By:- The Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw
The Dhamma
One Truth
Indeed, truth must be one and indivisible. This must be borne in mind. Nowadays, when Buddha-dhamma is being disseminated, there should be only one basis of teaching relating to the Middle Way or the Eightfold Path: the practice of morality, concentration, and acquisition of profound knowledge, and the Four Noble Truths. But if one were preaching that the aims and objects of Buddhism can be achieved without recourse to the actual practice of the Dhamma, we should understand that such a one has strayed from the Path.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Need for Practice
In these days there have cropped up misstatements running counter to what Buddha actually taught. Knowledge, it is said, is accomplishment; and there is no need for anyone to practice Dhamma once knowledge has been attained. Such a statement virtually amounts to the rejection of the practice of the Dhamma, to the exclusion of the Noble Eightfold Path. But in point of fact, the Noble Eightfold Path is to be constantly practiced, for it is a set of disciplines to be cultivated (bhavetabba) which can generate the power to gain insight into the nature of the Path. Without effort, nothing comes up naturally. And yet there is a school of thought which wrongly suggests that making an effort itself is dukkha or unsatisfactoriness, and that therefore, it should not be indulged in. In the face of such dogma who will be prepared to take the trouble of meditating upon the Noble Eightfold Path and practice its tenets? If there is no one to practice this Dhamma, how can its light shine within him? And in the absence of any insight into the nature of the Path, how can one eliminate defilements and attain Nibbanic peace?
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Path in Three Stages
Good Buddhists are in the habit of wishing for realization and attainment of Nibbana whenever they accomplish any meritorious deed. The summum bonum will not, of course, be attained immediately by their mere wishing. It will be attained only in one of the higher planes which they will reach by virtue of their good deeds; and then only if they actually practice developing the Eightfold Path. So, why wait till future existence? Why not start now and work for liberation in this very life?
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Putting Knowledge into Practice
According to the Buddha, knowledge relating to the Noble Path transports one to the stage where all suffering or unsatisfactoriness ceases. But it must always be borne in mind that the Path offers salvation only to those who actually practice it.
In your travels a vehicle takes you to your destination while those who stand by it are left behind. Knowledge about the Noble Path is like that vehicle. If you ride in it, you will be conveyed to your destination; and if you merely stand by it, you will be left behind. Those who desire to be liberated from all sufferings should use that vehicle. That is to say they should use knowledge they gained for practical purposes. The most important task for you while you are born into this Buddha Sasana is to practice Dhamma so that you reach Nibbana, where all sufferings cease.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The True Faith
The theory of rejection of kamma is gradually gaining more favorable attention because people's greed (lobha) is increasing and their hankering after sensual pleasures is making a corresponding increase. Nowadays, there are some who are of the opinion that if one avoids evil deeds, one will not achieve any useful purpose. That view leads people to these false faiths.
The ignorance of kamma and its effect that is becoming rife now, is the result of overwhelming greed (lobha) superimposed by delusion (moha).
The Buddha himself realized this and so he urged people to make efforts to reduce the volume of greed and delusion. Faithful disciples will follow the Buddha's directions and try to reach realization through meditational practice, and thus free themselves from these false faiths. They come to realize that the kamma of the previous existences had made them what they are in the present existence, and the kamma of the present existence, if not yet free of craving (tanha), will determine the state of the next existence. Thus, they confirm their belief in the true faith.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Deities' Dissatisfaction
Do not have the impression that if one becomes a celestial being owing to one's good deeds, one gets to a place where every wish is fulfilled and one does not need to have any more wishes; that is, one would be satisfied to the full. No being is ever satisfied with what has been given, and will always ask for more. To get more, further efforts have to be made, and suffering ensues from these efforts.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Great Pity
Men are just living their lives without being actually aware of the slow and gradual deterioration of their bodies and the onset of disease of one kind or another till at the last moment when nothing can be done to cure the disease, death is at hand. Then only do they realize the sad fact.
The same pattern applies to man's next existence; the gradual deterioration of the body, the onset of old age and disease, and the eventual death. This the Buddha perceived. He surveyed millions of ailing beings and dying beings, and the sorrows of those who are near and dear to them, and a great pity arose in him. "Millions upon millions" is the current term, but in reality the number is countless. If the history of a being's existences were to be illustrated pictorially, the pictures so depicted would fill the entire surface of the earth, and more space would be needed. The pictures of the being's birth, old age, illness, and death were perceived by the Buddha who felt a great pity for that being; that was how the great pity, or maha karuna arose in him.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Slavery
The Buddha saw that all beings were slaves of lust and greed, and that moved him to great pity. Living beings serve their lust and greed even at the risk of their lives. They go out in search of the things their lust or greed urges them, and risk their lives to get them. They have to work daily for all their lives to satisfy their lust and greed, and after death, and in the next existence, too, they remain slaves of the same master, craving (tanha). There is no period of rest for them.
In this world a slave may remain a slave only during his lifetime, but a slave of lust has an unending term of servitude till the time of salvation when he becomes an arahant and thus ends his wandering through samsara.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Listening to the Dhamma
To attain realization of the Dhamma while listening to a sermon, one must have a settled mind, for it is only through concentrated attention with a settled mind that one can attain samadhi, (concentration), and only samadhi can still the mind for insight. If the mind wanders during the sermon over domestic, economic, and other secular affairs, samadhi will not be attained. If anxiety sets in, it is all for the worse. If distraction and anxiety crop up, the essence of the Dhamma will slip, and as samadhi is lacking, there will be no insight, and if one cannot attain insight for vipassana, how can one attain realization of the Dhamma? Concentrated attention while listening to a sermon is, therefore, an important factor.
The listener must listen carefully, with full mental involvement, and the words of the Dhamma must be adhered to in practice. If one attends to a sermon in this way, one's mind will be calm and absorbed in the sermon; one will be free from interference, and thus attain purity of mind.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Self
There are three different views of the ego or self. The first is the belief in self as the soul-entity. The second is the view of self based on conceit and pride. The third is the self as a conventional term for the first person singular as distinct from other persons. The self or "I" implicit in "I walk" has nothing to do with illusion or conceit. It is a term of common usage that is to be found in the sayings of the Buddha and arahants.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
The Burden of the Aggregates
The Burden
What is the heavy burden? The khandhas[3] are the heavy burden.
Who accepts the heavy burden? Tanha, craving, accepts the heavy burden.
What is meant by throwing down the burden? Annihilation of tanha is throwing down the burden.
Heavy is the burden of the five khandhas.
Acceptance of the burden is suffering; rejection of the burden is conducive to happiness.
When craving is uprooted from its very foundation, no desires arise. An old burden having been laid aside, no new burden can be imposed.
Then, one enters Nibbana, the abode of eternal peace.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
How Heavy Is the Burden!
How heavy the burden is! When a man is conceived in his mother's womb, the five aggregates appertaining to him have to be cared for. The mother is to give him all necessary protection so that he may be safely born to develop well into a human being. She has to be careful in her daily pursuits, in her diet, in her sleep, etc. If the mother happens to be a Buddhist, she will perform meritorious deeds on behalf of the child to be born.
When the child is at last born, it cannot take care of itself. It is looked after by its mother and the elders. It has to be fed with mother's milk. It has to be bathed, cleansed, and clothed. It has to be carried from place to place. It takes at least two or three persons to look after and bring up this tiny burden of the five khandhas.
When a man comes of age, he will have to look after himself. He will have to feed himself two or three times a day. If he likes good food, he will have to make special efforts to get it. He must make himself clean, bathe himself, clothe himself. To tone up his body, he will have to do some daily exercise. He must do everything himself. When he feels hot, he cools himself and when he feels cold, he warms himself up. He has to be careful to keep up his health and well-being. When he takes a walk, he sees that he does not stumble. When he travels, he sees that he meets no danger. In spite of all these precautions, he may fall sick at times, and will have to take medicinal treatment. It is a great burden to tend to the welfare of his khandhas, the five aggregates of psycho-physical phenomena.
The greatest burden for a living being is to fend for himself. In the case of human beings, some have to work for a living starting from the age of twelve or thirteen, and for that purpose they have to be educated. Some can get only an elementary schooling and so they can get employment only as menials. Those who can get a good education are profitably employed in higher positions; but then they have to work day in and day out without any break.
But those who were born into this world with past good kamma do not feel the burden. A man born with the best kamma has been fed and clothed since childhood by his parents who gave him the best education as he came of age. Even when he grows to be a man they continue to give him all support to raise him up into a man of position who can fulfill his desires and wants. Such a fortunate man may not know how heavy the burden of life is.
Those whose past kamma is not good never know affluence. As children they know only hunger, not being able to eat what they would like to eat or dress in a way that they would like to dress. Now that they have grown up, they are just trying to keep their body and soul together. Some do not even have their daily quota of rice ready for the table. Some have to get up early to pound rice for cooking. Some do not even have that rice; and so they have to borrow some from their neighbors. If you want to know more about this life, go to poor men's quarters and make enquiries yourself.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Carrying the Heavy Burden
This body, one of the khandhas, is a heavy burden. Serving it means carrying the heavy burden. When we feed and clothe it, we are carrying the burden. That means we are servants to the aggregate of matter (rupakkhandha). Having fed and clothed the body, we must also see to it that it is sound and happy both in the physical and psychological sense. This is serving the aggregate of feeling (vedanakkhandha). Again, we must see that this body experiences good sights and sounds. This is concerned with consciousness. Therefore we are serving the aggregate of consciousness (viññanakkhandha).
These three burdens are quite obvious. Rupakkhandha says: "Feed me well. Give me what I like to eat; if not, I shall make myself ill or weak. Or, worse still, I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to try to please it.
Then vedanakkhandha also says: "Give me pleasurable sensations; if not, I shall make myself painful and regretful. Or, worse still, I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to hanker after pleasurable sensations to serve its needs.
Then viññanakkhandha also says: "Give me good sights. Give me good sounds. I want pleasant sense-objects. Find them for me; if not, I shall make myself unhappy and frightful. Eventually I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to do its biddings.
It is as if all these three khandhas are perpetually threatening us. So we cannot help complying with their demands; and this compliance is a great burden on us.
The aggregate of volitional activities (sankharakkhandha) is another burden. Life demands that we satisfy our daily needs and desires and for that satisfaction we have to be active. We must be working all the time. This round of human activities gets encouragement from our volition prompted by desire. These activities make threatening demand on us daily, indicating that, if they are not met, trouble and even death would ensue. When human desires remain unfulfilled, they resort to crime. How heavy the burden of the sankharas rests upon us! It is because we cannot carry this load well upon our shoulders that we get demoralized into committing sin that brings shame upon us. Criminal offenses are committed mostly because we cannot carry the burden of sankharakkhandha well. When criminals die, they may fall into the nether world of intense suffering or they may be reborn as hungry ghosts or animals. Even when they are reborn as human beings, their evil actions will follow in their wake and punish them. They may be short-lived; they may be oppressed with disease all the time; they may face poverty and starvation; they may be friendless; they may be always living in danger or in troublesome surroundings.
The aggregate of perception (saññakkhandha) is also a great burden; because it is with perception that you train your faculties like memory to be able to retain knowledge and wisdom which can discern good from bad and reject from your mind unwholesome things produced by unpleasant sense-objects. If the demands of the mind for pleasant sense-objects are not met, it will take up only evil, which does nobody any good. Regrets and anxieties arise because we cannot shoulder the burden of saññakkhandha well.
For all these reasons the Buddha declared the five aggregates of clinging (upadanakkhandha) a heavy burden.
We carry the burden of our khandhas not for a short time, not for a minute, not for an hour, not for a day, not for a year, not for one life, not for one world, not for one eon. We carry the burden from the beginning of samsara, the round of rebirths, which is infinite. It has no beginning. And there is no way of knowing when it will end. Its finality can be reached only with the extermination of the defilements of the mind (kilesa), as we get to the stage of the path of the Noble Ones (arahatta magga).
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Ethics
The Light of Dhamma
Virtue, concentration, and wisdom (sila, samadhi, pañña) can lead one to the Path. Yet some assert that it is not necessary to observe the rules of morality if they are convinced of the teachings. It is often put forward by such protagonists that they have invented simplified or easy methods for their followers. How strange! It cannot be denied that, in Buddha's times, there were instances of intelligent and mature individuals who at once saw the light of Dhamma the moment they heard the Buddha's sermons. Of course geniuses exist like the ugghatitaññu who can at once grasp the meaning of the Four Noble Truths after a brief exposition, or the vipañcitaññu who can realize the Truth after a wider exposition. In Buddha's times such individuals gained the light of knowledge while listening to the Buddha's teachings without appreciable endeavor. But when it comes to an ordinary neyya individual who has to be guided for the gradual realization of Truth, even the Buddha may not be able to let him see the light of Dhamma all at once. So, the following verse of the canonical Dhammapada, stanza 276, as taught by Buddha, should serve one as a reminder. In an expanded paraphrase:
You should strive for the annihilation of all potentials of defilements. Tathagatas can only show you the way. You yourself must practice meditation on the objects for samatha (concentration) and Vipassana (meditation). Only then will you be liberated from the bonds of defilements that destroy what is wholesome and moral.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Keeping The Precepts
Noble Ones who have attained the first stage of sainthood, the ariyas, adore the five precepts. They do not want to break them; they are always anxious not to break the sila. They observe the precepts not because they are afraid that others would censure them, but because they want to keep their minds in purity, and purity of the mind can be achieved only by observance of the five precepts. Not only during this life, but in all future existences they do not want to fail in keeping the precepts. They may not know that they have become stream-enterers (sotapanna) in their previous existence, but they do know that they must observe the five precepts fully and with no default.
Sometimes one comes across a person who has never since his infancy done any evil deed such as killing or stealing. He was not given any particular instructions by his parents, but he knows by himself what is an evil deed and refrains from it. He has kept his virtue pure since his childhood. Maybe he had achieved a special insight of the Dhamma in his previous existence. There are also instances of persons who, though born of non-Buddhist parents have come to the East to practice meditation. Maybe such persons have had some practice of observance of the Buddha's Dhamma in their previous existences. These are interesting instances, and their cases must be evaluated in accord with the extent and depth of their study and practice of the Dhamma.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
On Kindness and Charity
All human behavior resulting from the practice, in deed, in word, and in thought, of loving-kindness shall be rendered memorable throughout one's life.
Where love, compassion, and respect pervade human society, there shall one find enduring unity.
Acts of charity inspired by loving-kindness live long in human memory, generating love and respect among mankind, thus laying foundations for the unity of the whole world.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Ill-will
Ill-will (vyapada) is one of the five hindrances on the holy path. It is like a disease that creates a distaste for good food and makes the sick man listless and apathetic. Ill-will makes us irritable, bad-tempered and suspicious. We do not trust even our friend who is on good terms with the man we dislike. A man who has ill-will should regard himself as suffering from a disease. Unless it is treated promptly, it may gain ground and lead to death. Likewise, the effect of unrestrained ill-will may be disastrous, as is evident in the newspaper reports of violent crimes.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Killing in Self-defense
Once, a writer said in one of the journals that a stream-enterer (sotapanna) will not kill others, but if anyone comes to kill him, he will kill his attacker. That writer declared that he made that statement after a research of the nature of the human mind.
That is ridiculous. I just wonder whose mind he had made a research of, and how he could do that. He must have made a research of his own mind. He might have thought he was a sotapanna. He might have asked himself if he would allow the attacker to kill him when he had an effective weapon to return the attack by way of defense, and it might have been his own answer that he would attack the attacker first. From his personal attitude he obtained the conclusions which he expressed in his article. According to the tenets of Buddhism, this is a ridiculous statement.
The very fact that one thinks one can and should retaliate if attacked proves that one is not a stream-enterer, for according to Buddhist tenets, the person entertaining such a notion is a mere puthujjana, an ordinary worldling, definitely not a stream-enterer. A real sotapanna would not kill even a flea or a bug, not to say a human being. This fact must be remembered once and for all.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Concentration
The Need for Concentration
There are some teachers who instruct their audience to keep their minds free and relaxed instead of concentrating on meditational points because concentration, they say, restricts the mind. This is in contravention of the Buddha's instructions although it assumes an appearance of the Buddha's teachings. If, according to these teachers, the mind is set free, it will surely indulge in fond thoughts and may even revel in sensual pleasures.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Samadhi
Some are saying that samadhi — concentration of mind — is not necessary, that if one just ponders upon the two wisdom factors of the Eightfold Path, namely, Right Understanding (sammaditthi) and Right Thought (sammasankappa), there is no need to make a note of arising and vanishing. This is a skipping of the area of samadhi. Jhana-samadhi is indeed the best to attain, but failing that, one should acquire momentary concentration (khanika samadhi), which is equivalent to access-concentration. Otherwise, it is not real insight-wisdom. So said the Buddha:
Bhikkhus, try to acquire samadhi. A bhikkhu who has a stable mind knows the truth. What is knowing the truth? It is knowing that the eye (cakkhu) is non-permanent, that visual form (rupa) is non-permanent, and that visual consciousness (cakkhuviññana) is non-permanent.
So it is clear that without samadhi one cannot acquire Vipassana-knowledge and attain the knowledge of the supramundane Paths and Fruits (maggaphalañana). One can, therefore, decide that knowledge outside of samadhi is not Vipassana-knowledge, and that without Vipassana-knowledge one cannot attain Nibbana.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Becoming and Dissolution
A bubble bursts soon after it has been formed. A mirage conjures up an image of reality which disappears on close examination. There is absolutely no substance in either of them. This is common knowledge. As we know their true nature, so also must we know the true nature of the phenomena. When a meditator acquires knowledge of concentration through the observance of the dissolution of the Aggregates (khandha), he will discover that the known object and the knowing mind are all in a state of flux, now appearing, now vanishing. They are transitory. There is no essence or substance worthy to be named "mine" in them. They signify only the processes of becoming and dissolution.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Meditation
Instructions to the Meditator
To develop mindfulness and gain insight-knowledge, the following points must be borne in mind:
Recognize correctly all physical behavior as it arises.
Recognize correctly all mental behavior as it arises.
Recognize every feeling, pleasant, unpleasant, or indifferent, as it arises.
Know, with an analytical mind, every mental object as it arises.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Knowledge Deepens Through Practice
If the Path is practiced to gain direct personal experience, it is usual that knowledge deepens as time goes on.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Initial Doubt
Some people who have never meditated may have some doubt, and no wonder! For only seeing is believing, and their skepticism is due to their lack of experience. I myself was a skeptic at one time. I did not then like the Satipatthana method as it makes no mention of nama, rupa, anicca, anatta and so forth. But the Sayadaw who taught the method was a learned monk, and so I decided to give it a trial. At first I made little progress because I still had a lingering doubt about the method which, in my view, had nothing to do with ultimate reality.
It was only later on when I had followed the method seriously that its significance dawned on me. I realized then that it is the best method of meditation since it calls for attentiveness to everything that is to be known, leaving no room for absent-mindedness. So the Buddha describes the Satipatthana method as the only way: Ekayano-maggo.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
A Very Effective Remedy
If you suffer from ill health or disease, and if you have no other remedy to alleviate the pain and suffering, the meditational practice upon the suffering of illness can give at least some relief if it cannot give you a complete cure. If the pain and suffering remain in your body, the meditational practice can render relief to your mind. But if you are angry or irritated by the physical suffering, your mind will suffer, too. The Buddha compared this dual suffering to being pierced by two thorns at the same time.
Let us say a man has a thorn in his flesh, and he tries to extract the thorn by piercing another thorn into his flesh. The second thorn breaks into the flesh without being able to extract the first thorn. Then the man suffers the pain from two thorns at the same time. So also, the person who cannot make a note of the physical pain in a meditational manner suffers both physical and mental pain. But if he can ponder well upon the physical pain, he will suffer only that pain, and will not suffer mental pain.
This kind of suffering — only physical pain — is like that suffered by the Buddha and arahants, for they, too, suffer physical pain. They suffer from ill-effects of heat and cold, insect bites, and other kinds of discomfort. Though they suffer from the physical dukkha, their minds remain stable, so they do not suffer mental pain. The meditational method is a very effective remedy for physical pain and suffering.
— Discourse on Lokadhamma
Depression
We should keep in mind the law of kamma — the Buddha's teaching that everything happens according to one's actions — and bear our misfortunes calmly. The best remedy in a crisis is the practice of samatha or Vipassana. If sorrow, grief, or depression afflicts us, during meditation hours such unwholesome states of consciousness must be noted and removed. The Buddha describes the Satipatthana method as the only way to get over grief and end all suffering. So long as we keep ourselves mindful according to Satipatthana teaching, we never feel depressed, and if depression arises, it passes away when we focus our attention on it.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Despair
Some meditators are disheartened because of their weak concentration at the outset, but as a result, some redouble their effort and attain unusual insights. So the meditator may benefit by his despair at this stage. According to the commentaries, we should welcome the despair that results from non-fulfillment of desire in connection with renunciation, meditation, reflection, and jhana.
Sorrow is wholesome when it arises from frustration over any effort to promote one's spiritual life, such as the effort to join the holy order, the effort to attain insight, and so forth. We should welcome such sorrow for it may spur effort and lead to progress on the Path. It is not, however, to be sought deliberately. The best thing is to have wholesome joy in the search for enlightenment.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Strenuous Effort
Strenuous, relentless efforts in meditation practices for achievement of concentration and insight should not be misconceived as a form of self-torture. Leaving aside meditation practices, even the keeping of the moral precepts which may entail some physical discomfort and abstention, is not to be regarded as a practice of self-mortification.
In the practice of concentration and insight meditation, patience, and self-control (khanti-samvara) khanti-sa.mvara play an important role; they are important factors for the successful practice of both. Therefore unpleasant physical discomfort should be borne with patience. The self-control practiced thus is not self-mortification, inasmuch as its goal is not the afflicting and enduring of pain but one's progress in virtue, concentration, and wisdom (sila, samadhi, paññ) as enjoined by the Buddha.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
How to Avoid the Two Extremes
Of the five sense objects — namely, sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch — those objects which would not violate observance of the precepts or which would be helpful to the practice of Dhamma may be made use of. Eating food which should be normally eaten, wearing clothes which should be normally worn, contributes to easeful practice of Dhamma, thus avoiding the extreme austerity of self-mortification.
Necessary material goods such as food, clothing, medicine, and shelter should be used, accompanied either by reflective contemplation or the practice of concentration or insight-meditation. Every time contact is made with the five sense objects, they should be noted as objects of insight-meditation. By adopting a reflective mood or by noting these sense objects as objects of insight-meditation, partaking of necessary food, clothing, etc., does not develop into enjoying them with delight or pleasure, thereby avoiding the other extreme of indulgence in sensuous pleasures. The Blessed one declared, therefore, that "Having avoided these two extremes (parts, practices), I have come to understand the Middle Path."
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Purity of Mind
You have purity of mind when you are mindful. It is a mistake to think that one can attain it only when one enters meditative absorption (jhana). Purity of mind based on jhana is due to the continuous stream of jhanic consciousness. Purity of mind through Vipassana is the purity that emerges at the moment of attaining insight. Both kinds of consciousness are alike in respect to purity of mind and freedom from hindrances.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Insight Meditation
Insight Knowledge
Insight knowledge (vipassana ñana) is attained by observing the actions of mind-and-body (nama-rupa) in the state of impermanence (anicca), suffering (dukkha), and no-self (anatta). It is not attained simply by casual observation but by in-depth observation of the actions as they are happening, without leaving any one of them unobserved. Thus the observation should be on all actions such as seeing, hearing, smelling, eating, etc., as they are happening and without failing to observe any single action.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
A Flash of Lightning
Watch a flash of lightning. If you watch it at the moment lightning strikes, you will see it for yourself. If you are imagining in your mind as to how lightning strikes before or after the event, you may not be regarded as having seen the flash of lightning. So try to know things for yourself by actual observation of things as they happen.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
No Ordinary Teaching
Beware of those who assert that Vipassana (insight-meditation) is unnecessary or superfluous. Such statements are not conducive to the practice of insight-meditation, without which our Buddhasasana would be like any ordinary teaching.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Qualities for Success
It is impossible to do anything without faith or conviction. You will practice mindfulness only if you believe that it will help to develop insight-knowledge. But faith in itself will not do. You need, too, a strong will and unrelenting effort to attain the path and Nibbana. Possession of these qualities is essential to success in the practice of mindfulness and for gaining security in the abode of the Noble.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
The Three Feelings in Vipassana
The main object of Vipassana practice is to seek and cultivate the equanimity that is bound up with "equanimity about formations" (sankharupekkha) insight. To this end we should avoid sensuous joy and seek wholesome joy in good deeds and contemplation. Likewise we should welcome wholesome sorrow stemming from frustration on the holy path and avoid unwholesome sorrow. In the same way we should avoid unwholesome equanimity of the sensual world and seek wholesome equanimity of the holy path.
We should concentrate on wholesome joy, wholesome sorrow, and wholesome equanimity. For the cultivation of these wholesome states of consciousness means the elimination of their negative, unwholesome counterparts.
We should also eliminate wholesome sorrow through wholesome joy. This means that if we are depressed because of the failure to make much progress on the holy path, we must overcome the depression by exerting effort for Vipassana-insight. Likewise, wholesome joy must be rejected through wholesome equanimity.
Thus "equanimity about formations" (sankharupekkha) insight with joy or with equanimity is only a step removed from the holy path and fruition.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Intrinsic Knowledge
Here we are not concerned with mere perception but with insight-knowledge which can be gained only through actual practice. When you personally watch people going through a gate, you will notice for yourself their goings and comings; you need not depend on others to know at second-hand that they are going in and out of the gate. In the same way if you yourself watch and note the six sense-doors, the eye-door, the ear-door, etc., you will actually see how nama and rupa arise and pass away without resorting to the process of reflecting.
Take another example. Place a mirror at the roadside. All pedestrians and vehicles will be reflected in the mirror in their true nature. If you watch and note them, you will see them as they really are. In the same way if you watch and note with mindfulness all that appears at the six sense-doors, you will notice the sense-objects (which have no consciousness) arising while the mind (the subject that possesses the consciousness) is taking cognizance of such arising. Then both the object and the subject pass away. Then this process is renewed. The meditator will then come to realize that this is the phenomenon of nama and rupa arising and passing away. Consciousness and corporeality are, after all, not everlasting. They are not permanent. They are suffering. They are unsubstantial.
When you note the working of nama and rupa, you will come to know their true nature. Having known their true nature, what remains there to be thought of and considered? So one does not get at the nature of things by merely thinking about nama and rupa, without actually noting how they arise and pass away. Having come face to face with them, are you going to argue their existence? And it does not stand to reason if one merely recites, "Arising! Passing away!" without actually noting the actual process. The knowledge acquired by this method of thinking or reciting is not intrinsic but mere second-hand knowledge gained through books.
The essence of insight-meditation, therefore, is to note personally all dhammas and phenomena as they occur.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
The Knower and the Known
When a Vipassana meditator's insight-meditation becomes strengthened, Right Thoughts direct his mind to realities of the sense-objects on which he concentrates; eventually he will get Right Views. All this happens in this way. As one begins to reach the stage of mindfulness and subsequently of purity of mind, one will be able to distinguish the knowing mind from the object known. For instance, when one is meditating on the rising and falling of the abdominal wall, one may be able to distinguish the phenomenon of rising and falling from the mind that knows it. In much the same way, in the process of walking, one may notice that the act of raising the foot, extending forward, and putting it down is different from the mind motivating the movement. In this way nama, the knower, can be distinguished from rupa, the known. This can be effected without any preconception. One recognizes the phenomena without giving any thought to them. In other words, recognition is spontaneous.
As the power of concentration of the meditator gains strength, and his wisdom gets sharpened thereby, he will come to realize the fact that his knees bend because he wishes them to bent. He walks because he wants to. He sees because he has eyes to see, and the object to be seen is there. He hears because he has ears to hear, and the object to be heard is there. He enjoys life because his kamma is favorable. In this way he is enabled to distinguish between cause and effect with reference to every phenomenon that takes place.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Empirical Knowledge
Our main object is to attain insight-knowledge, which is accessible only to empirical approach. Through experience, the meditator observes the distinction between mind and matter, and he realizes the impermanence of every thing. Experience may be followed by explanation on the part of the teacher, but not the other way around. For real knowledge has nothing to do with preconceived notions but is based on personal experience. The empirical knowledge acquired by the meditator is distinct and clear. In the course of his practice he comes to see nothing except the vanishing of everything. This is called bhanga-ñana, knowledge of dissolution, which he learns to understand not from scriptures nor a teacher, but from experience. As he keeps on meditating, he becomes more and more mindful until his mindfulness becomes perfect at the last stage on the Noble Path.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Conviction in Anicca
When the realities of nama and rupa are known, the meditator will realize that things come into being only to pass away. Hutva abhavato aniccam the Commentaries say. "Having become, things cease to exist; and that is impermanence." Only when he can appreciate the realities of this nature of origination and cessation, will he gain conviction as to the impermanence of existence.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Law of Impermanence
Once you are convinced of the law of impermanence, your mind will be detached from the idea of permanence. When you reach that stage, ignorance will be dispelled from your mind. Then you will be able to get away from sankhara, or volitional formations, which constitute kamma that produces rebirth. Now you see a flash of Nibbana.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Ego-Belief
Believers in the Dhamma who have acquired some knowledge about the fundamentals relating to nama, rupa, anicca (impermanence), dukkha (unsatisfactoriness), and anatta (egolessness, unsubstantiality), should take up the practice of insight-meditation. It involves noting mind and matter in a state of flux at the six sense-doors in accordance with instructions relating to the establishment of mindfulness, satipatthana. Note what the eyes see; note what ears hear; note what the nose smells; note what the tongue tastes; note what the body contacts; note what the mind thinks; and then you will come to know all that is to be known in accordance with the degree of perfection you have acquired.
As a meditator practices mindfulness, his power of concentration will become strengthened and his mind purified. Then he will be able to distinguish the nama, or the mind that knows, and the rupa, or body that is known. Then he will come to realize the absence of the thing called atta or self, or "I." Repeating noting will lead him on to the knowledge of the causes and effects of nama and rupa. In the end, the idea of self will be utterly destroyed. Before the practice of mindfulness he might be wondering if a self existed in the past, and is still existing at the present moment, and will exist in the future. After the Vipassana-practice all such doubts will be resolved as the true nature of the phenomena is understood.
As the meditator continues noting, he will find that the sense-objects, together with the consciousness directed at them, vanish. They are all impermanent. They just arise and pass away of their own accord. What is not permanent is not satisfactory. Nothing is substantial. Then, what is there to cling to as "I" or "Mine"? All phenomena are in a state of flux, now arising, now passing away. Contemplating on these matters, one can, by the conviction of one's own experience, do away with the idea of atta.
Some would like to think that noting merely the arising and passing away of nama or rupa is not enough. They would prefer to speculate at some length on what nama or rupa or the phenomena are. Such speculations are not based on self-acquired knowledge gained through actual practice, but on hearsay or book-knowledge. Insight-knowledge is perceptual and not intellectual.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Self-Discovery
The five aggregates of grasping must be learned well. You do not learn them by rote. You learn them by actual experience and practice. You must try to realize yourself the phenomena of arising and passing away of mind (nama) and body (rupa). Vipassana means the insight you gain through your own inquiry and effort. Only after self-discovery as a result of meditation will all doubts about the non-existence of self or ego be dispelled. Then only can it be said with certainty that there is none which can be called an entity, and that what appears to be an entity is, after all, an aggregate of mental and bodily processes. As you become illumined with this realization, you will come to understand the law of cause and effect. As you continue to meditate on this causality, you will encounter the state of flux, or the constant arising and passing away of mind (nama) and body (rupa), which, after all, are not permanent.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Path Factors in Vipassana
A meditator has to note and observe every object that appears to him via the six sense-doors. This he does with an effort; and that is the Right Effort. Then he has to keep his mind on what he has noted so as to be aware of it. And that is the Right Mindfulness. As he has to be mindful, his mind will have to be fixed or concentrated on the object. And that is the Right Concentration. These three constituents of the Path (magga) — Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Concentration — are grouped under the heading of concentration (samadhi); they are the samadhi magga. Then there is the process of thinking out what existence really is, which is classified as Right Thinking or Right Thought. As a result of this right thinking, we have the Right View. These two are grouped under the heading of wisdom (pañña); they are the pañña magga. All these five in the samadhi and pañña sections are together classified as karaka magga, or the activators, which combine their efforts in the process of simultaneously noting and knowing.
Right Speech, Right Action, and Right Livelihood constitute the section on virtue; they are the sila magga, which may generally be deemed to have been fulfilled before the meditator takes up insight-meditation. During the period of meditation, these three sila magga (path-factors of virtue) remain unpolluted; in fact they get more and more purified as time goes on. With these three in this group added to the five in the previous groups, we have the eight Path factors as appearing in Vipassana (and hence called vipassana magga) on which we are to meditate.
Again, in the development of insight meditation, basic qualities of the elementary Path (mula magga) must be fulfilled. Of them, the first and foremost is the firm conviction that beings are the responsible "owners of their actions" (kammassakata sammaditthi), a view well established in the law of kamma. Only when a meditator has absolute faith in this law of action and its consequences, can he practice Vipassana. He must believe that the result of carrying out Vipassana or meditation exercises can lead him to the Path, to its fruition and finally to Nibbana. It is only with this faith that he will be able to exert Right effort.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Mindful Perception Leads to Detachment
"In the seen there should be only the seen; in the heard only the heard; in the sensed only the sensed; in the cognized only the cognized." This was the Buddha's instruction to Malunkyaputta and Bahiya.
— Salayatana Samyutta, Sutta 95; Udana I, 10.
One must note what is seen as seen and no more. That is the general idea. For meditational practice, however, one must note the beginning of any object or sense as it is in the process of happening. If one could concentrate on each phenomenon distinctly and separately, one would not feel any attachment or desire, and thus craving (tanha) is gotten rid of.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Unseen and the Seen
When the Buddha was about to give instructions to Malunkyaputta Bhikkhu, he asked:
"Malunkyaputta, do you have any desire for the appearances that you have never seen, or those that you are not in the act of seeing, or those that you never expect to see?"
"No, sir, that is impossible," replied the bhikkhu.
— Salayatana Samyutta, No. 95
Now if I were to ask you the same question as the Buddha put to Malunkyaputta Bhikkhu, you would give the same answer as he did. You would not have any feeling of love or hatred for a person whom you never expect to see, would you? Now there are many such people in so many villages, towns, cities, and countries, and you would never have any feeling of love or of hatred for them. You wouldn't have any attachment desire or lust for them.
Defilements do not arise from the unperceived. This point should be noted.
As for the things seen, however, defilements arise both in the act of seeing and after having seen because a mental picture is retained in the memory and on reflection or recall, defilements would recur. These cherished memories are stored up in the archives of the latent tendencies (anusaya), as deeply rooted memories. It is necessary to root these out by means of Vipassana.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Warning
When the knowledge of investigating the aggregates as composite, and thus as unsubstantial, works, the meditator becomes fully convinced of the truth of the Dhamma relating to the three marks of anicca, dukkha, and anatta, on the contemplation of which he can further follow the trend of knowledge about the arising and passing away of nama and rupa. This is the stage when he attains udayabbaya ñana, the knowledge of arising and passing away. At this stage he will see a radiance in his mind. He will feel highly exultant. His awareness will be extraordinary. There will be nothing of which he fails to take notice. His mind is sharpened, and his memory becomes clear. Strong faith will be established. He will be joyous both physically and spiritually. This state surpasses description. But, if at this stage one becomes attached to such pleasurable mental states, they will become precursors to defilements of the mind, and be obstacles to further mental development. Joy, in a way, is no doubt a support to the meditator in his efforts to gain more strength and determination to strive further for higher goals until he reaches his destination, namely, mature Vipassana-knowledge. So he is warned just to note the mental state of joy as it occurs, and then to dismiss it altogether to gain insight.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Eliminating the Unwanted
Every moment of mindfulness means the gradual destruction of latent defilements. It is somewhat like cutting away a piece of wood with a small axe, every stroke helping to get rid of the unwanted fragments of wood.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Penetrative Insight
Nama and rupa, or the truth of suffering, is seen as impermanent, as suffering, or as non-self. Every time they are seen thus, there is no chance for craving to make their appearance. Thus there is liberation from craving and clinging. It is called knowing the Truth of Origination by abandonment (pahanabhisamaya), though not by realization.
Every time rupa and nama become subjected to his awareness, the meditator is free from ignorance (avijja) that could lead him to the wrong path. Being thus free from avijja, he is free from the ills of sankhara viññana. This is a temporary cessation of ills (tadanga nirodha sacca). This temporary cessation of ills is realized by Vipassana at every instance of noting, but not as its object of contemplation.
Things hidden behind heavy curtains or thick walls become visible when these barriers are shattered asunder or windows are opened out. Likewise the Four Noble Truths are kept hidden behind avijja, which takes note of that which is wrong but covers up that which is right. By developing the Eightfold Path through meditation exercises, Truths which were not known before become apparent through Vipassana knowledge, the knowledge of the Noble Path. Avijja has been penetrated, and Noble Truths become known by means of penetrative insight.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
The Dhamma
One Truth
Indeed, truth must be one and indivisible. This must be borne in mind. Nowadays, when Buddha-dhamma is being disseminated, there should be only one basis of teaching relating to the Middle Way or the Eightfold Path: the practice of morality, concentration, and acquisition of profound knowledge, and the Four Noble Truths. But if one were preaching that the aims and objects of Buddhism can be achieved without recourse to the actual practice of the Dhamma, we should understand that such a one has strayed from the Path.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Need for Practice
In these days there have cropped up misstatements running counter to what Buddha actually taught. Knowledge, it is said, is accomplishment; and there is no need for anyone to practice Dhamma once knowledge has been attained. Such a statement virtually amounts to the rejection of the practice of the Dhamma, to the exclusion of the Noble Eightfold Path. But in point of fact, the Noble Eightfold Path is to be constantly practiced, for it is a set of disciplines to be cultivated (bhavetabba) which can generate the power to gain insight into the nature of the Path. Without effort, nothing comes up naturally. And yet there is a school of thought which wrongly suggests that making an effort itself is dukkha or unsatisfactoriness, and that therefore, it should not be indulged in. In the face of such dogma who will be prepared to take the trouble of meditating upon the Noble Eightfold Path and practice its tenets? If there is no one to practice this Dhamma, how can its light shine within him? And in the absence of any insight into the nature of the Path, how can one eliminate defilements and attain Nibbanic peace?
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Path in Three Stages
Good Buddhists are in the habit of wishing for realization and attainment of Nibbana whenever they accomplish any meritorious deed. The summum bonum will not, of course, be attained immediately by their mere wishing. It will be attained only in one of the higher planes which they will reach by virtue of their good deeds; and then only if they actually practice developing the Eightfold Path. So, why wait till future existence? Why not start now and work for liberation in this very life?
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Putting Knowledge into Practice
According to the Buddha, knowledge relating to the Noble Path transports one to the stage where all suffering or unsatisfactoriness ceases. But it must always be borne in mind that the Path offers salvation only to those who actually practice it.
In your travels a vehicle takes you to your destination while those who stand by it are left behind. Knowledge about the Noble Path is like that vehicle. If you ride in it, you will be conveyed to your destination; and if you merely stand by it, you will be left behind. Those who desire to be liberated from all sufferings should use that vehicle. That is to say they should use knowledge they gained for practical purposes. The most important task for you while you are born into this Buddha Sasana is to practice Dhamma so that you reach Nibbana, where all sufferings cease.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The True Faith
The theory of rejection of kamma is gradually gaining more favorable attention because people's greed (lobha) is increasing and their hankering after sensual pleasures is making a corresponding increase. Nowadays, there are some who are of the opinion that if one avoids evil deeds, one will not achieve any useful purpose. That view leads people to these false faiths.
The ignorance of kamma and its effect that is becoming rife now, is the result of overwhelming greed (lobha) superimposed by delusion (moha).
The Buddha himself realized this and so he urged people to make efforts to reduce the volume of greed and delusion. Faithful disciples will follow the Buddha's directions and try to reach realization through meditational practice, and thus free themselves from these false faiths. They come to realize that the kamma of the previous existences had made them what they are in the present existence, and the kamma of the present existence, if not yet free of craving (tanha), will determine the state of the next existence. Thus, they confirm their belief in the true faith.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Deities' Dissatisfaction
Do not have the impression that if one becomes a celestial being owing to one's good deeds, one gets to a place where every wish is fulfilled and one does not need to have any more wishes; that is, one would be satisfied to the full. No being is ever satisfied with what has been given, and will always ask for more. To get more, further efforts have to be made, and suffering ensues from these efforts.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Great Pity
Men are just living their lives without being actually aware of the slow and gradual deterioration of their bodies and the onset of disease of one kind or another till at the last moment when nothing can be done to cure the disease, death is at hand. Then only do they realize the sad fact.
The same pattern applies to man's next existence; the gradual deterioration of the body, the onset of old age and disease, and the eventual death. This the Buddha perceived. He surveyed millions of ailing beings and dying beings, and the sorrows of those who are near and dear to them, and a great pity arose in him. "Millions upon millions" is the current term, but in reality the number is countless. If the history of a being's existences were to be illustrated pictorially, the pictures so depicted would fill the entire surface of the earth, and more space would be needed. The pictures of the being's birth, old age, illness, and death were perceived by the Buddha who felt a great pity for that being; that was how the great pity, or maha karuna arose in him.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Slavery
The Buddha saw that all beings were slaves of lust and greed, and that moved him to great pity. Living beings serve their lust and greed even at the risk of their lives. They go out in search of the things their lust or greed urges them, and risk their lives to get them. They have to work daily for all their lives to satisfy their lust and greed, and after death, and in the next existence, too, they remain slaves of the same master, craving (tanha). There is no period of rest for them.
In this world a slave may remain a slave only during his lifetime, but a slave of lust has an unending term of servitude till the time of salvation when he becomes an arahant and thus ends his wandering through samsara.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Listening to the Dhamma
To attain realization of the Dhamma while listening to a sermon, one must have a settled mind, for it is only through concentrated attention with a settled mind that one can attain samadhi, (concentration), and only samadhi can still the mind for insight. If the mind wanders during the sermon over domestic, economic, and other secular affairs, samadhi will not be attained. If anxiety sets in, it is all for the worse. If distraction and anxiety crop up, the essence of the Dhamma will slip, and as samadhi is lacking, there will be no insight, and if one cannot attain insight for vipassana, how can one attain realization of the Dhamma? Concentrated attention while listening to a sermon is, therefore, an important factor.
The listener must listen carefully, with full mental involvement, and the words of the Dhamma must be adhered to in practice. If one attends to a sermon in this way, one's mind will be calm and absorbed in the sermon; one will be free from interference, and thus attain purity of mind.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Self
There are three different views of the ego or self. The first is the belief in self as the soul-entity. The second is the view of self based on conceit and pride. The third is the self as a conventional term for the first person singular as distinct from other persons. The self or "I" implicit in "I walk" has nothing to do with illusion or conceit. It is a term of common usage that is to be found in the sayings of the Buddha and arahants.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
The Burden of the Aggregates
The Burden
What is the heavy burden? The khandhas[3] are the heavy burden.
Who accepts the heavy burden? Tanha, craving, accepts the heavy burden.
What is meant by throwing down the burden? Annihilation of tanha is throwing down the burden.
Heavy is the burden of the five khandhas.
Acceptance of the burden is suffering; rejection of the burden is conducive to happiness.
When craving is uprooted from its very foundation, no desires arise. An old burden having been laid aside, no new burden can be imposed.
Then, one enters Nibbana, the abode of eternal peace.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
How Heavy Is the Burden!
How heavy the burden is! When a man is conceived in his mother's womb, the five aggregates appertaining to him have to be cared for. The mother is to give him all necessary protection so that he may be safely born to develop well into a human being. She has to be careful in her daily pursuits, in her diet, in her sleep, etc. If the mother happens to be a Buddhist, she will perform meritorious deeds on behalf of the child to be born.
When the child is at last born, it cannot take care of itself. It is looked after by its mother and the elders. It has to be fed with mother's milk. It has to be bathed, cleansed, and clothed. It has to be carried from place to place. It takes at least two or three persons to look after and bring up this tiny burden of the five khandhas.
When a man comes of age, he will have to look after himself. He will have to feed himself two or three times a day. If he likes good food, he will have to make special efforts to get it. He must make himself clean, bathe himself, clothe himself. To tone up his body, he will have to do some daily exercise. He must do everything himself. When he feels hot, he cools himself and when he feels cold, he warms himself up. He has to be careful to keep up his health and well-being. When he takes a walk, he sees that he does not stumble. When he travels, he sees that he meets no danger. In spite of all these precautions, he may fall sick at times, and will have to take medicinal treatment. It is a great burden to tend to the welfare of his khandhas, the five aggregates of psycho-physical phenomena.
The greatest burden for a living being is to fend for himself. In the case of human beings, some have to work for a living starting from the age of twelve or thirteen, and for that purpose they have to be educated. Some can get only an elementary schooling and so they can get employment only as menials. Those who can get a good education are profitably employed in higher positions; but then they have to work day in and day out without any break.
But those who were born into this world with past good kamma do not feel the burden. A man born with the best kamma has been fed and clothed since childhood by his parents who gave him the best education as he came of age. Even when he grows to be a man they continue to give him all support to raise him up into a man of position who can fulfill his desires and wants. Such a fortunate man may not know how heavy the burden of life is.
Those whose past kamma is not good never know affluence. As children they know only hunger, not being able to eat what they would like to eat or dress in a way that they would like to dress. Now that they have grown up, they are just trying to keep their body and soul together. Some do not even have their daily quota of rice ready for the table. Some have to get up early to pound rice for cooking. Some do not even have that rice; and so they have to borrow some from their neighbors. If you want to know more about this life, go to poor men's quarters and make enquiries yourself.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Carrying the Heavy Burden
This body, one of the khandhas, is a heavy burden. Serving it means carrying the heavy burden. When we feed and clothe it, we are carrying the burden. That means we are servants to the aggregate of matter (rupakkhandha). Having fed and clothed the body, we must also see to it that it is sound and happy both in the physical and psychological sense. This is serving the aggregate of feeling (vedanakkhandha). Again, we must see that this body experiences good sights and sounds. This is concerned with consciousness. Therefore we are serving the aggregate of consciousness (viññanakkhandha).
These three burdens are quite obvious. Rupakkhandha says: "Feed me well. Give me what I like to eat; if not, I shall make myself ill or weak. Or, worse still, I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to try to please it.
Then vedanakkhandha also says: "Give me pleasurable sensations; if not, I shall make myself painful and regretful. Or, worse still, I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to hanker after pleasurable sensations to serve its needs.
Then viññanakkhandha also says: "Give me good sights. Give me good sounds. I want pleasant sense-objects. Find them for me; if not, I shall make myself unhappy and frightful. Eventually I shall make myself die!" Then we shall have to do its biddings.
It is as if all these three khandhas are perpetually threatening us. So we cannot help complying with their demands; and this compliance is a great burden on us.
The aggregate of volitional activities (sankharakkhandha) is another burden. Life demands that we satisfy our daily needs and desires and for that satisfaction we have to be active. We must be working all the time. This round of human activities gets encouragement from our volition prompted by desire. These activities make threatening demand on us daily, indicating that, if they are not met, trouble and even death would ensue. When human desires remain unfulfilled, they resort to crime. How heavy the burden of the sankharas rests upon us! It is because we cannot carry this load well upon our shoulders that we get demoralized into committing sin that brings shame upon us. Criminal offenses are committed mostly because we cannot carry the burden of sankharakkhandha well. When criminals die, they may fall into the nether world of intense suffering or they may be reborn as hungry ghosts or animals. Even when they are reborn as human beings, their evil actions will follow in their wake and punish them. They may be short-lived; they may be oppressed with disease all the time; they may face poverty and starvation; they may be friendless; they may be always living in danger or in troublesome surroundings.
The aggregate of perception (saññakkhandha) is also a great burden; because it is with perception that you train your faculties like memory to be able to retain knowledge and wisdom which can discern good from bad and reject from your mind unwholesome things produced by unpleasant sense-objects. If the demands of the mind for pleasant sense-objects are not met, it will take up only evil, which does nobody any good. Regrets and anxieties arise because we cannot shoulder the burden of saññakkhandha well.
For all these reasons the Buddha declared the five aggregates of clinging (upadanakkhandha) a heavy burden.
We carry the burden of our khandhas not for a short time, not for a minute, not for an hour, not for a day, not for a year, not for one life, not for one world, not for one eon. We carry the burden from the beginning of samsara, the round of rebirths, which is infinite. It has no beginning. And there is no way of knowing when it will end. Its finality can be reached only with the extermination of the defilements of the mind (kilesa), as we get to the stage of the path of the Noble Ones (arahatta magga).
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Ethics
The Light of Dhamma
Virtue, concentration, and wisdom (sila, samadhi, pañña) can lead one to the Path. Yet some assert that it is not necessary to observe the rules of morality if they are convinced of the teachings. It is often put forward by such protagonists that they have invented simplified or easy methods for their followers. How strange! It cannot be denied that, in Buddha's times, there were instances of intelligent and mature individuals who at once saw the light of Dhamma the moment they heard the Buddha's sermons. Of course geniuses exist like the ugghatitaññu who can at once grasp the meaning of the Four Noble Truths after a brief exposition, or the vipañcitaññu who can realize the Truth after a wider exposition. In Buddha's times such individuals gained the light of knowledge while listening to the Buddha's teachings without appreciable endeavor. But when it comes to an ordinary neyya individual who has to be guided for the gradual realization of Truth, even the Buddha may not be able to let him see the light of Dhamma all at once. So, the following verse of the canonical Dhammapada, stanza 276, as taught by Buddha, should serve one as a reminder. In an expanded paraphrase:
You should strive for the annihilation of all potentials of defilements. Tathagatas can only show you the way. You yourself must practice meditation on the objects for samatha (concentration) and Vipassana (meditation). Only then will you be liberated from the bonds of defilements that destroy what is wholesome and moral.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Keeping The Precepts
Noble Ones who have attained the first stage of sainthood, the ariyas, adore the five precepts. They do not want to break them; they are always anxious not to break the sila. They observe the precepts not because they are afraid that others would censure them, but because they want to keep their minds in purity, and purity of the mind can be achieved only by observance of the five precepts. Not only during this life, but in all future existences they do not want to fail in keeping the precepts. They may not know that they have become stream-enterers (sotapanna) in their previous existence, but they do know that they must observe the five precepts fully and with no default.
Sometimes one comes across a person who has never since his infancy done any evil deed such as killing or stealing. He was not given any particular instructions by his parents, but he knows by himself what is an evil deed and refrains from it. He has kept his virtue pure since his childhood. Maybe he had achieved a special insight of the Dhamma in his previous existence. There are also instances of persons who, though born of non-Buddhist parents have come to the East to practice meditation. Maybe such persons have had some practice of observance of the Buddha's Dhamma in their previous existences. These are interesting instances, and their cases must be evaluated in accord with the extent and depth of their study and practice of the Dhamma.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
On Kindness and Charity
All human behavior resulting from the practice, in deed, in word, and in thought, of loving-kindness shall be rendered memorable throughout one's life.
Where love, compassion, and respect pervade human society, there shall one find enduring unity.
Acts of charity inspired by loving-kindness live long in human memory, generating love and respect among mankind, thus laying foundations for the unity of the whole world.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Ill-will
Ill-will (vyapada) is one of the five hindrances on the holy path. It is like a disease that creates a distaste for good food and makes the sick man listless and apathetic. Ill-will makes us irritable, bad-tempered and suspicious. We do not trust even our friend who is on good terms with the man we dislike. A man who has ill-will should regard himself as suffering from a disease. Unless it is treated promptly, it may gain ground and lead to death. Likewise, the effect of unrestrained ill-will may be disastrous, as is evident in the newspaper reports of violent crimes.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Killing in Self-defense
Once, a writer said in one of the journals that a stream-enterer (sotapanna) will not kill others, but if anyone comes to kill him, he will kill his attacker. That writer declared that he made that statement after a research of the nature of the human mind.
That is ridiculous. I just wonder whose mind he had made a research of, and how he could do that. He must have made a research of his own mind. He might have thought he was a sotapanna. He might have asked himself if he would allow the attacker to kill him when he had an effective weapon to return the attack by way of defense, and it might have been his own answer that he would attack the attacker first. From his personal attitude he obtained the conclusions which he expressed in his article. According to the tenets of Buddhism, this is a ridiculous statement.
The very fact that one thinks one can and should retaliate if attacked proves that one is not a stream-enterer, for according to Buddhist tenets, the person entertaining such a notion is a mere puthujjana, an ordinary worldling, definitely not a stream-enterer. A real sotapanna would not kill even a flea or a bug, not to say a human being. This fact must be remembered once and for all.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Concentration
The Need for Concentration
There are some teachers who instruct their audience to keep their minds free and relaxed instead of concentrating on meditational points because concentration, they say, restricts the mind. This is in contravention of the Buddha's instructions although it assumes an appearance of the Buddha's teachings. If, according to these teachers, the mind is set free, it will surely indulge in fond thoughts and may even revel in sensual pleasures.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Samadhi
Some are saying that samadhi — concentration of mind — is not necessary, that if one just ponders upon the two wisdom factors of the Eightfold Path, namely, Right Understanding (sammaditthi) and Right Thought (sammasankappa), there is no need to make a note of arising and vanishing. This is a skipping of the area of samadhi. Jhana-samadhi is indeed the best to attain, but failing that, one should acquire momentary concentration (khanika samadhi), which is equivalent to access-concentration. Otherwise, it is not real insight-wisdom. So said the Buddha:
Bhikkhus, try to acquire samadhi. A bhikkhu who has a stable mind knows the truth. What is knowing the truth? It is knowing that the eye (cakkhu) is non-permanent, that visual form (rupa) is non-permanent, and that visual consciousness (cakkhuviññana) is non-permanent.
So it is clear that without samadhi one cannot acquire Vipassana-knowledge and attain the knowledge of the supramundane Paths and Fruits (maggaphalañana). One can, therefore, decide that knowledge outside of samadhi is not Vipassana-knowledge, and that without Vipassana-knowledge one cannot attain Nibbana.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Becoming and Dissolution
A bubble bursts soon after it has been formed. A mirage conjures up an image of reality which disappears on close examination. There is absolutely no substance in either of them. This is common knowledge. As we know their true nature, so also must we know the true nature of the phenomena. When a meditator acquires knowledge of concentration through the observance of the dissolution of the Aggregates (khandha), he will discover that the known object and the knowing mind are all in a state of flux, now appearing, now vanishing. They are transitory. There is no essence or substance worthy to be named "mine" in them. They signify only the processes of becoming and dissolution.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Meditation
Instructions to the Meditator
To develop mindfulness and gain insight-knowledge, the following points must be borne in mind:
Recognize correctly all physical behavior as it arises.
Recognize correctly all mental behavior as it arises.
Recognize every feeling, pleasant, unpleasant, or indifferent, as it arises.
Know, with an analytical mind, every mental object as it arises.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Knowledge Deepens Through Practice
If the Path is practiced to gain direct personal experience, it is usual that knowledge deepens as time goes on.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Initial Doubt
Some people who have never meditated may have some doubt, and no wonder! For only seeing is believing, and their skepticism is due to their lack of experience. I myself was a skeptic at one time. I did not then like the Satipatthana method as it makes no mention of nama, rupa, anicca, anatta and so forth. But the Sayadaw who taught the method was a learned monk, and so I decided to give it a trial. At first I made little progress because I still had a lingering doubt about the method which, in my view, had nothing to do with ultimate reality.
It was only later on when I had followed the method seriously that its significance dawned on me. I realized then that it is the best method of meditation since it calls for attentiveness to everything that is to be known, leaving no room for absent-mindedness. So the Buddha describes the Satipatthana method as the only way: Ekayano-maggo.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
A Very Effective Remedy
If you suffer from ill health or disease, and if you have no other remedy to alleviate the pain and suffering, the meditational practice upon the suffering of illness can give at least some relief if it cannot give you a complete cure. If the pain and suffering remain in your body, the meditational practice can render relief to your mind. But if you are angry or irritated by the physical suffering, your mind will suffer, too. The Buddha compared this dual suffering to being pierced by two thorns at the same time.
Let us say a man has a thorn in his flesh, and he tries to extract the thorn by piercing another thorn into his flesh. The second thorn breaks into the flesh without being able to extract the first thorn. Then the man suffers the pain from two thorns at the same time. So also, the person who cannot make a note of the physical pain in a meditational manner suffers both physical and mental pain. But if he can ponder well upon the physical pain, he will suffer only that pain, and will not suffer mental pain.
This kind of suffering — only physical pain — is like that suffered by the Buddha and arahants, for they, too, suffer physical pain. They suffer from ill-effects of heat and cold, insect bites, and other kinds of discomfort. Though they suffer from the physical dukkha, their minds remain stable, so they do not suffer mental pain. The meditational method is a very effective remedy for physical pain and suffering.
— Discourse on Lokadhamma
Depression
We should keep in mind the law of kamma — the Buddha's teaching that everything happens according to one's actions — and bear our misfortunes calmly. The best remedy in a crisis is the practice of samatha or Vipassana. If sorrow, grief, or depression afflicts us, during meditation hours such unwholesome states of consciousness must be noted and removed. The Buddha describes the Satipatthana method as the only way to get over grief and end all suffering. So long as we keep ourselves mindful according to Satipatthana teaching, we never feel depressed, and if depression arises, it passes away when we focus our attention on it.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Despair
Some meditators are disheartened because of their weak concentration at the outset, but as a result, some redouble their effort and attain unusual insights. So the meditator may benefit by his despair at this stage. According to the commentaries, we should welcome the despair that results from non-fulfillment of desire in connection with renunciation, meditation, reflection, and jhana.
Sorrow is wholesome when it arises from frustration over any effort to promote one's spiritual life, such as the effort to join the holy order, the effort to attain insight, and so forth. We should welcome such sorrow for it may spur effort and lead to progress on the Path. It is not, however, to be sought deliberately. The best thing is to have wholesome joy in the search for enlightenment.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Strenuous Effort
Strenuous, relentless efforts in meditation practices for achievement of concentration and insight should not be misconceived as a form of self-torture. Leaving aside meditation practices, even the keeping of the moral precepts which may entail some physical discomfort and abstention, is not to be regarded as a practice of self-mortification.
In the practice of concentration and insight meditation, patience, and self-control (khanti-samvara) khanti-sa.mvara play an important role; they are important factors for the successful practice of both. Therefore unpleasant physical discomfort should be borne with patience. The self-control practiced thus is not self-mortification, inasmuch as its goal is not the afflicting and enduring of pain but one's progress in virtue, concentration, and wisdom (sila, samadhi, paññ) as enjoined by the Buddha.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
How to Avoid the Two Extremes
Of the five sense objects — namely, sight, sound, smell, taste, and touch — those objects which would not violate observance of the precepts or which would be helpful to the practice of Dhamma may be made use of. Eating food which should be normally eaten, wearing clothes which should be normally worn, contributes to easeful practice of Dhamma, thus avoiding the extreme austerity of self-mortification.
Necessary material goods such as food, clothing, medicine, and shelter should be used, accompanied either by reflective contemplation or the practice of concentration or insight-meditation. Every time contact is made with the five sense objects, they should be noted as objects of insight-meditation. By adopting a reflective mood or by noting these sense objects as objects of insight-meditation, partaking of necessary food, clothing, etc., does not develop into enjoying them with delight or pleasure, thereby avoiding the other extreme of indulgence in sensuous pleasures. The Blessed one declared, therefore, that "Having avoided these two extremes (parts, practices), I have come to understand the Middle Path."
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
Purity of Mind
You have purity of mind when you are mindful. It is a mistake to think that one can attain it only when one enters meditative absorption (jhana). Purity of mind based on jhana is due to the continuous stream of jhanic consciousness. Purity of mind through Vipassana is the purity that emerges at the moment of attaining insight. Both kinds of consciousness are alike in respect to purity of mind and freedom from hindrances.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Insight Meditation
Insight Knowledge
Insight knowledge (vipassana ñana) is attained by observing the actions of mind-and-body (nama-rupa) in the state of impermanence (anicca), suffering (dukkha), and no-self (anatta). It is not attained simply by casual observation but by in-depth observation of the actions as they are happening, without leaving any one of them unobserved. Thus the observation should be on all actions such as seeing, hearing, smelling, eating, etc., as they are happening and without failing to observe any single action.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
A Flash of Lightning
Watch a flash of lightning. If you watch it at the moment lightning strikes, you will see it for yourself. If you are imagining in your mind as to how lightning strikes before or after the event, you may not be regarded as having seen the flash of lightning. So try to know things for yourself by actual observation of things as they happen.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
No Ordinary Teaching
Beware of those who assert that Vipassana (insight-meditation) is unnecessary or superfluous. Such statements are not conducive to the practice of insight-meditation, without which our Buddhasasana would be like any ordinary teaching.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Qualities for Success
It is impossible to do anything without faith or conviction. You will practice mindfulness only if you believe that it will help to develop insight-knowledge. But faith in itself will not do. You need, too, a strong will and unrelenting effort to attain the path and Nibbana. Possession of these qualities is essential to success in the practice of mindfulness and for gaining security in the abode of the Noble.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
The Three Feelings in Vipassana
The main object of Vipassana practice is to seek and cultivate the equanimity that is bound up with "equanimity about formations" (sankharupekkha) insight. To this end we should avoid sensuous joy and seek wholesome joy in good deeds and contemplation. Likewise we should welcome wholesome sorrow stemming from frustration on the holy path and avoid unwholesome sorrow. In the same way we should avoid unwholesome equanimity of the sensual world and seek wholesome equanimity of the holy path.
We should concentrate on wholesome joy, wholesome sorrow, and wholesome equanimity. For the cultivation of these wholesome states of consciousness means the elimination of their negative, unwholesome counterparts.
We should also eliminate wholesome sorrow through wholesome joy. This means that if we are depressed because of the failure to make much progress on the holy path, we must overcome the depression by exerting effort for Vipassana-insight. Likewise, wholesome joy must be rejected through wholesome equanimity.
Thus "equanimity about formations" (sankharupekkha) insight with joy or with equanimity is only a step removed from the holy path and fruition.
— Discourse on the Sakkapañha Sutta
Intrinsic Knowledge
Here we are not concerned with mere perception but with insight-knowledge which can be gained only through actual practice. When you personally watch people going through a gate, you will notice for yourself their goings and comings; you need not depend on others to know at second-hand that they are going in and out of the gate. In the same way if you yourself watch and note the six sense-doors, the eye-door, the ear-door, etc., you will actually see how nama and rupa arise and pass away without resorting to the process of reflecting.
Take another example. Place a mirror at the roadside. All pedestrians and vehicles will be reflected in the mirror in their true nature. If you watch and note them, you will see them as they really are. In the same way if you watch and note with mindfulness all that appears at the six sense-doors, you will notice the sense-objects (which have no consciousness) arising while the mind (the subject that possesses the consciousness) is taking cognizance of such arising. Then both the object and the subject pass away. Then this process is renewed. The meditator will then come to realize that this is the phenomenon of nama and rupa arising and passing away. Consciousness and corporeality are, after all, not everlasting. They are not permanent. They are suffering. They are unsubstantial.
When you note the working of nama and rupa, you will come to know their true nature. Having known their true nature, what remains there to be thought of and considered? So one does not get at the nature of things by merely thinking about nama and rupa, without actually noting how they arise and pass away. Having come face to face with them, are you going to argue their existence? And it does not stand to reason if one merely recites, "Arising! Passing away!" without actually noting the actual process. The knowledge acquired by this method of thinking or reciting is not intrinsic but mere second-hand knowledge gained through books.
The essence of insight-meditation, therefore, is to note personally all dhammas and phenomena as they occur.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
The Knower and the Known
When a Vipassana meditator's insight-meditation becomes strengthened, Right Thoughts direct his mind to realities of the sense-objects on which he concentrates; eventually he will get Right Views. All this happens in this way. As one begins to reach the stage of mindfulness and subsequently of purity of mind, one will be able to distinguish the knowing mind from the object known. For instance, when one is meditating on the rising and falling of the abdominal wall, one may be able to distinguish the phenomenon of rising and falling from the mind that knows it. In much the same way, in the process of walking, one may notice that the act of raising the foot, extending forward, and putting it down is different from the mind motivating the movement. In this way nama, the knower, can be distinguished from rupa, the known. This can be effected without any preconception. One recognizes the phenomena without giving any thought to them. In other words, recognition is spontaneous.
As the power of concentration of the meditator gains strength, and his wisdom gets sharpened thereby, he will come to realize the fact that his knees bend because he wishes them to bent. He walks because he wants to. He sees because he has eyes to see, and the object to be seen is there. He hears because he has ears to hear, and the object to be heard is there. He enjoys life because his kamma is favorable. In this way he is enabled to distinguish between cause and effect with reference to every phenomenon that takes place.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Empirical Knowledge
Our main object is to attain insight-knowledge, which is accessible only to empirical approach. Through experience, the meditator observes the distinction between mind and matter, and he realizes the impermanence of every thing. Experience may be followed by explanation on the part of the teacher, but not the other way around. For real knowledge has nothing to do with preconceived notions but is based on personal experience. The empirical knowledge acquired by the meditator is distinct and clear. In the course of his practice he comes to see nothing except the vanishing of everything. This is called bhanga-ñana, knowledge of dissolution, which he learns to understand not from scriptures nor a teacher, but from experience. As he keeps on meditating, he becomes more and more mindful until his mindfulness becomes perfect at the last stage on the Noble Path.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Conviction in Anicca
When the realities of nama and rupa are known, the meditator will realize that things come into being only to pass away. Hutva abhavato aniccam the Commentaries say. "Having become, things cease to exist; and that is impermanence." Only when he can appreciate the realities of this nature of origination and cessation, will he gain conviction as to the impermanence of existence.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Law of Impermanence
Once you are convinced of the law of impermanence, your mind will be detached from the idea of permanence. When you reach that stage, ignorance will be dispelled from your mind. Then you will be able to get away from sankhara, or volitional formations, which constitute kamma that produces rebirth. Now you see a flash of Nibbana.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Ego-Belief
Believers in the Dhamma who have acquired some knowledge about the fundamentals relating to nama, rupa, anicca (impermanence), dukkha (unsatisfactoriness), and anatta (egolessness, unsubstantiality), should take up the practice of insight-meditation. It involves noting mind and matter in a state of flux at the six sense-doors in accordance with instructions relating to the establishment of mindfulness, satipatthana. Note what the eyes see; note what ears hear; note what the nose smells; note what the tongue tastes; note what the body contacts; note what the mind thinks; and then you will come to know all that is to be known in accordance with the degree of perfection you have acquired.
As a meditator practices mindfulness, his power of concentration will become strengthened and his mind purified. Then he will be able to distinguish the nama, or the mind that knows, and the rupa, or body that is known. Then he will come to realize the absence of the thing called atta or self, or "I." Repeating noting will lead him on to the knowledge of the causes and effects of nama and rupa. In the end, the idea of self will be utterly destroyed. Before the practice of mindfulness he might be wondering if a self existed in the past, and is still existing at the present moment, and will exist in the future. After the Vipassana-practice all such doubts will be resolved as the true nature of the phenomena is understood.
As the meditator continues noting, he will find that the sense-objects, together with the consciousness directed at them, vanish. They are all impermanent. They just arise and pass away of their own accord. What is not permanent is not satisfactory. Nothing is substantial. Then, what is there to cling to as "I" or "Mine"? All phenomena are in a state of flux, now arising, now passing away. Contemplating on these matters, one can, by the conviction of one's own experience, do away with the idea of atta.
Some would like to think that noting merely the arising and passing away of nama or rupa is not enough. They would prefer to speculate at some length on what nama or rupa or the phenomena are. Such speculations are not based on self-acquired knowledge gained through actual practice, but on hearsay or book-knowledge. Insight-knowledge is perceptual and not intellectual.
— Discourse on the Bhara Sutta
Self-Discovery
The five aggregates of grasping must be learned well. You do not learn them by rote. You learn them by actual experience and practice. You must try to realize yourself the phenomena of arising and passing away of mind (nama) and body (rupa). Vipassana means the insight you gain through your own inquiry and effort. Only after self-discovery as a result of meditation will all doubts about the non-existence of self or ego be dispelled. Then only can it be said with certainty that there is none which can be called an entity, and that what appears to be an entity is, after all, an aggregate of mental and bodily processes. As you become illumined with this realization, you will come to understand the law of cause and effect. As you continue to meditate on this causality, you will encounter the state of flux, or the constant arising and passing away of mind (nama) and body (rupa), which, after all, are not permanent.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
The Path Factors in Vipassana
A meditator has to note and observe every object that appears to him via the six sense-doors. This he does with an effort; and that is the Right Effort. Then he has to keep his mind on what he has noted so as to be aware of it. And that is the Right Mindfulness. As he has to be mindful, his mind will have to be fixed or concentrated on the object. And that is the Right Concentration. These three constituents of the Path (magga) — Right Effort, Right Mindfulness, and Right Concentration — are grouped under the heading of concentration (samadhi); they are the samadhi magga. Then there is the process of thinking out what existence really is, which is classified as Right Thinking or Right Thought. As a result of this right thinking, we have the Right View. These two are grouped under the heading of wisdom (pañña); they are the pañña magga. All these five in the samadhi and pañña sections are together classified as karaka magga, or the activators, which combine their efforts in the process of simultaneously noting and knowing.
Right Speech, Right Action, and Right Livelihood constitute the section on virtue; they are the sila magga, which may generally be deemed to have been fulfilled before the meditator takes up insight-meditation. During the period of meditation, these three sila magga (path-factors of virtue) remain unpolluted; in fact they get more and more purified as time goes on. With these three in this group added to the five in the previous groups, we have the eight Path factors as appearing in Vipassana (and hence called vipassana magga) on which we are to meditate.
Again, in the development of insight meditation, basic qualities of the elementary Path (mula magga) must be fulfilled. Of them, the first and foremost is the firm conviction that beings are the responsible "owners of their actions" (kammassakata sammaditthi), a view well established in the law of kamma. Only when a meditator has absolute faith in this law of action and its consequences, can he practice Vipassana. He must believe that the result of carrying out Vipassana or meditation exercises can lead him to the Path, to its fruition and finally to Nibbana. It is only with this faith that he will be able to exert Right effort.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Mindful Perception Leads to Detachment
"In the seen there should be only the seen; in the heard only the heard; in the sensed only the sensed; in the cognized only the cognized." This was the Buddha's instruction to Malunkyaputta and Bahiya.
— Salayatana Samyutta, Sutta 95; Udana I, 10.
One must note what is seen as seen and no more. That is the general idea. For meditational practice, however, one must note the beginning of any object or sense as it is in the process of happening. If one could concentrate on each phenomenon distinctly and separately, one would not feel any attachment or desire, and thus craving (tanha) is gotten rid of.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
The Unseen and the Seen
When the Buddha was about to give instructions to Malunkyaputta Bhikkhu, he asked:
"Malunkyaputta, do you have any desire for the appearances that you have never seen, or those that you are not in the act of seeing, or those that you never expect to see?"
"No, sir, that is impossible," replied the bhikkhu.
— Salayatana Samyutta, No. 95
Now if I were to ask you the same question as the Buddha put to Malunkyaputta Bhikkhu, you would give the same answer as he did. You would not have any feeling of love or hatred for a person whom you never expect to see, would you? Now there are many such people in so many villages, towns, cities, and countries, and you would never have any feeling of love or of hatred for them. You wouldn't have any attachment desire or lust for them.
Defilements do not arise from the unperceived. This point should be noted.
As for the things seen, however, defilements arise both in the act of seeing and after having seen because a mental picture is retained in the memory and on reflection or recall, defilements would recur. These cherished memories are stored up in the archives of the latent tendencies (anusaya), as deeply rooted memories. It is necessary to root these out by means of Vipassana.
— Discourse on the Hemavata Sutta
Warning
When the knowledge of investigating the aggregates as composite, and thus as unsubstantial, works, the meditator becomes fully convinced of the truth of the Dhamma relating to the three marks of anicca, dukkha, and anatta, on the contemplation of which he can further follow the trend of knowledge about the arising and passing away of nama and rupa. This is the stage when he attains udayabbaya ñana, the knowledge of arising and passing away. At this stage he will see a radiance in his mind. He will feel highly exultant. His awareness will be extraordinary. There will be nothing of which he fails to take notice. His mind is sharpened, and his memory becomes clear. Strong faith will be established. He will be joyous both physically and spiritually. This state surpasses description. But, if at this stage one becomes attached to such pleasurable mental states, they will become precursors to defilements of the mind, and be obstacles to further mental development. Joy, in a way, is no doubt a support to the meditator in his efforts to gain more strength and determination to strive further for higher goals until he reaches his destination, namely, mature Vipassana-knowledge. So he is warned just to note the mental state of joy as it occurs, and then to dismiss it altogether to gain insight.
— Discourse on To Nibbana via the Noble Eightfold Path
Eliminating the Unwanted
Every moment of mindfulness means the gradual destruction of latent defilements. It is somewhat like cutting away a piece of wood with a small axe, every stroke helping to get rid of the unwanted fragments of wood.
— Discourse on the Ariyavasa Sutta
Penetrative Insight
Nama and rupa, or the truth of suffering, is seen as impermanent, as suffering, or as non-self. Every time they are seen thus, there is no chance for craving to make their appearance. Thus there is liberation from craving and clinging. It is called knowing the Truth of Origination by abandonment (pahanabhisamaya), though not by realization.
Every time rupa and nama become subjected to his awareness, the meditator is free from ignorance (avijja) that could lead him to the wrong path. Being thus free from avijja, he is free from the ills of sankhara viññana. This is a temporary cessation of ills (tadanga nirodha sacca). This temporary cessation of ills is realized by Vipassana at every instance of noting, but not as its object of contemplation.
Things hidden behind heavy curtains or thick walls become visible when these barriers are shattered asunder or windows are opened out. Likewise the Four Noble Truths are kept hidden behind avijja, which takes note of that which is wrong but covers up that which is right. By developing the Eightfold Path through meditation exercises, Truths which were not known before become apparent through Vipassana knowledge, the knowledge of the Noble Path. Avijja has been penetrated, and Noble Truths become known by means of penetrative insight.
— Discourse on The Wheel of Dhamma
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