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Fundamental of
Vipassana
Mahasi Sayadaw
translated by Maung
Tha Noe
[02] Meditate Right Now If you fail to meditate on the rising
phenomena and so do not know their real nature of impermanency, suffering
and not-self, you may relive them and thus let defilements be. This is a
case of latent defilements. Because they arise from objects, we call them
"object-latent." What do people cling to and why do they cling to? They
cling to things or persons they have seen because they have seen. If you
fail to meditate on them as they arise, somehow or other grasping arise.
Defilements are latent in whatever we see, hear, taste, etc. If you meditate, you find that what
you see passes away, what you hear passes away. They pass away in no time
at all. Once you see them as they really are, there is nothing to love,
nothing to hate, nothing to cling to. If there is nothing to cling to,
there can be no clinging or grasping. And you meditate right now. The moment you
see, you meditate. You can't put it off. You may buy things on credit, but
you cannot meditate on credit. Meditate right now. Only then will the
clingings not come up. Scripturally speaking, you meditate as soon as the
eye-door process ends and before the subsequent mind-door process begins.
When you see a visible object, the process takes place like this: First,
you see the object that comes up. This is the seeing process. Then you
review the object seen. This is the reviewing process. Then you put the
forms seen together and see the shape or material. This is the form
process. Last of all, you know the concept of name. This is the name
process. With objects you have never seen before, and so you do not know
the names of this, naming process will not occur. Of the four, when the
first or seeing process takes place, you see the present form, the
reality, as it rises. When the second or reviewing process takes place,
you review the past form, the form seen -- reality again. Both attend on
reality -- the object seen. No concept yet. The difference is between the
present reality and the past reality. With the third process you come to
the concept of shape. With the fourth you come to the concept of names.
The processes that follow are all various concepts. All these are common
to people not practised in insight meditation. There are 14 thought-moments in the
process of seeing. If neither seeing, hearing, nor thinking conscious-ness
arises, life-continuum goes on. It is identical with
rebirth-consciousness. It is the consciousness that goes on when you are
sleeping fast. When a visible object or any such appears, life-continuum
is arrested, and seeing consciousness, etc., arises. As soon as
life-continuum ceases, a thought-moment arises adverting the
conscious-ness to the object that comes into the avenue of the eye. When
this ceases, seeing consciousness arises. When this again ceases, the
receiving consciousness arises. Then comes the investigating
consciousness. Then, the conscious-ness that determines whether the object
seen is good or not. Then, in accordance with the determination reached,
moral or immoral apperceptions arise violently for seven thought-moment.
When these cease, two retentive resultants arise. Whenthese cease, there
comes subsidence into life-continuum like falling asleep. From the
adverting to retention there are 14 thought-moments. All these manifest as
one seeing consciousness. This is how the seeing process takes place. When
one is well-practised in insight meditation, after the arising of
life-continuum following the seeing process, insight consciousness that
reviews "seeing" takes place. You must try to be able to thus meditate
immediately. If you are able to do so, it appears in your intellect as
though you were meditating on things as they are seen, as they just
arise. This kind of meditation is termed in the Suttas as "meditation on
the present." "He discerns things present as they arise
here and now." -- Majjhima Nikaya
iii.227
"Understanding in reviewing the perversion
of present states is knowledge in arising and passing away." --
Patisambhidamagga These extracts from the Suttas clearly
show that we must meditate on present states. If you fail to meditate on
the present, apprehending arises from life-continuum. This consciousness
arises to review what has just been seen. The thought-moments included
are: apprehending conscious-ness, apperceptions 7, and registering
consciousness 2 -- a total of 10 thought-moments. Every time you think or
ponder, these three types of consciousness and ten thought-moments take
place. But to the meditator they will appear as one thought-moment only.
This is in conformity with the explanations in connection with the
knowledge of dissolution in Patisambhida-magga and Visuddhi-magga. If
you can meditate beyond the apprehending, you may not get to concepts
and may stay with the reality -- the object seen. But this is not very
easy for the beginner. If you fail to meditate even at the
apprehending, you get to form process and name process. Then graspings
come in. If you meditate after the emergence of graspings, they
will not disappear. That is why we instruct you to meditate immediately,
before the concepts arise. The processes for hearing, smelling,
tasting, touching, are to be understood along similar lines. With thinking at the mind-door, if you
fail to meditate immediately, subsequent processes come up after the
thought. So, you meditate immediately so that they may not arise. Sometimes, as you are noting "rising,
falling, sitting, touching" a thought or idea may come up in between.
You notice it the moment it arises. You note it and it ends right there.
Sometimes a wandering of the mind is about to arise. You note it and it
quiets down. In the words of some meditators, "it is like a naughty child
who behaves himself when shouted at 'Quiet!' " So, if you note the moment you see, hear,
touch, or perceive, no subsequent consciousness will arise to bring about
graspings. ".... you will simply have the sight of
the thing seen, the sound of the thing heard, the sense of the things
sensed, and the idea of the thing cognized." As this extract from Malunkya-sutta shows,
the mere sight, the mere sound, the mere sense, the mere idea is there.
Recall them and only the real nature you have understood will appear. No
graspings. The meditator who meditates on whatever arises as it arises
sees how everything arises and passes away, and it becomes clear to him
how everything is impermanent, suffering, not self. He knows this for
himself -- not because a teacher has explained it to him. This only is the
real knowledge. Incessant Work To arrive at this knowledge needs thorough
work. There is no guaranteeing that you will gain such knowledge at
one sitting. Perhaps one in a million will. In the days of the Buddha
there are people who attained to the Path and Fruit after listening to a
stanza. But you can't expect such things today. It was then the Buddha
himself who was teaching. He knew the disposition of his listeners very
well. The listeners on their part were people of perfections. But today
the preacher is just an ordinary person who preaches what little he has
learnt. He does not know the disposition of his listeners. It will be
difficult to say that the listeners are men and women of perfections. If
they had been, they would have gained deliverance in the days of the
Buddha. So we cannot guarantee you will gain special knowledge at one
sitting. We can only tell you that you can if you work hard enough. How long do we have to work? Understanding
impermanence, suffering and not self begins with the investigating
knowledge. But it does not come at once. It is preceded by purity of mind,
purity of views, and purity of transcending doubts. To speak from the
level of the present-day-meditators, a specially gifted person can achieve
this knowledge in two or three days. Most will take five, six, or seven
days. But they must work assiduously. Those who get slack at work may not
gain it even after fifteen or twenty days have passed. So I will talk
about working in earnest in the beginning. Insight meditation is incessant work --
meditate whenever you see, hear, smell, taste, touch or think,
without missing any thing. But to beginners, to note everything is quite
impossible. Begin with several. It is easy to observe the moving form in
the rising and falling of the abdomen. We have already spoken about it.
Note without a let-up rising, falling, rising, falling. As your
mindfulness and concentration grow stronger, add the sitting and the
touching and note rising, falling,
sitting, touching.
As you note on, ideas may come up. Note
them, too: thinking, planning, knowing. They are hindrances. Unless
you are rid of them, you have not got purity of mind and will not have a
clear understanding of mind-matter phenomena. So, don't let them in. Note
them and get rid of them. If unbearable feelings like tiredness,
hotness, pain, or itch, appear in the body, concentrate on them and note:
tired, tired or hot, hot as they arise. If the desire arises
to stretch or bend the limbs, note it too, desire to bend, desire to
stretch. When you bend or stretch, every move should be noted:
bending, bending, stretching, stretching. In the same way, when you
rise, note every move. When you walk, note every step. When you sit down,
note it. If you lie down, note it too. Every bodily movement made, every thought
that arises, every feeling that comes up, all must be noted. If there is
nothing in particular to note, go on noting rising, falling, sitting,
touching. You must note while eating or having a bath. If there are
things you see or hear particularly, note them too. Except for the
four-five-six hours you sleep, you keep noting things. You must try to be
able to note at least one thing in a second. If you keep on noting thus in earnest, you
will, in two or three days, find your mindfulness and concentration quite
strong. If not in two or three days, in five or six. Then, very rarely do
wanton thoughts come up. If they do, you are able to note them the moment
they come. And they pass away the moment you notice them. The object noted
like the rising and falling and the mind noting it seem to be well-timed.
You note with ease. These are signs that your mindfulness and
concentration have become strong. In other words, you have developed
purity of mind. Things Fall Apart From now on, every time you note, the
object noted and the mind that notes it appear two separate things. You
come to know that the material form like the rising and falling is one
thing and the mental state that notes it is another. Ordinarily, the
material form and the mind that cognizes it do not seem separate. They
seem one and the same thing. Your book knowledge tells you they are
separate but your personal feeling has them as one. Shake your index
finger. Do you see the mind that intends to shake? Can you
distinguish between that mind and the shaking? If you are sincere, the
answer will be No. But to the meditator whose mindfulness and
concentration are well developed the object of attention and the awareness
of it are as separate as the wall and the stone that is thrown to it. The Buddha used the simile of the gem and
the thread (D.i.72). Just as when you look at a string of lapis lazuli you
know: the gem is threaded on a string; this is the gem, this is the string
the gem is threaded on, so does the meditator know: this is the material
form, this is the consciousness that is aware of it, which depends on it,
and is related to it. The Commentary says that the conscious-ness here is
the insight consciousness, insight knowledge, that observesthe material
form. The lapis lazuli is the material form and the string is the
consciousness that observes. The thread is in the gem as the insight
awareness penetrates the material form. When you note rising, the rising is
one thing, the awareness is one thing -- only these two exist. When you
note falling the falling is one, the awareness is one -- only these
two. The knowledge comes clear to you of its own accord. When you lift one
foot in walking, one is the lifting, the other is the awareness -- only
these two exist. When you push it forward, the pushing and the awareness.
When you put it down, the putting down and the awareness. Matter and
awareness. These two only. Nothing else. As your concentration improves further,
you unders-tand how the material and mental things you have been noting
keep passing away each in its own time. When you note rising, the
form rising comes up gradually and passes away. When you note falling, the
form falling comes up gradually and then passes away. You also find that
the rising as well as the awareness passes away, the falling as well as
the awareness passes away. With every noting you find only arising and
passing away. When noting bending, one bending and the next do not
get mixed up. Bends, passes away, bends, passes away -- and thus, the
intention to bend, the form bending, and the awareness, come and go each
in its time and place. And when you note the tiredness, hotness, and pain,
these pass away as you are noting them. It becomes clear to you: they
appear and then disappear, so they are impermanent. The meditator understands for himself what
the commentaries say, "They are impermanent in the sense of being nothing
after becoming." This knowledge comes to him not from books nor from
teachers. He understands by himself. This is real knowledge. To believe
what other people say is faith. To remember out of faith is learning. It
is not knowledge. You must know from your own experience. This is the
important thing. Insight meditation is contemplation in order to know for
yourself. You meditate, see for yourself, and know -- this alone is
insight. Regarding contemplation on impermanence
the commentary says: ".... the impermanent should be
understood." This brief statement is followed by the
explanation: "Here, 'impermanent' are the Five Aggregates." You must know
that the five aggregates are impermanent. Although you may not understand
it by your own knowledge, you should know this much. Not only that. You
should know that they are all suffering, all without a self. If you know
this much, you can take up insight meditation. This understanding made by
learning is given in
Culatanha-sankhaya-sutta:
"If, 0 lord of devas, a monk has heard,
'All states are not fit for adherence,' he understands all the truth." --
Majjhima Nikaya i 318 To "understand" means to meditate on the
mind-and-matter and be aware of it. It is the basic insight knowledge of
Analytical Knowledge of Mind and Matter and the knowledge by Discerning
Conditionality. So, if you have learnt that mind and matter are all
impermanent, suffering and not-self, you can begin meditating from the
analysis of mind and matter. Then you can go on to higher knowledges
like the Investigating knowledge. "Understanding all the states, he
comprehends all of them" So, the least qualification required of a
beginner in insight meditation is that he must have heard or learnt of the
impermanent, suffering, and not-self nature of mind and matter. To
Buddhists in Burma this is something they have had since childhood. We say mind and matter are impermanent
because they come to be and then pass away. If a thing never comes to be,
we cannot say it is impermanent. What is that thing which never comes to
be? It is a concept. Concepts never come to be, never really
exist. Take a personal name. It comes into use from the day a child
is named. It appears as though it has come to be. But actually people just
say it in calling him. It has never come to be, it never really exists. If
you think it exists, find it. When a child is born, the parents give it
a name. Suppose a boy has been named "Master Red." Before the naming
ceremony the name Master Red is unknown at all. But from the day the boy
is named people begin calling him Master Red. But we can't say the name
has come into being since then. The name Master Red just does not exist.
Let's find it out. Is the name Master Red in his body? On his
head? On his side? On his face? No, it is not anywhere. The people have
agreed to call him Master Red and that is all. If he dies, does the
name die with him too? No. As long as the people do not forget it, the
name will live on. So it is said, "a name or surname never gets
destroyed". Only when the people forget it will the name Mastcr Red
disappear. But it is not destroyed. Should someone restore it, it will
come up again. Think of the Bodhisatta's names in the
Jatakas: Vessantara, Mahosadha, Mahajanaka, Vidhura, Temiya, Nemi... these
names were known in the times of the stories but were lost for millions of
years until the Buddha restored them. Four asankkeyyas and a
hundred thousand kalpas ago the name Dipankara the Buddha and the
name Sumedha the recluse were well known. They were lost to posterity
afterwards. But our Buddha restored them and the names are known to us
again. They will be known as long as the Buddha's teaching lasts. Once
Buddhism is gone from earth these names will be forgotten too. But if a
future Buddha were to speak about them again, they would become known
again. So, concepts, names, are just conventions. They never exist. They
have never been and they will never be. They never arise, so we can't say
they "pass away." Nor can we say they are impermanent. Every concept is
like that -- no existence, no becoming, no passing away, so no
impermanence. Nibbana, although it is a reality, cannot be said to be
impermanent because it never comes to be or passes away. It is to be
regarded is permanent because it stands as peace for ever. Impermanence Realities other than Nibbana -- mind and
matter -- never were in the beginning. They come into being whenever there
arise causes. After coming into being they pass away. So we say these
realities of mind and matter are impermanent. Take seeing, for example. In
the beginning there was no seeing. But if the eye is good, the object
comes up, there is light, your attention is drawn to it -- if these four
causes concur, then there is seeing. Once it has risen, it passes away. No
more of it. So we say seeing is impermanent. It is not very easy for an
ordinary person to know that seeing is impermanent. Hearing is
easier to understand. There was no hearing in the beginning. But if the
ear is good, the sound comes up, there is no barrier, your attention is
drawn to it -- if these four factors concur, then there is hearing. It
arises and then passes away. No more of it. So we say hearing is
impermanent. Now you hear me talking. You hear one
sound after another. Once you have heard them, they are gone. Listen,
sound, sound, sound. When I say so, you hear it, then it
is no more. When I say sound, you hear it, then it is gone. That is
how they come and pass away. The same is true of other psycho-physical
phenomena. They come and go. Seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, touching,
thinking, bending, stretching, moving -- all come and go away. Because
they keep passing away, we say they are impermanent. Of these, the passing away of
consciousness is very clear. If your mind wanders while you are noting
rising, falling, you note wandering. As you note it, the
wandering mind is no more. It is gone. It has not existed before. It comes
about just then. Then it is gone in no time at all when noted. So we say
it is impermanent. The passing away of unpleasant feelings too, is
obvious. As you go on noting rising, falling, tiredness, hotness,
or pain, appears somewhere in the body. If you concentrate on it and note
tiredness, tiredness, etc., sometimes it disappears completely, and
sometimes it disappears at least for the time you are noting. So it is
impermanent. The meditator realizes its impermanent characteristic as he
notes its arising and passing away. This realization of the fleeting nature of
things is Contemplation of Impermanence. It comes from your own
experience. Mere reflection without personally experiencing it is no true
knowledge. Without meditating you will not know what things come up and
what things pass away. It is just book learning. It may be a meritorious
deed, but not real insight knowledge. Real insight knowledge is what you know
for yourself by meditating on things as they come up and pass away. Here
in the audience are lots of meditators who have come to this stage of
knowledge. I am not speaking from my own experience alone. No, not even
from the experience of forty or fifty disciples of mine. There are
hundreds of them. Beginners may not have such clear knowledge yet. It is
not quite easy. But it is not too difficult to achieve, either. If you
work hard enough as we instruct, you can have it. If you don't, you can't.
Educational degrees, distinctions, honours -- all are results of hard
work. No pain, no gain. The insight knowledge of the Buddha, too, must be
worked for. As your concentration grows sharper, you
will be able to see a great number of thoughts in one single act of
bending or stretching of the limbs. You will see large numbers of thoughts
coming up one after another as you intend to bend or stretch. The same
number when you step. There arise a great number of thoughts in the
twinkling of an eye. You have to note all these fleeting thoughts as they
arise. If you cannot name them, just note "aware, aware." You will
see that there are four, five, or ten thousands arising in
succession every time you note aware. Sometimes when the awareness
is so swift, even the word aware is no longer necessary.
Just following them with your intellect will do. Now a thought arises, now the mind is
aware of it; now another thought arises, now the observant conscious-ness
is aware of it. It is like the saying "a morsel of food, a stroke of the
stick." For every thought that arises there is the observant consciousness
to be aware of it. Thus aware, these arisings and passings away are made
only too plain to you. The wandering mind that arises as you are
noting the rising and falling of the abdomen is caught by the observing
consciousness as an animal that falls direct into the snare or an object
that is hit by a well-aimed stone. And once, you are aware of it, it is
gone. You find it as clearly as if you were holding it in your hand. You
find thus whenever consciousness arises. When tiredness arises, you note tired,
and it is gone. It comes up again, you note it again, and it is gone
again. This kind of passing away will be made all the more clearer in
higher insight. Tired, noted, gone; tired, noted, gone -- they pass away
one by one. There is no connection between one tiredness and the next. The
same with pain. Pained, noted, gone; pained, noted, gone -- each pain is
gone at each noting. One pain does not mix with the other. Each pain is
distinct from the other. To ordinary people there is no
interruption in tiredness or pain. It seems to tire or pain you
continuously for a long time. In fact, there is no tiredness or pain for a
long while. One tiredness and the next, one pain and the next, just very
short pieces, very separate ones. The meditator sees this as he notes. When you note rising, the rising
comes up gradually and passes away by degrees. When you note falling,
the falling comes up and passes away by degrees. Common people who are
ignorant of this fact think of the rising and falling in terms of the
absurd abdominal shape. So from their own experience they think the
meditators too, will only be seeing the absurd abdominal shape. Some make
accusations to this effect. Don't speak by guess, please. Try and see for
yourselves, let us warn. If you work hard enough, you will find out. When you note bending, you see
clearly how it moves and passes, moves and passes, one moves after
another. You understand now the scriptural statement that realities like
mind and matter do not move from place to place. Ordinary people think it
is the same hand that moves, that has been before the bending, and that
will be after the bending. They think the same hand moves inwards and
outwards. To them it is ever-unchanging hand. It is because they have
failed to see through the continuity of matter, the way matter rises in
succession. It is because they lack in the knowledge to see through.
Impermanence is hidden by continuity, it is said. It is hidden because one
does not meditate on what arises and passes away. Says
Visuddhi-magga:
"Because the rise and fall are not
attended to, the characteristic of impermanence does not appear, as long
as it is hidden by continuity." --
Visuddhi-magga xxi, 781 Since the meditator is watching every
rising, all things mental and material appear to him as separate, broken
pieces not as things whole and unbroken. From afar ants look like a line,
but nearer you see the ants one by one. The meditator sees things
in broken pieces so continuity cannot hide the fact from him. The
characteristic of impermanence unfolds itself to him. He is no longer
illusioned. "But when the rise and fall are grasped
and continuity is broken, the characteristic of impermanence appears in
its true peculiar property." --
Visuddhi-magga xxi, 781
This is how you meditate and gain
the knowledge of Contemplation on Impermanence. Mere reflection without
meditation will not give rise to this knowledge. Once this knowledge is
made become, those on suffering and not-self follow. "To one, Meghiya, who has perceived
impermanence the perception of not-self is established." --
Anguttara Nikaya iii, 169 How will you take what you very well know
to be capable of rising and passing away to be self, ego, a being? People
cling to the self because they think they have been the same person the
whole life. Once it is clear to you from your own experience that life is
but made up of things that rise and pass away incessantly, you will not
cling as self. Some obstinate persons say that this sutta is meant for
Meghiya alone. This is something that should not be said. We fear others
will come up who will say what the Buddha said were meant for the people
of his days, not for us who live today. But the statement is found not in
that sutta alone. In Sambodhi sutta the Buddha says: "To one, monks, who has perceived
impermanence the perception of not-self is established." --
Anguttara Nikaya iii, 165
And, if one realizes impermanence, one
realizes suffering, too. The meditator who realizes how things are rising
and passing away, can see how the two events, rising and passing away,
have been oppressing him. The commentary to Sambodhi sutta says: "When the characteristic of impermanence
is seen, the characteristic of not-self is seen, too, since when one of
the three characteristics is seen the other two are seen too." So, it is very important to understand the
one characteristic of impermanence. Rediscovery In this connection let me tell you a story
from my own experience as a preacher. It is about a meditator from
my native village Hseipkhun in Shwebo district. He was none other
than a cousin of mine. He was one of the first three persons to take up
insight meditation in the village. The three of them agreed among
themselves to work for a week first. They worked very hard. They had
brought to the hermitage cigars and betel quids to be taken one each day.
But when they returned from the hermitage they took home all the seven
cigars and betel quids -- untouched. So hard did they work that in three days
they attained the knowledge of rising and falling and were overjoyed to
experience tranquillity and see brilliance around. "Only at this old age
have we discovered the truth," they spoke with great joy. Because they
were the first to take up meditation I thought of letting them go with
their joys and just told them to go on noting. I did not tell them not to
note the joys. So, although they worked for four more days, they did not
get any higher. After a few days'rest they came again for
another week of meditation. That cousin of mine then reached the stage of
the knowledge of dissolution. Although he was noting rising, falling,
sitting, he did not see the abdominal shape, and his body
seemed to have disappeared, so he had to touch it with his hand to see if
it was still there, he told me. And, whenever he looked or saw, everything
seemed to be dissolving and breaking up. The ground he looked at was
dissolving and so were the trees. It was all against what he had thought
things to be. He began to wonder. He had never thought such external,
season-produced, gross material things like earth, trees, logs, etc, could
be incessantly breaking up. He had thought they perished only after
aconsiderable length of time. They lasted for quite a long time, he
thought. Now, as insight knowledge gained momentum with meditation the
rising and passing away of phenomena appeared to him of their own accord
without his specially meditating on them. They were passing away, breaking
up, there before him. It was all the reverse of his former beliefs.
Perhaps his new vision was wrong. Perhaps his eye-sight was failing. So he asked me. And I told him. The
passing away and breaking up he saw in everything were true. As your
insight grew sharper and quicker, things appear rising and passing away to
you without your meditating on them. These are all true, I explained to
him. Later on he again told me about his own findings as he
progressed in insight. Today he is no more. He has long been dead. When insight knowledge has grown really
sharp, it will prevail over wrong beliefs and thoughts. You see things in
their true light as impermanent, suffering, not-self. An uncultured mind
or reflection without meditation cannot give you real insight into the
nature of things. Only insight meditation can do that. Once you realize impermanence, you see how
they oppress you with their rising and passing away, how you can derive no
pleasure from them, how they can never be a refuge, how they can perish
any moment, so how they are frightening, how they are sufferings, etc. "... ill (suffering) in the sense of
fearful." You thought, "This body will not perish so
soon. It will last for quite a long time." So you took it for a great
refuge. But now as you meditate you find only incessant risings and
passings-away. If no new ones rise up for the mental and material things
that have passed away, one dies. And this can happen any moment. To make a
self out of these mental and material things that can die any moment and
to take refuge in it is as dreadful a thing as sheltering in an old
tumble-down house. And you find that nothing happens as you
desire. Things just follow their natural course. You thought you could go
if you wished to, sit if you wished to, rise, see, hear, do anything if
you wished to. Now as you meditate you find that it is not so. Mind and
matter are found to be working in a pair. Only when there is intention to
bend is there the form bending. Only when there is intention to
stretch is there the form stretching. There is effect only when there is
cause. Only when there is something to see do you see. If there is
something to see, you can't help seeing it. You hear, when there is
something to hear. You feel happy only when there is reason to be happy.
You worry when there is cause to worry. If there is cause, there is
effect. You cannot help it. There is no thing that
lives and does what it desires. There is no self, no ego, no I. Only
processes of arising and passing away. To understand clearly is the most
important thing in insight meditation. Of course, you will come across
joys, tranquillities, bright lights in the course of your training. They
are not important things. What is important is to understand impermanence,
suffering and not-self. These characteristics are made clear to you as you
just keep on meditating as explained. Peace at Last You make things clear to you yourself. Not
believing what others tell you. If any of you beginners have not
had such self-made knowledge yet, know that you have not reached that
stage. Work on. If others can, you can. It will not take very long. The
knowledge comes to you as you are meditating. Only when you know for sure
that all are impermanent, suffering and not-self will you not cling to
sense objects, as permanent, happy, beautiful, good. Nor will you cling to
them as self, soul, the I. All the graspings are done away with. What
then? Well, all the defilements are calmed by Aryan Path and Nibbana is
realized. "One who has no grasping does not long
after things. One who does not long after things is calmed in himself." --
Majjhima Nikaya ii, 318 Whenever you meditate, you have no
obsession with the object noted. So, no grasping arises. There is no
grasping to what you see, hear, smell, eat, touch or be aware of. They
appear to rise each in its time and then pass away. They manifest
themselves as impermanent. There is nothing to cling to. They oppress us
with their rise and fall. They are all sufferings. There is nothing to
cling to as happy, good, or beautiful. They rise and fall as is their
nature, so there is nothing to cling to as self, soul, or I, that lives
and lasts. All these are made very plain to you. At that the graspings are
done away with. Then you realize Nibbana through Ariyan Path. We will explain this in the light of
Dependent Origination and Aggregates. "The stopping of grasping is from the
stopping of craving; the stopping of becoming is from the stopping of
grasping; the stopping of birth is from the stopping of becoming; from the
stopping of birth old age and dying, grief, suffering, sorrow, despair,
and lamentation are stopped. Thus comes to be the stopping of this entire
mass of ill" -- Majjhima Nikaya i,
337; Samyutta Nikaya ii, 1-3
One who meditates on the mental and
material objects that appear at the six doors and knows their intrinsic
nature of impermanence, suffering and not-self does not delight in them or
cling to them. As he does not grasp them, he makes no effort to
enjoy them. As he refuses to make an effort, there arises no karma called
"becoming." As no karma arises, there is no new birth. When there is no
new birth, there is no occasion for old age, dying, grief, etc. This is
how one realizes momentary Nibbana through insight path whenever one
meditates. We will explain the realization by Aryan Path later. In Silavanta sutta earlier quoted, the
venerable Sariputta explained how, if a monk of moral habit meditates on
the five grasping aggregates as impermanent, suffering, and not-self, he
can become a Stream-winner; if a Stream-winner meditates, he can become a
Once-returner; if a Once-returner meditates, he can become a
Never-returner; if a Never-returner meditates, he can become an Arahant.
Here, to realize the four Aryan fruitions of Stream-winning,
Once-returning, Never-returning, and Arahatship means to realize Nibbana
through the four Aryan Paths. Progress To get to the Aryan Path one starts with
insight path. And insight path begins with the analytical knowledge of
mind and matter. Then one arrives at the knowledge by discerning
conditionality. Then, working on, one gains the knowledge of
investigation. Here one comes to enjoy reflecting on things, investigating
them, and persons of considerable learning often spend a long time doing
so. If you do not want to reflect or investigate, you just keep on
meditating. Your awareness now becomes light and swift. You see very
clearly how the things noted arise and pass away. You have come to the
knowledge of rising and passing away. At this stage noting tends to be easy.
Illuminations, joys, tranquillities appear. Going through experiences
unthought of before, one is thrilled with joy and happiness. At the
initial stage of his work, the meditator has had to take great pains not
to let the mind wander this way and that. But it has wandered and for most
of the time he has not been able to meditate. Nothing has seemed all
right. Some have had to fight back very hard indeed. But with strong faith
in one's teachers, good intentions and determination, one has passed all
these difficult stages. One has now come to the knowledge of rising and
passing away. Everything is fine at this stage. Noting is easy and
effortless. It is good to note, and brilliant lights appear. Rapture
seizes him and causes a sort of goose-flesh in him. Both body and mind are
at ease and he feels very comfortable. The objects to be noted seem to
drop on one's mindfulness of their own accord. Mindfulness on its part
seems to drop on the object of its own accord. Everything is there already
noted. One never fails or forgets to note. On every noting the awareness
is very clear. If you attend to something and reflect on it, it proves to
be a plain and simple matter. If you take up impermanence, suffering and
not-self, about which you have heard before, they turn out to be plainly
discernible things. So you feel like preaching. You think you would make a
very good preacher. But if you have had no education, you will make a poor
preacher. But you feel like preaching and you can even become quite
talkative. This is what is called "the ideal Nibbana" the meditators
experience. It is not the real Nibbana of the Aryans. We may call it
"imitation Nibbana." "It is the immortality of the knowers." Training in meditation is like climbing a
mountain. You begin climbing from the base. Soon you get tired. You ask
people who are coming down and they answer you with encouraging words like
"It's nearer now." Tired, you climb on and very soon come to a resting
place in the shade of a tree with a cool breeze blowing in. All your
tiredness is gone. The beautiful scenery around fascinates you. You get
refreshed for a further climb. The knowledge of the rising and passing
away is the resting place for you on your climb to higher insight
knowledge. Those meditators who have not yet reached
this stage of knowledge may be losing hope. Days have passed and no taste
of insight yet. They often get disheartened. Some leave the meditation
centre with thoughts that meditation is nothing after all. They have not
discovered the "meditator's Nibbana." So we instructors have to encourage
newcomers to the centre with the hope that they will attain to this
knowledge at least. And we ask them to work to attain to it soon. Most
succeed as we advise. Then they needn't further encouragement. They are
now full of faith and determination to work on till the ultimate goal. This "meditator's Nibbana" is often spoken
of as amanusi rati -- non-human delight or superhuman enjoy-ment.
You derive all kinds of delights from various things -- from education,
wealth, family life. The "meditator's Nibbana" surpasses all these
delights. A meditator once told me that he had indulged in all kinds of
worldly pleasures. But none could match the pleasure he derived from
meditation. He just could not express how delightful it was. But is that all? No, you must work on. You
go on with your noting. Then, as you progress, forms and features no
longer manifest themselves and you find them always disappearing. Whatever
appears disappears the moment you notice it. You note seeing, it
disappears swiftly. You note hearing, it disappears. Bending, stretching,
again it disappears swiftly. Not only the object that comes up, the
awareness of it too disappears with it in a pairwise sequence. This is the knowledge of dissolution. Every time you note, they dissolve
swiftly. Having witnessed this for a long time, you become frightened of
them. It is the knowledge of the Fearful. Then you find fault with these
things that keep passing away. It is the knowledge of tribulation. Then as
you meditate on, you get wearied of them. It is the knowledge of
repulsion. "So seeing all these things, the
instructed disciple of the aryans disregards the material shapes,
disregards feeling." -- Majjhima
Nikaya i, 137; Samyutta Nikaya iii, 68 Your material body has been a delightful
thing before. Sitting or rising, going or coming, bending or stretching,
speaking or working, everything has seemed very nice. You have
thought this material body of yours to be a dependable and delightful
thing. Now that you have meditated on it and seen that everything
dissolves, you no longer see your body as dependable. It is no longer
delightful. It is just a dull, tiresome business. You have enjoyed both pleasurable feelings
of the body and mental pleasure. You have thought, "I am enjoying," "I
feel happy." Now these feelings are no longer pleasurable. They, too,
pass away as you notice them. You become wearied of them. You have thought well of your perception.
But now it too, passes away as you notice it. You feel disgusted with it
as well. Volitional activities are responsible for
all your bodily, mental and vocal behaviours. To think, "I sit, I rise, I
go, I act," is to cling to volitional activities. You have thought well of
them, too. Now that you see them passing away, you feel repulsion
for them. You have enjoyed thinking. When
newcomers to the meditation centre are told that they must not engage in
thinking about things, but must keep noting, they are not at all pleased.
Now you see how thoughts, ideas, come up and pass away, and you are tired
of them, too. The same thing happens to your sense organs. Whatever comes
up at the six doors is now a thing to disgust, to be wearied of. Some feel
extreme disgust, some a considerable amount. Then arise desires to be rid of
them all. Once you are tired of them, of course you want to get rid of
them. "They come and pass incessantly. They are no good. It were well if
they all ceased." This is the knowledge of desire for deliverance.
Where "they all ceased" is Nibbana. To desire for deliverance from them is
to long for Nibbana. What must one do if he wants Nibbana? He works harder
and goes on meditating. This is the knowledge of reflection. Working with
special effort, the characteristics of impermanence, suffering and
not-self become all the more clearer to you. Especially clearer is
suffering. After reflection you come to the knowledge
of indifference to formations. Now the meditator is quite at ease. Without
much effort on his part the notings run smoothly and are very good. He
sits down to meditate and makes the initial effort. Then everything runs
its course like a clock once wound up goes on ticking of its own accord.
For an hour or so he makes no change in his posture and goes on with his
work without interruption. Before this knowledge there may have been
disturbances. Your mind may be directed to a sound heard and thus
disturbed. Your thoughts may wander off and meditation is disturbed.
Painful feelings like tiredness, hotness, aches, itches, coughs, appear
and disturb you. Then you have to start it all over again. But now all
goes well. There are no more disturbances. Sounds you may hear but you
ignore them and go on noting. Whatever comes up you note without being
disturbed. There are no more wanderings of the mind. Pleasant objects may
turn up but no delight or pleasure arises in you. You meet with unpleasant
objects. Again you feel no displeasure or fear. Painful feelings like
tiredness, hotness or aches rarely appear. If they do, they are not
unbearable. Your noting gets the better of them. Itching pains and coughs
disappear once you attain this knowledge. Some even get cured of serious
illnesses. Even if the illnesses are not completely cured, you get some
relief while noting in earnest. So for an hour or so there will be no
interruption to your notings. Some can go on meditating for two or three
hours without interruption. And yet you feel no weariness in body.
Time passes unheeded. "It's not long yet," you think. On such a hot
summer day as this it would be very fine to have attained this knowledge.
While other people are groaning under the intense heat the meditator
who is working in earnest with this knowledge will not be aware of the
heat at all. The whole day seems to have fled in no time. It is a very
good insight knowledge indeed, yet there can be dangers like excess of
worry ambition, or attachment. If these cannot be removed, no progress
will be made. Once they are removed, the aryan path knowledge is there to
realize. How? Noble Path Every time you note rising, falling,
sitting, touching, seeing, hearing, bending, stretching, and so on,
there is an effort being made. This is the right effort of the Noble
Eightfold Path. Then there is your mindfulness. It is right mindfulness.
Then there is concentration which penetrates the object noted as well as
remains fixed on it. This is right concentration. The three are called
Concentration Constituents of the Path. Then there is initial application
which, together with concentration, ascends on the object noted. It is the
application of the concomitants on the object. Its characteristic is
"lifting" of the concomitants to the object (abhiniropanalakkhana),
according to the Commentary. This is right thought. Then there is the
realization that the object thus attended is movement, non-cognition,
seeing, cognition, impermanence and so on. This is right view. Right
thought and right view together form the Wisdom Constituent of the Path.
The three Morality Constituents, right speech, right action and right
livelihood, have been perfected before you take up insight meditation --
when you take the precepts. Besides, there can be no wrong speech, no
wrong action, or no wrong livelihood in respect of the object noted. So
whenever you note, you perfect the Morality Constituents of the Path as
well. The eight constituents of the Noble Path
are there in every awareness. They constitute the insight path that comes
up once clinging is done away with. You have to prepare this path
gradually until you reach the knowledge of indifference to formations.
When this knowledge grows mature and strong, you arrive at Aryan Path in
due course. It is like this:-- When the knowledge of indifference to
formations has matured and grown stronger, your notings get sharper and
swifter. While thus noting and becoming aware swiftly, all of a sudden you
fall into the peace that is Nibbana. It is rather strange. You have no
prior knowledge of it. You cannot reflect on it on arrival, either. Only
after the arrival can you reflect. You reflect because you find unusual
things. This is the knowledge of reflection. Then you know what has
happened. This is how you realize Nibbana through the Aryan Path. So, if you want to realize Nibbana, what
is important is to work for freedom from clingings. With ordinary people
clingings arise everywhere: in seeing, in hearing, in touching, in being
aware. They cling to things as being permanent, as being happy, good, as
soul, ego, persons. We must work for a complete freedom from these
clingings. To work is to meditate on whatever rises, whatever is seen,
heard, touched, thought of. If you keep meditating thus, clingings cease
to be, the Aryan Path arises, leading to Nibbana. This is the process. To Sum Up *
How is insight developed?
-- Insight is developed by meditating
on the five grasping aggregates. * Why and when do we meditate on the
aggregates? -- We meditate on the aggregates
whenever they arise in order that we may not cling to them. These then, are the elements of insight
meditation. -ooOoo-
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".... impermanence should be understood."
".... the discernment of the impermanent should be understood." --
Visuddhi-magga, i 281
-- If we fail to meditate on mind and matter, clingings arise.
-- We cling to them as permanent, good, and as ego.
-- If we keep meditating on mind and matter, clingings cease to be.
-- It is plainly seen that all are impermanent, suffering, mere
processes.
-- Once clingings cease, the Path arises, leading to Nibbana.
last updated: 01-06-2003