petak, 19. prosinca 2008.

Consciousness and the Absolute



Consciousness and the Absolute, pg. 48 Nisargadatta Discussion group
M: Start with the body. From the body you get the knowledge of `I am'. In this process you become more and more subtle. When you are in a position to witness the knowledge `I am', you have reach the highest. In this way you must try to understand, and the seeds of knowledge will sprout in you.
When you come to the end of material world-knowledge, at that stage you transcend the observer and the observed. That means that you are in a true state of being-ness. Thereafter, you enter the state of transcending being-ness, where the identities of the observer and observed disappear.
Suppose somebody abuses you and you find out who it is. Is it the body? It is not the body. Then what could it be? Finally you come to the conclusion that it is spontaneously happening out of whatever that body is. You will not attribute it to any individual. When your individuality is dissolved, you will not see individuals anywhere, it is just a functioning in consciousness. If it clicks in you, it is very easy to understand. If it does not, it is most difficult. It is very profound and very simple, if understood right. What I am saying is not the general run of common spiritual knowledge.
When you reach a state when body is transcended, mind is transcended and consciousness is also transcended; from then on all is merely happening out of consciousness, which is the outcome of the body, and there is no authority or doer-ship. When a sound is emanating out of a body, it is not that somebody is talking, it is just words emanating, just happening, not doing.
If you understand the basis thoroughly, it will lead you very far, deep into spirituality.
The Absolute alone prevails. There is nothing but the Absolute. The un-manifest manifested itself, that manifest state is Guru and it is universal.
Who is the one who recognizes this body-mind? This `I Am-ness' which recognizes the body-mind is without name and form, it is already there.
June 27, 1981 Page 108Consciousness and the Absolute
**June 30,1981

srijeda, 10. prosinca 2008.

Sve ono što možete da promijenite je samo vaš stav




Da li se um pojavljuje u tijelu ili tijelo u umu? Sigurno da mora postojati um da shvati, da potvrdi ideju „Ja sam tijelo“. Tijelo bez uma ne može biti „moje tijelo“. „Moje tijelo“ je odsutno kada je um u privremenom odsustvu, nesvjestan. Ono je također odsutno kada je um duboko angažiran u mislima i osjećanjima. Jednom kada shvatite da tijelo zavisi od uma, a um od mentalne svjesnoti, a svjesnost od probuđenosti, duhovne svjesnosti, a ne suprotno, odgovoreno je na vaše pitanje o čekanju na samo ostvarenje dok ne umrete. Nije neophodno da budete prvo oslobođeni od ideje „ja sam tijelo“ da biste spoznali „Sopstvo“. To je potpuno drugačiji put – vi prianjate uz lažno jer ne znate istinito. Ozbiljnost, ne savršenstvo, je preduvjet za samoostvarenje. 253


Kada se sadržaj vidi bez sviđanja i nesviđanja, takva svjesnost je probuđenost. 254

Vi ste zaokupljeni i zabrinuti vašom vlastitom srećom, a ja vam kažem da takvo nešto, takva pojava ne postoji. Sreća nikad nije vaša vlastita, ona je tamo gdje „ja“ ne postoji.

Marljivo promatrajte sve promjene u vašem životu, ispitujte temeljno vaše motive iza vaših djelovanja, i vi ćete uskoro probiti mjehur u kojem ste zatvoreni. 255

Morate da se oslobodite individualnosti za koju smatrate da ste vi, pošto je ideja koju vi imate o sebi ta koja vas drži u ropstvu. Kako se osloboditi individualnosti? Odlučnošću, odlukom. Shvatite da ona mora otići i želite da ona otiđe – ona će otići ako ste vi ozbiljni, iskreni sa tim.

Odolijevajte vašim starim navikama osjećanja i mišljenja, borite se protiv njih, nastavite uporno da govorite sebi: „Ne, ne to“ to ne može biti tako; ja nisam kao ovo, ja to ne trebam, ja ne želim to“. U toku dubokog sna sve je stavljeno na stranu, ostavljeno i zaboravljeno. Svaki put kada zaspite vi činite to bez i najmanje sigurnosti da ćete se probuditi, a ipak preuzimate rizik?!

Čovjek bi trebao uvijek da bude u revoltu, pobuni protiv samog sebe, jer ego, kao krivo ogledalo, smanjuje i iskrivljuje. On je najgori od svih tirana, on potpuno upravlja nama. 258

Što ja dobijam učenjem da koristim moj um? Dobijate slobodu od želja i straha, koji su potpuno tu zbog pogrešnog korišćenja uma.

Usmjerite pažnju na pitanje: što je ono što me čini svjesnim? – sve dok vaš um ne postane samo pitanje i ne može da misli o ničem drugom. (Tko kaže da sam izdvojena osoba? Um. Kad je um utišan ne postoji osjećaj izdvojenosti. Sve se samo događa. Što me čini svjesnim?
Biće – pravo ja.op.)

Da biste otišli iznad uma, morate biti tihi, smireni i u tišini.

Sve što se desi, dešava se u umu, i za um, ne za izvor „ja jesam“. Jednom kada spoznate da se sve dešava samo po sebi, nazovite to sudbinom – ili Voljom Božjom – ili samo slučajnost – vi ostajete samo svjedok, razumijevajući i uživajući, ali neuznemireni.

Vi ste odgovorni samo za ono što možete da promijenite. Sve ono što možete da promijenite je samo vaš stav. Tu leži vaša odgovornost. 261

Svijet me jako uznemirava?! To je zbog toga što vi mislite puno o tome da ste pod utjecajem svijeta. To nije tako. Vi ste tako mali da vas ništa ne može obvezati. Vaš um je taj koji je zarobljen, ne vi. Spoznajte sebe onakvim kakvi jeste – samo iskra, točka svjesnosti, bezdimenzionalni, slobodni, bezvremeni.

Sve zavisi od vas. Uz vašu suglasnost svijet postoji. Odbacite vaše vjerovanje u njegovu realnost i on će se rastopiti kao san. 262

Kad je želja prepoznata kao lažna, bezželjnost dolazi sama po sebi. Konačno to je nagon za srećom, koji je prirodan sve dok postoji patnja. Samo vidite da ne postoji sreća u onome što želite. Svako svjetovno i čulno zadovoljstvo je umotano bolom. Uskoro ćete otkriti da ne možete jedno bez drugoga. 264

Vi nikad niste sami. Postoje sile i prisustva koja vas služe najodanije svo vrijeme. Kad shvatite da je sve u vašem umu, da ste vi iznad uma, tada ste stvarno sami; onda ste vi sve.
(Svjesnost je veza sa Bićem-op.) 268

Kada spoznate sebe kao manjeg od točke u prostoru i vremenu, kao nešto tako suviše malo da bude posječeno, smrvljeno, i tako kratkog vijeka, da bude ubijeno, onda i samo onda, sav strah će nestati. Kada ste manji od vrha igle, onda vas igla ne može probosti, - vi probadate iglu! 271

Naša je dužnost da živimo prirodno, spontano i s lakoćom. Ali bolest i patnja nisu prirodne. Plemenita je vrlina nepokolebljivo izdržati što život nosi, ali ima i dostojanstva u odbijanju besmislenog mučenja i poniženja.

Zašto na ovom svijetu ima toliko patnje? Uzrok je patnje sebičnost (sebična zadovoljstva). Nema drugog uzroka. 274



Izdvojene rečenice iz knjige - Razgovori sa ŠRI NISARGADATA MAHARADŽOM

petak, 5. prosinca 2008.

We are the creators and creatures of each other



Quotes by Nisargadatta
"We are the creators and creatures of each other, causing and bearing each other's burden."
**I find that somehow, by shifting the focus of attention, I become the very thing I look at, and experience the kind of consciousness it has; I become the inner witness of the thing. I call this capacity of entering other focal points of consciousness, love; you may give it any name you like. Love says "I am everything". Wisdom says "I am nothing". Between the two, my life flows. Since at any point of time and space I can be both the subject and the object of experience, I express it by saying that I am both, and neither, and beyond both. (269)
**Unless you make tremendous efforts, you will not be convinced that effort will take you nowhere. The self is so self-confident that unless it is totally discouraged it will not give up. Mere verbal conviction is not enough. Hard facts alone can show the absolute nothingness of the self-image. (523)
**
A quiet mind is all you need. All else will happen rightly, once your mind is quiet. As the sun on rising makes the world active, so does self-awareness affect changes in the mind. In the light of calm and steady self-awareness, inner energies wake up and work miracles without any effort on your part. (311)
**"The world is like a sheet of paper on which something is typed. The reading and the meaning will vary with the reader, but the paper is the common factor, always present, rarely perceived. When the ribbon is removed, typing leaves no trace on the paper. So is my mind - the impressions keep on coming, but no trace is left."(225)
**When you demand nothing of the world, nor of God, when you want nothing, seek nothing, expect nothing, then the Supreme State will come to you uninvited and unexpected. (195)**"All that a guru can tell you is: 'My dear Sir, you are quite mistaken aboutyourself.You are not the person you take yourself to be.'" (443)




**"There is no such thing as a person. There are only restrictions and limitations. The sum total of these defines the person. (...) The person merely appears to be, like the space within the pot appears to have the shape and volumeand smell of the pot."
**By all means attend to your duties. Action, in which you are not emotionally involved and which is beneficial and does not cause suffering will not bind you. You may be engaged in several directions and work with enormous zest, yet remain inwardly free and quiet, with a mirror like mind, which reflects all, without being affected. (50)
**"To expound and propogate concepts is simple, to drop all concepts is difficult and rare"
**"There is nothing to practise. To know yourself, be yourself. To be yourself, stop imagining yourself to be this or that. Just be. Let your true nature emerge. Don't disturb your mind with seeking"
I am That PG 259 (Chetana version)
**The consciousness in you and the consciousness in me, apparently two, reallyone, seek unity and that is love. (70)
**In people with devotion, even with limited intellect, the intellect is not making mischief, as it is here.
This is the place where the intellect gets annihilated.
Consciousness and the Absolute, chapter 32**There was a house, and in the house there was a person; now the person is gone and the house is demolished. The sum total is, whatever experiences you have, whether for a day or for years, it is all illusion. The experiences begin with knowingness.What is the most ingrained habit you have? It is to say "I Am'. This is the root habit. Words and experiences are unworthy of you. This habit of experiencing will not go until you realize that all this domain of the five elements, are unreal, This "I Amness" is itself unreal.

četvrtak, 4. prosinca 2008.

Želje i strahovi su otupjeli vaš um



Odustanite od stvari jer vidite njihovu bezvrijednost. Kako se pridržavate odricanja, vi ćete vidjeti da odrastate, napredujete spontano u inteligenciji i snazi, moći, i nepresušnoj ljubavi i radosti. 205

Želje i strahovi su otupjeli vaš um. Njemu treba čišćenje.
Kako mogu da razbistrim svoj um? Pomoću njegovog neprestanog promatranja. 209

Zašto ne stvorite svoju vlastitu okolinu. Svijet ima samo onoliko mnogo moći nad vama koliko mu vi to dozvolite.

Osobno motivirana akcija, zasnovana na nekoj skali vrijednosti, s ciljem za nekim rezultatom je gora nego neaktivnost, jer su njeni plodovi uvijek gorki.

Spoznajte da vi niste gospodar onoga što se dešava, ne možete kontrolirati budućnost, izuzev u čisto tehničkim, formalnim stvarima. Samo imajte razumijevanja i suosjećanja, oslobođeni od svakog koristoljublja, sebičnosti. 215

Duhovna zrelost leži u spremnosti da se sve napusti. Predavanje je prvi korak.
Ali realno predavanje ili napuštanje je u spoznavanju da nema ničega od čega treba odustati, nema od čega da se odustane, jer ništa nije vaše vlastito. To je kao duboki san – vi ne napuštate vaš krevet kad zaspite – vi ga jednostavno zaboravljate. 219

Biti – da biste bili – vi morate biti nitko. Misliti o sebi da ste nešto, ili netko, je smrt i pakao.

Tjelo je sačinjeno od hrane, dok je um sačinjen od misli. 223

Zašto sam ja tako zaokupljen stvarima? Zato što ste zainteresirani. Što me nagoni da budem zainteresiran? Strah, bol i želja za zadovoljstvom. Prijatan je kraj bola, a bolan je kraj zadovoljstva. Oni se samo smjenjuju u beskonačnom nizu. Istražujte taj poročni, pogrešni krug, dok ne nađete sebe iznad njega. 224

Ako samo stojite po strani kao promatrač, nečete patiti. Vi ćete vidjeti svijet kao predstavu, zaista najzabavniji šou. 226

Sva patnja je uzrokovana sebičnom izolacijom, zbog uskogrudnosti i pohlepe. 234

Kako da postignem savršenstvo? Budi spokojan. Obavljaj svoj svjetovni posao, ali iznutra ostani miran. Tada ćeš sve dobiti. Nemoj se oslanjati na svoj rad na oslobođenju. To može koristiti drugima, ali ne i tebi. Tvoja je nada u tome da zadržiš mir u umu i ljubav u srcu. Oslobođene osobe žive u tišini. 240
Shvatite da ni jedna ideja nije vaša vlastita, sve one dolaze izvana. Morate misliti na to neprestano.


Citati iz knjige "JA SAM TO" Razgovori sa ŠRI NISARGADATA MAHARADŽOM


srijeda, 3. prosinca 2008.

Hrvatsko Zagorje














































Hrvatsko Zagorje po danu u jednom danu!








Training this Mind




A Dhammatalk by Ajahn Chah
Training this Mind1
Training this mind... actually there's nothing much to this mind. It's simply radiant in and of itself. It's naturally peaceful. Why the mind doesn't feel peaceful right now is because it gets lost in its own moods. There's nothing to mind itself. It simply abides in its natural state, that's all. That sometimes the mind feels peaceful and other times not peaceful is because it has been tricked by these moods. The untrained mind lacks wisdom. It's foolish. Moods come and trick it into feeling pleasure one minute and suffering the next. Happiness then sadness. But the natural state of a person's mind isn't one of happiness or sadness. This experience of happiness and sadness is not the actual mind itself, but just these moods which have tricked it. The mind gets lost, carried away by these moods with no idea what's happening. And as a result, we experience pleasure and pain accordingly, because the mind has not been trained yet. It still isn't very clever. And we go on thinking that it's our mind which is suffering or our mind which is happy, when actually it's just lost in its various moods.
The point is that really this mind of ours is naturally peaceful. It's still and calm like a leaf that is not being blown about by the wind. But if the wind blows then it flutters. It does that because of the wind. And so with the mind it's because of these moods - getting caught up with thoughts. If the mind didn't get lost in these moods it wouldn't flutter about. If it understood the nature of thoughts it would just stay still. This is called the natural state of the mind. And why we have come to practice now is to see the mind in this original state. We think that the mind itself is actually pleasurable or peaceful. But really the mind has not created any real pleasure or pain. These thoughts have come and tricked it and it has got caught up in them. So we really have to come and train our minds in order to grow in wisdom. So that we understand the true nature of thoughts rather than just following them blindly.
The mind is naturally peaceful. It's in order to understand just this much that we have come together to do this difficult practice of meditation.

Footnotes
...1
This talk was previously printed as a different translation under the title 'About this Mind' 
Contents: © Wat Nong Pah Pong, 2007 Last update: March 2008


var s_sid = 152262;var st_dominio = 4;
var cimg = 0;var cwi =150;var che =30;
');
A Dhammatalk by Ajahn Chah

ponedjeljak, 1. prosinca 2008.

Pustite da se stvari dešavaju kako se dešavaju



Neočekivano je na putu da se desi, dok očekivano ne mora nikad doći.
Ispunjene želje stvaraju više želja. Držati se izvan svih želja i zadovoljstva u koje dospijete, koja se dese sama po sebi, vrlo je plodonosno, ispunjeno stanje – preduvjet stanja ispunjenja, punoće. Vjerujte mi ispunjenje želja stvara bijedu. Sloboda od želja je blaženstvo.

Ono što vam je potrebno doći će vam ako ne tražite ono što vam je nepotrebno!!
Pustite da se stvari dešavaju kako se dešavaju – one će same sebe razmrsiti povoljno – na kraju.

Uvijek je lažno ono koje čini da patite, lažne želje i strahovi, lažne vrijednosti i ideje, lažni međusobni odnosi među ljudima. Napustite lažno i vi ste oslobođeni od bola.

U tijelu postoji tok energije. Otkrijte taj tok i budite s njim. 155

Sloboda od želja je vječnost. Sve vezanosti izazivaju strah, jer sve stvari su prolazne. A strah čini čovjeka robom. Sve patnje i žudnje su zbog osjećaja suvišnosti, nedovoljnosti. Kada spoznate da ne oskudijevate ni u čemu, da sve što postoji ste vi i da je sve vaše, želja prestaje.
Gledajte sebe i vaše vlastito postojanje.Vi znate da vi jeste, i to vam se dopada. Napustite sva razmišljanja, to je sve. Nemojte se pouzdati u vrijeme. Vrijeme je smrt. Tko čeka – umire.
Život je samo sada. 31.10.08.11.16 167
Što smo više duhovno svjesniji, to je naša radost dublja, veća. Prihvaćanje bola, neopiranje, nesuprostavljanje, hrabrost i izdržljivost – ovo stvara duboke i vječite izvore istinske, realne sreće, istinskog blaženstva. Zadovoljstvo je lako prihvatljivo, dok se sve sile individualnog Ja opiru bolu. Kako je prihvaćanje bola negiranje individualnog Ja, sebe, a individualno Ja stoji na putu istinske sreće, dobrovoljno i svesrdno prihvaćanje bola oslobađa izvore sreće.
Sa patnjom to nije tako jednostavno. Usredotočiti patnju nije dovoljno, jer je mentalni život, kako ga mi znamo, jedan kontinuirani tok patnje. Dosegnuti dublje nivoe patnje, znači ići u njene korijene i otkriti njenu pozemnu, nesvjesnu, mrežu, gdje su strah i želja blisko povezane, prepletene i tokovi životne energije se suprostavljaju, ometaju i uništavaju se međusobno.

Sa bivanjem, življenjem sa vama samima, sa „JA JESAM“, sa promatranjem sebe u svakodnevnom životu, sa svjesnim, budnim interesiranjem, sa namjerom da razumijete više nego da sudite, sa punim prihvaćanjem svega onog što može da se desi, iskrsne, jer to postoji tamo, vi ohrabrujete dubinu da dođe do površine i obogati, oplemeni vaš život i svjesnost sa njenim zarobljenim energijama.

Zašto se zadovoljstvo završava u bolu? Sve ima početak i kraj, a isto tako i zadovoljstvo. Nemojte predviđati i nemojte žaliti i neće biti bola. Sjećanje i fantazija su uzrok patnji.

Kada um preuzme vlast, kada prevladaju sjećanja i očekivanja, on pretjeruje, iskrivljuje, on se ne obazire, predviđa. Prirodno, sebičnost je uvijek destruktivna. Želja i strah, oboje su egocentrična stanja. Između želje i straha bijes se rađa, sa ljutnjom mržnja, sa mržnjom pasija, strast za destrukciju. Rat je mržnja u akciji, organiziran i opremljen sa svim instrumentima smrti. 169

Da biste mogli prosuđivati o uzvišenim učiteljima i njihovom radu, morate postati jedno sa njima. Žaba u bunaru, ne zna ništa o pticama na nebu.

Ne postoji dobro, ne postoji zlo. U svakoj konkretnoj situaciji postoji samo potrebno i nepotrebno. Nužno je ispravno, suvišno je pogrešno. O tome odlučuje situacija.

U mom svijetu čak i ono što vi nazivate zlom je sluga dobrog i, prema tome, potrebno. To je kao temperature i groznice, koje čiste tijelo od nečistoće. Bolest je bolna, čak i opasna, ali ako se odvija onako kako treba, ona liječi, iscijeljuje. Ili ubija. U nekim slučajevima smrt je najbolji lijek. 171

Jedna od posebnosti mudraca je da on nije zabrinut vezama za budućnost. Vaša zabrinutost za budućnost je zbog straha od bola i želje za zadovoljstvom, za mudraca je sve blaženstvo. 172

Možete u vašem životu jasno opažati kalup, obrazac, ili vidjeti samo lanac slučajnosti. Objašnjenja su namijenjena da zadovolje um. Ona ne moraju biti istinita. Realnost je nedefinirana, neodrediva i neopisiva.

Objektivni univerzum ima strukturu, građu, on je uređen i prekrasan. Ali struktura i obrazac, oblici zahtijevaju prinudu i obaveznost. Moj svijet je potpuno slobodan; sve u njemu je samoodređeno, sve se dešava samo od sebe. Postoji red i u mom svijetu također, ali to nije nametnuto izvana, to dolazi spontano i trenutno, odmah, zbog njegove bezvremenosti. Nema ničeg lošeg sa vašim svijetom, samo je vaše mišljenje o sebi kao odvojenom od njega to koje stvara nered. Sebičnost je izvor svega zla. 177
U svjesnosti, duhovnoj probuđenosti, vi napredujete, sazrijevate. 178

Sve dok vi imate ideju da utječete na događaje, oslobođenje još nije za vas, sam utisak djelovanja, biti uzrokom je ropstvo.

Vi ste u ropstvu zbog nepažnje. Pažnja oslobađa. 189

Samozainteresiranost, egocentričnost i briga za sebe, lični interes, su žiže lažnoga. Vaš dnevni život vibrira između želje i straha. Promatrajte ga pažljivo i vi ćete vidjeti kako um stvara bezbrojna imena i oblike, kao rijeka koja pjenuša među kamenjem. Uđite u trag svakoj akciji do njenog sebičnog motiva i gledajte na motiv usredotočeno dok se ne rastopi. Odbacite svaki sebičan, koristoljuban motiv čim ga spazite i ne treba da tragate za Istinom. Istina će vas naći.

Vama treba nešto hrane, odjeće i zaklon, krov za vas i vaše, ali ovo neće stvarati probleme sve dok se pohlepa ne smatra potrebom.

Prianjanje uz lažno je ono što čini da se Istina teško može vidjeti.

Večina ljudi vegetira, ali ne živi. Oni samo skupljaju iskustva i obogaćuju svoju memoriju. Ali iskustvo je negiranje Realnosti, koja nije čulna, niti konceptualna, niti od tijela, niti od uma, mada ona uključuje i nadmašuje i jedno i drugo. 191

Bit će ženidbe, bit će djece, bit će zarađivanja novca da bi izdržavali porodicu; sve ovo će se desiti u prirodnom toku događaja, jer se sudbina mora ispuniti, vi ćete proći kroz to bez otpora, suprostavljanja, suočavajući se sa zadacima kako oni dolaze, pažljivo, i temeljno, i za male i za velike stvari. Ali glavno ponašanje, stav, bit će srdačno nevezivanje, ogromna dobra volja, bez očekivanja za uzvraćanjem, stalno davanje bez traženja. U braku vi niste ni suprug, ni supruga; vi ste ljubav između njih dvoje. Vi ste jasnoća i dobrota koja čini sve smirenim, sređenim i srećnim. Vi niste čulna, emocijonalna i intelektualna osoba, zgrabljena željama i strahovima. 196
Stalno se prisječajte: ja nisam ni um, ni njegove predstave, ideje.


Izdvojene rečenice - SRI NISARGADATTA MAHARAJ

četvrtak, 13. studenoga 2008.

Living in the World with Dhamma




A Dhammatalk by Ajahn Chah
Living in the World with Dhamma1
Most people still don't know the essence of meditation practice. They think that walking meditation, sitting meditation and listening to Dhamma talks are the practice. That's true too, but these are only the outer forms of practice. The real practice takes place when the mind encounters a sense object. That's the place to practice, where sense contact occurs. When people say things we don't like there is resentment, if they say things we like we experience pleasure. Now this is the place to practice. How are we going to practice with these things? This is the crucial point. If we just run around chasing after happiness and away from suffering all the time we can practice until the day we die and never see the Dhamma. This is useless. When pleasure and pain arise how are we going to use the Dhamma to be free of them? This is the point of practice.
Usually when people encounter something disagreeable to them they don't open up to it. Such as when people are criticized: ''Don't bother me! Why blame me?'' This is someone who's closed himself off. Right there is the place to practice. When people criticize us we should listen. Are they speaking the truth? We should be open and consider what they say. Maybe there is a point to what they say, perhaps there is something blameworthy within us. They may be right and yet we immediately take offense. If people point out our faults we should strive to be rid of them and improve ourselves. This is how intelligent people will practice.
Where there is confusion is where peace can arise. When confusion is penetrated with understanding what remains is peace. Some people can't accept criticism, they're arrogant. Instead they turn around and argue. This is especially so when adults deal with children. Actually children may say some intelligent things sometimes but if you happen to be their mother, for instance, you can't give in to them. If you are a teacher your students may sometimes tell you something you didn't know, but because you are the teacher you can't listen. This is not right thinking.
In the Buddha's time there was one disciple who was very astute. At one time, as the Buddha was expounding the Dhamma, he turned to this monk and asked, ''Sāriputta, do you believe this?'' Venerable Sāriputta replied, ''No, I don't yet believe it.'' The Buddha praised his answer. ''That's very good, Sāriputta, you are one who is endowed with wisdom. One who is wise doesn't readily believe, he listens with an open mind and then weighs up the truth of that matter before believing or disbelieving.''
Now the Buddha here has set a fine example for a teacher. What Venerable Sāriputta said was true, he simply spoke his true feelings. Some people would think that to say you didn't believe that teaching would be like questioning the teacher's authority, they'd be afraid to say such a thing. They'd just go ahead and agree. This is how the worldly way goes. But the Buddha didn't take offense. He said that you needn't be ashamed of those things which aren't wrong or bad. It's not wrong to say that you don't believe if you don't believe. That's why Venerable Sāriputta said, ''I don't yet believe it.'' The Buddha praised him. ''This monk has much wisdom. He carefully considers before believing anything.'' The Buddha's actions here are a good example for one who is a teacher of others. Sometimes you can learn things even from small children; don't cling blindly to positions of authority.
Whether you are standing, sitting, or walking around in various places, you can always study the things around you. We study in the natural way, receptive to all things, be they sights, sounds, smells, tastes, feelings or thoughts. The wise person considers them all. In the real practice, we come to the point where there are no longer any concerns weighing on the mind.
If we still don't know like and dislike as they arise, there is still some concern in our minds. If we know the truth of these things, we reflect, ''Oh, there is nothing to this feeling of liking here. It's just a feeling that arises and passes away. Dislike is nothing more, just a feeling that arises and passes away. Why make anything out of them?'' If we think that pleasure and pain are personal possessions, then we're in for trouble, we never get beyond the point of having some concern or other in an endless chain. This is how things are for most people.
But these days they don't often talk about the mind when teaching the Dhamma, they don't talk about the truth. If you talk the truth people even take exception. They say things like, ''He doesn't know time and place, he doesn't know how to speak nicely.'' But people should listen to the truth. A true teacher doesn't just talk from memory, he speaks the truth. People in society usually speak from memory, he speaks the truth. People in the society usually speak from memory, and what's more they usually speak in such a way as to exalt themselves. The true monk doesn't talk like that, he talks the truth, the way things are.
No matter how much he explains the truth it's difficult for people to understand. It's hard to understand the Dhamma. If you understand the Dhamma you should practice accordingly. It may not be necessary to become a monk, although the monk's life is the ideal form for practice. To really practice, you have to forsake the confusion of the world, give up family and possessions, and take to the forests. These are the ideal places to practice.
But if we still have family and responsibilities how are we to practice? Some people say it's impossible to practice Dhamma as a layperson. Consider, which group is larger, monks or lay people? There are far more lay people. Now if only the monks practice and lay people don't, then that means there's going to be a lot of confusion. This is wrong understanding. ''I can't become a monk....'' Becoming a monk isn't the point! Being a monk doesn't mean anything if you don't practice. If you really understand the practice of Dhamma then no matter what position or profession you hold in life, be it a teacher, doctor, civil servant or whatever, you can practice the Dhamma every minute of the day.
To think you can't practice as a layman is to lose track of the path completely. Why is it people can find the incentive to do other things? If they feel they are lacking something they make an effort to obtain it. If there is sufficient desire people can do anything. Some say, ''I haven't got time to practice the Dhamma.'' I say, ''Then how come you've got time to breathe?'' Breathing is vital to people's lives. If they saw Dhamma practice as vital to their lives they would see it as important as their breathing.
The practice of Dhamma isn't something you have to go running around for or exhaust yourself over. Just look at the feelings which arise in your mind. When the eye sees form, ear hears sounds, nose smells odors and so on, they all come to this one mind, ''the one who knows.'' Now when the mind perceives these things what happens? If we like that object we experience pleasure, if we dislike it we experience displeasure. That's all there is to it.
So where are you going to find happiness in this world? Do you expect everybody to say only pleasant things to you all your life? Is that possible? No, it's not. If it's not possible then where are you going to go? The world is simply like this, we must know the world - lokavidū - know the truth of this world. The world is something we should clearly understand. The Buddha lived in this world, he didn't live anywhere else. He experienced family life, but he saw its limitations and detached himself from them. Now how are you as lay people going to practice? If you want to practice you must make an effort to follow the path. If you persevere with the practice you too will see the limitations of this world and be able to let go.
People who drink alcohol sometimes say, ''I just can't give it up.'' Why can't they give it up? Because they don't yet see the liability in it. If they clearly saw the liability of it they wouldn't have to wait to be told to give it up. If you don't see the liability of something that means you also can't see the benefit of giving it up. Your practice becomes fruitless, you are just playing at practice. If you clearly see the liability and the benefit of something you won't have to wait for others to tell you about it. Consider the story of the fisherman who finds something in his fish-trap. He knows something is in there, he can hear it flapping about inside. Thinking it's a fish, he reaches his hand into the trap, only to find a different kind of animal. He can't yet see it, so he's in two minds about it. On one hand it could be an eel2, but then again it could be a snake. If he throws it away he may regret it... it could be an eel. On the other hand, if he keeps holding on to it and it turns out to be a snake it may bite him. He's caught in a state of doubt. His desire is so strong he holds on, just in case it's an eel, but the minute he brings it and sees the striped skin he throws it down straight away. He doesn't have to wait for someone to call out, ''It's a snake, it's a snake, let go!'' The sight of the snake tells him what to do much more clearly than words could do. Why? Because he sees the danger - snakes can bite! Who has to tell him about it? In the same way, if we practice till we see things as they are we won't meddle with things that are harmful.
People don't usually practice in this way, they usually practice for other things. They don't contemplate things, they don't reflect on old age, sickness and death. They only talk about non-aging and non-death, so they never develop the right feeling for Dhamma practice. They go and listen to Dhamma talks but they don't really listen. Sometimes I get invited to give talks at important functions, but it's a nuisance for me to go. Why so? Because when I look at the people gathered there I can see that they haven't come to listen to the Dhamma. Some are smelling of alcohol, some are smoking cigarettes, some are chatting... they don't look at all like people who have come out of faith in the Dhamma. Giving talks at such places is of little fruit. People who are sunk in heedlessness tend to think things like, ''When is he ever going to stop talking?... Can't do this, can't do that...'' and their minds just wander all over the place.
Sometimes they even invite me to give a talk just for the sake of formality: ''Please give us just a small Dhamma talk, Venerable Sir.'' They don't want me to talk too much, it might annoy them! As soon as I hear people say this I know what they're about. These people don't like listening to Dhamma. It annoys them. If I just give a small talk they won't understand. If you take only a little food, is it enough? Of course not.
Sometimes I'm giving a talk, just warming up to the subject, and some drunkard will call out, ''Okay, make way, make way for the Venerable Sir, he's coming out now!'' - trying to drive me away! If I meet this kind of person I get a lot of food for reflection, I get an insight into human nature. It's like a person having a bottle full of water and then asking for more. There's nowhere to put it. It isn't worth the time and energy to teach them, because their minds are already full. Pour any more in and it just overflows uselessly. If their bottle was empty there would be somewhere to put the water, and both the giver and the receiver would benefit.
In this way, when people are really interested in Dhamma and sit quietly, listening carefully, I feel more inspired to teach. If people don't pay attention it's just like the man with the bottle full of water... there's no room to put anymore. It's hardly worth my while talking to them. In situations like this I just don't get any energy arising to teach. You can't put much energy into giving when no-one's putting much energy into receiving.
These days giving talks tends to be like this, and it's getting worse all the time. People don't search for truth, they study simply to find the necessary knowledge to make a living, raise families and look after themselves. They study for a livelihood. There may be some study of Dhamma, but not much. Students nowadays have much more knowledge than students of previous times. They have all the requisites at their disposal, everything is more convenient. But they also have a lot more confusion and suffering than before. Why is this? Because they only look for the kind of knowledge used to make a living.
Even the monks are like this. Sometimes I hear them say, ''I didn't become a monk to practice the Dhamma, I only ordained to study.'' These are the words of someone who has completely cut off the path of practice. There's no way ahead, it's a dead end. When these monks teach it's only from memory. They may teach one thing but their minds are in a completely different place. Such teachings aren't true.
This is how the world is. If you try to live simply, practicing the Dhamma and living peacefully, they say you are weird and anti-social. They say you're obstructing progress in society. They even intimidate you. Eventually you might even start to believe them and revert to the worldly ways, sinking deeper and deeper into the world until it's impossible to get out. Some people say, ''I can't get out now, I've gone in to deeply.'' This is how society tends to be. It doesn't appreciate the value of Dhamma.
The value of Dhamma isn't to be found in books. Those are just the external appearances of Dhamma, they're not the realization of Dhamma as a personal experience. If you realize the Dhamma you realize your own mind, you see the truth there. When the truth becomes apparent it cuts off the stream of delusion.
The teaching of the Buddha is the unchanging truth, whether in the present or in any other time. The Buddha revealed this truth 2,500 years ago and it's been the truth ever since. This teaching should not be added to or taken away from. The Buddha said, ''What the Tathāgata has laid down should not be discarded, what has not been laid down by the Tathāgata should not be added on to the teachings.'' He ''sealed off'' the teachings. Why did the Buddha seal them off? Because these teachings are the words of one who has no defilements. No matter how the world may change these teachings are unaffected, they don't change with it. If something is wrong, even if people say it's right doesn't make it any the less wrong. If something is right, that doesn't change just because people say it's not. Generation after generation may come and go but these things don't change, because these teachings are the truth.
Now who created this truth? The truth itself created the truth! Did the Buddha create it? No, he didn't. The Buddha only discovered the truth, the way things are, and then he set out to declare it. The truth is constantly true, whether a Buddha arises in the world or not. The Buddha only ''owns'' the Dhamma in this sense, he didn't actually create it. It's been here all the time. However, previously no-one had searched for and found the Deathless, then taught it as the Dhamma. He didn't invent it, it was already there.
At some point in time the truth is illuminated and the practice of Dhamma flourishes. As time goes on and generations pass away the practice degenerates until the teaching fades away completely. After a time the teaching is re-founded and flourishes once more. As time goes on the adherents of the Dhamma multiply, prosperity sets in, and once more the teaching begins to follow the darkness of the world. And so once more it degenerates until such a time as it can no longer hold ground. Confusion reigns once more. Then it is time to re-establish the truth. In fact the truth doesn't go anywhere. When Buddhas pass away the Dhamma doesn't disappear with them.
The world revolves like this. It's something like a mango tree. The tree matures, blossoms, and fruits appear and grow to ripeness. They become rotten and the seed goes back into the ground to become a new mango tree. The cycle starts once more. Eventually there are more ripe fruits which proceed to fall, rot, sink into the ground as seeds and grow once more into trees. This is how the world is. It doesn't go very far, it just revolves around the same old things.
Our lives these days are the same. Today we are simply doing the same old things we've always done. People think too much. There are so many things for them to get interested in, but none of them leads to completion. There are the sciences like mathematics, physics, psychology and so on. You can delve into any number of them but you can only finalize things with the truth.
Suppose there was a cart being pulled by an ox. The wheels aren't long, but the tracks are. As long as the ox pulls the cart the tracks will follow. The wheels are round yet the tracks are long; the tracks are long yet the wheels are merely circles. Just looking at a stationary cart you can't see anything long about it, but once the ox starts moving you see the tracks stretching out behind you. As long as the ox pulls, the wheels keep on turning... but there comes a day when the ox tires and throws off its harness. The ox walks off and leaves the empty cart sitting there. The wheels no longer turn. In time the cart falls apart, its components go back into the four elements - earth, water, wind and fire.
Searching for peace within the world you stretch the cart wheel tracks endlessly behind you. As long as you follow the world there is no stopping, no rest. If you simply stop following it, the cart comes to rest, the wheels no longer turn. Following the world turns the wheels ceaselessly. Creating bad kamma is like this. As long as you follow the old ways there is no stopping. If you stop there is stopping. This is how we practice the Dhamma.

Footnotes
...1
An informal talk given after an invitation to receive almsfood at a lay person's house in Ubon, the district capital, close to Wat Pah Pong
... eel2
Considered a delicacy in some parts of Thailand.
Contents: © Wat Nong Pah Pong, 2007 Last update: March 2008

ponedjeljak, 10. studenoga 2008.

Saznajte da niste ni tijelo ni um



Jednom kad spoznate bez ikakve sumnje da je svijet u vama, a ne vi u svijetu, vi ste izvan njega.

Da saznate da niste ni tijelo ni um, treba neprestano da promatrate sebe i da živite nedirnuti od vašeg tijela i uma, potpuno odvojeno, nezavisno, kao kad biste bili mrtvi. A to znači da nemate stečene interese, zainteresiranost niti za tijelo, niti za um. Ma što da se desi, podsječajte sebe da ste nezavisni, da su to samo vaš um i tijelo. Što ste više iskreni u pamćenju onoga što treba da bude zapamćeno (sebe), skorije ćete biti svjesni sebe, što ste, jer će sjećanje postati iskustvo.

Vi niste u tijelu, tijelo je u vama. Um je u vama.

Kada znate bez trunke sumnje da isti život teče kroz sve, i da ste vi taj život, vi ćete voljeti sve spontano i prirodno. 130

Um je samo skup mentalnih navika, načina mišljenja i osjećaja, a da bi se oni promijenili, moraju biti izneseni na površinu i proučeni, istraženi.

Biti slobodan od misli je samo po sebi meditacija. Dopustite da misli teku i vi ih promatrajte. Samo promatranje usporava, smiruje um dok se ne zaustavi potpunnno. 137

Sve bolesti počinju u umu. Prvo se pobrinite za um, pronađite i eliminirajte sve loše ideje i emocije. Zatim živite i radite ne obraćajući pažnju na bolest i više ne misleći na nju.

Očekivanje vas čini nesigurnim, sjećanje – nesretnim. Ostavite sve brige prošlosti i budućnosti i živite stalno u sadašnjosti. Kao nitko i ništa vi ste sigurni i srećni.

Ne postoji mjesto za kaos u prirodi.
Jedino u umu čovjeka postoji kaos.

Ono što je za nekoga kaotična buka, za drugog je prelijepa poema. 145

Promatrajte vaše misli kao što gledate uličnu gužvu. Ljudi dolaze i odlaze a vi registrirate, svedočite, bez uzbuđenja, reagiranja. 146

Da li vi vidite da je vaša sama potraga za srećom ono što čini da se osjećate bjedno?

Nema potrebe da prestanete da mislite, samo prestanite da budete zainteresirani (za misli).

Nevezanost, ravnodušnost je ono što oslobađa. 147

Odustanite od vaših navika, ne postoji ništa drugo čega se treba odreći. Prestanite sa navikom sticanja bogatstva, kao i da težite rezultatima, i sloboda univerzuma je vaša.

Ako ste ljuti ili u bolu, odvojite se od ljutnje i bola i promatrajte ih!!

Ako biste mogli samo da budete smireni, tihi, oslobođeni od sjećanja i očekivanja, vi biste bili u stanju da prepoznate prekrasan način, odvijanja događaja. Vaša uznemirenost je ta koja prouzrokuje kaos, vaše nespokojstvo ima za posljedicu nemir. „Stanite. Budite tihi, mirni“.
Sve što treba da se napravi može biti napravljeno u miru i tišini. Nema potrebe biti uznemiren.
Ako vi samo pokušate biti smireni, sve će doći – posao, snaga za rad, ispravan motiv. Morate li vi sve znati unaprijed? Nemojte biti uznemireni zbog budućnosti – budite smireni sada i sve će doći na mjesto. 151


Izdvojene rečenice - SRI NISARGADATTA MAHARAJ

subota, 8. studenoga 2008.

Reading the Natural Mind




A Dhammatalk by Ajahn Chah
Reading the Natural Mind1
Our way of practice is looking closely at things and making them clear. We're persistent and constant, yet not rushed or hurried. Neither are we too slow. It's a matter of gradually feeling our way and bringing it together. However, all of this bringing it together is working towards something, there is a point to our practice.
For most of us, when we first start to practice, it's nothing other than desire. We start to practice because of wanting. At this stage our wanting is wanting in the wrong way. That is, it's deluded. It's wanting mixed with wrong understanding.
If wanting is not mixed with wrong understanding like this, we say that it's wanting with wisdom (paññā)2. It's not deluded - it's wanting with right understanding. In a case like this we say that it's due to a person's pāramī or past accumulations. However, this isn't the case with everyone.
Some people don't want to have desire, or they want not to have desires, because they think that our practice is directed at not wanting. However, if there is no desire, then there's no way of practice.
We can see this for ourselves. The Buddha and all his disciples practiced to put an end to defilements. We must want to practice and must want to put an end to defilements. We must want to have peace of mind and want not to have confusion. However, if this wanting is mixed with wrong understanding, then it will only amount to more difficulties for us. If we are honest about it, we really know nothing at all. Or, what we do know is of no consequence, since we are unable to use it properly.
Everybody, including the Buddha, started out like this, with the desire to practice - wanting to have peace of mind and wanting not to have confusion and suffering. These two kinds of desire have exactly the same value. If not understood then both wanting to be free from confusion and not wanting to have suffering are defilements. They're a foolish way of wanting - desire without wisdom.
In our practice we see this desire as either sensual indulgence or self-mortification. It's in this very conflict that our teacher, the Buddha, was caught up, just this dilemma. He followed many ways of practice which merely ended up in these two extremes. And these days we are exactly the same. We are still afflicted by this duality, and because of it we keep falling from the Way.
However, this is how we must start out. We start out as worldly beings, as beings with defilements, with wanting devoid of wisdom, desire without right understanding. If we lack proper understanding, then both kinds of desire work against us. Whether it's wanting or not wanting, it's still craving (tanhā). If we don't understand these two things then we won't know how to deal with them when they arise. We will feel that to go forward is wrong and to go backwards is wrong, and yet we can't stop. Whatever we do we just find more wanting. This is because of the lack of wisdom and because of craving.
It's right here, with this wanting and not wanting, that we can understand the Dhamma. The Dhamma which we are looking for exists right here, but we don't see it. Rather, we persist in our efforts to stop wanting. We want things to be a certain way and not any other way. Or, we want them not to be a certain way, but to be another way. Really these two things are the same. They are part of the same duality.
Perhaps we may not realize that the Buddha and all of his disciples had this kind of wanting. However the Buddha understood regarding wanting and not wanting. He understood that they are simply the activity of mind, that such things merely appear in a flash and then disappear. These kinds of desires are going on all the time. When there is wisdom, we don't identify with them - we are free from clinging. Whether it's wanting or not wanting, we simply see it as such. In reality it's merely the activity of the natural mind. When we take a close look, we see clearly that this is how it is.
The Wisdom of Everyday Experience
So it's here that our practice of contemplation will lead us to understanding. Let us take an example, the example of a fisherman pulling in his net with a big fish in it. How do you think he feels about pulling it in? If he's afraid that the fish will escape, he'll be rushed and start to struggle with the net, grabbing and tugging at it. Before he knows it, the big fish has escaped - he was trying too hard.
In the olden days they would talk like this. They taught that we should do it gradually, carefully gathering it in without losing it. This is how it is in our practice; we gradually feel our way with it, carefully gathering it in without losing it. Sometimes it happens that we don't feel like doing it. Maybe we don't want to look or maybe we don't want to know, but we keep on with it. We continue feeling for it. This is practice: if we feel like doing it, we do it, and if we don't feel like doing it, we do it just the same. We just keep doing it.
If we are enthusiastic about our practice, the power of our faith will give energy to what we are doing. But at this stage we are still without wisdom. Even though we are very energetic, we will not derive much benefit from our practice. We may continue with it for a long time and a feeling will arise that aren't going to find the Way. We may feel that we cannot find peace and tranquillity, or that we aren't sufficiently equipped to do the practice. Or maybe we feel that this Way just isn't possible anymore. So we give up!
At this point we must be very, very careful. We must use great patience and endurance. It's just like pulling in the big fish - we gradually feel our way with it. We carefully pull it in. The struggle won't be too difficult, so without stopping we continue pulling it in. Eventually, after some time, the fish becomes tired and stops fighting and we're able to catch it easily. Usually this is how it happens, we practice gradually gathering it together.
It's in this manner that we do our contemplation. If we don't have any particular knowledge or learning in the theoretical aspects of the teachings, we contemplate according to our everyday experience. We use the knowledge which we already have, the knowledge derived from our everyday experience. This kind of knowledge is natural to the mind. Actually, whether we study about it or not, we have the reality of the mind right here already. The mind is the mind whether we have learned about it or not. This is why we say that whether the Buddha is born in the world or not, everything is the way it is. Everything already exists according to its own nature. This natural condition doesn't change, nor does it go anywhere. It just is that way. This is called the Sacca Dhamma. However, if we don't understand about this Sacca Dhamma, we won't be able to recognize it.
So we practice contemplation in this way. If we aren't particularly skilled in scripture, we take the mind itself to study and read. Continually we contemplate (lit. talk with ourselves) and understanding regarding the nature of the mind will gradually arise. We don't have to force anything.
Constant Effort
Until we are able to stop our mind, until we reach tranquillity, the mind will just continue as before. It's for this reason that the teacher says, ''Just keep on doing it, keep on with the practice!'' Maybe we think, ''If I don't yet understand, how can I do it?'' Until we are able to practice properly, wisdom doesn't arise. So we say just keep on with it. If we practice without stopping we'll begin to think about what we are doing. We'll start to consider our practice.
Nothing happens immediately, so in the beginning we can't see any results from our practice. This is like the example I have often given you of the man who tries to make fire by rubbing two sticks of wood together. He says to himself, ''They say there's fire here''. and he begins rubbing energetically. He's very impetuous. He rubs on and on but his impatience doesn't end. He wants to have that fire. He keeps wanting to have that fire, but the fire doesn't come. So he gets discouraged and stops to rest for awhile. He starts again but the going is slow, so he rests again. By then the heat has disappeared; he didn't keep at it long enough. He rubs and rubs until he tires and then he stops altogether. Not only is he tired, but he becomes more and more discouraged until he gives up completely. ''There's no fire here!'' Actually he was doing the work, but there wasn't enough heat to start a fire. The fire was there all the time but he didn't carry on to the end.
This sort of experience causes the meditator to get discouraged in his practice, and so he restlessly changes from one practice to another. And this sort of experience is also similar to our own practice. It's the same for everybody. Why? Because we are still grounded in defilements. The Buddha had defilements also, but He had a lot of wisdom in this respect. While still worldlings the Buddha and the arahants were just the same as us. If we are still worldlings then we don't think rightly. Thus when wanting arises we don't see it, and when not wanting arises we don't see it. Sometimes we feel stirred up, and sometimes we feel contented. When we have not wanting we have a kind of contentment, but we also have a kind of confusion. When we have wanting this can be contentment and confusion of another kind. It's all intermixed in this way.
Knowing Oneself and Knowing Others
The Buddha taught us to contemplate our body, for example: hair of the head, hair of the body, nails, teeth, skin... it's all body. Take a look! We are told to investigate right here. If we don't see these things clearly as they are in ourselves, we won't understand regarding other people. We won't see others clearly nor will we see ourselves. However, if we do understand and see clearly the nature of our own bodies, our doubts and wonderings regarding others will disappear. This is because body and mind (rūpa and nāma) are the same for everybody. It isn't necessary to go and examine all the bodies in the world since we know that they are the same as us - we are the same as them. If we have this kind of understanding then our burden becomes lighter. Without this kind of understanding, all we do is develop a heavier burden. In order to know about others we would have to go and examine everybody in the entire world. That would be very difficult. We would soon become discouraged.
Our Vinaya is similar to this. When we look at our Vinaya (code of monks' discipline) we feel that it's very difficult. We must keep every rule, study every rule, review our practice with every rule. If we just think about it, ''Oh, it's impossible!'' We read the literal meaning of all the numerous rules and, if we merely follow our thinking about them, we could well decide that it's beyond our ability to keep them all. Anyone who has had this kind of attitude towards the Vinaya has the same feeling about it - there are a lot of rules!
The scriptures tell us that we must examine ourselves regarding each and every rule and keep them all strictly. We must know them all and observe them perfectly. This is the same as saying that to understand about others we must go and examine absolutely everybody. This is a very heavy attitude. And it's like this because we take what is said literally. If we follow the textbooks, this is the way we must go. Some teachers teach in this manner - strict adherence to what the textbooks say. It just can't work that way3.
Actually, if we study theory like this, our practice won't develop at all. In fact our faith will disappear, our faith in the Way will be destroyed. This is because we haven't yet understood. When there is wisdom we will understand that all the people in the entire world really amount to just this one person. They are the same as this very being. So we study and contemplate our own body and mind. With seeing and understanding the nature of our own body and mind comes understanding the bodies and minds of everyone. And so, in this way, the weight of our practice becomes lighter.
The Buddha said to teach and instruct ourselves - nobody else can do it for us. When we study and understand the nature of our own existence, we will understand the nature of all existence. Everyone is really the same. We are all the same ''make'' and come from the same company - there are only different shades, that's all! Just like ''Bort-hai'' and ''Tum-jai''. They are both pain-killers and do the same thing, but one type is called ''Bort-hai'' and the other ''Tum-jai''. Really they aren't different.
You will find that this way of seeing things gets easier and easier as you gradually bring it all together. We call this ''feeling our way'', and this is how we begin to practice. We'll become skilled at doing it. We keep on with it until we arrive at understanding, and when this understanding arises, we will see reality clearly.
Theory and Practice
So we continue this practice until we have a feeling for it. After a time, depending on our own particular tendencies and abilities, a new kind of understanding arises. This we call investigation of Dhamma (dhamma-vicaya), and this is how the seven factors of enlightenment arise in the mind. Investigation of Dhamma is one of them. The others are: mindfulness, energy, rapture, tranquillity, concentration (samādhi) and equanimity.
If we have studied about the seven factors of enlightenment, then we'll know what the books say, but we won't have seen the real factors of enlightenment. The real factors of enlightenment arise in the mind. Thus the Buddha came to give us all the various teachings. All the enlightened ones have taught the way out of suffering and their recorded teachings we call the theoretical teachings. This theory originally came from the practice, but it has become merely book learning or words.
The real factors of enlightenment have disappeared because we don't know them within ourselves, we don't see them within our own minds. If they arise they arise out of practice. If they arise out of practice then they are factors leading to enlightenment of the Dhamma and we can use their arising as an indication that our practice is correct. If we are not practicing rightly, such things will not appear.
If we practice in the right way, then we can see Dhamma. So we say to keep on practicing, feeling your way gradually and continually investigating. Don't think that what you are looking for can be found anywhere other than right here.
One of my senior disciples had been learning Pāli at a study temple before he came here. He hadn't been very successful with his studies so he thought that, since monks who practice meditation are able to see and understand everything just by sitting, he would come and try this way. He came here to Wat Pah Pong with the intention of sitting in meditation so that he would be able to translate Pāli scriptures. He had this kind of understanding about practice. So I explained to him about our way. He had misunderstood completely. He had thought it an easy matter just to sit and make everything clear.
If we talk about understanding Dhamma then both study monks and practice monks use the same words. But the actual understanding which comes from studying theory and that which comes from practicing Dhamma is not quite the same. It may seem to be the same, but one is more profound. One is deeper than the other. The kind of understanding which comes from practice leads to surrender, to giving up. Until there is complete surrender we persevere - we persist in our contemplation. If desires or anger and dislike arise in our mind, we aren't indifferent to them. We don't just leave them but rather take them and investigate to see how and from where they arise. If such moods are already in our mind, then we contemplate and see how they work against us. We see them clearly and understand the difficulties which we cause ourselves by believing and following them. This kind of understanding is not found anywhere other than in our own pure mind.
It's because of this that those who study theory and those who practice meditation misunderstand each other. Usually those who emphasize study say things like this, ''Monks who only practice meditation just follow their own opinions. They have no basis in their teaching''. Actually, in one sense, these two ways of study and practice are exactly the same thing. It can help us to understand if we think of it like the front and back of our hand. If we put our hand out, it seems as if the back of the hand has disappeared. Actually the back of our hand hasn't disappeared anywhere, it's just hidden underneath. When we say that we can't see it, it doesn't mean that it has disappeared completely, it just means that it's hidden underneath. When we turn our hand over, the same thing happens to the palm of the hand. It doesn't go anywhere, it's merely hidden underneath.
We should keep this in mind when we consider practice. If we think that it has ''disappeared'', we'll go off to study, hoping to get results. But it doesn't matter how much you study about Dhamma, you'll never understand, because you won't know in accordance with truth. If we do understand the real nature of Dhamma, then it becomes letting go. This is surrender - removing attachment (upādāna), not clinging anymore, or, if there still is clinging, it becomes less and less. There is this kind of difference between the two ways of study and practice.
When we talk about study, we can understand it like this: our eye is a subject of study, our ear is a subject of study - everything is a subject of study. We can know that form is like this and like that, but we attach to form and don't know the way out. We can distinguish sounds, but then we attach to them. Forms, sounds, smells, tastes, bodily feelings and mental impressions are all like a snare to entrap all beings.
To investigate these things is our way of practicing Dhamma. When some feeling arises we turn to our understanding to appreciate it. If we are knowledgeable regarding theory, we will immediately turn to that and see how such and such a thing happens like this and then becomes that... and so on. If we haven't learned theory in this way, then we have just the natural state of our mind to work with. This is our Dhamma. If we have wisdom then we'll be able to examine this natural mind of ours and use this as our subject of study. It's exactly the same thing. Our natural mind is theory. The Buddha said to take whatever thoughts and feelings arise and investigate them. Use the reality of our natural mind as our theory. We rely on this reality.
Insight Meditation (Vipassanā)
If you have faith it doesn't matter whether you have studied theory or not. If our believing mind leads us to develop practice, if it leads us to constantly develop energy and patience, then study doesn't matter. We have mindfulness as a foundation for our practice. We are mindful in all bodily postures, whether sitting, standing, walking or lying. And if there is mindfulness there will be clear comprehension to accompany it. Mindfulness and clear comprehension will arise together. They may arise so rapidly, however, that we can't tell them apart. But, when there is mindfulness, there will also be clear comprehension.
When our mind is firm and stable, mindfulness will arise quickly and easily and this is also where we have wisdom. Sometimes, though, wisdom is insufficient or doesn't arise at the right time. There may be mindfulness and clear comprehension, but these alone are not enough to control the situation. Generally, if mindfulness and clear comprehension are a foundation of mind, then wisdom will be there to assist. However, we must constantly develop this wisdom through the practice of insight meditation. This means that whatever arises in the mind can be the object of mindfulness and clear comprehension. But we must see according to anicca, dukkha, anattā. Impermanence (anicca) is the basis. Dukkha refers to the quality of unsatisfactoriness, and anattā says that it is without individual entity. We see that it's simply a sensation that has arisen, that it has no self, no entity and that it disappears of its own accord. Just that! Someone who is deluded, someone who doesn't have wisdom, will miss this occasion, he won't be able to use these things to advantage.
If wisdom is present then mindfulness and clear comprehension will be right there with it. However, at this initial stage the wisdom may not be perfectly clear. Thus mindfulness and clear comprehension aren't able to catch every object, but wisdom comes to help. It can see what quality of mindfulness there is and what kind of sensation has arisen. Or, in its most general aspect, whatever mindfulness there is or whatever sensation there is, it's all Dhamma.
The Buddha took the practice of insight meditation as his foundation. He saw that this mindfulness and clear comprehension were both uncertain and unstable. Anything that's unstable, and which we want to have stable, causes us to suffer. We want things to be according to our own desires, but we must suffer because things just aren't that way. This is the influence of an unclean mind, the influence of a mind which is lacking wisdom.
When we practice we tend to become caught up in wanting it easy, wanting it to be the way we like it. We don't have to go very far to understand such an attitude. Merely look at this body! Is it ever really the way we want it? One minute we like it to be one way and the next minute we like it to be another way. Have we ever really had it the way we liked? The nature of our bodies and minds is exactly the same in this regard. It simply is the way it is.
This point in our practice can be easily missed. Usually, whatever we feel doesn't agree with us, we throw out; whatever doesn't please us, we throw out. We don't stop to think whether the way we like and dislike things is really the correct way or not. We merely think that the things we find disagreeable must be wrong, and those which we find agreeable must be right.
This is where craving comes from. When we receive stimuli by way of eye, ear, nose, tongue, body or mind, a feeling of liking or disliking arises. This shows that the mind is full of attachment. So the Buddha gave us this teaching of impermanence. He gave us a way to contemplate things. If we cling to something which isn't permanent, then we'll experience suffering. There's no reason why we should want to have these things in accordance with our likes and dislikes. It isn't possible for us to make things be that way. We don't have that kind of authority or power. Regardless of however we may like things to be, everything is already the way it is. Wanting like this is not the way out of suffering.
Here we can see how the mind which is deluded understands in one way, and the mind which is not deluded understands in another way. When the mind with wisdom receives some sensation for example, it sees it as something not to be clung to or identified with. This is what indicates wisdom. If there isn't any wisdom then we merely follow our stupidity. This stupidity is not seeing impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self. That which we like we see as good and right. That which we don't like we see as not good. We can't arrive at Dhamma this way - wisdom cannot arise. If we can see this, then wisdom arises.
The Buddha firmly established the practice of insight meditation in his mind and used it to investigate all the various mental impressions. Whatever arose in his mind He investigated like this: even though we like it, it's uncertain. It's suffering, because these things which are constantly rising and falling don't follow the influence of our minds. All these things are not a being or a self, they don't belong to us. The Buddha taught us to see them just as they are. It is this principle on which we stand in practice.
We understand then, that we aren't able to just bring about various moods as we wish. Both good moods and bad moods are going to come up. Some of them are helpful and some of them are not. If we don't understand rightly regarding these things, then we won't be able to judge correctly. Rather we will go running after craving - running off following our desire.
Sometimes we feel happy and sometimes we feel sad, but this is natural. Sometimes we'll feel pleased and at other times disappointed. What we like we hold as good, and what we don't like we hold as bad. In this way we separate ourselves further and further and further from Dhamma. When this happens, we aren't able to understand or recognize Dhamma, and thus we are confused. Desires increase because our minds have nothing but delusion.
This is how we talk about the mind. It isn't necessary to go far away from ourselves to find understanding. We simply see that these states of mind aren't permanent. We see that they are unsatisfactory and that they aren't a permanent self. If we continue to develop our practice in this way, we call it the practice of vipassanā or insight meditation. We say that it is recognizing the contents of our mind and in this way we develop wisdom.
Samatha (Calm) Meditation
Our practice of samatha is like this: We establish the practice of mindfulness on the in-and out-breath, for example, as a foundation or means of controlling the mind. By having the mind follow the flow of the breath it becomes steadfast, calm and still. This practice of calming the mind is called samatha meditation. It's necessary to do a lot of this kind of practice because the mind is full of many disturbances. It's very confused. We can't say how many years or how many lives it's been this way. If we sit and contemplate we'll see that there's a lot that doesn't conduce to peace and calm and a lot that leads to confusion!
For this reason the Buddha taught that we must find a meditation subject which is suitable to our particular tendencies, a way of practice which is right for our character. For example, going over and over the parts of the body: hair of the head, hair of the body, nails, teeth and skin, can be very calming. The mind can become very peaceful from this practice. If contemplating these five things leads to calm, it's because they are appropriate objects for contemplation according to our tendencies. Whatever we find to be appropriate in this way, we can consider to be our practice and use it to subdue the defilements.
Another example is recollection of death. For those who still have strong greed, aversion and delusion and find them difficult to contain, it's useful to take this subject of personal death as a meditation. We'll come to see that everybody has to die, whether rich or poor. We'll see both good and evil people die. Everybody must die! Developing this practice we find that an attitude of dispassion arises. The more we practice the easier our sitting produces calm. This is because it's a suitable and appropriate practice for us. If this practice of calm meditation is not agreeable to our particular tendencies, it won't produce this attitude of dispassion. If the object is truly suited to us then we'll find it arising regularly, without great difficulty, and we'll find ourselves thinking about it often.
Regarding this we can see an example in our everyday lives. When lay people bring trays of many different types of food to offer the monks, we taste them all to see which we like. When we have tried each one we can tell which is most agreeable to us. This is just an example. That which we find agreeable to our taste we'll eat, we find most suitable. We won't bother about the other various dishes.
The practice of concentrating our attention on the in-and out-breath is an example of a type of meditation which is suitable for us all. It seems that when we go around doing various different practices, we don't feel so good. But as soon as we sit and observe our breath we have a good feeling, we can see it clearly. There's no need to go looking far away, we can use what is close to us and this will be better for us. Just watch the breath. It goes out and comes in, out and in - we watch it like this. For a long time we keep watching our breathing in and out and slowly our mind settles. Other activity will arise but we feel like it is distant from us. Just like when we live apart from each other and don't feel so close anymore. We don't have the same strong contact anymore or perhaps no contact at all.
When we have a feeling for this practice of mindfulness of breathing, it becomes easier. If we keep on with this practice we gain experience and become skilled at knowing the nature of the breath. We'll know what it's like when it's long and what it's like when it's short.
Looking at it one way we can talk about the food of the breath. While sitting or walking we breathe, while sleeping we breathe, while awake we breathe. If we don't breathe then we die. If we think about it we see that we exist only with the help of food. If we don't eat ordinary food for ten minutes, an hour or even a day, it doesn't matter. This is a course kind of food. However, if we don't breathe for even a short time we'll die. If we don't breathe for five or ten minutes we would be dead. Try it!
One who is practicing mindfulness of breathing should have this kind of understanding. The knowledge that comes from this practice is indeed wonderful. If we don't contemplate then we won't see the breath as food, but actually we are ''eating'' air all the time, in, out, in, out... all the time. Also you'll find that the more you contemplate in this way, the greater the benefits derived from the practice and the more delicate the breath becomes. It may even happen that the breath stops. It appears as if we aren't breathing at all. Actually, the breath is passing through the pores of the skin. This is called the ''delicate breath''. When our mind is perfectly calm, normal breathing can cease in this way. We need not be at all startled or afraid. If there's no breathing what should we do? Just know it! Know that there is no breathing, that's all. This is the right practice here.
Here we are talking about the way of samatha practice, the practice of developing calm. If the object which we are using is right and appropriate for us, it will lead to this kind of experience. This is the beginning, but there is enough in this practice to take us all the way, or at least to where we can see clearly and continue in strong faith. If we keep on with contemplation in this manner, energy will come to us. This is similar to the water in an urn. We put in water and keep it topped up. We keep on filling the urn with water and thereby the insects which live in the water don't die. Making effort and doing our everyday practice is just like this. It all comes back to practice. We feel very good and peaceful.
This peacefulness comes from our one-pointed state of mind. This one-pointed state of mind, however, can be very troublesome, since we don't want other mental states to disturb us. Actually, other mental states do come and, if we think about it, that in itself can be the one-pointed state of mind. It's like when we see various men and women, but we don't have the same feeling about them as we do about our mother and father. In reality all men are male just like our father and all women are female just like our mother, but we don't have the same feeling about them. We feel that our parents are more important. They hold greater value for us.
This is how it should be with our one-pointed state of mind. We should have the same attitude towards it as we would have towards our own mother and father. All other activity which arises we appreciate in the same way as we feel towards men and women in general. We don't stop seeing them, we simply acknowledge their presence and don't ascribe to them the same value as our parents.
Undoing the Knot
When our practice of samatha arrives at calm, the mind will be clear and bright. The activity of mind will become less and less. The various mental impressions which arise will be fewer. When this happens great peace and happiness will arise, but we may attach to that happiness. We should contemplate that happiness as uncertain. We should also contemplate unhappiness as uncertain and impermanent. We'll understand that all the various feelings are not lasting and not to be clung to. We see things in this way because there's wisdom. We'll understand that things are this way according to their nature.
If we have this kind of understanding it's like taking hold of one strand of a rope which makes up a knot. If we pull it in the right direction, the knot will loosen and begin to untangle. It'll no longer be so tight or so tense. This is similar to understanding that it doesn't always have to be this way. Before, we felt that things would always be the way they were and, in so doing, we pulled the knot tighter and tighter. This tightness is suffering. Living that way is very tense. So we loosen the knot a little and relax. Why do we loosen it? Because it's tight! If we don't cling to it then we can loosen it. It's not a permanent condition that must always be that way.
We use the teaching of impermanence as our basis. We see that both happiness and unhappiness are not permanent. We see them as not dependable. There is absolutely nothing that's permanent. With this kind of understanding we gradually stop believing in the various moods and feelings which come up in the mind. Wrong understanding will decrease to the same degree that we stop believing in it. This is what is meant by undoing the knot. It continues to become looser. Attachment will be gradually unrooted.
Disenchantment
When we come to see impermanence, unsatisfactoriness and not-self in ourselves, in this body and mind, in this world, then we'll find that a kind of boredom will arise. This isn't the everyday boredom that makes us feel like not wanting to know or see or say anything, or not wanting to have anything to do with anybody at all. That isn't real boredom, it still has attachment, we still don't understand. We still have feelings of envy and resentment and are still clinging to the things which cause us suffering.
The kind of boredom which the Buddha talked about is a condition without anger or lust. It arises out of seeing everything as impermanent. When pleasant feeling arises in our mind, we see that it isn't lasting. This is the kind of boredom we have. We call it nibbidā or disenchantment. That means that it's far from sensual craving and passion. We see nothing as being worthy of desire. Whether or not things accord with our likes and dislikes, it doesn't matter to us, we don't identify with them. We don't give them any special value.
Practicing like this we don't give things reason to cause us difficulty. We have seen suffering and have seen that identifying with moods can not give rise to any real happiness. It causes clinging to happiness and unhappiness and clinging to liking and disliking, which is in itself the cause of suffering. When we are still clinging like this we don't have an even-minded attitude towards things. Some states of mind we like and others we dislike. If we are still liking and disliking, then both happiness and unhappiness are suffering. It's this kind of attachment which causes suffering. The Buddha taught that whatever causes us suffering is in itself unsatisfactory.
The Four Noble Truths
Hence we understand that the Buddha's teaching is to know suffering and to know what causes it to arise. And further, we should know freedom from suffering and the way of practice which leads to freedom. He taught us to know just these four things. When we understand these four things we'll be able to recognize suffering when it arises and will know that it has a cause. We'll know that it didn't just drift in! When we wish to be free from this suffering, we'll be able to eliminate its cause.
Why do we have this feeling of suffering, this feeling of unsatisfactoriness? We'll see that it's because we are clinging to our various likes and dislikes. We come to know that we are suffering because of our own actions. We suffer because we ascribe value to things. So we say, know suffering, know the cause of suffering, know freedom from suffering and know the Way to this freedom. When we know about suffering we keep untangling the knot. But we must be sure to untangle it by pulling in the right direction. That is to say, we must know that this is how things are. Attachment will be torn out. This is the practice which puts an end to our suffering.
Know suffering, know the cause of suffering, know freedom from suffering and know the path which leads out of suffering. This is magga (path). It goes like this: right view, right thought, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration. When we have the right understanding regarding these things, then we have the path. These things can put an end to suffering. They lead us to morality, concentration and wisdom (sīla, samādhi, paññā).
We must clearly understand these four things. We must want to understand. We must want to see these things in terms of reality. When we see these four things we call this ''Sacca Dhamma''. Whether we look inside or in front or to the right or left, all we see is Sacca Dhamma. We simply see that everything is the way it is. For someone who has arrived at Dhamma, someone who really understands Dhamma, wherever he goes, everything will be Dhamma.

utorak, 4. studenoga 2008.

Podsjetite sebe odlučno da vi niste um



Podsjetite sebe odlučno da vi niste um i da njegovi problemi nisu vaši. 81

Strah i pohlepa prouzrokuju zloupotrebu uma. Ispravno korištenje uma je u službi ljubavi, života, istine i ljepote.

Nemojte se plašiti, nemojte se protiviti, nemojte kasniti, odlagati. Budite ono što jeste.
Nema ničega čega biste se plašili. Vjerujte i pokušajte. Probajte iskreno. Dajte svome stvarnom biću šansu da kreira vaš život. Nećete zažaliti.

Ako vi ne brinete o zadovoljstvu, vi nećete biti uplašeni ni od bola.

Ništa ne koristi svijetu kao odustajanje od profita, dobiti. 105

Živite svoj život ne povrijeđujući nikoga. To je umjetnost življenja u miru i harmoniji, u prijateljstvu i ljubavi. Plod od toga je sreća, neuslovljenja i beskrajna.

Ja ne doživljavam strah ili pohlepu, grabež, mržnju ili ljutnju, gnjev.

Kada bi mogli da zadržite u vašem umu ono što ne znate, to bi vam otkrilo svoje tajne. Ali kako ste površni i nestrpljivi, nedovoljno ozbiljni da gledate i čekate, vi ste kao dijete koje plaće za mjesecom.

Sve dok budete davali važnost riječima, vi ste dijete. 110

Svatko umire onako kako živi. Ja se ne bojim smrti, jer se ne bojim života. Ja živim sretan život i umrijet ću sretnom smrću.

Za neznalicu sve ono što ne može da razumije je ludost.

Razvijte stav svjedoka, i spoznati ćete iz vašeg vlastitog iskustva da nevezanost – odvojenost, donosi kontrolu. 120

Samo-prisjećanje, svjesnost „Ja jesam“ dovodi do sazrijevanja brzo i snažno, moćno. Odrecite se svih ideja o sebi i jednostavno budite. Prestanite da koristite vaš um i gledajte šta se dešava.

Vaša vlastita nepromjenljivost je tako očevidna da je vi ne primječujete. Upravo kao što svaka mala kapljica boravi u vodi i ne može biti bez vode, tako i sav Univerzum je u vama i ne može biti bez vas.

Bog je samo ideja u vašem umu. Činjenica ste vi. Jedina stvar koju vi znate sigurno jeste: „ovdje i sada Ja jesam“ Uklonite „ovdje i sada“ i „Ja jesam“ ostaje, nepobitno. 121

Jednom kad shvatite da je svijet vaša vlastita projekcija, vi ste slobodni od njega. Kada gledate u nešto, bilo što, vi vidite ono najviše, apsolutno, a zamišljate da vidite oblak ili drvo. Naučite da gledate bez mašte, da slušate bez iskrivljavanja; to je sve. Prestanite da pripisujete, dajete imena i oblike suštinski bezimenom i bezobličnom, shvatite da je svaki način opažanja subjektivan, da ono što se vidi i čuje, dodiruje i miriše, osjeća ili misli, iskušava, doživljava ili zamišlja, da je u umu, a ne u stvarnosti, istini, i vi ćete tada doživjeti mir i oslobođenje od straha.

Svatko tko ispoljava mržnju prema bilo kome ili čemu, uvjek projektira van svoju mržnju prema samome sebi i to je dokaz njegove nesvjesnosti. Onaj tko je sebe svjestan ( svog sopstva) on sebe i voli i to se automatski ispoljava kao ljubav prema svemu, jer Sopstvo je sve što Jeste. (I.A.) 124

Kada ne mislite o sebi da ste ovo ili ono, svi konflikti prestaju.

Uočite da vi niste ono što vjerujete o sebi da ste. Borite se sa svom snagom kojom raspolažete protiv ideje da ste vi ograničeni imenom, likom, i da ste opisivi. Vi to niste. Odbijajte da mislite o sebi na način da ste ovo ili ono.

Ne postoji drugi izlaz iz bijede koju ste stvorili za sebe pomoću slijepog prihvaćanja, bez istraživanja, traganja. Patnja je poziv na traganje, svaki bol traži ispitivanje. Nemoje biti lijeni da razmišljate.

Svo odvajanje, svaka vrsta otuđivanja i razdvajanja je lažna. Sve je jedno – ovo je krajnje rješenje svih sukoba.

U realnosti vrijeme i prostor postoje u vama, ne postojite vi u njima, u vremenu i prostoru. Vrijeme i prostor su kao riječi napisane na papiru; papir je realan, a riječi su samo konvencija, prenošenje. Kako ličnost dolazi u postojanje? Pomoću memorije. Identifikacijom sadašnjeg sa prošlim i projektiranjem toga u budućnost. Razmišljanje o sebi u ovom trenutku: prisutan stalno, bez prošlosti i budućnosti, i vaša će se ličnost rastopiti. Jednom kada spoznate čisto postojanje, bez postojanja ovoga ili onoga, bez ega, vi ćete to razlikovati, raspoznati i nećete biti više obmanuti imenima i oblicima. 126


Izdvojene rečenice - SRI NISARGADATTA MAHARAJ