Reflections on
Cittanusatipatthana, the third Foundation of Mindfulness, given by
Luang Por Sumedho during a retreat at Amaravati in September, 1997
A few words on cittanupassana-satipatthana - mindfulness of the
state of mind (the mood): with this, I've found it very helpful to
ask myself and to contemplate what mood I am in, because it's easy
to be living life mechanically. We can be so wrapped up in our
habits and reactions that we don't fully know the mood. There was
one time when somebody told me I was angry, and I denied it;
actually I was angry, and I didn't even know - I couldn't admit it
to myself. But it's only in admitting these things to ourselves that
we can resolve them.
The energies and emotions that we have can be frightening, even to
oneself. My character is one that wants to have a nice life where
everybody is smiling and saying: 'Everything's OK' - even if it
isn't! Life can be lived on that level: not daring to bring up or to
admit, let alone to contemplate, the way things are - because we
feel so threatened or frightened, and a part of us doesn't really
want to know. We don't feel we can take it; we don't know or
understand ourselves in a way that allows us to deal with what we
think are bad habits or personal problems.
I think there's also a fear of insanity, or that there might be
something basically wrong with us: 'Maybe there's a screw loose, or
I've missed out on something when I was born' - because when we look
at ourselves, we don't really understand why we are this way. Often,
at least in my generation when I was young, men never admitted
things - we played roles, we acted out the macho style: 'Nothing
frightens me, I'm not afraid of anything.' We gave the appearance of
being invincible and tough. In the Navy, I remember being on a ship
where everybody was playing this role - but, actually, I felt very
different: 'We're all saying we're tough, but I'm really scared to
death. I must be the only one on the ship who feels this way - but I
don't want them to know that, because I don't know what they'll do
to me if they find out!' Nowadays I think people are more willing to
admit to each other, and to themselves: 'I'm frightened', or, 'I do
have these desires', or, 'I do feel angry,' or whatever.
I was someone who really couldn't bear to feel confused, so I always
wanted to have a certification of things: 'Tell me what to do, how
do you do this?' I wanted to know exactly, and to have everything
neatly arranged so that I'd feel secure; then if I didn't, there
would be this uncertainty or confusion - which I'd resist, I'd
always try to get rid of it. But what I'd suggest now is that when
you do feel uncertain or insecure or confused by anything, you take
the opportunity to contemplate the feeling. Look inward, and ask:
'What is it like?...' 'There's this confusion right now. I don't
know what to do, or what's going on. Am I right or wrong? Should I
or shouldn't I?' Then listen, and just observe that mood as an
object of mind - without judging it - and see what happens.
We can bring up a mood of doubt to stop the thinking mind, using a
question like, 'Who am I?' (or any question that will bring up a
state of doubt). We can be aware of that gap in the mind where
there's no thought; we actually use the space between thoughts. So
with a doubting nature, we can use that doubt as a skilful means to
develop the ability to know not knowing; we see that, 'It's like
this: "Don't know..."'
The thinking mind stops. We can use deliberate thinking also,
noticing the space between the words. For example: 'I am a human
being.' Before thinking it, there's a pause, then 'I,' and there's a
gap, 'am' another gap, 'a' - gap - 'human' - gap - 'being' -
finished. Nothing. So we get used to noticing and paying attention
to nothing, to a gap, to where the thinking mind is not there. This
helps in developing connected mindfulness, in which mindfulness
isn't just being aware of things or sensations, but also being aware
of no-thing, and of the background - the emptiness, the space, the
silence. We have to awaken to notice that because the mind is not
conditioned to noticing it, even though it's obvious. It's here and
now - we're not making it up - and we can suddenly notice, and
awaken to the way it is.
So, in terms of the mood, I can contemplate: 'What kind of mood am I
in?' I can go into the body and see if there's anxiety, or if I feel
dissatisfied or ill at ease; or if I feel happy or very positive -
whatever. Whatever the mood - the kind of internal atmosphere - I
can be aware of that as an object that I can observe. Then, once we
really get used to observing the mood we're no longer just a victim
of it; we no longer resist or indulge in what we're experiencing.
Knowing what state of mind you're in - the way it is, in terms of
its quality, is actually a Foundation of Mindfulness. Normally, we
try to manipulate and change the moods, or think positively to make
ourselves feel better - there doesn't seem to be any escape from the
condition. But the religious goal is the escape. There is an escape
from suffering - from the conditioned, the born, the created and the
originated. To paraphrase the Buddha: 'There is the Unborn,
Uncreated, Unoriginated. If there was not the Unborn, Uncreated,
Unoriginated, there would be no escape from the born, the created,
the originated. But because there is the Unborn, the Uncreated, the
Unoriginated, therefore there is an escape from the created, the
born, the originated.'
This kind of escape is encouraged: to free oneself from being bound
and caught up in the deathbound state. We call it 'deathbound'
because, when you really contemplate it, everything in these khandas:
the thoughts, memories, feelings, the body - is going to die, to
cease. So if you're attached to the five khandhas - and that's all
there is - actually, you're attached to death. Although people think
they're attached to life when they're fascinated by and attached to
the conditioned realm, really they are attaching to death. They may
say they love life, but isn't what they consider to be life just a
part of a bigger picture that is not admitted into full
consciousness?
There's always this kind of fairytale, or naive hope, that the
fulfilment of desire will be the answer to our suffering: if we meet
the perfect person, then we'll live happily ever after; or, once we
get lots of money then we'll be really happy; or, once we get
everything we desire, we won't have any more desires. But consider:
people who seem to have everything - how OK are they? Is it worth
spending your life trying to fulfil all your desires? It doesn't
take much reflection to see that it's a bit of a waste - because as
long as desire is your attachment, your delusion, it will always
perpetuate itself. You may get momentary gratification but that's
about the best you can expect. You get what you want, and for that
moment you feel gratified but then it starts again, you're looking
for something else - and it goes on and on and on. This is because
the basic problem is the identification with, and attachment to,
desire.
But our true nature isn't that; it isn't desire, it isn't death.
There is the Unconditioned, Unborn, Uncreated, Unoriginated:
Amaravati - the Deathless Realm, which is timeless, apparent here
and now. So what can that be in terms of experience, now? If we
practise in order to improve ourselves or to get something in the
future that will always take us to suffering. In meditation, no
matter how much you strive and work to be disciplined, how many
hours a day you sit, if you still operate from this basic delusion
you end up with suffering as a result.
You can't get enlightenment through ignorance. The way to realise,
or to be enlightened, is to awaken to the present - to trust in the
ability to listen, to be in a state of simple awareness. This may be
difficult to sustain, because we are programmed for passions - for
going up and down the scale of greed, hatred and delusion in all its
variations. However, there is that which is aware of the passions,
that can be established through mindfulness - of body, feelings,
mind states and mental phenomena. Mindfulness and reflection on the
five khandhas allows us to change our attitude towards them, rather
than always seeing them as 'me and mine.'
So the constant requirement in all these experiences is mindfulness.
We notice the arising of a condition, like an inhalation: it begins,
reaches a peak, and then the exhalation begins, and then ends.
Similarly, you can be aware of the mood as changing; when you are
patient enough and willing to sustain attention, a mood is
definitely impermanent - it isn't a solid block. If we don't
recognise our moods in this way, we're always either indulging in
them or resisting them, and they have a great influence on how we
experience life. But as soon as I awaken and pay attention, my
relationship to conditions changes. Instead of being deluded by the
conditioned realm, I observe it. There is the state of knowing, of
being aware of the changingness of conditioned phenomena, behind
which there is the Unconditioned. With intuitive awareness, we find
that silence, the unconditioned, as an embracing background, within
which the conditions are in perspective. They are the way they are,
they're like this: but then they end, they cease.
On the personal level I can feel afraid: even to think of
Enlightenment or realising the Deathless could be seen as an
over-estimation or delusion. Sometimes we prefer to think of
ourselves in negative terms because we think that by being humble
and admitting our faults we are being honest. But in fact we have to
let go of that luxury of seeing ourselves as a damaged person, or a
helpless victim of circumstances: 'My mother never loved me - that's
why I am the way I am,' 'I never had the opportunities that you've
had', or whatever. I'm not trying to make fun of that but I'm
pointing out that if we're attached to those roles, then we will
always experience life in that way. But there is an escape; there is
a release from the suffering of delusion and from the power of that
conditioning.
We might think: 'Well, the Buddha did it, but that was over two
thousand five hundred years ago, and it's only hearsay. I didn't
know Gotama the Buddha, so maybe they just made it up - maybe there
wasn't any Gotama the Buddha.' But if you practise and develop
mindfulness, it doesn't matter whether the Buddha ever existed -
because the teaching works. We're not demanding historical accuracy,
but: does it work? Is there an escape from suffering? Do you know
when suffering is there? Do you know when there is no suffering?
This realm we live in as human individuals is basically a realm that
is changing - and it's kammic, everything depends on something else.
Having a human body connects us to the condition of ageing. Now I
can create suffering around the ageing process of this body if I
want; people do, don't they? People pay billions for cosmetic
surgery and to have everything changed around: to get the lines out,
look younger and so forth - because if you're identified with the
body then when, as is natural, it starts getting old, you suffer.
The Buddha got old, but he didn't suffer. He had sicknesses, but he
didn't suffer. He didn't suffer when his body died, and he didn't
suffer when he was blamed for things he didn't do. A lot of terrible
things happened to the Buddha. According to the Scriptures, he had
to put up with a lot of really miserable conditions: difficult monks
and nuns; being attacked by a drunken elephant; his own cousin tried
to murder him - yet the Buddha didn't suffer. Was he just
impervious, like it didn't matter and he didn't feel a thing?
When we feel the ageing process, the pain of disease, or discomfort;
when things go wrong, and we get blamed for things we haven't done;
or when there is the death of a loved one - there's a natural
feeling - but do we have to create suffering around it? We see that
there's the way it is, the kammic inheritence in the present, which
is like this - but that suffering is caused through attachment to
these conditions. When there isn't attachment, then we still feel -
there's the kammic inheritance of our life - but we do not create
anger, resentment, resistance, blame, self-pity, fear, or desire
around it.
Ask yourself: 'Why is there so much stress in a society that's aimed
at trying to create a technology to make life easier?' We've
actually made it much more stressful. There are electric washers,
driers, microwave ovens, and dishwashers so that the housewife isn't
stuck in the kitchen, having to do all kinds of tedious chores day
after day, so there's more time for - what? Travelling, worrying and
feeling stressed out - getting involved in all kinds of things that
we wouldn't have been able to before, when life was much more basic!
We have all these labour-saving devices, but then we fill our time
up with activities that create stressful psychological problems.
So I advise people to try to simplify things - not to fill the time
with activities, but to have more free time to develop meditation in
daily life. See meditation and mindfulness as something to really
treasure and respect, rather than something only to be done in a
routine way before going to work in the morning. If you regard
meditation as something you just do when you have the time for it,
after a while you won't have time for it any more - I guarantee it!
Everything else seems much more urgent than meditation, because
meditation looks like you're just sitting there not doing anything.
Your family might think: 'He's just sitting there, he's not doing
anything. What good is that? He should be doing something.'
That's the kind of society we live in; but for yourself, if you're
really interested in developing meditation, then give it an
important place - really develop a lifestyle in a way that gives you
opportunities for silent reflection. Develop samatha and vipassana,*
and then integrate them into daily life. Then you can learn a lot
about the way it is.
* samatha and vipassana: inclinations in meditation aimed
respectively at steadying the mind and investigating the object of
meditation.
With cittanupassana you can be aware of what you're feeling in
regards to other people. If you feel anger towards your husband, you
can at least notice that: 'Right now there's anger, and it's like
this...', rather than getting caught up in blaming him, or trying to
not admit it. Admitting it doesn't mean that it's permanent, or
anything other than: 'It's like this.' - and that helps to relieve
the tension, because you're not caught. Consider how, if you're
infatuated with somebody, you don't want to think that there's
anything wrong with them; even if they have their faults it doesn't
seem to matter, you can brush them aside. But when you're blaming
someone, it's hard to remember anything good they've ever done,
though you can remember accurately everything they've ever done
wrong!
In this practice of mindfulness, we are willing to bear with the
nasty side of life in our own minds. We are willing to let bad
thoughts, resentments, all these kinds of negative emotions be
conscious - to let them be the way they are. We come to trust in our
Refuge, and just let mind-states be the way they are, without
creating guilt or resistance around them. It still feels this way:
if it's a bad thought it still feels bad, but our relationship to it
is one of kindness, or patience. That then allows the condition to
cease. It's resolved; it ceases. So if we recognise and understand
our moods and their effects, we no longer create suffering around
them or in our relationships with other human beings.
Forest Sangha
Newsletter: October 2000, Number 54
Source :
http://www.forestsangha.org
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