''Oh,
I can't stand that person, he does everything wrongly,'' will no
longer arise. Or, ''I really like so and so...'', these things
don't arise. There remain merely the conventional worldly standards
of like and dislike, but one's speech is one way, one's mind another.
They are separate things. We must use the conventions of the world
to communicate with each other, but inwardly we must be empty. The
mind is above those things. We must bring the mind to transcendence
like this. This is the abiding of the Noble Ones. We must all aim
for this and practice accordingly. Don't get caught up in doubts.
Before I started to practice, I thought to myself, ''The
Buddhist
religion is here, available for all, and yet why do only some people
practice while others don't? Or if they do practice, they do so only
for a short while and then give up. Or again those who don't give
it up still don't knuckle down and do the practice. Why is this?''
So I resolved to myself, ''Okay... I'll give up this body and mind
for this lifetime and try to follow the teaching of the Buddha down
to the last detail. I'll reach understanding in this very lifetime...
because if I don't I'll still be sunk in suffering. I'll let go of
everything else and make a determined effort, no matter how much
difficulty
or suffering I have to endure, I'll persevere. If I don't do it I'll
just keep on doubting.''
Thinking like this I got down to practice. No matter how much
happiness,
suffering or difficulty I had to endure I would do it. I looked on
my whole life as if it was only one day and a night. I gave it up.
''I'll follow the teaching of the Buddha, I'll follow the Dhamma
to understanding - why is this world of delusion so wretched?''
I wanted to know, I wanted to master the teaching, so I turned to
the practice of Dhamma.
How much of the worldly life do we monastics renounce? If we
have
gone forth for good then it means we renounce it all, there's nothing
we don't renounce. All the things of the world that people enjoy are
cast off: sights, sounds, smells, tastes and feelings... we throw
them all away. And yet we experience them. So Dhamma practicers must
be content with little and remain detached. Whether in regard to
speech,
in eating or whatever, we must be easily satisfied: eat simply, sleep
simply, live simply. Just like they say, ''an ordinary person,''
one who lives simply. The more you practice the more you will be able
to take satisfaction in your practice. You will see into your own
heart.
The Dhamma is paccattam, you must know it
for yourself.
To know for yourself means to practice for yourself. You can depend
on a teacher only fifty percent of the way. Even the teaching I have
given you today is completely useless in itself, even if it is worth
hearing. But if you were to believe it all just because I said so
you wouldn't be using the teaching properly.
If you believed me completely then you'd be foolish. To hear
the teaching,
see its benefit, put it into practice for yourself, see it within
yourself, do it yourself... this is much more useful. You will then
know the taste of Dhamma for yourself.
This is why the Buddha didn't talk about the fruits of the
practice
in much detail, because it's something one can't convey in words.
It would be like trying to describe different colors to a person blind
from birth, ''Oh, it's so white,'' or ''it's bright yellow,''
for instance. You couldn't convey those colors to them. You could
try but it wouldn't serve much purpose.
The Buddha brings it back down to the individual - see clearly
for
yourself. If you see clearly for yourself you will have clear proof
within yourself. Whether standing, walking, sitting or reclining you
will be free of doubt. Even if someone were to say, ''Your practice
isn't right, it's all wrong'', still you would be unmoved, because
you have your own proof.
A practicer of the Dhamma must be like this wherever he goes.
Others
can't tell you, you must know for yourself. Sammā-ditthi,
right view, must be there. The practice must be like this for every
one of us. To do the real practice like this for even one month out
of five or ten rains retreats would be rare.
Our sense organs must be constantly working. Know content and
discontent,
be aware of like and dislike. Know appearance and know transcendence.
The apparent and the transcendent must be realized simultaneously.
Good and evil must be seen as co-existent, arising together. This
is the fruit of the Dhamma practice.
So whatever is useful to yourself and to others, whatever
practice
benefits both yourself and others, is called ''following the Buddha.''
I've talked about this often. The things which should be done, people
seem to neglect. For example, the work in the monastery, the standards
of practice and so on. I've talked about them often and yet people
don't seem to put their hearts into it. Some don't know, some are
lazy and can't be bothered, some are simply scattered and confused.
But that's a cause for wisdom to arise. If we go to places
where none
of these things arise, what would we see? Take food, for instance.
If food doesn't have any taste is it delicious? If a person is deaf
will he hear anything? If you don't perceive anything will you have
anything to contemplate? If there are no problems will there be
anything
to solve? Think of the practice in this way.
Once I went to live up north. At that time I was living with
many
monks, all of them elderly but newly ordained, with only two or three
rains retreats. At the time I had ten rains. Living with those old
monks I decided to perform the various duties - receiving their bowls,
washing their robes, emptying their spittoons and so on. I didn't
think in terms of doing it for any particular individual, I simply
maintained my practice. If others didn't do the duties I'd do them
myself. I saw it as a good opportunity for me to gain merit. It made
me feel good and gave me a sense of satisfaction.
On the uposatha7 days I
knew the required duties. I'd go and clean out the uposatha
hall and set out water for washing and drinking. The others didn't
know anything about the duties, they just watched. I didn't criticize
them, because they didn't know. I did the duties myself, and having
done them I felt pleased with myself, I had inspiration and a lot
of energy in my practice.
Whenever I could do something in the monastery, whether in my
own
kuti or others', if it was dirty, I'd clean up. I
didn't
do it for anyone in particular, I didn't do it to impress anyone,
I simply did it to maintain a good practice. Cleaning a kuti
or dwelling place is just like cleaning rubbish out of your own mind.
Now this is something all of you should bear in mind. You
don't have
to worry about harmony, it will automatically be there. Live together
with Dhamma, with peace and restraint, train your mind to be like
this and no problems will arise. If there is heavy work to be done
everybody helps out and in no long time the work is done, it gets
taken care of quite easily. That's the best way.
I have come across some other types, though... although I used
it
as an opportunity to grow. For instance, living in a big monastery,
the monks and novices may agree among themselves to wash robes on
a certain day. I'd go and boil up the jackfruit wood8.
Now there'd be some monks who'd wait for someone else to boil up
the jackfruit wood and then come along and wash their robes, take
them back to their kutis, hang them out and then
take
a nap. They didn't have to set up the fire, didn't have to clean up
afterwards... they thought they were on a good thing, that they were
being clever. This is the height of stupidity. These people are just
increasing their own stupidity because they don't do anything, they
leave all the work up to others. They wait till everything is ready
then come along and make use of it, it's easy for them. This is just
adding to one's foolishness. Those actions serve no useful purpose
whatsoever to them.
Some people think foolishly like this. They shirk the required
duties
and think that this is being clever, but it is actually very foolish.
If we have that sort of attitude we won't last.
Therefore, whether speaking, eating or doing anything
whatsoever,
reflect on yourself. You may want to live comfortably, eat comfortably,
sleep comfortably and so on, but you can't. What have we come here
for? If we regularly reflect on this we will be heedful, we won't
forget, we will be constantly alert. Being alert like this you will
put forth effort in all postures. If you don't put forth effort things
go quite differently... Sitting, you sit like you're in the town,
walking, you walk like you're in the town... you just want to go and
play around in the town with the lay people.
If there is no effort in the practice the mind will tend in
that direction.
You don't oppose and resist your mind, you just allow it to waft along
the wind of your moods. This is called following one's moods. Like
a child, if we indulge all its wants will it be a good child? If the
parents indulge all their child's wishes is that good? Even if they
do indulge it somewhat at first, by the time it can speak they may
start to occasionally spank it because they're afraid it'll end up
stupid. The training of our mind must be like this. You have to know
yourself and how to train yourself. If you don't know how to train
your own mind, waiting around expecting someone else to train it for
you, you'll end up in trouble.
So don't think that you can't practice in this place. Practice
has
no limits. Whether standing, walking, sitting or lying down, you can
always practice. Even while sweeping the monastery grounds or seeing
a beam of sunlight, you can realize the Dhamma. But you must have
sati at hand. Why so? Because you can realize the
Dhamma
at any time at all, in any place, if you ardently meditate.
Don't be heedless. Be watchful, be alert. While walking on
almsround
there are all sorts of feelings arising, and it's all good Dhamma.
When you get back to the monastery and are eating your food there's
plenty of good Dhamma for you to look into. If you have constant effort
all these things will be objects for contemplation, there will be
wisdom, you will see the Dhamma. This is called dhamma-vicaya,
reflecting on Dhamma. It's one of the enlightenment factors9.
If there is sati, recollection, there will be dhamma-vicaya
as a result. These are factors of enlightenment. If we have
recollection
then we won't simply take it easy, there will also be inquiry into
Dhamma. These things become factors for realizing the Dhamma.
If we have reached this stage then our practice will know
neither
day or night, it will continue on regardless of the time of day. There
will be nothing to taint the practice, or if there is we will
immediately
know it. Let there be dhamma-vicaya within our
minds constantly,
looking into Dhamma. If our practice has entered the flow the mind
will tend to be like this. It won't go off after other things... ''I
think I'll go for a trip over there, or perhaps this other place...
over in that province should be interesting....'' That's the way
of the world. Not long and the practice will die.
So resolve yourselves. It's not just by sitting with your eyes
closed
that you develop wisdom. Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, body and mind are
constantly with us, so be constantly alert. Study constantly. Seeing
trees or animals can all be occasions for study. Bring it all inwards.
See clearly within your own heart. If some sensation makes impact
on the heart, witness it clearly for yourself, don't simply disregard
it.
Take a simple comparison: baking bricks. Have you ever seen a
brick-baking
oven? They build the fire up about two or three feet in front of the
oven, then the smoke all gets drawn into it. Looking at this
illustration
you can more clearly understand the practice. Making a brick kiln
in the right way you have to make the fire so that all the smoke gets
drawn inside, none is left over. All the heat goes into the oven,
and the job gets done quickly.
We Dhamma practicers should experience things in this way. All
our
feelings will be drawn inwards to be turned into right view. Seeing
sights, hearing sounds, smelling odors, tasting flavors and so on,
the mind draws them all inward to be converted into right view. Those
feelings thus become experiences which give rise to wisdom.
Best way from https://sites.google.com/site/smartdhamma/bhavana_key_lp_cha
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