Showing posts with label vipassana. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vipassana. Show all posts

Monday, October 24, 2011

Unraveling Mind and Body (Part I of II)

Ayya Susila and Yogi Seven (Wisdom Quarterly)


It is said that “mind leads the world.” Is it true? We will only really know when we understand how the mind works. Mind seems at times close and at times far away. Mind is both the culprit behind unwholesome deeds and also the director of all heart-soothing behavior.

The study of the Abhidharma (Buddhism's "Higher Teachings" on ultimate reality) helps us gain an understanding of how the mind works, which is essential for leading a happy and blameless life.

According to the Abhidharma, the ultimate realities that make up mind and matter making, which we call "self" or "soul" are revealed. They are actually an impersonal stream of mind-moments (cittas) and infinitesimally small particles (kalapas). Both continuously arise and pass away, utterly dependent on conditions.

The study of the Abhidharma is an antidote to the painful illusion of a permanent self, ego, or “I.”



Most problems in life spring from our ignorance and craving regarding this “I” and the selfishness that is its offspring.

But when we understand that -- ultimately speaking -- there is no “I,” we are finally able to let go of our intense clinging and thereby to let go of all suffering.

The truth sets one free. It is an escape to reality and away from the illusion that wash over us like a great flood. The heart is set free of affliction. Life’s problems suddenly disappear by a change of perception, understanding truth for truth.

How would we ever accomplish this? The Buddha’s gradual instruction guides us through a practical study of Abhidharma and, more importantly, meditative experience. There is no reason to be bogged down by intellectual grasping. Far more important is the application of the principles. For instance, we can debate for a lifetime whether there are four great elements (earth, fire, water, wind), or five (space), or none at all. Or we can practice four elements meditation as the Buddha instructed.

Then whatever we might choose to label the characteristics of matter, the truth about materiality remains the same. But we are changed, and our relationship to it is changed. We no longer regard it as me or mine. And freed from this illusion, we are at peace.

But "who" is at peace. How can the self realize not-self? How can all I regard as me or mine (my form, feelings, perceptions, mental formations, and consciousness) ever see that that is not me, not mine?

The Abhidharma shows the way. While it appears to be an inscrutable paradox, it is in practice very clear. How can what is changing at every moment, what is painful, what is beyond my control be "me" or be considered "mine"? How can it be anything but impersonal?

But whether it is personal or impersonal, me or not me, self or non-self should not be decided in advance. The Buddha advised us to investigate. And we should be fearless, like scientists knowing full well their hypothesis can be disproved (refuted, found to be false or in error).

I assert that I AM. Now I will test that assertion. By "I" I mean this body. Well, I know I'm not this body. But this body is mine? I can test that, too.

By "I" I actually mean this soul (consciousness, heart, mind, spirit, memory, history, ghost, energetic body, DNA, lineage... software package). Well, I don't know if I am, but I can test it.


The Buddha asserted that all that we typically regard as our "selves" can be summed up in five categories or heaps. He called these heaps the Five Aggregates of Clinging. We cling to them as self, as me or mine. They are familiar to us, though often go misunderstood, via the famous Heart Sutra mantra:
  1. form (body, materiality, subtle or tangible)
  2. feeling (sensation, pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral)
  3. perception (what we apprehend, conceptions, discriminations, cognitions)
  4. mental formations (such as volitions, intentions, emotions, memories, impulses, likes and dislikes, opinions... in fact, feelings and perceptions are also "mental formations," only they are so important as to be singled out from other formations and fabrications)
  5. consciousness (awareness, reflection, the knowing that knows it knows, but what does it know other than sights, sounds, bodily impressions, tastes, odors, and ideas, which we give the fancy name "objects of mind," the sixth sense beyond this body?)
According to the Buddha, we see ourselves as these, in these, or apart from these as owners of them. If that is true -- that these are me or mine -- we can test it.

A calm mind is a strong mind. A very calm mind is a very strong mind. If we can clear it of thought and intensify our attention and focus to laser precision, we have something very powerful to work with.

"KNOW THYSELF," all of the ancient traditions say, from India to Greece, from Timbuktu to Nalanda to the Gymnasium to Harvard. So what is this "self"? I don't know. Let's find out!



We can turn the well collected and sharpened mind in on those very things. It is easy enough to examine the mind. And (test it) perception can become so sharp as to directly observe that it is composed of light particles. The Buddha knew this. He was not the first to know it, not the first to speak of it, not the first to show how it is done. But we already know we are not these bodies.

I am my feelings! At least I feel that I am. Of course, by "feeling" is meant sensation not emotion. Emotions are another type of formation (sankhara or samskara). Am I this pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral worldly or otherworldly sensation? The mind can examine each and find out. I see sensations arising with perceptions, born of sense contact with the world. So if I am it, I must also be the body (sense base) and the outside world impinging on the body. Okay, so I might not be the feelings I am experiencing.

Am I what I think about it or how I discriminate it? Am I how I feel about it (happy, sad, up, down, ecstatic, dejected)? I perceive it one way, but it may be another. Or my perception of it can change. I'm probably not that, but I better check back.

Am I my intention? Karma is intention. What I think, speak, or act what determines whether this is profitable, unprofitable, or neutral karma is whether it is rooted in greed, aversion/fear, or delusion or nongreed, nonaversion/nonfear, nondelusion. The first three roots mean that when it ripens it will be unpleasant and unwelcome, but until then it might go either way and make me happy.

The second three roots mean that when it matures and comes to fruition it will be pleasant and welcome, but until then it might go either way and make me unhappy. Being good can feel quite bad, and vice versa, but karma is not deceived. It all balances out in the long run. Am I these intentions, or opinions, or beliefs, or deductions, or what have you? I don't think I am, and I certainly don't feel that I am, but I might be. I better keep examining. Or forget about all that.

I know what I am. I am that I am. I am the Knower, the Watcher, the Soul, the One who has been doing this all along -- consciousness! Aha! Case closed!

Wait, let's not jump to conclusions. The Buddha said investigate. He didn't think he was consciousness. In fact, he saw through consciousness and likened it to a magician's trick (SN 22.95, echoed here). How do I know that I'm the one who knows, the knower? Oops! I see my mistake, I mean the mistake. It is being assumed that there is a knower, but the evidence so far only suggests there is knowing. I've made knowing into a Knower without even realizing it. First principles. Consciousness exists.

But to say someone is conscious is an assumption. Descartes jumped the gun to have said "I think therefore I am." Based on thinking, all that was known was that there was some thinking. Am I the thought? Am I the consciousness itself? That needs investigation. There are six kinds of consciousness, six things to be conscious of -- sights, sounds, savories, smells, touch sensations, and mind objects (extrasensory perceptions, ideas, thoughts, knowings, awareness of being aware, reflections, or whatever is beyond the body's sensory apparatuses).

You know, I'm starting to think the Buddha might have been onto something. But I'm going to investigate because he also said not to go on what others say, or tradition, or scripture, or preferences (Kalama Sutra), which I think is sound advice -- and not because he said it. I'll see for myself.

Hey, I'd better be one of these, or religions teaching me I have a soul and atheists tell me I have a self are going to have a lot to answer for, although I do wonder if I ever understood what they meant. Only Buddhism, on a buddha, teaches the liberating wisdom of nonself (anatta). It is unique to a fully, supremely enlightened teacher. But one can't help but notice how all of them are saying selfishness and self-centeredness, vaulting pride and ego are harmful delusions to be overcome by unselfishness, generosity, charity, and caring.

I really think the Buddha was onto something, but I'm not at all sure I'm up to the task of enlightenment (bodhi) and liberation (nirvana). After all, I didn't actually follow the first step, which was to purify my mind/heart through the effort of virtue (sila) and absorption (zen) in meditation.

So far I have only been intellectualizing and conducting a mental experiment. Buddhism is not about "thinking" and hammering things out by mere reasoning. This is a Wisdom Tradition. This is about real knowing. (The Buddha solved the philosophical tangle of epistemology, the ultimate question of questioners: "How do we know that we know, and how can we be sure?")



So long as we only think, there is no knowing. Knowing comes from direct experience of the truth. Nirvana, for example, is not something that could ever be conceptualized, yet it can be experienced and known here and now. It's not a feeling, so to say it's "women's intuition" if off the mark.

There is a certainty that surpasses all understanding. There is knowing. And mere thinking is not the way to it. I have a heart and a head, and this head is capable of far more than rationalism. It's capable of insight, wisdom, and enlightenment.

When I know, I'll know that I know. And the only way to that is practice with a well purified instrument of knowing. I may be thinking now, but in meditation I will be investigating.

What is the Abhidharma?

Buddhism is divided into three collections or divisions -- conventional discourses (sutras), disciplinary code (Vinaya), and the Higher Teachings (Abhidharma).

Abhidharma
is a combination of abhi (means higher, special, or sublime) and Dharma, which means teaching or universal truth. Abhidharma is therefore the higher or ultimate teaching of the Buddha. It is grounded in the reality of experiential truth.

It is not metaphysical theory, as some portray it, but a description of what is possible for meditators to directly know, and it leads to enlightenment.

The Abhidharma system classifies and fully explains mental and material phenomena. This is why the oldest existing Buddhist tradition -- the Theravada or "Teaching of the Elders," who were the immediate disciples of the historical Buddha -- regards Abhidharma as the best exposition of the true nature of existence as realized by the penetrative wisdom of the Supremely-Enlightened One and those who successfully practice the path.

According to Buddhism ,as elaborated in the Abhidharma system, there are two types of truth (sacca), conventional (sammuti) and ultimate (paramattha).

Conventional truth refers to ordinary concepts such as “tree,” “house,” “person,” “body,” “being.” Such concepts are linked to language, culture, and conditioning. We may think these concepts are objective realities that actually exist. After all, there are words and concepts for them. But while they seem to exist, closer examination reveals that they in no way exist as irreducible realities.

Instead, incredibly, they break down into smaller and smaller components. For example, if we discern the four elements (or characteristics of matter) in this body, the "body" breaks down into innumerable, infinitesimally tiny particles. If the analysis continues, these particles break down further. Each contains... TO BE CONTINUED

But the mind or mentality is more relevant than the body or materiality. And that is what the Abhidharma teaches. And it teaches it to reveal the path to enlightenment in this very life.

Remember, this is all directly knowable, directly visible to the mind/heart purified by intense and prolonged concentration (absorption, jhana) and trained in insight (vipassana). This is the Buddha's Middle Path that avoids extremes in views.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Science Friday: What is a Flame? (video)

Wisdom Quarterly, NPR, Science Friday

Flame footage: Dale R. Tree, Tadd T. Truscott, Preston Murray, Jonathon Pendlebury.

Humans are thought to have mastered controlled fire in the middle of the Paleolithic era. Half a million years later, engineers Tadd Truscott and Dale Tree, of Brigham Young University, are trying to quantify it. Using high speed cameras and computer algorithms, they are reconstructing fire, digitally. Understanding flames better can help us use fire better, they say.

Candle Gazing Meditation

Candle gazing meditation is called trakata in Sanskrit (yogawithmarnie.com).

There is a simple but very effective form of meditation -- staring into the center of a candle flame until the countersign is developed and the light becomes visible even when not staring at the fire. It does not involve thinking. Quite to the contrary, it involves arresting and settling the mind. Consciousness continues and in fact becomes a fuller awareness; lucidity actually increases with the cessation of discursive thought, ratiocination, and contemplation. Our natural assumption is that "our" thoughts and ideas are us. What a relief that they think themselves, follow their own course, come and go. The real relief is even temporary release from neurotic revolving in mind. Steady focusing on a flame has the power to bring this about. Of course, this is only the first step. The goal is not simply to stop the mental chatter and be serene. This meditation can be developed to absorption (first jhana). And that sets the foundation for successful insight meditation or vipassana.

() Video, music, text: Anke Moehlmann (BMP Music), Mystic Journey Vol. 1 & 2, Yoga Sunset Chill I-III, bodymindpower.de.

A short Candle Meditation may inspire some to meditate with a candle. Use a non-paraffin candle free of toxic petroleum products and synthetic fragrances for best results, such as a simple oil lamp, soy candle, or this video:


It is a simple form of meditation that brings deep relaxation. And it is a fantastic way to improve concentration skills. The flame is an aid to go into a deep state of meditation. If thoughts come just let them be there watching them drifting by. Eyes may water a little, which is normal and helps clear them removing tiredness and improving eyesight.

When the eyes starts to burn, close them and visualize the flame with the third eye, the point between the eyebrows.

As a result of focusing on the flame, it feels as though that there is no distance between the eyes and flame. One might become one with the flame and enter a deep state of peace and tranquility.

Take a comfortable seat that promotes alertness, which usually means an erect but relaxed back that is not leaning on anything. Allow the eyes to relax while gazing at the flame. Breathe in and out at the center of the solar plexus. With each in and outflow of the breath, allow the entire body and mind to become more and more relaxed.

Complete the meditation by allowing a few minutes to come back to Earth. Close the eyes for a few minutes. Then slowly move head, hands, and feet before slowly standing.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Insight Meditation in Business

(dhamma.org)

Learn how senior business leaders in India across various industries and sectors cope with uncertainty and change in a challenging market environment. In a series of candid interviews, senior executives discuss how the practice of insight meditation (vipassana) enables them to more effectively:
  • manage their stress
  • increase employee engagement of competition
  • make decisions from a base of personal wisdom and authenticity


Vipassana Meditation as Taught by S.N. Goenka
in the tradition of Sayagyi U Ba Khin

There is a special Website related to meditation courses conducted from time to time by S.N. Goenka and his assistant teachers specially for business executives and government officials. For most of his life Goenka worked as a prominent international businessman based in Burma and India. He was a keynote speaker on the subject of spirituality in business at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. It was held on January, 2000. He also addressed the World Peace Summit held at the United Nations in August, 2000 and was the keynote speaker at the Spirit in Business Conference (SiB) held in New York City in April 2002. More

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Mindfulness of Breathing (sutra)

Wisdom Quarterly translation, Dhammawheel.com


Thus have I heard. At one time the Buddha was living in Savatthi, in Migara Mother's Palace, in the Eastern Park together with many very great elder male disciples: Ven. Sariputta, Maha Moggallana, Maha Kassapa, Maha Kaccayana, Maha Kotthita, Maha Kappina, Maha Cunda, Anuruddha, Revata, and Ananda.

These elders were teaching and instructing the new monastics who were thereby reaching successively higher levels of discernment and distinction in meditation. Some elders were teaching and instructing ten monks, some 20, some 30, some 40. The new monks, being taught and instructed by the elder monks, were progressing well.

Now on that occasion -- the lunar observance (uposattha) day of the 15th, the full-moon night of the Pavarana ceremony -- the Buddha was seated in the open air surrounded by the community. The Buddha, surveying this silent congregation of the monastic community, addressed them:

"Monastics, I am content at heart with this progress. Monastics, I am content at heart with this development. Strive on even more persistently [balancing effort and calm] to attain what has not yet been attained, to achieve what has not yet been achieved, to realize what has not yet been realized. I will stay...

Anapanasati Sutta. Majjhima Nikaya 118 Full text & explanation here: I will remain here in Savatthi [for another month] through the White Waterlily month, the fourth month of the rains retreat."

The monastics in the countryside heard, "The Blessed One, they say, will remain in Savatthi through the fourth month of the rains." So they left for Savatthi to see the Buddha. Then the elders taught and instructed the new monks even more intensely. Some elders were teaching and instructing ten, 20, 30...40.

The new monks, being taught and instructed by the elders, were thereby reaching successively higher levels of discernment and distinction in meditation. "Monks, this assembly is free of idle chit chat, devoid of idle talk, and is established like pure heartwood. Such is this [noble, attained] community, such is this assembly.

"This sort of assembly is worthy of gifts, worthy of hospitality, worthy of offerings, worthy of respect. An incomparable field of merit for the world, such is this community of monks, such is this assembly. This sort of assembly is one, which when a small gift is given, becomes great, and a great gift given becomes greater. Such is this community, such is this assembly.

"This sort of assembly is rare to see in the world. Such is this community, such is this assembly -- the sort of assembly that would be worth traveling leagues for, taking along provisions, in order to see.

"In this community there are those who are arhats, whose defilements (fetters) are ended, who have reached fulfillment, completed the task, laid down the burden, attained the final goal, laid to waste the fetter of becoming, and who are released through wisdom. Such are those in this community.

"In this community there are those who, with the uprooting of the five lower fetters, are due to be reborn [in the Pure Abodes], there to reach final liberation [nirvana], destined never again to return from that world [to this one]. Such are those in this community.

"In this community there are those who, with the uprooting of [the first] three fetters and with the weakening of lust, aversion, and delusion, are once-returners. On returning only once more to this world, they will make a final end of suffering. Such are those in this community.

"In this community there are those who, with the uprooting of [the first] three fetters, are stream-enterers, steadfast, never again destined for states of woe [any rebirth below the human plane of existence] but destined for enlightenment [within seven rebirths]. Such are those in this community.



"In this community there are those who remain devoted to the development of [the Thirty-Seven Requisites of Enlightenment, namely]
  1. the Four Foundations of Mindfulness...
  2. the Four Right Efforts...
  3. the Four Bases of Power...
  4. the Five Spiritual Faculties...
  5. the Five Powers...
  6. the Seven Factors for Enlightenment...
  7. the Noble Eightfold Path
"Such are those in this community. In this community there are those who remain devoted to the development of loving-kindness... compassion... appreciative joy (happiness at the success of others)... equanimity (impartiality)... [the perception of the] foulness [of the body]... the perception of impermanence. Such are those in this community.

"In this community there are those who remain devoted to mindfulness of in-and-out breathing.

"Mindfulness of in-and-out breathing, when developed and pursued, is of great fruit, of great benefit. Mindfulness of in-and-out breathing, when developed and pursued, brings the Four Foundations of Mindfulness to their culmination.

The Four Foundations of Reference, when developed and pursued, bring the Seven Factors of Enlightenment to their culmination. The Seven Factors of Enlightenment, when developed and pursued, bring about knowing and seeing and therefore release to their culmination. More

Monday, September 5, 2011

Buddhism on Campus "Wakes Up"

Carlin Green, Wisdom Quarterly, US.wkup.org, Plumvillage.org, UK.wkup.org


I'm quite busy as school starts again. My personal experience with insight-meditation scholar-practitioner Sayalay Susila is brief but has really impacted me. I met her a month before the vipassana retreat she conducted at The Bhavana Society, West Virginia. I was at her public talks around Washington, DC. Somehow I ended up being the youngest person in attendance.

Later, when I was asking Sister Susila a question, she instead asked me my age. She told me it was inspiring to her to see someone so young practicing and wanting to learn about the Dharma.


us.wkup.org (indiegogo.com)

Honestly, I have no groundbreaking insights, no inspiring anecdotes, no moving stories of dazzling lights in absorption. I'm just eager to learn, and I was in the right place at the right time to meet a Buddhist nun who knows so much.

It was beneficial for me to attend Buddhist talks in public libraries staring at Mark Twain and a raft of magazines about dieting and cooking, dating and being happy, economic news and war. It was beneficial because she spoke about things never heard before -- the "Exposition of the Elements" (Dhātuvibhanga Sutta) and the Five Aggregates in her talks.
These two topics formed the basis of the insight-meditation (vipassana) instructions she gave us during the retreat, so I was glad I had been familiarized with them beforehand. If I could encourage others to hear such thing, what a change it might make in the country. But I'm only in college; what can I do?

Something To Do:
Waking Up
What should we do when we feel overwhelmed by despair, despair coming from inside of us and despair about the world's situation? How can we find the energy, the strength to do something about it?


Speaking at Plum Village in 2011, Thay uses the Buddha's own life to encourage us. Youth, let's nourish ourselves with the joyful energy of sisterhood/brotherhood and the strength of a clear aspiration to do something helpful.

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

9/11 Day Meditation SIT-A-THON

Wisdom Quarterly



Against the Stream Buddhist Meditation Society, Los Angeles



Sign up now and be a part of Against the Stream's Second Annual Sit-a-Thon. Join them for a lovely day of mindful practice dedicated to helping others. Commemorating a fateful day, this fundraiser for ATS's scholarship program is targeted specifically for the October retreat at Joshua Tree. Sitters are encouraged to raise funds by having friends and family sponsor them. They can support practitioners via an online donation, or sitters can bring cash, checks, or credit cards to the sit. All are welcome to come sit just for the sake of good practice -- allowing this to be a day of remembrance. Read about ATS's intention for the weekend.









9/11 FEMA search filmed underground (cbsnews.com)



The Decades' Biggest Scam


Glenn Greenwald (Salon.com)

The Los Angeles Times examines the staggering sums of money expended on patently absurd domestic "homeland security" projects: $75 billion per year for things such as a Zodiac boat with side-scan sonar to respond to a potential attack on a lake in tiny Keith County, Nebraska, and hundreds of "9-ton BearCat armored vehicles, complete with turret" to guard against things like an attack on DreamWorks in Los Angeles. All of that -- which is independent of the exponentially greater sums spent on foreign wars, occupations, bombings, and the vast array of weaponry and private contractors to support it all -- is in response to this mammoth, existential, the-single-greatest-challenge-of-our-generation threat:

  • "The number of people worldwide who are killed by Muslim-type terrorists, Al Qaeda wannabes, is maybe a few hundred outside of war zones. It's basically the same number of people who die drowning in the bathtub each year," said John Mueller, an Ohio State University professor who has written extensively about the balance between threat and expenditures in fighting terrorism. More

The Blissful Way to Meditate

Wisdom Quarterly

(Philiproeland/Flickr)



It was only when Siddhartha stopped being afraid of pleasure dissociated from sensuality that he entered upon the path to enlightenment. For it is not by austerity but by happiness that one finds nirvana: "There is no way to happiness; happiness ["pleasure" (sukha) as a factor of absorption] is the way!"



They See Me Rollin' (More happy panda pictures at Kjdrill/Flickr)



Meditative bliss (piti in jhana or zen, dhyana, ch'an) is given shortshrift in this age of insight (vipassana). But profound concentration serves as the best foundation for the work of penetrative wisdom.



It purifies the mind-heart and stabilizes mindfulness. It intensifies the mind making it manifest what it is capable of, things we ourselves would not believe of it.



For example, when coming out of a meditative absorption it is very useful to review the factors of absorption associated with it. In this way one ensures where in the practice one is. This is done by turning attention toward the "mind door" which is located in the area of the physical heart. Without absorption (or at least access concentration), one sees nothing.



But with it one notices something that has always been there: a greenish mirror reflecting whatever is in the mind. One can then check the factors. (Only do this under a teacher skilled in the absorptions for, as the Gavi Sutra or "Cow Discourse" points out, one foolishly loses even the absorption one has already gained to say nothing of going no higher).

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)

Monday, August 22, 2011

Why would anyone go on a meditation retreat?

Carlin Green (on retreat with Abhidharma expert Sayalay Susila, August 2011)

Insight meditation master Pa Auk Sayadaw's chief female disciple, Sayalay Susila, gave a week long end-of-summer insight (vipassana) meditation retreat. This is Part 1 describing its benefits and the experience of various attendees.



BHAVANA SOCIETY, West Virginia - Many people desire to meditate but do not know where to start. Maybe they have already started and they do not know how to make progress. Perhaps they feel lost, unguided, and are beginning to to think, “I can’t do this by myself; I’m in over my head.”

  • Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche once said, “In the beginning, deciding to try the practice of meditation is just leaping to some conclusion about what to do. In doing the practice at the beginning, rather than really meditating, you just imagine that you are meditating. So to begin with, the whole practice is based on confusion.”
I felt that confusion for many months. My progress was slow, cluttered, and unclear. Then suddenly the opportunity to attend a retreat presented itself. I followed my intuition, desiring to deepen and strengthen my practice. I found myself on a five-day retreat in the mountains of West Virginia.



What is a retreat? Why would anyone want to attend one?



When one really yearns to know the way something happens or functions, what do they do? In sports, we use a slow-motion camera to break down and dissect the process, say, the batter’s swing.



Just so on retreat. The mind is allowed to slow down, to become clear and simple so we can see its many aspects. We do not need to worry about anything. We let go, leave our daily concerns behind. And like muddy water, the mind settles down. It becomes clearer and sharper as the clutter settles out.



Another wonderful benefit to going on retreat is constant access to a teacher. Someone is there to guide, to direct the practice in a very beneficial way. The confusion of not knowing what to do or how to do it is replaced by confidence in a tangible meditation practice.





Sayalay's PowerPoint presentation on Abhidharma



During a retreat, one is surrounded by like-minded people, walking the same path, providing one another inspiration and energy.



What is it not? A retreat is not some strange regimented religious "boot camp" forcing recruits to follow a set of austere rules.



A retreat is an incredibly caring, open, and friendly environment where retreatants' needs are met by people who genuinely care about the progress and well-being of participants. It is a place where one can make real progress watching the mind open up like an intricate bud unfolding in the nurturing sunlight.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

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.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

The amazing Shinzen Young (live)

The Science of Enlightenment (ebook3000.com)
AGS is hosting famous Western science/meditation master Shinzen Young for an evening in Santa Monica, California. There will be meditation, a talk, and conversation with the lay sangha. No registration needed. By donation only. This will be followed by an all-day intensive on Sunday.


What is the best path? Shinzen answers.

SHINZEN YOUNG became fascinated with Asian culture as a teenager in Los Angeles. Later he enrolled in the Ph.D. program in Buddhist Studies at the University of Wisconsin. He eventually went to Asia and did extensive monastic training in all three of the major Buddhist meditative traditions: Tibetan (Vajrayana), Zen (Mahayana), and Vipassana (Theravada). His specialty is linking Eastern internal science and Western technological science.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Meditate: Insight meditation in California

Chemtrails-shemtrails! Radiation-obfuscation! There's still meditation to soothe the mind and gladden the heart. The world is old world yet and nothing we'll soon forget. Of much greater importance is transcending the illusion of samsara that causes us to suffer when the world is so beautiful in the eye of the wise beholder.

The latest Buddhist insight-meditation (vipassana) events and news in California for June 2011 and a few other important events in July and August:

Berkeley: Saturday, June 4
South Bay: Sunday, June 5 & Saturday, June 18
Santa Rosa: Saturday, June 11
San Francisco: Sunday, June 19
San Diego: Saturday, June 11
Santa Monica: Saturday, June 18
Baldwin Park: Saturday, July 2
  • Trust Meeting at the California Vipassana Center (North Fork) on Sunday, June 12
  • Trust Meeting at the Southern California Vipassana Center (Twentynine Palms) on Sunday, July 10.
  • Children's Course at the Northern California Vipassana Center (Kelseyville) from Saturday to Sunday, July 9-10
  • Children's Course at the California Vipassana Center (North Fork) from Saturday to Sunday, August 13-14

One-Day Courses
One-day courses are for students who have completed a ten-day Vipassana course as taught by S.N. Goenka. No registration for the one-day course is necessary. Simply bring a cushion and a non-perishable vegetarian lunch. Come for all or part of the course.

VIDEO: Life on Mars? Housing found (See on YouTube)