Showing posts with label abhidhamma. Show all posts
Showing posts with label abhidhamma. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 25, 2011

Unraveling Mind and Body (Part II of II)

Ayya Susila and Yogi Seven (Wisdom Quarterly)


PART I... Each contains eight inseparable characteristics: solidity (earth), cohesion (water), temperature (fire), movement (wind), color, smell, taste, and nutritive essence. The apparent elements break down to sub-components of existence.

This is crucial to understand because, by penetrating conventional truth with wisdom, we are able to realize ultimate truth.

Ultimate Truth
Ultimate truth refers to things that cannot be further broken down into smaller components. They cannot be further broken down because they are the final and irreducible sub-components of existence that exist by reason of their own intrinsic nature (sabhāva).

For example, "earth" element in the human body (or any animate thing) exists as the intrinsic characteristic of relative hardness or softness. "Fire" element exists as the intrinsic characteristic of relative heat and cold.

Whereas body is a conventional truth, its elements are ultimate truth -- the final, irreducible components of existence. No amount of analysis can further break them down.

Of these two realities, Abhidharma deals primarily with ultimate truth.

This book is divided into three parts. Part I describes ultimate reality, which in Abhidharma is fourfold: Three folds comprise the totality of conditioned existence. Consciousness and mental factors are what we conventionally call the “mind.” Matter is what we conventionally call the “body.”

The coming together of mind and matter is what we conventionally call “I,” self, living being, person, animal, or whatever the case may be. It is surprising, but “I” is simply a conventional truth, a concept, whereas consciousness, mental factors, and matter are ultimate truths.

These three ultimate truths are conditioned dharmas (things, phenomena). They are produced by causes and conditions and are subject to alteration, dissolution, and passing away. These three are indeed subtle and profound dharmas that cannot be seen by the ordinary

However, they can be discerned by intensified-mind developed by concentration and wisdom.

Nirvana, the fourth ultimate reality, is unconditioned. That is to say, it is not produced by any cause or condition. It stands by itself. Therefore, it does not change. Nirvana can be experienced here and now. The path is one of undergoing a gradual training of morality, concentration, and wisdom detailed by the Buddha, who pointed out the way to enlightenment.



Part II of the book describes rebirth and Dependent Origination. The basic law of karma, the lawful regularity of causes and effects, is generally recognized. What is generally not understood is how karma acts as a link at the time of death.

The near-death cognitive process is detailed showing that at the moment of rebirth, consciousness (called death-proximate consciousness) in the present life gives rise to rebirth-linking consciousness connecting to the next life. They are linked together by the karma (action or seed) that ripens at death without a transmigrating soul crossing over life after life. This process of death and rebirth is impersonal, merely the arising of suffering. How does this suffering arise, and how is it to cease?

The Buddha revealed the problem of suffering and its solution, explaining it in a profound teaching called Dependent Origination. On account of not seeing this truth, he and we went on suffering for an inconceivably long time bound to the wheel or round of death and rebirth. The two root causes of the dilemma are ignorance and craving. They give rise to suffering (dukkha, unsatisfactoriness, distress).

With the cessation of causes and conditions, effects cease. Dependent Origination reveals the conditional arising of an “ego” or “individual,” conventionally speaking, how it cycles through the beginningless wheel of rebirth, undergoes the round of existence and death.

The profound teaching of Dependent Origination consists of 12 interrelated factors. These factors are links in a causal chain. The chain encompasses all three periods of time: past, present, and future lives. Each factor is entirely dependent on the preceding factor as its support or condition; it in turn becomes the condition or support for the subsequent factor.

The factors are merely mind and matter governed by causality. The final cessation of all suffering is brought about by practicing the Noble Eightfold Path, which is the Buddha's threefold training of morality, concentration, and wisdom. This book is a guide along that path.



Part III describes the actual practice (concentration and insight) that brings about the realization of what has been learned. Concentration is frequently overlooked nowadays in favor of mindfulness. But we will see that mindfulness is not enough for the realization of nirvana, which is why the Buddha included the factor "right concentration" in the Noble Eightfold Path and defined it in terms of absorptions (jhānas). There are many ways to develop concentration. The easiest is perhaps mindfulness of breathing (anapanasati).

Because it is one of the easiest serenity meditation (samatha) subjects to learn and because a practitioner is able to develop it to the level of absorption, it is systematically detailed here. But it is taught in such a way as to be easily understood and followed. With it antidotes to the Five Hindrances that obstruct serenity and insight (sensual desire, ill-will, sleepiness, restlessness, and doubt) are also detailed. After successfully reaching the first level of absorption, one can directly proceed to the development of insight by discerning mental factors one by one.

In order to realize that the body ultimately consists of four elements (manifesting as many forms of derived materiality), two related meditations are introduced -- contemplating the body's 32 parts as taught in the ancient discourses and as taught at Pa Auk meditation centers.

And finally a moment-to-moment insight practice is revealed that emphasizes mindfulness and wisdom that releases one from clinging and suffering. The practice begins as sense objects impinge on sense bases and is applicable in formal meditation and daily life.

Unraveling the mysteries of the human mind may seem like an overwhelming task. But it is exactly for this reason that Abhidharma is studied, making it a systematic path that produces immediate results for ordinary people.

The subject, in practice, is actually easily understood. In theory it can be made endlessly complex to no advantage. Combining philosophy and practice unravels the mystery and, with patience and effort, brings one to full comprehension.



This book is not intended for light reading, in spite of the fact that it may be approached lightly. It is intended to be a serious practice manual. Without practice, the topic seems ponderous and metaphysical, requiring readers to be slow, exacting, and careful not to jump to unfounded conclusions. Many of these intellectual pitfalls are avoided by simple and consistent practice.

The ease with which one comprehends Abhidharma will of course vary from person to person, depending on the quality of one’s existing understanding of Buddhism. But the purpose of the book is to present the subject in direct, simple, and straightforward language without assuming previous knowledge of Buddhism, which should enable even beginners to understand deeply.

The subjects are interrelated and in sequence. Evaluating, presuming, and concluding without actually reading and practicing are pitfalls best avoided. The mind, like a parachute, only works when it is open. It is up to each person to practice what the Buddha taught as a practice not as a theory. Read, question, and apply the antidotes consistently and in this way honor the Buddha who pointed out the path to the end of suffering.

“Those who understand the meaning and the truth and who practice in accordance with the truth few, while those who fail to do so are many. Those who are stirred by things that are truly stirring are few, while those who are not are many. Those who strive with balance are few, while those who do not are many” (AN I, xix: 1).

Be one of the few.

Friday, September 2, 2011

Sayalay Susila speaks in Richmond, VA

Vipassana means "seeing things as they really are." The insight gained though the practice of vipassana enables one to correctly interpret the input from the five physical senses and the mind.



The mental factors of mindfulness and wisdom are combined to enable one to see the impermanent, unsatisfactory, and impersonal nature of the body and mind.



Join the Ekoji Buddhist Sangha as Sayalay Susila guides attendees through meditation and a discourse on these precious teachings of the Buddha.

Sayalay Susila was ordained as a Buddhist nun in Malaysia in 1991. She practiced under Sayadaw U Pandita until 1994 then took up intensive practice under the guidance of Ven. Pa Auk Sayadaw at Pa Auk Forest Meditation Center, Burma. Since 2002, she has traveled in the U.S. and Canada teaching Abhidharma and meditation. She is the author of "Unraveling the Mysteries of Mind and Body Through Abhidhamma."

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

An Exposition on "Right Mindfulness"

Ven. P.A. Payutto (translated from Thai by Wisdom Quarterly and Dhamma-Vijaya)





In the Noble Eightfold Path the practice leading to the complete cessation of unsatisfactoriness (dukkha, suffering) is "right mindfulness" (samma-sati).



It is counted as the second factor of the Concentration Section, the "Higher Mental Training." The usual definition of right mindfulness given in the sutras (discourses) is as follows:



"Monastics, what is right mindfulness? The following is called right mindfulness, namely, that a practitioner in this Doctrine and Discipline:



"1. One contemplates the body in the body with effort, clearly comprehending and mindfully, eradicating covetousness and distress with regard to the world;[1]



"2. One contemplates feeling in feelings with effort, clearly comprehending and mindfully, eradicating covetousness and distress with regard to the world;



"3. One contemplates the mind in the mind with effort, clearly comprehending and mindfully, eradicating covetousness and distress with regard to the world;



"4. One contemplates phenomena [2] in phenomena with effort, clearly comprehending and mindfully, eradicating covetousness and distress with regard to the world" (D.II.313).

  • This gradual training is outlined in the discourse on the setting up of the Four Foundations of Mindfulness and explained in detail by teachers in a living oral tradition.

"'Mindfulness' might also be defined as 'knowing where your elbow is at all times.' " (Fr.toonpool.com; loosely translated from German by Wisdom Quarterly).



Another definition, which appears in the Abhidharma ("Higher Teachings") texts, runs as follows:



"What is right mindfulness? Mindfulness (sati) means to bear in mind or bring to mind. It is the state of recollecting, the state of remembering [keeping in mind], the state of non-fading, the state of non-forgetting. It means the mindfulness that is a Spiritual Faculty, the mindfulness that is a Spiritual Power, right mindfulness, the mindfulness that is an Factor of Enlightenment, that which is a Path Factor, and that which is related to the Path. This is what is called right mindfulness" (Vbh.105, 286).

  • These are all references to the great importance of mindfulness in the "37 Requisites of Enlightenment" (bodhi-pakkaya-dhamma), where it occurs 14 times.
Right mindfulness, as defined in the discourses, is a synonym for the principles of Dharma known as the Four Foundations (sati-patthana). The four elements of this group have the abbreviated names of:
  1. mindfulness (or "contemplation") of the body (kaya-anupassana);
  2. mindfulness of feelings (vedana-anupassana);
  3. mindfulness of mind (citta-anupassana);
  4. mindfulness of mind-objects (dhammas or phenomena).
Before investigating the meaning of right mindfulness in terms of the Four Foundations, it is appropriate to point out a few things on the subject of sati to serve as a basic foundation for study. More



TRANSLATOR'S NOTES

[1] "Ananda, whatever is of a nature to dissolve (paloka), this is called 'the world' in the Discipline of the Nobles. What is of a nature to dissolve? The eye, Ananda...visible objects...visual consciousness... visual contact... the ear... sounds...mind contact, and whatever arises conditioned by mind contact, whether felt as pleasant or painful or neutral -- that is of a nature to 'dissolve'."

[2] Namely, all mental and physical phenomena (listed and explained in the discourse on the Four Foundations of Mindfulness (MN 10)

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Super speed cameras may one day see particles

The smallest unit of material in Buddhist physics is the kalapa. These particles of perception are so far visible only to highly trained and concentrated meditators. Most people will never see them even with a meditation practice. It takes specialized training, such as that provided by Pa Auk Sayadaw and the few teachers he has trained. But it is vital to see them to discern mind (citta) and matter, also called consciousness and materiality. Will a camera like the Phantom Flex one day be able to reach the speed and sophistication to prove the Buddha's teachings on physics empirically? Probably not. But while it tries, it is possible for a purified and well trained mind to see ultimate reality, discern it, and be freed from the illusion that composite things are either permanent (from one moment to the next), able to satisfy, or in any way personal (part of an abiding "self" we cling to as our own).

Absorption Advice (Jhana Meditation)

(jhanasadvice.com)



Pa Auk Sayadaw is a Theravada Buddhist scholar-practitioner. Two of his accomplished Western students are Stephen Snyder and Tina Rasmussen. They are offering retreats, day long meditations, and interviews (advice on practicing to gain profound serenity).



2011 Retreats

3-day meditation retreat at Cloud Mountain, Dec. 9-12, 2011



Dharma Talks, Daylongs, Interviews

  • Tina Rasmussen was recently interviewed by Nonduality Magazine, an online magazine featuring interviews with teachers from a wide variety of traditions. Stephen Snyder will be interviewed for the next issue.
Dharma Talks

  • Sacramento, CA on April 21 & 22, 2012
  • We have posted a Dharma talk recorded in November, 2009 when Ven. Pa Auk Sayadaw invited us to teach at the Theravada Dhamma Society near San Francisco, California.
  • We were interviewed in 2010 by Vince Horn at BuddhistGeeks.com. It was a lot of fun talking about the "Jedi Warrior Training" yogis described experiencing at our Dec. 2009- Jan 2010 retreat. Click here for the link, and scroll down to the interviews (in two parts).
Upcoming 2012 and 2013 Retreats

  • 25-day Retreat in Washington, 2013: We will also offer our first 25-day retreat, October 13-November 8, 2013, at a private retreat center on Samish Island, near Bellingham, Washington. The estimated cost is $1,350 and all rooms are single cabins. Pre-registration is now open.
  • These retreats are in addition to our usual 13-day annual retreat at Cloud Mountain, which next year will be held Sept 8-21, 2012. See Events page for details.

Spirit Rock Daylong: In Jan. 2011, we held our first daylong at Spirit Rock Meditation Center (near San Francisco). We were delighted that 120 people attended with very positive feedback.



Practicing the Jhanas Book


  • Now available for e-readers! The e-reader version of Jhanas Advice is sold at a reduced cost, on Amazon Kindle, Barnes & Noble, and Google.
  • Practicing the Jhanas (Shambhala Publications) is available in major bookstores and most Internet booksellers. Or order from JhanasAdvice.com (Books page).

  • The original Jhanas Advice from Two Spiritual Friends was purchased by more than 550 people in 31 countries on six continents in a two year period. The Shambhala version contains one additional chapter on "First Sit to First Jhana" as well as an expanded section on the Purification of Mind. Several wonderful reviews of our book have been released, including Yoga Journal UK, Wisdom Quarterly: American Buddhist Journal, and Buddhadharma. The latest can be found here.
Knowing and Seeing by Pa Auk Sayadaw
This seminal text is now available at cost for purchase on Amazon.com thanks to two yogis in our sangha -- Ted Weinstein and Michael Nagy. The book is beautiful and much easier to read and use than the downloadable version. It sells for $15.99 (nonprofit) with any small proceeds being donated to Pa Auk Forest Monastery in Burma. Click here to order. For a description visit Books/Dana page.

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Enlightened Nun to Teach in D.C. Area

Wisdom Quarterly


In a rare opportunity to see a noble Buddhist teacher, a local Dharma advocate has arranged for an extraordinary nun to teach openly. Sayalay Susila will be offering three afternoon Dharma sessions in the Washington, DC area on July 23, July 30, and August 6, 2011. The format for the afternoon is an hour of sitting meditation, an hour long Dharma talk, and an hour of Q&A.

  • There is no charge for these sessions; dana will be accepted [which is extraordinarily meritorious]. To attend, register with Fran Oropeza (OropezaF at AOL.com) because space is limited to 45 people. It is wise to sign up early.
July 23, 2011
Sayalay Susila will teach "The Exposition of the Elements" (Dhatuvibhanga Sutra, MN 140). This first session will be held from 1:00-5:00 pm in Meeting Room 104 A/B of the Martha Washington Library. The library is located at 6614 Fort Hunt Road, Alexandria, VA 22307, (703) 768-6700. Directions: I-495 /Capital Beltway to the Alexandria Exit 177A-177B, U.S 1, South toward Fort Belvoir. Travel on U.S. 1 for approximately 0.2 miles to a slight right fork with a stoplight. (Get in a turn lane to make a 90 degree turn across U.S. 1 onto Fort Hunt Road/State Route 629). Turn left across U.S. 1 onto Fort Hunt Road and go approximately 1.2 miles. Library is on the right.

July 30, 2011
Sayalay will be offer her talk “Conquering the Enemy.” This second session will be held from 1:00-5:00 pm in the George Mason Meeting Room of the George Mason Regional Library, located at 7001 Little River Turnpike, Annandale, VA 22003, (703) 256-3800. Directions: I-495 /Capital Beltway to Annandale Exit 52, Little River Turnpike, VA - 236 - East. Travel on VA - 236 - East for approximately 1.8 miles. Library is on the right.

August 6, 2011
Sayalay will be teaching about the "Five Aggregates" (constituents of existence). This third session will be held from 1:00-5:00 pm in the City of Fairfax Regional Library Meeting Room A. The library is located at 10360 North Street Fairfax, VA 22030, (703) 293-6227. Directions: I-495 /Capital Beltway to Annandale Exit 52, Little River Turnpike, VA - 236 - West. Travel on VA - 236 - West for approximately 5 miles. Turn right on Old Lee highway and travel approximately 500 feet. Left on North Street. Library is approximately 500 feet on right.

  • Bring items needed for sitting meditation, such as cushion for hard floor.

ABOUT THE TEACHER: Fluent in English, Chinese, Burmese, Hokkien, and Malay, Sayalay Susila started insight meditation (vipassana) while pursuing a degree in Mass Communications at USM in Malaysia. Before ordination she was a full-time practitioner for a year and a half. After her ordination in 1991, she practiced under the guidance of U Pandita Sayadaw in Panditarama Monastery, Burma, until 1994. Then she began to practice under the guidance of the great scholar-practitioner Pa Auk Sayadaw at Pa Auk Tawya Meditation Center, Burma. She was born in 1963 in Pahang, Malaysia and ordained at the age of 28 at the Malaysian Buddhist Meditation Centre (MBMC) in Penang. Beginning in 2000, with the encouragement of Pa Auk Sayadaw, she has taught Abhidharma in Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore, Australia, Canada, and the US. Her Dharma talks are widely praised as lucid and precise. They have been well received at North American Buddhist centers such as Spirit Rock (California) and the Barre Center for Buddhist Studies (Massachusetts), and the Bhavana Society (West Virginia). Her publications include Unravelling the Mysteries of Mind and Body Through Abhidhamma in English and The Nine Attributes of the Buddha in Chinese.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Seeking a Path: Dependent Origination

P.A. Payutto (trans. from Thai by Bruce Evans), intro. edited by Wisdom Quarterly Himalayan path along Phoksundo Lake (lasochres.se)

The Buddhist Law of Conditionality
The teaching of causal interdependence is the most important of Buddhist principles.

It describes a law of nature that exists as the natural course of things. The Buddha was not an emissary of heavenly "commandments." He was a discoverer of this liberating-principle of the natural order, and he proclaimed its truth to the world.

The progression of causes and conditions is the reality that applies to all things: from the natural environment, which is an external and physical condition, to the events of human society, ethics, life events, and the happiness and suffering that manifest in our minds.

Causal relationships are part of one natural truth. Our happiness within this natural system depends on having some knowledge of how it works and practicing correctly within it. With knowledge we are able to address problems on personal, social, and environmental levels.

Given that all things are interconnected, all affecting one another, success in dealing with the world lies in creating harmony within it.

(Kevin-McGuiness/Flickr.com)

The sciences, which have evolved with human civilization and are influencing our lives so profoundly, are said to be based on reason and rationality. Their storehouse of knowledge has been amassed through interacting with these natural laws of conditionality. ...

But the human search for knowledge in modern scientific fields has three notable features...

  • Underneath it all, we tend to interpret concepts like happiness, freedom, human rights, liberty, and peace in ways that preserve the interests of some and encroach on others. Even when controlling other people comes to be seen as a blameworthy act, this aggressive tendency is then turned in other directions, such as the natural environment. Now that we are beginning to realize that it is impossible to really control other people or other things, the only meaning left in life is to preserve self interests and protect territorial rights. Living as we do with this faulty knowledge and these mistaken beliefs, the natural environment is thrown out of skew, society is in turmoil, and human life, both physically and mentally, is disoriented. The world seems to be full of conflict and suffering.

All facets of the natural order -- the physical world and the human world, the world of conditions (dharma) and the world of actions (karma), the material world and the mental world -- are connected and interrelated; they cannot be separated. Disorder and aberration in one sector will affect other sectors. If we want to live in peace, we must learn how to live in harmony with all spheres of the natural environment, both the internal and the external, the individual and the social, the physical and the mental, the material and the immaterial.

...This is why, of all the systems of causal relationship based on the following law "Because there is this, that arises; when this ceases, that ceases," the teachings of Buddhism begin with, and stress throughout, the factors involved in the creation of suffering in individual awareness.

"Because there is ignorance, there are volitional formations..." is the first link of the Dependent Origination formula. Once this system is understood on the inner level, liberating us from suffering, we are then in a position to see the connections between inner factors and the causal relationships in the external environment. This is the approach adopted in this book. More

1. An Overview of Dependent Origination
Types of Dependent Origination found in the texts

1. The general principle

2. The principle in effect

2. Interpreting Dependent Origination
The essential meaning

3. Man and Nature

4. The Standard Format
The main factors

1. Ignorance and craving-clinging

2. Volitional impulses and becoming

3. Consciousness to feeling, and birth, aging and death

5. Other Interpretations
Preliminary definition

How the links connect

Examples

An example of Dependent Origination in everyday life

6. The Nature of Defilements

7. Dependent Origination in Society

8. The Middle Teaching

9. Breaking the Cycle