Thursday, February 19, 2009

Mediation Gems

Meditation

Important gems taught by Ajahn Chakat:

1. Do not be attached to the external 'form' of meditation.Whether one is sitting full lotus or not or sitting on a chair or walking is Immaterial. The important point is LOOKING at the Mind. ALL else is secondary

2. The time spent in formal practise is of the least importance. What is IMPORTANT is whether we are LOOKING at our Minds in the times when we are NOT in formal practise. At all times whenever possible, LOOK at the Mind when we are working. walking, cooking, in bus, etc That is the important practise

3. Do NOT worry about Jhanas, just be constantly Mindful, that is IMPORTANT. The concentration will arise by itself.

4. Looking at the Breath is important but looking at the Mind is even more so.

5. Meditation can be done with or withOUT the eyes being closed. This is because we are not concerned with what is seen, but what is arising in the Mind as a result of what is seen!

6. From Sense contact will arise FEELINGs (Vedana), Perception (Sanna), Thought Formations (Sankhara) and the Knowing of the Object ie Consciousness (Vinana). When an object is in contact with the sense Base, the result is the Feeling which is NOTED, and the Perception associated with that object. Just KNOW / be Conscious of the Object without THINKING about it. Keep the Thought Formations MINIMAL, just have SATI- the knowing of the Feeling.. thats all. With Training the Perception of it Lessens, and the Thought Formations which results from it lessens. It becomes Just KNOWing of the arising of a Feeling, Just NOTE it .. without responding/prejudice/interpretation. Looking at the Mind enables us to see all of this and to train appropriately.

7. When fear arise, just NOTE the arising of the emotion and stop. When thoughts arise, just see the arising of the Thought and stop. Note and Know this arising and ceasing within the Mind.

8. It is Much more important to train the Mind than the Body; even at near death, we need to be Mindful, to see the Mind process.

9. Looking at the Mind is akin to looking straight into the Mind, the arising Thoughts are like shadows arising at the sides, we do not turn to look at these shadows but merely know that it had arisen, we know it and it fades away . The Knowing Mind is just Looking straight into the Mind unwaveringly, unaffected by the changing emotions and thoughts.

10. It is NOT so easy to see Ghosts and Devas, most times what we think we see is just the result of our Imagination. If the Mindfulness is strong, only Hearing is Noted or Seeing is Noted without interpreting whether it is a "Ghost" or a "Deva"!

11. Do not be attached to external forms; looking at the Vens, what do we see? Monks? It is so perceived because of the Robe that is worn. But it is NOT necessary that all are behaving like Monks just because of the Robes, it is just an image that we perceive. Similarly in meditation, it is NOT necessary that the one sitting unmovingly is in meditation.....it is INDEED the one who is constantly NOTING and KNOWING his Mind who is in Meditation, and this person need not be in full lotus position. This person is just intensely aware, and Mindful. So do not compare oneself with others, instead just train oneself.

12. The main purpose of the teacher is to help the yogi proceed when the yogi is stuck in all his concepts.

13. Whether a Yogi is experiencing Bliss or Depression in meditation, JUST note the emotion and let it go, proceeding from there. Do not be stuck in the emotion, just note it without being INVOLVED in it.

14. Bad kamma is like salt, we can dilute it in lots of water- Good Kamma. Do not live in the past, or keep hoping for the future BUT just Be in the Present moment Mindfully KNOWING the Mind.

15. Do not expect instant results, training oneself to constantly look at the Mind takes time, but we can do it everyday and everytime we have an opportunity. At work we should look at the Mind whenever there is the opportunity. This training in Mindfulness will in fact make one a better worker! The IMPORTANT point is to be ardent and train oneself to be ceaselessly Mindful.

16. Meditation is very simple, it is our wrong concepts which makes it very difficult.
 -- A flower falls, even though we love it; and a weed grows, even though we do not love it.

The Silent Mind

The Silent Mind

The Silent Mind in Meditation

when we talk of "a silent mind", one is not talking of a mind that does nothing, knows nothing and is just blank......

rather the silent mind is that state of mind
that just KNOWS,
that just NOTES
and that does not RESPOND judgementally or emotionally to what is noted,
it just "silently" note all the thoughts or feelings or movements without being involved.

This "silent mind" is in fact VERY active ,
observing mindfully and is aware of all the things that present into its consciousness,

it is "silent" by the fact that it does not ACTIVELY respond to all these sense objects. 

It is just the "Knowing Mind" in contrast to the usual Mind state that jumps in response to stimuli.

When we say we learn or gain insight from this silent mind, it is not that some Divine computer had plugged itself into the USB port of this silent mind and downloaded data!,

NO, this "silent Mind" gains wisdom and Insight by neutrally observing the process of the Body and Mind as it simply silently observes all that passes through it. It is "SILENT" only from the point of it being a very good student intensely observing and not dragged into all the passing thoughts and sensations.

The Mind that is forced into silence by subjugating it into ONE chosen object of Attention eg a Kasina will have deep states of concentration but all it will learn about is that CHOSEN object of attention; temporarily defilements are suppressed but there will not be wisdom from the observation of this humble body.....

Hence, while yogis constantly complain that innumerable thoughts go in and out of theirmind during meditation, what is not realised is that thoughts are NORMAL, as normal as the breathing in and out, or the aches and pains. We do not complain about the sensation of breathing in and out because we accept it as Normal and a meditation object, in fact we feel proud if we note this sensation carefully, similarly we pat ourselves if we note the arising and ceasation of feelings and claim a job well done.... do we not realise that the arising and cessation of thoughts is similarly as natural as breathing or sensations.

If we can just as "Neutrally" note the arising of thoughts, then it is just another object of meditation; the silent knowing mind just noting the arising of thoughts and associated mindstates of anger or hurt or joy or frustration, simply seeing it arise and pass away.
The KNOWING MIND can well be separated from the thoughts, one can clearly observe that the arising thoughts and the Mind that knows these arising thoughts are distinctly separate.

This "SILENT KNOWING MIND" can just observe and do the job of meditation, this SilentKnowing Mind arising in respond to all the objects that presents itself. One may even get the insight that this knowing mind only arises if and when there is an object!

Patience

Patience

Patience in Meditation

A woman approached the great violinist Fritz Kreisler after one of his concerts...

She said, "Mr Kreisler, I would give my life to play as you play!"

He turned and smiled and said, "I DID!"



If we want to be really good at something, we might need to spend our whole life practising ...or ten years practising ... or at least six months!

A hundred years ago, most people understood this. Nowadays, people want instant results!

For whatever we want to do, here's a strategy ... practise every day, but don't expect to see progress every day!

If we are:
* working on our spiritual practise, meditation, Dhamma studies
* learning a language
* getting your body fit
* learning a new sport, beginning a hobby, starting a new career
 ...

give ourself enough time.

Get a daily plan, stick with it ... AND allow ourself time to improve.

We might see little progress in a month. Give it six months of effort - or a year of effort - THEN assess our improvement.

Most people quit too soon!

IN A NUTSHELL

To be successful, this is what we need - in order of importance:
1. Patience and persistence
2. perhaps a bit of Talent !


Expectation is the POISON of the meditator!

Words.

Words3!

Every Word carries with it a big baggage for we attach to it our impressions, likes and dislikes. For example if I say durian, then straight away we have an image of a thorny fruit that is beloved by many and considered diabolical by others! And for the chap who has NO idea what this delectable fruit is, his Mind goes blank!

Hence,

We call it "meditation" and then get ourselves Utterly confused when it does not "fit" into our image of what meditation is supposed to be.

Why not drop the label "meditation"?

I am just watching my Mind, that's all.


So hard to see,
so very, very subtle,
alighting wherever it likes:
the mind.
The wise should guard it.
The mind protected
brings ease.

Meditation has no Failure

 IN MEDITATION, there are people who think of themselves as failures. Not being able to make one's mind concentrated is enough to make one feel a sense of failure, particularly when they hear other people talking that once they enter into meditation, the mind just becomes calm and concentrated, never straying away from breathing. Some set a target for themselves but the mind keeps wandering and at times they get more frustrated, it appears to them that realising the desired result may not be achieved. Bringing the mind back to the primary object does not seem to help either. The mind never seems settled.

  
         There are many reasons for one feeling a sense of failure. May be the expectation is too high and one is not aware of one's own expectation or one has not learnt how to deal with expectation itself. By and large, people come to be disappointed in meditation when they are unable to keep the mind focused on one point, especially breathing or abdominal movements. There are those also who feel defeated in their efforts because sounds and various thoughts disturb them. The experience seems to be driving them to the limit of their ability. The problem is one of being unable to accept theinability.
 
         This is largely due to the judgmental mind. The principle of a non-judgmental approach to Vipassana is not being heeded. A judgmental mind conditions many things — wanting to be something and not wanting to be something. There is a strong desire 'to be.' Vipassana essentially aims at seeing such desire. However, it could be very despairing to see some of our own real experiences in Vipassana meditation. We are not yet ready to see things such as disappointment and the prospect of unfulfilled expectation. While hoping for the best, we are not at all prepared for the worst.
 
         Taking the wandering mind just as another meditation object to observe and contemplate, we could have avoided being disappointed. By observing the judgmental mind, there could be an escape from being trapped in confusion. The mind keeps wanting to be something else (a concentrated mind) all the time, unable to open to the conditions at that present moment, which is wandering. There is also an element of 'want' manifested in wanting not to be something, like having awandering mind. The judgmental mind itself is trapped in two extremes,wanting to get rid of something and wanting to be something else. Just watching and observing these extremes can help one out of being judgmental. Watching and not reacting, are other aspects of mindfulness working the Middle Way which abandons the two opposite extreme approaches.
 
         There is no failure in meditation. Any effort is rewarding in one way or another. We come to learn a lot about how the mind functions, not least the danger of leaving it untrained. It is helpful to remind ourselves that not all failures are necessarily an indication of weakness. The ascetic Gautama, before his enlightenment, went through some kinds of failure, if we may say so. He did not obtain the solution he was seeking from the two best-known meditation masters, Alara Kalama and Uddaka Ramaputta. Having decided to leave a princely life, he found himself not nearer the set goal. A few years, not just a few meditation sessions, of harsh practices that followed did not bring him any reward either. Six years is a long time for someone who is searching extensively and making an earnest effort like ascetic Gautama. He could have called off all his efforts if not for his strong resolve and patience. He made progress through learning from his own failures. His efforts bore fruits in the end, and we benefit them now. Therefore, determination and patience are important friends in coping with failure.
 
         Meditatively, we should endeavour to cope with failure in two ways. First by cultivating the right attitude towards failure or rather, a perceived sense of failureas discussed earlier. Secondly, we should be mindful of the sense of failure itself and the responses to it such as disappointment, frustration and impatience.
 
         Awareness in these cases will prove that developing concentration alone is not sufficient. There are also other very indispensable qualities like determination (aditthana), and patience (khanti) to develop in meditation. Mindfulness helps one to achieve them.

One Breath

ONLY ONE BREATH

By Unknown Author 


 This morning I was talking to Venerable Subbato and he was saying he never has developed Anapanasati - mindfulness of the breath. So I said , ' Can you be mindful of one inhalation ? ' And he said , ' Oh yes.'  ' And of one exhalation ? ' And he said, ' Yes.' And I said, ' Got it ! '

There's nothing more to it than that. However, one tends to expect to develop some special kind of ability to go into some special state. And because we don't do that, then we think we can't do it.

But the way of the spiritual life is through renunciation , relinquishment , letting go not through attaining or acquiring. Even the jhanas* are relinquishments rather than attainments. If we relinquish more and more , letting go more and more , then the jhanic states are natural.

The attitude is most important. To practise anapanasati , one brings the attention onto one inhalation, being mindful from the beginning to the end. One inhalation, that's it ; and then the same goes for the exhalation. That's the perfect attainment of anapanasati. The awareness of just that much is the result of concentration of the mind through sustained attention on the breath - from the beginning to the end of the inhalation , from the beginning to the end of the exhalation. The attitude is always one of letting go , not attaching to any ideas or feelings that arise from that , so that you're always fresh with the next inhalation , the next exhalation , completely as it is . You're not carrying over anything. So it's a way of relinquishment, of letting go, rather than of attaining and achieving.

The dangers in meditation practice is the habit of grasping at things , grasping at states ; so the concept that's most useful is the concept of letting go , rather than of attaining and achieving. If you say today that yesterday you had a really super meditation , absolutely fantastic , just what you've always dreamed of , and then today you try to get the same wonderful experience as yesterday, but you get more restless and more agitated than ever before - now why is that ? Why can't we get what we want ? It's because we're trying to attain something that we remember rather than really working with the way things are , as they happen to be now. So the correct way is one of mindfulness , of looking at the way it is now rather than remembering yesterday and trying to get to that state again.

The first year I meditated I didn't have a teacher. I was in this little kuti* in Nong Khai for about ten months , and I had all kinds of blazing insights. Being alone for ten months , not having to talk , not having to go anywhere , everything calmed down after several months, and then I thought I was a fully enlightened person, an arahant. I was sure of it. I found out later that I wasn't.

I remember we went through a famine in Nong Khai that year and we didn't get very much to eat. I had malnutrition, so I thought, ' Maybe malnutrition's the answer. If I just starve myself...' I remember being so weak with malnutrition at Nong Khai that my earlobes started cracking open. On waking up , I'd have to pry my eyelids open ; they'd be stuck shut with the stuff that comes out of your eyelids when you're not feeling very well.

Then one day this Canadian monk brought me three cans of tinned milk. In Asia they have tinned sweetened milk and it's very very delicious. And he also brought me some instant coffee, and a flask of hot water. So I made a cup of this : put in a bit of coffee , poured in some of this milk , poured hot water and started drinking it. And I just went crazy. It was so utterly delicious, the first time I had anything sweet in weeks, or anything stimulating. And being malnourished and being in a very dull tired apathetic state, this was like high-octane petrol - whoomph ! Immediately I gulped that down - I couldn't stop myself - and I managed to consume all three tins of milk and a good portion of that coffee. And my mind went flying into outer space, or it seemed like it, and I thought, ' Maybe that's the secret. If I can just get somebody to buy me tinned milk.'

When I went to Wat Pah Pong the following year I kept thinking, ' Oh , I had all those wonderful experiences in Nong Khai. I had all those beautiful visions, and all those fantastic floating experiences and blazing insights , and it seemed like I understood everything. And you even thought you were an arahant.' At Wat Pah Pong, that first year there, I didn't have much of anything. I just kept trying to do all the things I'd done in Nong Khai to get these things.But after a while , even using strong cups of coffee didn't work any more. I didn't seem to get those exhilarations , those fantastic highs and blazing insights , that I had the first year. So after the first Vassa* at Wat Pah Pong , I thought , 'This place is not for me. I think I'll go and try to repeat what happened in Nong Khai.' And I left Ajahn Chah and went to live on Pupek mountain in Sakorn Nakorn province.

There , at last , I was in an idyllic spot. However, for the almsround there you had to leave before dawn and go down the mountain , which was quite a climb , and wait for the villagers to come. They'd bring you food , and then you had to climb all the way back up and eat this food before twelve noon. That was quite a problem.

I was with one other monk, a Thai monk , and I thought , ' He's really very good ', and I was quite impressed with him. But when we were on this mountain, he wanted me to teach him English ; so I got really angry with him !

It was in an area where there was a lot of terrorists and communists, in North-East Thailand. There were helicopters flying overhead sometimes checking us out. Once they came and took me down to the provincial town, wondering whether I was a communist spy.

Then I got violently ill , so ill that they had to carry me down the mountain. I was stuck in a wretched place by a reservoir under a tin roof in the hot season with insects buzzing in and out of my ears and orifices. With horrible food  I nearly died , come to think of it . I almost didn't make it.

But it was during that time in that tin-roof lean-to that a real change took place. I was really despairing and sick and weak and totally depressed , and my mind would fall into these hellish realms , with the terrible heat and discomfort. I felt like I was being cooked ; it was like torture.

Then a change came. Suddenly, I just stopped my mind ; I refused to get caught in that negativity and I started to practise anapanasati. I used the breath to concentrate my mind and things changed very quickly. After that , I recovered my health and it was time to enter the next Vassa , so I went back - I'd promised Ajahn Chah I'd go back to Wat Pah Pong for the Vassa - and my robes were all tattered and torn and patched. I looked terrible. When Ajahn Chah saw me, he just burst out laughing. And I was so glad to get back after all that !

I had been trying to practice and what I had wanted were the memories of these insights. I'd forgotten what the insights really were. I was so attached to the idea of working in some kind of ascetic way, like I did the first year, when asceticism really worked. At that time being malnourished and being along had seemed to provide me with insight, so that for the following several years I kept trying to create the conditions where I would be able to have these fantastic insights.

But the following two or three years seemed to be years of just getting by. Nothing much seemed to happen. I was six months on this mountain before I returned to Wat Pah Pong, just deciding to stay on and follow the insights I had. One of the insights the first year was that I should find a teacher, and that I should learn how to live under a discipline imposed on me by that teacher. So I did that. I realised Ajahn Chah was a good teacher and had a good standard of monastic discipline , so I stayed with him. Those insights that I had were right, but I'd become attached to the memory.

Actually, insight is more and more a matter of living insightfully. It's not just that you have insight sometimes, but more and more as you reflect on Dhamma, then everything is insightful. You see insightfully into life as it's happening to you . As soon as you think you have to have special conditions for it, and you're not aware of that , then you're going to create all sorts of complexities about your practice.

So I developed letting go : to not concern myself with attaining or achieving anything. I decided to make little achievements possible by learning to be a little more patient , a little more humble , and a little more generous. I decided to develop this rather than go out of my way to control and manipulate the environment with the intention of setting myself up in the hope of getting high. It became apparent , through reflection ,that the attachment to the insights was the problem. The insights were valid insights, but there was attachment to the memory.

Then the insight came that you let go of all your insights. You don't attach to them. You just keep letting go of all the insights you have because otherwise they become memories, and then memories are conditions of the mind and , if you attach to them , they can only take you to despair.

In each moment it's as it is. With Ana-Pana-Sati , one inhalation , at this moment , is this way.It's not like yesterday's inhalation was. You're not thinking of yesterday's inhalation and yesterday's exhalation while you're doing the one now. You're with it completely, as it is ; so you establish that. The reflective ability is based on establishing your awareness in the way it is now rather than having some idea of what you'd like to get, and then trying to get it in the here and now. Trying to get yesterday's blissful feeling in the here and now means you're not aware of the way it is now. You're not with it. Even with anapanasati, if you're doing it with the hope of getting the result that you had yesterday, that will make it impossible for that result to ever happen.

Last winter, Venerable Vipassi was meditating in the shrine room and someone was making quite distracting noises. Talking to Venerable Vipassi about it , I was quite impressed , because he said first he felt annoyed and then he decided the noises would be part of the practice. So, he opened his mind to the meditation hall with everything in it - the noises, the silence, the whole thing. That's wisdom, isn't it ? If the noise is something you can stop - like a door banging in the wind - go close the door. If there's something you have control over, you can do that.

But much of life you have no control over. You have no right to ask everything to be silent for ' my ' meditation. When there is reflectiveness , instead of having a little mind that has to have total silence and special conditions , you have a big mind that can contain the whole of it : the noises, the disruptions, the silence, the bliss, the restlessness, the pain. The mind is all-embracing rather than specialising on a certain refinement in consciousness. Then you develop flexibility because you can concentrate your mind.

This is where wisdom is needed for real development.It's through wisdom that we develop it, not through will-power or controlling or manipulating environmental conditions ; getting rid of the things we don't want and trying to set ourselves up so that we can follow this desire to achieve and attain.

Desire is insidious. When we are aware that our intention is to attain some state, that's a desire , isn't it ? So we let it go. If we are sitting here, even with a desire to attain the first jhana , we recognise that that desire is going to be the very thing that's going to prevent the fulfilment. So we let go of the desire , which doesn't mean not to do anapanasati , but to change the attitude to it.

So what can we do now ? Develop mindfulness of one inhalation. Most of us can do that ; most human beings have enough concentration to be concentrated from the beginning of an inhalation to the end of it. But even if your concentration span is so weak you can't even make it to the end, that's all right. At least you can get to the middle, maybe. That's better than if you gave up totally or never tried at all, isn't it ? Because at least you're composing the mind for one second, and that's the beginning : to learn to compose and collect the mind around one thing, like the breath , and sustain it just for the length of one inhalation ; if not, then half an inhalation , or a quarter , or whatever. At least you have started, and you must try to develop a mind that's glad at just being able to do that much, rather than being critical because you haven't attained the first jhana, or the fourth.

If meditation becomes another thing you have to do, and you feel guilty if you don't live up to your resolutions , then you start pushing yourself without an awareness of what you're doing. Then life does get quite dreary and depressing. But if you are putting that skilful kind of attention into your daily life, you'll find so much of daily life very pleasant - which you may not notice if you are caught in your compulsions and obsessions. If we act with compulsiveness it becomes a burden , a grind. Then we drag ourselves around doing what we have to do in a heedless and negative way. But being able to be in the countryside - the tress, the fields, we have this time for a retreat - we can sit and walk ; we don't have a lot to do. The morning chanting, the evening chanting can be extremely pleasant for us, when we're open to it. People are offering the food. The meal is quite a lovely thing. People are eating mindfully and quietly.When we're doing it out of habit and compulsion ! ! ! , then it gets to be a drag. And a lot of things that are quite pleasant in themselves are no longer pleasant. We can't enjoy them when we're coming from compulsiveness, heedlessness, and ambition. Those are the kinds of driving forces that destroy the joy and the wonder of our lives.

Sustaining your attention on the breathing really develops awareness but when you get lost in thought or restlessness, that's all right too. Don't drive yourself. Don't be a slave driver or beat yourself with a whip and drive yourself in a nasty way. Lead, guide and train yourself ; leading onward, guide yourself rather than driving and forcing yourself.

Nibbana is a subtle realisation of non-grasping. You can't drive yourself to Nibbana. That's the sure way of never realising it. It's here and now, so if you're driving yourself to Nibbana, you're always going far away from it, driving right over it.

It's pretty heavy, sometimes, to burn up attachments in our mind. The Holy Life is a holocaust , a total burning, a burning up of self, of ignorance. The purity that comes from the holocaust is like a diamond ; something that went through such fires that all that was left was purity. And so in our life here there has to be this willingness to burn away the self-views , the opinions , the desires , the restlessness , the greed ; all of it , the whole of it , so that there's nothing but purity remaining.Then when there is purity, there is nobody, no thing , there's that , the 'suchness '.

And let go of that. More and more the path is just the simple being here and now, being with the way things are. There's nowhere to go, nothing to do, nothing to become, nothing to get rid of. Because of the holocaust, there is no ignorance remaining ; there is purity, clarity and intelligence.

Right Concentration

Right Concentration

Right concentration (samma samadhi) is the eighth step on the Buddha's Noble Eightfold Path and is an essential component of successful meditation. It is defined in the scriptures as `any unification of the mind' (M.I,301) and is sometimes also called `one-pointedness of mind'.
 
The advantages of concentration are many. The attention is fixed on an object for a sustained period allowing us to come to know it better and thus it has a role to play in wisdom. When we have developed concentration, we can turn our attention to whatever we like, rather than having it constantly flitting from one thing to another as is usually the case. The ability to do this can minimize useless daydreaming, worry and unwanted intrusive thoughts thus giving us a degree of peace and calm.
 
In Buddhist meditation concentration is usually developed by practicing mindfulness of breathing (M.III,82).
According to the Buddha there are several things we can do which will assist in the development of concentration.
 
The first is following the Precepts. Doing this simplifies our life and minimizes the possibilities of remorse, embarrassment and conflicts with others, all of which keep the mind churned up.

Another thing is what the Buddha called guarding the sense doors, which means not seeking out situations that will over-stimulate the mind(D.I,70). Also, there is a direct connection between physical ease, psychological well-being and concentration. 

While actually practising meditation, maintaining a relaxed, comfortable posture will allow the body to become still without being forced.Likewise, having a light, joyful attitude will make concentration easier.
 
The Buddha said that '…from gladness comes joy, being joyful the body is tranquil, with a tranquil body one is happy and the mind that is happy becomes concentrated' (D.I,74).

Meditation Posture

Meditation Posture

A posture is a position the body is held in. The Buddhist scriptures frequently speak of four postures – walking, standing, sitting and lying down  M.I,57.
 
The significance of posture in Buddhism pertains mainly to the practise of meditation. During the preliminary stages of meditation the Buddha recommended (M.I,56) that one sit with the legs crossed and the back straight. Most people find it helpful to put a pillow under their buttocks, place their hands either in their lap or on their knees and close their eyes. Some meditators might find it suits them better to sit on a chair rather than on the floor. The Visuddhimagga makes the helpful suggestion that meditators should try different postures for three days each and then decide on the one that is most comfortable for them (Vis.128).
 
The two most important aspects of good meditation posture are (1) that the back be straight without being rigid so as to facilitate clear breathing, and (2) that the body be relaxed and comfortable so that discomfort does not become a distraction (S.V,156).

Those whose goal is to develop mindfulness, should do so with a regimen of regular sitting practise. However, after their mindfulness has been strengthened, it is necessary to then try to broaden it by becoming mindful during all activities, i.e. while in any of the four postures. The Buddha said: 'A monk has full awareness while coming and going, while reaching out his hands or drawing them back, while putting on his robes and carrying his bowl, while eating and drinking, chewing and tasting, even while defecating and urinating. He has full awareness while walking, standing and sitting, while falling to sleep and waking up, while talking and remaining silent' (M.I,57).

Inscriptions

AN 3.130
Lekha Sutta                       Inscriptions



"Monks, there are these three types of individuals to be found existing in the world. Which three? An individual like an inscription in rock, an individual like an inscription in soil, and an individual like an inscription in water.

"And how is an individual like an inscription in rock? There is the case where a certain individual is often angered, and his anger stays with him a long time. Just as an inscription in rock is not quickly effaced by wind or water and lasts a long time, in the same way a certain individual is often angered, and his anger stays with him a long time. This is called an individual like an inscription in rock.

"And how is an individual like an inscription in soil? There is the case where a certain individual is often angered, but his anger doesn't stay with him a long time. Just as an inscription in soil is quickly effaced by wind or water and doesn't last a long time, in the same way a certain individual is often angered, but his anger doesn't stay with him a long time. This is called an individual like an inscription in soil.

"And how is an individual like an inscription in water? There is the case where a certain individual — when spoken to roughly, spoken to harshly, spoken to in an unpleasing way — is nevertheless congenial, companionable, & courteous. Just as an inscription in water immediately disappears and doesn't last a long time, in the same way a certain individual — when spoken to roughly, spoken to harshly, spoken to in an unpleasing way — is nevertheless congenial, companionable, & courteous. This is called an individual like an inscription in water.

"These are the three types of individuals to be found existing in the world."

Dogmas

DOGMAS

What are dogmas? Firstly, they are opinions; a teaching, belief or rule laid down by a person or group which others have to accept without question.

The Buddha began his religious life with the great questions of life: What is life? Why suffering? How to end suffering? What is happiness? After the Buddha's awakening, he advises his followers to continue to question in this manner.

To question effectively, we have to observe carefully. They are inseparable. This careful observation is known as "mindfulness." Meditation is as important as a very effective way of observation or mindfulness which prepares us for a direct knowledge and vision of reality/Truth.

What are our tools for observation? There are six of them: the eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind. The eye sees form, the ear hears sounds, the nose smells odours, the tongue tastes, the body feels touches, and the mind manages all these experiences and also has it own mental images.

What can we observe? We can only observe the sense-objects: forms, sounds, smells, tastes, touches, and mind processes. Whatever happens, can only happen within these six sense-fields. The awakening process leading to mental liberation lies in understanding how the six senses and the six sense-objects work in our consciousness.

When we do this, we find that our consciousness (here it is easier if we limit it to "attention") tries to go a thousand ways. We easily become distracted. If we are observant enough, we will notice that our attention would mostly go into the past, and sometimes into the future, but rarely lives in the present moment!

Understanding this uprooted nature of our consciousness is the beginning of knowledge and vision of true reality. In terms of practice, all Buddhist teachings lead one thing: present-moment awarenessWatch the present moment, and do so again and again, and carefully. What do we see?

If our ideas are fixed or our minds unclear, we will only see the shifting shadows of the past, and blinding colours of the future, and these can be very noisy. When we focus on the present moment (such as doing breath meditation), these shadows, colourings and noises recede into the background, settling like dirt in settled water. Our minds become calmer and clearer.

There are various ways of talking about what we see in the calm and clarity of the present moment. One popular way in the Suttas is that of the five aggregates. All that we can know and see are as follows:

(1) The body: this is impermanent, changing all the time,
     becoming other than what we wish.


(2) When there is a body, there are feelings (like, dislike, neutral).

(3) These feelings arise dependent of how we recognize our present sense-experiences: when we relate it to something nice in the past, we interpret it as "nice," and so on.
     The present quickly becomes the past.

(4) We are caught in this opinion-cycle, and keep on forming new opinions, which are often biased by like, dislike, or unconcern.

(5) All this happens as along as we direct our consciousness to them.

Considering all this dynamics, we should be able to understand why there are no dogmas in Buddhism. Because Buddhism is a life-long learning process.Try watching how a baby learns to walk. He has no dogmas: he just keeps on learning to walk, no matter how many times he falls, he gets up, and keeps moving. Then he walks and finally grows up into you!

Sunday, February 15, 2009

IwantHP

Oh my!!

I want this HP Designer Laptop because it is such a cute little gadget!! HP mini 1000 Vivienne Tam edition.

Great design which really brings out the style and feminine touch in one. Can imagine it adding a stylish and fashionable touch to me when I use it to display to others. You can be tech savvy and still look great professionally!
This will not be hidden in a cover and can be like a clutch as I walk around holding this gadget proudly.

Plus, I was always looking for something that is portable and still looks great. This will serve me well at my work, giving me the portability that I need. Plus I can be online and working for both work and leisure wherever and whenever I want and need!

I want this HP Designer Laptop because it is compact, portable, looks great both on the inside and outside! I need and really want the additional touch that it will bring!