INTRODUCTION This book contains a collection of teachings of Ajahn Sumedho given to people who are familiar with the conventions of Theravada Buddhism and have some experience of meditation. Most of the chapters are edited from talks given during retreats for lay people for Ajahn Sumedho's monastic (ordained) disciples, so they require some careful attention and are best read in sequence. In the monastic retreats Ajahn Sumedho develops a theme from the Buddha's teaching over a couple of months, linking it to other aspects of the Dhamma, embellishing it with accounts of his personal experiences, demonstrating its relevance to the society in general, or using it as an exhortation to the Sangha to live up to their aspiration of enlightenment. Although it is not possible to render the tonal depth and variety of these talks in a printed work, the mixture of short exhortations and pointers, longer contemplative reflections mingled with the chants that the monks and nuns will be reciting daily (and have been doing so for years) may suggest the atmosphere and scope within which the teachings are offered. In many of these talks Ajahn Sumedho expounds on the uniquely Buddhist expression of 'not-self' (anatta). He maintains this to be the Buddha's way of pointing to the experience of Ultimate Reality that is the goal of many religions. During the monastic retreats Ajahn Sumedho frequently teaches the Dependent Origination paticca-samuppada based on the approach of anatta. The Dependent Origination traces the process whereby suffering (dukkha) is compounded out of ignorance (avijja) and conversely suffering is eliminated (or rather not created ) with the cessation of ignorance. Just as anatta -- not-self -- is the expression of Ultimate Truth, Ajahn Sumedho suggests that the root of ignorance is the illusion of Self'. Not that he is trying to annihilate or reject some personal qualities but rather to point out how suffering arises through attempting to sustain an identity denoted by body and mind. This mistaken identity is what the average person calls 'myself'. It can be detected in a latent state as self-consciousness, or as habitual mood of the mind such as conceit or self-criticism, or it can manifest as selfish bodily or verbal activity. The profundity of the Dependent Origination is that it describes how even at its most passive, such wrong view creates habitual drives (kamma) and attitudes through which even a silent and well-intentioned meditator experiences suffering. What is called kamma (habitual drives) ranges from the 'internal', psychological plane to the 'outer' realm of action. This habitual process then manifests in terms of body, speech or mind; all such manifestations being termed sankhara. Even moral action based on 'self-view' can lead to anxiety, doubt, 'sorrow, grief, pain, lamentation and despair'. Such is the meaning of the first 'link' of Dependent Origination 'avijjapaccaya sankhara' or 'dependent on ignorance are kammic formations'.
In its
most complete formulation,
This deals with arising of dukkha.
The cessation of dukkha is then mapped out:
In English
this can be translated as:
Dependent
on ignorance are habitual formations; dependent on habitual
(kamma-) formations is consciousness; dependent on consciousness
are name-and-form (mentality-corporeality); dependent on
name-and-form
are the six sense-bases; dependent on the six sensebases
is contact; dependent on contact is feeling; dependent on
feeling is desire; dependent on desire is grasping; dependent
on grasping is becoming; dependent on becoming is birth;
dependent
on birth is old age, sickness and death, sorrow, grief,
lamentation,
pain and despair.
There are
many forms of dependence that are concerned in this analysis.
It is helpful to remember that paccaya 'dependent on' or
'conditions' does not necessarily mean 'creates'. For example one
could say 'walking is dependent on legs' or 'ice is dependent
on water' or 'catching the train is dependent on getting to
the station at the right time' or even 'the view is dependent
on the non-appearance of intervening objects'. Understanding
this, the contemplative begins to realise that just as 'arising
dependence' need not mean 'creation', 'cessation' so valued by the
Buddha need not mean 'annihilation'. In this lifetime, when Nibbana
is to be realised, mentality-corporeality can 'cease' - ie. the
identification with physical and mental kamma-formations can cease
so that life is no longer lived from the pleasure/pain principle
dictated by the senses. (nama-rupa-salayatana-phassa-vedana-tanha+).
In this spirit one could interpret the sequence in a more fluid
way, for example :
To the
extent to which (paccaya) the mind has not comprehended (avijja)
Truth, habitual drives manifest and condition (paccaya) awareness
into a discriminative mode (viññana) that operates in
terms of (paccaya) subject and object (nama-rupa) held (paccaya)
to exist on either side of the six sense-doors (salayatana). These
sense-doors open dependent (paccaya) on contact (phasso) that can
arouse (paccaya) varying degrees of feeling (vedana). Feeling
stimulates
(paccaya) desire (tanha) and, according to (paccaya) the power
of desire, attention lingers (upadana) and so personal aims and
obsessions develop (bhava) to give (paccaya) (jati) rise to
self-consciousness.
That self-consciousness, mental or physical, once arisen
must follow (paccaya) the cycle of maturing and passing away
(jara-marana) with the resultant sense of sadness (soka) varying
from sorrow (parideva) to depression (domanassa), to anguish (dukkha)
and emotional breakdown (upayasa).
When the
mind looks into the sense of loss and comprehends Truth
(avijja-nirodha),
habitual drives cease (sankhara-nirodha) and the awareness
is no longer bound by discrimination (viññana-nirodha);
so that the separation of the subject and object is no longer
held (nama-rupa-nirodha) and one does not feel trapped behind
or pulled out through the six sense-doors (salayatana-nirodha).
The sense-doors open for reflection, rather than being dependent
on contact (phassa-nirodha) and impingement does not impress
itself into the mind (vedana-nirodha). So there is freedom from desire
(tanha-nirodha) and attention does not get stuck (upadana-nirodha)
and grow into selfish motivations (bhava-nirodha) that center
around and reinforce the ego (jati-nirodha). When no personal
image is created, it can never bloat up, nor can it be destroyed
(jara-maranam-nirodha). So there is nothing to lose, a sense
of gladness, uplift, joy and serenity
(soka-parideva-dukkha-domanass-upayasa-nirodha).
With the
cessation of such a death-bound frame of reference there is
the living of the True life, the Holy life, of which Ajahn Sumedho
so evocatively speaks.
Although
many of these talks were delivered to monastics, the beauty
of the Dhamma is that it is available to those who wish to
listen. It is with this in mind that this book is freely offered. May
all beings realise Truth, Ven. Sucitto Bhikkhu Amaravati 1990.
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