'CITTAVIVEKA',
the title of this book, is a word in the Pali language meaning 'the mind of non-attachment'.
A major theme of the Buddha's teaching – known as the Dhamma – is
that suffering is caused by attachment, and that the aim and result of the correct
application of the teachings is a mind of non-attachment.
Actually,
through the practice of Buddhist meditation, the very impression of a substantial
permanent mind is understood as being a mirage, the result of attaching to a sequence
of fleeting mental states. As long as that model of permanence is retained –
even with the wish to have or be a permanently non-attached mind – it will
give rise to further painful (if subtle) I attachment. So the 'cittaviveka' is
not another fixed mental state, but a sensitive response in each moment, a non-grasping
that Ajahn Sumedho frequently calls 'letting go'. This practice of lightness or
'enlightenment' is not a matter of affirmation or rejection, but of a clear-minded
investigation of what we can know through our senses. It is the method that underlies
the teachings in this book and the way of life that evolves from these teachings.
'Cittaviveka' is also the name – as an aspiration, and slight word-play
– for Chithurst Buddhist Monastery, the first forest tradition monastery
to be established in Britain. Forest monasteries, as the prologue indicates, are
not what most people consider monasteries to be: they are generally a scattering
of simple huts in a remote forest region, with a few communal buildings for meetings
and amenities. Such a situation is rare in the West, and when Chithurst Monastery
came about, it generated quite a lot of interest in Buddhist circles, an interest
that was also based on a respect for Ajahn Sumedho and those men and women who
would commit themselves to such a life. As interest grew, supporters of the monastery
asked that a book be composed that would bring the image of 'Cittaviveka' across
to those who had not seen the monastery or heard the teachings.
The Buddhist monastic life presents the opportunity for the most unambiguous practice
of letting go. The life is centred around the relinquishment of personal concern
and ambition by means of traditional discipline (Vinaya) established by the Buddha.
It is also buoyed up by the moral and practical support of lay people whose co-operation
and generosity allow the monastics to live within a clearly defined and supportive
lifestyle. The monastics – collectively called 'Sangha' – provide
examples and teachings of enlightenment to support the lay person's own cultivation,
as well as maintaining the monasteries that facilitate practice and that are open
to lay and ordained persons alike. The monk or nun can be likened to a researcher
who can go ahead of non-specialists to ascertain information for their use, or
as a scout who can find a trail for others to follow. The Dhamma teachings are
available to all, but a Buddha discovers and proclaims them, and a living Sangha
exemplifies the Way.
The prologue of this book describes how the monastery in West Sussex came to be established. It must
be stressed that this was the result of the aspirations and efforts of many people other than the
subsequent resident community. The faith and effort of the English Sangha Trust over 20 years of
difficulties have been enormous. Also, the contribution to the monastery that has been made in terms of
spiritual resources by the Venerable Ajahn Chah cannot be exaggerated. That his approach, worked out
through years of practice in the forests of North-East Thailand, could be so immediately accessible to
people of urban Britain is in some way an indication of its profundity and universality.
A large amount of the material support for Chithurst Buddhist Monastery and for this book has come
from Thai supporters. For them, supporting Buddhism is an obvious and delightful thing to do. For us,
it is equally obvious and delightful to express our profound appreciation to the Buddha, to our
teachers and to our friends and good companions on the spiritual Path. It is from this spirit of
offering that this book has come; may those who wish receive it so.
Ven. Sucitto
Bhikkhu
Amaravati Buddhist Centre
March 1992