by Venerable Acariya Maha Boowa Ñanasampanno
Translated from the Thai
In the
basic principles of the doctrine, we are taught that, 'A delight in
the Dhamma surpasses all other delights. The flavor of the Dhamma
surpasses all other flavors.' This statement was made by a person
who had felt delight in the true Dhamma, who had tasted the flavor
of the true Dhamma: namely, our Lord Buddha. For this reason, those
who take an interest in listening to his teachings find that no
matter what the statement, each word, each sentence goes straight to
the heart — except, of course, for people who are simply going
through the motions of listening without focusing the mind, letting
it drift engrossed in various things in line with its original
inclinations without gaining anything of any worth.
The
teachings of the religion have no meaning in a mind of this sort
until it turns to the Dhamma, develops an interest of its own
accord, and puts the Dhamma into practice. Only then will the flavor
of the Dhamma seep deep into the heart, nurturing it and giving rise
to conviction step by step. This is because the heart now has a
continuing basis for the Dhamma that supports it in ascending
stages.
In
particular, when listening to Dhamma dealing with the practice, if
our mind doesn't have any experience with meditation, has never
taken an interest in the Dhamma, has never taken an interest in
practicing the Dhamma, then not even a single statement will arrest
the attention. When listening to a talk on the practice dealing with
the stages of the mind, the progress of the mind, setting the mind
aright in relationship to the defilements or to the path —
mindfulness and discernment, or persistent effort — we won't
understand. When we don't understand, we become frustrated and turn
our attention elsewhere. Perhaps we may become drowsy and want to go
to sleep or something of the sort. The talk seems long because it
acts as a drag on our defilements, preventing them from roaming
around as they please. This is because we have to keep control over
the mind while we listen to the talk; and the mind, when kept under
control in this way, feels hemmed in, imprisoned within limits it
finds oppressive. Annoyed and bored, it doesn't want to listen,
except for the purpose of creating useless issues for entangling
itself.
But
when we keep listening with interest, meditating even while we
listen, the mind becomes focused and follows along with the stream
of Dhamma being explained. The mind grows still because the
awareness making contact with the Dhamma maintains that contact
continuously, step by step, without break. The heart has no chance
to slip away to any other preoccupations that are its enemies while
listening, and so it's able to settle down and be still.
To be
able to settle down in this way is to begin building a base, or to
scrub our vessel — the heart — making it clean and fit to receive
the Dhamma. The heart will start growing more peaceful and calm,
seeing the value of listening to the Dhamma as explained by the
Buddha: 'Listening to the Dhamma has five rewards.' The fifth reward
is the important one: 'The mind of the listener becomes radiant and
calm.' This one is very important, but it must build on the earlier
ones. 'The listener hears things he or she has never heard' — this
is the basis for the rest.
Suppose
that we have never listened to anything in the way of the practice
or whatever. When we come to listen, we gain an understanding of
things we have never heard before. Things that we have heard
before, but never understood clearly, we gradually come to
understand more and more clearly. We can bring our views more
correctly into line. And finally we reach the stage where 'the mind
of the listener becomes radiant and calm.' When results of this sort
appear, a delight in the Dhamma will develop of its own accord. The
flavor of the Dhamma will begin to appear while we listen and while
the mind is stilling itself to listen. Even though this flavor may
not yet surpass all others, it is nevertheless absorbing and
arresting, and will remain long in the memory, not easily erased.
This is
why meditators place great importance on listening to the Dhamma. If
you were to call it being attached to one's teacher, I wouldn't
disagree. Meditating monks always like to listen to their teachers.
If they have a teacher they venerate and revere in the area of
meditation, in the area of the mind, then wherever he lives they
will keep coming to be with him until there is hardly enough room
for them to stay.
Venerable Acariya Mun is an example. Wherever he stayed, students
would come continually from near and far to search him out. Even
though they couldn't all stay in the same place with him, inasmuch
as there wasn't enough room, they would still be willing to stay in
nearby areas, two, three, four, or seven to eight kilometers away,
so that they might conveniently come to hear his teachings on the
uposatha days and 'Dhamma meeting' days.
On the
uposatha days, after listening to the Patimokkha and to his
instructions, anyone who had any doubts or questions about the
Dhamma could ask him to resolve them. For this reason, the township
where he stayed was filled with nothing but meditating monks and
novices. When uposatha day came, they would begin gathering
together after the morning meal. At 1:00 p.m. they would hear the
Patimokkha; and after the Patimokkha, Venerable Acariya Mun would
give his talk — that's when he'd usually give his talk, after the
Patimokkha. This would be an important part of the practice for
those who lived with him. During the Rains Retreat (vassa) we
would meet like this every seven days. Outside of the Rains Retreat,
the schedule wasn't too fixed, but this is how he would usually
schedule things for those of us who stayed directly with him. Each
time we would listen to his talks we would gain in insight and
understanding — without fail. This is why meditation monks are
attached to their teachers.
Each
time we would listen to him, he himself would be like a magnet
drawing the interest of the monks and novices. In all things related
to the Dhamma, he would be the major attracting force, inspiring
fascination and delight in the Dhamma. There was a delight in seeing
him and meeting him each time, and even more so in hearing him speak
— talking in general, giving instructions, conversing about ordinary
things, joking — because he himself was entirely Dhamma.
Everything he would do or say in any way would keep revealing Dhamma
and reasonability that could be taken as a lesson, so that those who
were interested could gain a lesson each time they heard him.
This is
why meditating monks find a great deal of enjoyment in the area of
the Dhamma by living with a meditation master. They go to be with
him of their own accord. When they are far from him, and their minds
aren't yet to the stage where they can look after themselves, they
are bound to feel lonesome. Or if they come across a problem they
can't solve, they are sure to miss him. If they can't work out a
solution, they have to run to him for advice so as to save a great
deal of the time it would take to figure out a solution on their own
— because he has been through everything of every sort. If we would
take a problem to him, then as soon as we had finished the last
sentence, he would immediately have the solution and we would
understand right then and there.
This is
why, when living with a master who has realized the truth, there's
no delay, no waste of time in dealing with each problem as it
arises. This is a great benefit for those who come to study with
him. They're never disappointed. The fact that one who has seen the
truth is giving the explanation makes all the difference.
A
moment ago I began by mentioning a delight in the Dhamma. What I
have just been talking about is the same sort of thing: finding
pleasure in the Dhamma, continual pleasure, through listening to it
constantly. In the same way, when we practice the Dhamma constantly,
the results — the flavor and nourishment that come from the practice
— increase continually, becoming more and more solid and substantial
in the heart.
Especially in the practice of centering the mind: The mind is calm,
tranquil, contented, and relaxed. Its thoughts don't go meddling
with anything outside. It's as if the world didn't exist, because
our attention isn't involved with it. There's simply the Dhamma to
be contemplated and practiced so as to give rise to more and more
steadiness and strength.
And on
the level of discernment, no matter how broad or narrow our
investigation of the many phenomena in the world may be, it is
exclusively for the sake of the Dhamma, for the sake of
self-liberation. We thus become thoroughly engrossed, day and night.
The more strongly our heart is set on the Dhamma, the greater its
stamina and courage. It has no concern for life itself, no worries
about its living conditions or anything external. Its only support
is the guiding compass of the Dhamma. Whether we are sitting, lying
down, or whatever, the heart is engrossed in its persistent efforts
in practicing the Dhamma. On the level of concentration, it is
engrossed in its stillness of mind. On the level of discernment, it
is engrossed in its explorations of the Dhamma from various angles
for the sake of removing defilement, step by step, as it
investigates.
Peace
of heart is thus possible in each stage of persisting with the
practice. The more quiet and secluded the place, the more
conspicuously this awareness stands out. Even knowledge in the area
of concentration stands out in our inner awareness. It stands out
for its stillness. In the area of discernment, our knowledge stands
out for the shrewdness and ingenuity of the mind as it explores
without ceasing — except when resting in the stillness of
concentration — just as water from an artesian well flows without
ceasing during both the wet season and the dry.
When
phenomena make contact with the mind — or even when they don't — a
mind already inclined to discernment is bound to investigate,
peering into every nook and cranny, gaining understanding step by
step. For example, when we are first taught mindfulness immersed in
the body (kayagata-sati), it seems superficial — because the
mind is superficial. It has no footing, no mindfulness, no
discernment. It hasn't any principles — any Dhamma — to hold to.
Whatever it hears doesn't really go straight to the heart, because
the mind is buried way down there, deep under the belly of
defilement.
But
once it develops principles and reasonability within itself, then —
especially when we're sitting in meditation in a quiet place,
investigating the body — the whole body seems clear all the way
through. That's how it really feels to a person meditating on this
level. It's really enthralling. Whether we're contemplating the skin
or the body's unattractiveness, it appears extremely clear, because
that's the way its nature already is — simply that our mind hasn't
fallen in step with the truth and so is constantly taking issue with
it.
So. Now
that the mind can develop stillness and investigate using its
discernment, let's take it on a meditation tour, exploring the body:
our five khandhas. We can travel up to the head, down to the
feet, out to the skin, into the muscles, tendons, and bones to see
how all the parts are related and connected by their nature.
As the
mind contemplates in this way, step by step, as it gets engrossed in
its investigation, the final result is that even though we're
investigating the body, the body doesn't appear in our inner sense
of feeling at all. The mind feels airy and light. The physical body
disappears, despite the fact that we continue investigating the
mental image of the body as before. Even though we're using the
mental image of the body as the focal point of our investigation,
the physical aspect of the body no longer appears. It completely
vanishes. We investigate until there's a refinement in the mind's
sense of awareness to the point where we can make the body in the
image die and disintegrate, step by step. Our awareness is confined
solely to the mental image that we are investigating by means of
discernment. We see it distinctly because nothing else is coming in
to interfere.
The
mind feels no hunger or desire to go skipping outside. It's
completely engrossed in its work of investigation. Its understanding
grows clearer and clearer. The clearer its understanding, the
greater its fascination. Ultimately there is simply the mental
image, or the idea, and the mind, or discernment. As for the actual
body, it disappears. You don't know where it's gone. There's no
sense of the body at that moment, even though you are investigating
the body until you see its condition disintegrating clearly within
the mind — disintegrating until it returns to its original condition
as the elements of earth, water, wind, and fire. Once the body in
the image returns to its original elements, the mind then withdraws
inward, leaving nothing but simple awareness.
Feelings all disappear at this stage. Sañña, sankhara, and
viññana aren't involved. There's simply awareness, sufficient
for the mind's state at that moment. It enters a really solid
stillness, leaving only simple awareness. The body sitting here
disappears entirely.
This is
something that can occur in the course of investigating, but
please don't plan on it. Simply listen now for the sake of
becoming absorbed and gladdened while listening. This will give rise
to the benefits of listening that you will actually see for
yourself.
What
will happen when you investigate in line with your own personal
traits is a completely individual matter that will appear in keeping
with your temperament. As for what occurs with other people, you
can't make yourself experience what they do, know the way they know,
or see the way they see. This is something that depends on each
person's individual traits. Let things follow your own inner nature
in line with the way you are able to investigate and to know.
This is
one point I want to explain.
A
second point: When investigating the body in terms of inconstancy,
stress, and not-self, then — whether or not you think, 'inconstancy,
stress, and not-self' — when discernment makes clear contact with
the bodily khandha, it will be able to know these things on
its own, because things that are inconstant, stressful, and not-self
are things that deserve to be relinquished, that inspire dispassion
and disenchantment, step by step, until you let go. When the mind
has investigated so that it fully understands, it lets go of its own
accord without being forced, because each part, each aspect of the
body or of the khandha being investigated is simply an
individual truth. When the mind investigates clearly in this way, it
makes the break automatically, because a truth has encountered a
truth: The mind is the mind, and each of these individual conditions
is a separate condition that hasn't come to involve itself with the
mind at all. The mind will then turn around to see its own fault in
being attached. 'Here I've really been deluded. Actually things are
like this and this.' This is one stage: When the mind hasn't yet
made a complete break — when it doesn't yet have adequate strength —
it will start out by knowing at intervals in this way.
The
next time you investigate, you know in this way again and it keeps
seeping in, seeping in, until your knowledge on this level becomes
adequate and lets go. Like duckweed that keeps moving in, moving in
to cover the water: After you spread it apart, the duckweed comes
moving in again, and you spread it apart again. This is how it is
when discernment investigates these things, making forays into these
things or unraveling them. As soon as discernment retreats, subtle
defilements come moving in again, but after you have investigated
many, many times, the duckweed — the various types of defilement —
begins to thin out. Your investigation of these phenomena becomes
more and more effortless, more and more proficient, more and more
subtle, step by step, until it reaches a point of sufficiency and
the mind extricates itself automatically, as I have already
explained.
The
mind — when its mindfulness and discernment are sufficiently strong
— can extricate itself once and for all. This knowledge is clear to
it, without any need to ask anyone else ever again. The heart is
sufficient, in and of itself, and sees clearly as 'sanditthiko'
in the full sense of the term, as proclaimed by the Dhamma, without
any issues to invite contradiction.
A third
point: Sometimes, when investigating the body, the mind makes
contact with a feeling of pain, and so turns to investigate it. This
all depends on the mind's temperament. In the same way, when we turn
to investigate the feeling, the mind sends us back to the body. This
is because the body and the feeling are interrelated and so must be
investigated together at the same time, depending on what comes
naturally to us at that particular time, that particular feeling,
and that particular part of the body.
When
the mind investigates a feeling of pain, the pain is nothing more
than 'a pain.' The mind looks at it, fixes its attention on it,
examines it, and then lets it go right there, turning to look at the
body. The body is the body. The feeling is a feeling. Then we turn
to look at the mind: The mind is the mind. We investigate and
experiment to find the truth of the body, the feeling, and the mind
— all three of which are the troublemakers — until we have a solid
understanding of how each has its own separate reality.
When
the mind pulls back from the body and the feeling, neither the body
nor the feeling appears. All that appears is simple awareness. When
a mental current flashes out to know, the feeling then appears as a
feeling. These currents are the means by which we know what
phenomenon has appeared, because this knowledge gives a meaning or a
label to the phenomenon as being like this or like that.
If
we're going to think in a way that binds us to 'ourself' — in other
words, in the way of the origin of stress — we have to make use of
this act of labeling as what leads us to grasp, to become attached,
to make various assumptions and interpretations. If we're going to
think in the way of discernment, we have to make use of the
discernment that is this very same current of the mind to
investigate, contemplate, until we see clearly by means of
discernment and can withdraw inwardly in a way that is full of
reason — not in a way that is lazy or weak, or that is groveling in
abject surrender with no gumption left to fight.
In
investigating feeling, when a sañña flashes out, mindfulness
is alert to it. If our investigation of feeling has become refined
and precise, then when a sañña simply flashes out, we know.
When sankharas form, they are just like fireflies: blip! If
no sañña labels them or picks up where they leave off, they
simply form — blip! blip! — and then vanish, vanish. No matter what
they form — good thoughts, bad thoughts, crude thoughts, subtle
thoughts, neutral thoughts, whatever — they are simply a rippling of
the mind. If they occur on their own, when nothing is making contact
with the mind, they're called sankhara. If they occur when
something is making contact, they're called viññana.
Here
we're talking about the sankharas that form on their own,
without anything else being involved. They form — blip — and then
vanish immediately. Blip — and then vanish immediately. We can see
this clearly when the mind converges snugly in the subtle levels of
concentration and discernment.
The
snugness of the mind's convergence won't have anything else involved
with it at all. All that remains is simple awareness. When this
simple awareness remains stable this way, we will see clearly that
it isn't paired with anything else. When the mind begins to withdraw
from this state to return to its awareness of phenomena — returning
to its ordinary state of mind that can think and form thoughts —
there will be a rippling — blip — that vanishes immediately. It will
then be empty as before. In a moment it will 'blip' again. The mind
will form just a flash of a thought that doesn't yet amount to
anything, just a rippling that vanishes immediately the instant it's
known. As soon as there's a rippling, we are alert to it because of
the power of mindfulness keeping watch at the moment — or because of
the strength of concentration that hasn't yet dissipated. But after
these ripples have formed two or three times, they come more and
more frequently, and soon we return to ordinary consciousness, just
as when a baby awakens from sleep: At first it fidgets a bit, and
then after this happens a number of times, it finally opens its
eyes.
The
same is true of the mind. It has calm... Here I'm talking about
concentration when discernment is there with it. The various ways of
investigating I have mentioned are all classed as discernment. When
we have investigated enough, the mind enters stillness, free from
mental formations and fashionings and from any sort of disturbance.
All that appears is awareness. Even just this has the full flavor of
a centered mind, which should already be enough to surpass all other
flavors. We never tire of delighting in this stillness. We feel a
constant attraction to this stillness and calm in the heart.
Wherever we go, wherever we stay, the mind has its own foundation.
The heart is at ease, quiet and calm, so that now we must use
discernment to investigate the elements and khandhas.
The
important point to notice is the act of formation in the mind. Once
something is formed, sañña immediately labels it — as if
sankhara were forming things to hand on to sañña, which
takes up where the sankhara leaves off. It then interprets
these things from various angles — and this is where we get deluded.
We fall for our own assumptions and interpretations, for our own
shadows, which paint picture stories that have us engrossed or upset
both day and night. Why are we engrossed? Why are we upset?
Engrossed or upset, it's because of the mind's shadows acting out
stories and issues. This story. That story. Future issues. Things
yet to come. Things yet to exist — nothing but the mind
painting pictures to delude itself. We live in our
thought-formations, our picture-painting — engrossed and upset by
nothing but our own thought-formations, our own picture-painting. In
a single day there's not a moment when we're free from painting
imaginary pictures to agitate and fool ourselves. Wise people,
though, can keep up with the tricks and deceits of the khandhas,
which is why they aren't deluded.
The
moment when mindfulness and discernment really penetrate down is
when we can know that this is actually the way the mind usually is.
Like people who have never meditated: When they start meditating,
they send their minds astray, without anything to hold on to. For
example, they may have a meditation word, like 'buddho,' and
there they sit — their eyes vacant, looking at who-knows-what. But
their minds are thinking and painting 108 pictures with endless
captions. They then become engrossed with them or wander aimlessly
in line with the preoccupations they invent for themselves, falling
for their preoccupations more than actually focusing on their
meditation. They thus find it hard to settle their minds down
because they don't have enough mindfulness supervising the work of
meditation to make them settle down.
Once we
have used our alertness and ingenuity in the areas of concentration
and discernment, we will come to know clearly that these conditions
come from the mind and then delude the mind whose mindfulness and
discernment aren't quick enough to keep up with them. The heart
causes us to follow after them deludedly, so that we can't find any
peace of mind at all, even though our original aim was to meditate
to find peace of mind. These deceptive thoughts engender love, hate,
anger, irritation, without letup, no matter whether we are
meditators or not — because as meditators we haven't set up
mindfulness to supervise our hearts, and the result is that we're
just as insane with our thoughts as anyone else. Old Grandfather
Boowa has been insane this way himself, and that's no joke!
Sometimes, no matter how many years in the past a certain issue may
lie, this aimless, drifting heart wanders until it meets up with it
and revives it. If it was something that made us sad, we become sad
about it again, all on our own. We keep it smoldering and think it
back to life, even though we don't know where the issue lay hidden
in the meantime. These are simply the mind's own shadows deceiving
it until they seem to take on substance and shape. As what? As
anger, greed, anxiety, pain, insanity, all coming from these
shadows. What sort of 'path' or 'fruition' is this? Paths and
fruitions like this are so heaped all over the world that we can't
find any way out.
So in
investigating the acts of the mind, the important point is that
discernment be quick to keep up with their vagrant ways. When
mindfulness and discernment are quick enough, then whatever forms in
the mind, we will see that it comes from the mind itself, which is
about to paint pictures to deceive itself, about to label and
interpret sights, sounds, smells, and tastes of various kinds. The
heart is then up on these preoccupations; and when it is up on them,
they vanish immediately, with no chance of taking on substance or
shape, of becoming issues or affairs. This is because mindfulness
and discernment are wise to them, and so the issues are resolved.
Ultimately, we come to see the harm of which the mind is the sole
cause. We don't praise or blame sights, sounds, smells, tastes,
or tactile sensations at all. The heart turns and sees the harm that
arises in the mind that deceives itself, saying, 'That's worth
praising... worth criticizing... worth getting glad about... worth
getting sad about.' It sees that the blame lies entirely with the
mind. This mind is a cheat, a fraud, a deceiver. If we study it and
keep watch of its ways through meditation, we will gain a thorough
knowledge of its good and evil doings, until it lies within our
grasp and can't escape us at all.
This is
how we investigate when we investigate the mind.
Ultimately, other things will come to have no meaning or importance
for us. The only important thing is this deceiving mind, so we must
investigate this deceiver with mindfulness and discernment so that
we can be wise to its tricks and deceits.
In
fixing our attention on the mind, we have to act as if it were a
culprit. Wherever it goes, we have to keep watch on it with
mindfulness and discernment. Whatever thoughts it forms, mindfulness
and discernment have to keep watch so as to be up on events. Each
event — serious or not — keeps vanishing, vanishing. The heart knows
clearly, 'This mind, and nothing else, is the real culprit.'
Visual
objects aren't at fault. They don't give benefits or harm. Sounds,
smells, tastes, and tactile sensations don't give benefits or harm,
because they themselves aren't benefits or harm. Only the mind is
what fashions them and dresses them up so as to deceive itself into
being gladdened or saddened, pleased or pained through the power of
the preoccupations that arise only from the heart. Mindfulness and
discernment see more and more clearly into these things, step by
step, and then turn to see that all the fault lies with the mind.
They no longer praise or blame other things as they used to. Once
they have focused solely on the mind, which at the moment is the
culprit, the time won't be long before they can catch the culprit
and put an end to all our concerns.
So
then. Whatever thoughts that may be formed are all an affair of the
mind. The 'tigers and elephants' it forms are simply sankharas
it produces to deceive itself. Mindfulness and discernment are up on
events every time. Now the current of the cycle (vatta) keeps
spiraling in, day by day, until we can catch the culprit — but we
can't yet sentence him. We are now in the stage of deliberation to
determine his guilt. Only when we can establish the evidence and the
motive can we execute him in accordance with the procedures of
'Dhamma Penetration.' This is where we reach the crucial stage in
mindfulness and discernment.
In the
beginning, we used the elements and khandhas as our objects
of investigation, cleansing the mind with elements, using them as a
whetstone to sharpen mindfulness and discernment. We cleansed the
mind with sights, sounds, smells, tastes, and tactile sensations,
using them as a whetstone to sharpen mindfulness and discernment;
and we cleansed the mind itself with automatic mindfulness and
discernment. Now at this stage we circle exclusively in on the mind.
We don't pay attention to matters of sights, sounds, smells, or
tastes, because we have already understood and let go of them,
knowing that they aren't the causal factors. They aren't as
important as this mind, which is the primary instigator — the
culprit renowned throughout the circles of the cycle, the agitator,
the disturber of the peace, creating havoc for itself only right
here inside.
Mindfulness and discernment probe inward and focus right here.
Wherever this mind goes, it's the only thing causing harm. So we
watch patiently over this culprit to see what he will do next — and
aside from being alert to what he will do, we also have to use
discernment to penetrate in and see who is inciting him. Who stands
behind him, so that he must be constantly committing crimes? He
keeps creating deceptive issues without pause — why?
Mindfulness and discernment dig in there, not simply to pounce on or
lay siege to his behavior, but also to go right into his lair to see
what motivating force lies within it. What is the real instigator?
There has to be a cause. If there's no cause, no supporting
condition to spin the mind into action, the mind can't simply act on
its own.
If it
simply acts on its own, then it has to be a matter of khandhas
pure and simple — but here it's not pure and simple. Whatever
behavior the mind displays, whatever issues it forms, all give rise
to gladness or sadness. This shows that these conditions aren't
'simply' coming out. There's a cause. There's an underlying
condition that sends them out, making them give rise to real
pleasure and pain when we fall for them.
While
we are exploring inward at this point, we have already seen that the
mind is the culprit, so we must consider letting go of all external
things. Our burdens grow less and less. There remain only the issues
of the mind and the issues of formation and interpretation that
arise solely from the mind. Mindfulness and discernment spin
whizzing around in there and ultimately come to know what it is that
causes the mind to form so many thoughts giving rise to love, anger,
and hate. As soon as it appears, the heart knows it; and when the
heart knows it, the 'Lord of Conventional Reality,' which is blended
with the mind, dissolves away.
At this
point the cycle has been destroyed through mindfulness and
discernment. The mind is no longer guilty, and turns into a mind
absolutely pure. Once the problem of the cycle is ended, there is no
way that we can find fault with the mind. When we could find
fault, that was because the fault was still in the mind. It was
hiding in the mind. Just as when criminals or enemies have taken up
hiding in a cave: We have to destroy the cave as well, and can't
conserve it out of affection for it.
Avijja — unawareness — is the lord of the three levels of
existence that has infiltrated the mind, and thus we have to
consider destroying the entire thing. If the mind isn't genuine, it
will dissolve together with unawareness. If it's genuine in line
with its nature, it will become a pure mind — something peerless —
because all things counterfeit have fallen away from it through the
use of mindfulness and discernment.
When
the counterfeit things that are like rust latching firmly onto the
mind finally dissolve away through the power of mindfulness and
discernment, the mind becomes genuine Dhamma. You can call it 'the
genuine mind' or 'the genuine Dhamma': There's no contradiction,
because there is no more reason for contradiction, which is an
affair of defilement. You can say 100% that the flavor of the Dhamma
has surpassed all other flavors. When the mind is pure Dhamma, it
has had enough of all other things. It is absolutely no longer
involved with anything else at all. It's one mind, one Dhamma. There
is only one. There is only one genuine Dhamma. The mind is Dhamma,
the Dhamma is the mind. That's all that can be said.
I ask
each of you to take this and contemplate it. This is the basis for
the truth of the teachings that the Lord Buddha taught from the
beginning until the moment of his total nibbana. The purity
of his mind was a deeply felt Dhamma that he experienced with his
full heart. He then proclaimed that Dhamma, with the benevolence of
his full heart, teaching the world up to the present.
To call
his teachings, 'the benevolence of the Lord Buddha' shouldn't be
wrong, because he taught the world with true benevolence. When we
take those teachings and put them into practice in a way that goes
straight to the heart, we will come to see things we have never seen
before, never known before, within this heart, step by step, until
we reach the full level of practice, know the full level of
knowledge, and gain release from suffering and stress with our full
hearts, with nothing left latching on. This is called wiping out the
cemeteries — the birth and death of the body and mind — for good.
What a relief!
And now
that we've reached this point, I don't know what more to say,
because I'm at a loss for words. I ask that you as meditators
practice, train yourselves and explore all Dhammas until you too are
at a loss of words like this speaker at his wits' end. Even though
we may be stupid, infinitely stupid, I'll ask to express my
admiration straight from the heart.
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