Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018
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0:01 - 0:08The Irreverent. Hey! we are on the
same page -
0:09 - 0:13literally (laughs)
-
0:13 - 0:16OK we got a couple of minutes
-
0:16 - 0:19so what we have done here;
-
0:19 - 0:24they are some of the teachings
from the Anguttara Nikaya -
0:24 - 0:30and I lumped them all together
a long time ago because they show -
0:30 - 0:32from one thing it causes another thing
-
0:32 - 0:35from that thing it causes another thing
-
0:35 - 0:40it just shows how the path works as
a sequence -
0:40 - 0:46and if the previous factor is not there;
then the next factor is not there. -
0:46 - 0:55So it shows that one thing is necessary
before you can experience the next thing -
0:55 - 0:58Something which is very common
throughout the Buddhist teachings -
0:58 - 1:00like cause and effect.
-
1:00 - 1:03And the effect becomes the cause
for the next thing and so on. -
1:03 - 1:06Anyway I shouldn't run-off
or run-forward too much because -
1:06 - 1:09there are still some people coming in
-
1:09 - 1:13Maybe because of the road-works of
Morley Drive and Constance Street -
1:13 - 1:16some people get a bit lost.
-
1:16 - 1:24so we'll give them an extra couple of minutes
before we start today's Sutta Class. -
1:24 - 1:28And of course in two weeks time it's
our Vesak Day -
1:28 - 1:34So because it's Vesak Day
we won't be having a Sutta Class that day -
1:34 - 1:40There's many more activities
which we shall be busy with -
1:42 - 1:57(Ajahn giving time for people
to come in) -
2:03 - 2:27(Ajahn giving time for people
to come in) -
2:27 - 2:46(Ajahn giving time for people
to come in) -
3:12 - 3:14OK I think maybe...
-
3:14 - 3:19let's see....people are coming in here now
-
3:19 - 3:21So I can begin now.
-
3:21 - 3:28Usually when I give a talk straight
from the Suttas -
3:28 - 3:34usually I do 'Namo Thassa" first of all
just as a mark of respect -
3:34 - 3:42Namo tassa bhagavato arahato samma sambuddhassa
-
3:44 - 3:51Namo tassa bhagavato arahato samma sambuddhassa
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3:53 - 4:02Namo tassa bhagavato arahato samma sambuddhassa
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4:02 - 4:09Buddham, Dhammam, Sangham namassami.
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4:09 - 4:11Very Good
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4:11 - 4:20So at the end of the new translation
which I did of the Word of the Buddha -
4:20 - 4:26there were more suttas; small ones
from the Anguttara Nikaya -
4:26 - 4:30which I also translated
-
4:30 - 4:35again different than what you
have seen before -
4:35 - 4:41And these are The Anguttara Nikaya
if you have a look through it -
4:41 - 4:47it is a group of suttas -
Word of the Buddha -
4:47 - 4:53but they are arranged according
to some numerical order -
4:53 - 4:58so the first one I have here 5.21
Irreverent -
4:58 - 5:05This means the 21st sutta in the;
what we call the fives, the group of fives -
5:05 - 5:10where they have maybe
the five hindrances, the five powers -
5:10 - 5:17the five indriyas; anything to do with
five is usually put in that group. -
5:17 - 5:21but also those Suttas are very short;
-
5:21 - 5:26because they are very short, it is
wonderful to study them by yourself -
5:26 - 5:32but if it comes to a session like this
one sutta is not enough -
5:32 - 5:41to make a one hour 15 minute class
all that meaningful. -
5:41 - 5:46so because of that we try and get
a group of discourses -
5:46 - 5:52from the Anguttara Nikaya
as to make it more interesting. -
5:52 - 5:56and these particular ones were
put together -
5:56 - 6:04because you always notice that these
show this idea of conditionality -
6:04 - 6:10of cause and effect; of one thing
being the cause of another -
6:10 - 6:16and if that first thing is not there then
the second thing cannot arise. -
6:16 - 6:21and it is almost as if it's
beyond your will-power -
6:21 - 6:23if those causes aren't there
-
6:23 - 6:28doesn't matter how much you strive and
will and wiggle -
6:28 - 6:34you cannot get that next part of the
causal chain -
6:34 - 6:38but later on, one of the last
in this group here -
6:38 - 6:41the very well known sutta
-
6:41 - 6:46that even if you don't will
if you don't make this effort -
6:46 - 6:52still when one cause is there
the effect will have to happen -
6:52 - 6:54So it's cause and effect.
-
6:54 - 6:58Not somebody intervening with;
-
6:58 - 7:02similar to laws of science,
laws of physics. -
7:02 - 7:09Divine intervention or your intervention
will not affect the outcome. -
7:09 - 7:13So first of all this is 'Irreverent'
-
7:13 - 7:20"Meditators; when a meditator is irreverent
and undeferential, -
7:20 - 7:24and their behavior is uncongenial
to the fellow meditators -
7:24 - 7:29it is impossible for them to fulfill the
factor of proper conduct. -
7:30 - 7:37and the idea of irreverent is like
unrespectful and not giving -
7:37 - 7:44weight or 'gaurava'
it means like respect to others -
7:44 - 7:48It doesn't always mean respect
according to their position, -
7:48 - 7:51how long they have been in the Sangha
-
7:51 - 7:54whether they are
male or female or whatever -
7:54 - 7:58what it really means is
you respect one another -
7:58 - 8:03so if you come into a hall and if
somebody is meditating -
8:03 - 8:07doesn't matter who you are
you don't try and make a noise -
8:07 - 8:13you respect that they are here
peacefully, calmly and you just try and -
8:13 - 8:18come in without them knowing
that you have come in -
8:18 - 8:22so you respect and you revere
the fact that they are doing something -
8:22 - 8:24which is very very good.
-
8:24 - 8:29An un-deferential obviously is
just to defer to those people -
8:29 - 8:34who are already here;
don't encroach on their space. -
8:34 - 8:41This idea of sensitivity to the other
is what is really meant here -
8:41 - 8:44to be reverent and deferential.
-
8:44 - 8:51Giving up your seat; if you happen
to be healthy and somebody else -
8:51 - 8:54needs a seat more than you do.
-
8:54 - 8:59So little things like that;
just basic etiquette. -
8:59 - 9:06And then you find if you are
irreverent and un-deferential -
9:06 - 9:09then your behaviour is uncongenial
to your fellow meditators. -
9:09 - 9:15Congeniality, like friendliness
not harming one another -
9:15 - 9:17by body, speech or mind.
-
9:17 - 9:22and of course if you don't have that
reverence and deference -
9:22 - 9:30then you find it impossible for them
to fulfill the factor of proper conduct; -
9:30 - 9:33which is quite obvious.
-
9:33 - 9:37Without fulfilling that factor of
proper conduct -
9:37 - 9:41it is impossible for them to fulfill the
factor of a trainee. -
9:41 - 9:47This is what they call for the monks,
it's called the Sekha Dhammas -
9:47 - 9:50It is the training
-
9:50 - 9:57again just the proper respect,
eating properly, walking properly -
9:57 - 9:59not encroaching on others.
-
9:59 - 10:03Being sort of good conduct of
yourself. -
10:03 - 10:07Not shouting, not interrupting
-
10:07 - 10:10This is called
proper conduct. -
10:10 - 10:17And it's, proper conduct is
pretty easy to understand -
10:17 - 10:23sometimes one just needs to stand
back and see other peoples' conduct -
10:23 - 10:27and then you think 'oh my goodness; I've
done the same and it doesn't look good'. -
10:27 - 10:30And it's not sort of helpful.
-
10:30 - 10:34It is not something which I like to see
in others -
10:34 - 10:37and I don't want to see it on myself.
-
10:37 - 10:40So without fulfilling the factor of
proper conduct -
10:40 - 10:45it's impossible for them to fulfill
the factor of a trainee. -
10:45 - 10:48Without fulfilling the factor of a trainee
-
10:48 - 10:52it is impossible to fulfill
virtuous behaviour. -
10:52 - 10:58So virtuous behaviour to be fulfilled,
obviously you have to learn and train. -
10:58 - 11:02Without fulfilling virtuous behaviour
-
11:02 - 11:07it is impossible for them to
fulfill Right View. -
11:07 - 11:16That is the Right View of things like
no permanent essence, no self, -
11:16 - 11:21that suffering in the world of the
five senses and delusion -
11:21 - 11:25to see actually what's really going on
in this world. -
11:25 - 11:27Without fulfilling Right View
-
11:27 - 11:33It is impossible for them to fulfill
the Jhanas, Samma Samadhi. -
11:33 - 11:36Now it doesn't mean that someone
can't get Jhana -
11:36 - 11:39until they have got Right view.
-
11:39 - 11:44This means to fulfill Samma Samadhi
-
11:44 - 11:50To really fulfill the Jhanas. So that
one can achieve or enter or disappear -
11:50 - 11:54into those Jhanas whichever way
you wish to describe it. -
11:54 - 11:58It is dependent upon having
some Right View -
11:58 - 12:05And if you don't have the Right View
then you find the Jhanas, Samma Samadhi -
12:05 - 12:13that stillness become quite hit and miss
mostly miss, very rarely hit -
12:13 - 12:16sometimes hit only by a bit of chance.
-
12:16 - 12:20so the Right View is important for the
Factors of Jhanas -
12:20 - 12:22And how do you get the Right View?
-
12:22 - 12:25by fulfilling the virtuous behaviour
first of all. -
12:25 - 12:33So this is sometimes where the virtuous
behaviour, the sīla, your precepts -
12:33 - 12:40that is an important fact, a factor,
important cause for seeing things -
12:40 - 12:47according to truth and also for
fulfilling the deep meditations. -
12:47 - 12:52So when a meditator is reverential
and deferential -
12:52 - 12:57and the behaviour is congenial to their
fellow meditators -
12:57 - 13:03it is possible for them to fulfill the
duty of proper conduct -
13:03 - 13:05Having fulfilled the duty of
proper conduct -
13:05 - 13:09it is possible for them to fulfill the
duty of a Trainee. -
13:09 - 13:13Having fulfilled the duty of a trainee
it is possible for them to fulfill -
13:13 - 13:16virtuous behaviour.
-
13:16 - 13:18Having fulfilled the virtuous behaviour
-
13:18 - 13:21it is possible for them to fulfill
Right View -
13:21 - 13:25and having fulfilled Right View, it is
possible for them to fulfill the Jhanas -
13:25 - 13:28The Samma Samadhi.
-
13:28 - 13:31Sometimes people meditate just
through force -
13:31 - 13:36and they get frustrated
-
13:36 - 13:41So instead of using will-power
to fulfill Jhanas -
13:41 - 13:44it comes from Right View.
-
13:44 - 13:48Where does Right View come from?
virtuous behaviour, -
13:48 - 13:50Where does virtuous behaviour
come from? -
13:50 - 13:53doing the duty of a trainee,
proper conduct -
13:53 - 13:57and right from the beginning here
being reverential and deferential -
13:57 - 14:01and being congenial
to your fellow meditators -
14:01 - 14:04One thing leading to another.
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14:04 - 14:08Any questions on that short Sutta?
-
14:08 - 14:09Yes,
-
14:09 - 14:13Question: Does it refer to just meditators
or all people? -
14:13 - 14:17It is just the Fellow Meditators,
people on the path. -
14:17 - 14:22In other words your congeniality
to everybody -
14:22 - 14:27is a task which is almost impossible
-
14:27 - 14:33This is one thing I can remember
Roosevelt saying -
14:33 - 14:35you can please all the people
some of the time -
14:35 - 14:37Some of the people
all the time -
14:37 - 14:39you can't please all the people
all the time. -
14:39 - 14:41So the congeniality here
-
14:41 - 14:43There is 'meditators' here
-
14:43 - 14:51because this Sutta was originally
given to a community of Bhikkhus, monks -
14:51 - 14:55So that's why...
it was said especially to monks -
14:55 - 15:00So instead of just having monks;
then you say 'what about the Bhikkhunis?' -
15:00 - 15:08What about those others who are
pursuing the Path appropriately, diligently -
15:08 - 15:11So that's why I call it Meditators.
-
15:13 - 15:16That would say include all of you here
-
15:16 - 15:20but may be it wouldn't sort of include...
because these are not people who are -
15:20 - 15:23trying to get to Jhanas
-
15:23 - 15:27Say, I don't know people of
different religions, different faiths -
15:27 - 15:32who are really trying to do something
totally different. -
15:32 - 15:37Yes... OK
-
15:39 - 15:42Question: Ajahn, I believe I've heard it said that
-
15:42 - 15:47Right View depends on words of an Aryan
and also the work of the mind...... -
15:47 - 15:51response: That is coming in one of the
other sequences -
15:51 - 15:54Question: I was just wondering how
that fits into this lineage? -
15:54 - 15:58OK this comes in because being
congenial to others -
15:58 - 16:06especially other teachers means that
you tend to hang out with them much more. -
16:06 - 16:09Because you hang out with them much more
because of your congeniality -
16:09 - 16:15because you are deferential and
reverent or whatever -
16:15 - 16:24and kind to them, that usually you just
hear them more, be around with them more. -
16:24 - 16:27So that's actually how it would work.
-
16:27 - 16:31but those are the causes that come up in
one of the other -
16:31 - 16:37conditional sequences coming up soon
-
16:39 - 16:43Yeah
-
16:44 - 16:47Question: Ajahn what is the duty of a trainee?
-
16:47 - 16:56The duties of a trainee are many
They call it Sekha Dhamma -
16:56 - 17:04which is specially for monastics
there are many duties which we do: -
17:04 - 17:10the etiquette of eating,
the duties towards teachers -
17:10 - 17:15the teachers duties towards
their disciples -
17:15 - 17:21The duty to be devoted to solitude; to
spend as much time as possible -
17:21 - 17:23There are many many duties which we have
-
17:23 - 17:26and it is not just for our own practice
-
17:26 - 17:30The duties to serve others
-
17:30 - 17:34There was a case...
this was from the Vinaya -
17:34 - 17:40where obviously many of the duties are
expounded at length -
17:40 - 17:46Where the monks of one temple at the
time of the Buddha made a vow -
17:46 - 17:49to have silence for the whole
three months -
17:49 - 17:52Three months of vow of silence
-
17:52 - 17:58and the people who came to offer dana
listen and ask questions -
17:58 - 18:01they were faced with these monks
just being quite all the time -
18:01 - 18:04in absolute silence
not even giving a blessing -
18:04 - 18:08So they complained to the Buddha
said 'that's not your duty to be silent' -
18:08 - 18:15'you have to serve others as well as
having times for quietness for yourself' -
18:15 - 18:21So it's understanding the duties
which we have as monks and nuns -
18:21 - 18:27and the duties which you have as
lay meditators. -
18:27 - 18:33So we serve one another.
-
18:33 - 18:37but there are many but I think you
can usually understand -
18:37 - 18:43the purpose is try and not to be
self-centered, what's in it for me, -
18:43 - 18:57to let go by doing kind beautiful
things for others including yourself. -
18:57 - 19:05OK the next one
OK for Mindfulness in the Eights -
19:06 - 19:11Meditators when there is no
mindfulness and wisdom -
19:11 - 19:15this is the sati sampajañña
-
19:15 - 19:20and in Ajahn Chah's; the forest tradition:
it was always called sati paññā -
19:20 - 19:22Mindfulness and wisdom
-
19:22 - 19:26We never saw or heard those forest
teachers -
19:26 - 19:32where I grew up and learnt my
practice of Buddhist monasticism -
19:32 - 19:35I never heard them use of mindfulness
just by itself -
19:35 - 19:39It was always mindfulness and wisdom.
-
19:39 - 19:44Those two words were so twinned
it was impossible in my memory -
19:44 - 19:47to hear one without the other.
-
19:47 - 19:50So this was always like
Mindfulness and Wisdom. -
19:50 - 19:52When there is no mindfulness
and wisdom -
19:52 - 19:55the sense of moral shame
and moral dread -
19:55 - 19:57lack their main cause.
-
19:57 - 20:01Moral shame and moral dread is the
fact that if one does something -
20:01 - 20:05which was inappropriate, harms
or hurts another person -
20:05 - 20:09the person often feels regret
-
20:09 - 20:13'what did I do that for;
why did I do that?' -
20:13 - 20:15that type of remorse.
-
20:15 - 20:18Later on in your development
-
20:18 - 20:21when the sense of self diminishes
more and more and more, -
20:21 - 20:27that lack of shame tends to change
into something more -
20:27 - 20:29it's not that you are ashamed
of your own deeds -
20:29 - 20:32ashamed that you are representing
the Dhamma -
20:32 - 20:35representing the Buddha
-
20:35 - 20:42and you've almost let the team down
rather than something by yourself. -
20:42 - 20:46And the moral dread; dread is
bit of a harsh word -
20:46 - 20:49but it is just the understanding that
-
20:49 - 20:54the bad actions of body, speech
do have consequences. -
20:54 - 21:00Oh crikey 'I don't want those
consequences to cause further problems -
21:00 - 21:02either for myself or for others.
-
21:02 - 21:09So that's the idea of moral shame and
dread otherwise known as hiri ottappa -
21:09 - 21:13So when there is no mindful of wisdom
-
21:13 - 21:19then hiri ottappa, this moral
shame and dread lack their main cause. -
21:19 - 21:23When there is no sense of moral
shame and moral dread -
21:23 - 21:27restraint of the senses
-
21:27 - 21:29sense faculties lacks its main cause
-
21:29 - 21:33in other words 'anything goes'
-
21:33 - 21:35And it's not the case of
-
21:35 - 21:40ok I can do anything because
no one is watching me -
21:40 - 21:45now you know that Facebook
is watching you, -
21:45 - 21:51Google is tracking you.
-
21:51 - 21:56Without Facebook or Google at least
you are tracking you, -
21:56 - 21:58you know what you are doing.
-
21:58 - 22:03This is the restraint of the
sense faculties -
22:03 - 22:05lack their main cause
-
22:05 - 22:09when there is no sense of
'what you are doing this for' -
22:09 - 22:11'are you shaming yourself'
-
22:11 - 22:19or are you really aware of the
consequences of your actions -
22:19 - 22:25and if you have a sense of that shame,
and consequences, -
22:25 - 22:29then you find that the sense faculties restraint
do have a cause. -
22:29 - 22:33and of course once you have restrained
the sense faculties -
22:33 - 22:38when you have no restraint of the
sense faculties (sorry) -
22:38 - 22:43then virtuous behaviour
lacks it main cause -
22:43 - 22:48So sometimes without that
sense restraint -
22:48 - 22:51sometimes... that sense restraint means
-
22:51 - 22:54I should explain that in more depth
-
22:54 - 22:58it is like when you see
something in the shops -
22:58 - 23:07thinks 'Oh that looks really nice' and seeing
all of its wonderful features and -
23:07 - 23:12how wonderful that would be, one
tends to want to buy it -
23:12 - 23:21In other words the restraint is overtaken
by the greed, wanting and ownership -
23:21 - 23:26And I can never forget the time...
think that person is not here, thank goodness -
23:26 - 23:30when somebody turned up on a
Friday afternoon -
23:30 - 23:38with a TV, a big new LCD? plasma screen TV...
-
23:38 - 23:42I've never bought one of these, I'm not
quite sure what the right terminology is -
23:42 - 23:46but it is a big TV and he said
'Do you want this? for the temple?' -
23:46 - 23:53I said 'we don't want a TV;
he said 'but it's new!" -
23:53 - 23:55he said 'I just bought it'
-
23:55 - 23:59But how can you buy something
when you don't want it? -
23:59 - 24:04Because it was on sale, he said
-
24:04 - 24:06And that was the first time,
I couldn't believe -
24:06 - 24:09that somebody would buy something
just because it was a bargain, -
24:09 - 24:11when they didn't need it.
-
24:11 - 24:16Sorry to me I cannot understand that
may be I was born in the wrong century. -
24:16 - 24:22But nevertheless when you do
have a sense of restraint -
24:22 - 24:32then all your behaviour can be a
bit more virtuous, kind, simple, frugal -
24:32 - 24:37just non destructive
because we have a sense of restraint. -
24:37 - 24:42Then virtue can actually
not harming oneself or others -
24:42 - 24:45by body, speech or mind.
-
24:45 - 24:47When there is no virtuous behaviour
-
24:47 - 24:54again the Jhana Samma Samādhi,
the meditation lacks its main cause. -
24:54 - 25:02This is emphasizing once again the
importance of sīla the virtuous behaviour -
25:02 - 25:04to get to deep meditation.
-
25:04 - 25:09Sometimes people would say just
go on retreats; as many as you can -
25:09 - 25:11what they do outside the retreats
-
25:11 - 25:15is not really by any standard all that
virtuous -
25:15 - 25:22which means you are not going to have
all that much success during the retreat. -
25:22 - 25:25When there is no Jhāna,
-
25:25 - 25:31the knowledge and vision of things
as they really are lacks its' main cause. -
25:31 - 25:34It's one of the reasons why I put
these things down -
25:34 - 25:39this is straight (you can check it out for
yourself) from the Suttas -
25:39 - 25:46This is just showing that you do need
the Jhānas to get the real deep insights. -
25:46 - 25:52You can't just think OK I am going
to get real insight without the Jhānas -
25:52 - 25:56when there is no Jhāna the knowledge
and vision of things as they really are -
25:56 - 25:59lacks its' main cause.
-
25:59 - 26:04Jhāna paccayā yathābhūta nyanadassanam
-
26:04 - 26:07When there is no knowledge and vision
of things as they really are -
26:07 - 26:11you don't see things,
the truth of nature. -
26:11 - 26:16Then Nibbida fading away
lack their main cause -
26:16 - 26:20This word Nibbida--I never translated it
here because there are some words -
26:20 - 26:23also the word Jhāna
-
26:23 - 26:27I don't think that has an adequate
translation into English -
26:27 - 26:32Many people try and it ends
up confusing the matter. -
26:32 - 26:38So why do we need to change a word
which many people who are meditators -
26:38 - 26:39have heard so often
-
26:39 - 26:42At least they have an understanding
what it refers to. -
26:42 - 26:44It's a technical term.
-
26:44 - 26:52So the Jhāna is necessary to see
things as they really are -
26:52 - 26:54and when you see things as they really are
-
26:54 - 26:56then this word Nibbida.
-
26:56 - 27:05Nibbida is like turning away
it's a repulsion -
27:05 - 27:09It is what I call samsara's
ejector seat. -
27:09 - 27:12So if you can imagine samsara
-
27:12 - 27:16the wheel of samsara going round and
round and round and round and round -
27:16 - 27:22just being equanimous
'Oh it's all OK, -
27:22 - 27:26just means you stay on that wheel
as it goes round and round and round -
27:26 - 27:28you are not really attached to the wheel
-
27:28 - 27:30but you are not pushed off
from the wheel -
27:30 - 27:34It's like you still keep going
round and round with that wheel -
27:34 - 27:37You need to press the little button
the ejector seat -
27:37 - 27:40to push you off the wheel of samsara.
-
27:40 - 27:44That injector seat is Nibbida.
-
27:44 - 27:46It is a negative word
-
27:46 - 27:49It means this isn't good enough
-
27:49 - 27:54I don't want to stay around here
this is just more suffering -
27:54 - 27:56So the Nibbida button
-
27:56 - 28:00From the NIbbida
'I am not interested in it any more' -
28:00 - 28:05It's not a case of aversion
-
28:05 - 28:08but a case of
'this doesn't make any sense any more' -
28:08 - 28:12So that's why you don't get involved in
you move away from it. -
28:12 - 28:16And from there the fading away.
-
28:16 - 28:19The word 'fading away' is called
'virāga' -
28:19 - 28:22It can be translated in two ways
-
28:22 - 28:24dispassion is one way
-
28:24 - 28:30but the fading away is certainly
a valid translation of virāga -
28:30 - 28:33Many Pali scholars agree on that.
-
28:33 - 28:37And in this context it seems to be the
most appropriate -
28:37 - 28:40Things fade away.
-
28:40 - 28:46For example sometimes people get
Nibbida towards the world -
28:46 - 28:50is really sort of hard to survive
-
28:50 - 28:57there is always new taxes, new politics
new difficulties, just surviving -
28:57 - 29:00and you just want to turn away.
-
29:00 - 29:06to turn away in such a way that things
just vanish, you just move away -
29:06 - 29:12so your attachments to that
part of life fade. -
29:12 - 29:15And when there is no nibbida and
fading away -
29:15 - 29:19liberation lacks its main cause
-
29:19 - 29:22And the simile, there is another simile
in this sutta. -
29:22 - 29:28When a tree is deficient in branches
and foliage its' new shoots -
29:28 - 29:34barks, softwood and heartwood
do not grow to fullness -
29:34 - 29:37So you do need branches and foliage
-
29:37 - 29:42for new shoots, barks and softwood
and heartwood to grow to fullness -
29:42 - 29:51and it is interesting that,
that simile of a tree, branches and foliage -
29:51 - 29:53shoots, barks, softwood and heartwood
-
29:53 - 29:58it has actually been used in
other contexts -
29:58 - 30:08where the heartwood is the liberation
the softwood is the Jhānas -
30:08 - 30:10and the bark is the virtue
-
30:10 - 30:16You have to go through virtue
the sīla, samādhi of the softwood -
30:16 - 30:19to get to the heartwood.
-
30:19 - 30:23Meditators, now we have the opposite
-
30:23 - 30:26When there is mindfulness and wisdom
sati paññā -
30:26 - 30:29The sense of moral shame and moral dread
-
30:29 - 30:31possess the main cause.
-
30:31 - 30:33you are aware and you are wise.
-
30:33 - 30:36You think why do I want to do this for?
-
30:36 - 30:45If there is no sense of self
It's not right for the tradition, the path -
30:45 - 30:50that you act in such a way,
you speak in such a way -
30:50 - 30:51and you know there are consequences
-
30:51 - 30:53your mindfulness and wisdom
-
30:53 - 30:55one thing with mindfulness;
-
30:55 - 31:04mindfulness will also have within
its' ability to remember -
31:04 - 31:12So even in neuroscience if you
are mindful of a particular act or speech -
31:12 - 31:14it makes a connection.
-
31:14 - 31:16A neuro-link.
-
31:16 - 31:21So the mindfulness is also a way
of training and memory as well. -
31:21 - 31:25You may not be a memory
in the sense of... -
31:25 - 31:28memory of what you had for
breakfast this morning. -
31:28 - 31:32But you remember the training
you remember what to do in the same way -
31:32 - 31:36that your memory of how to drive a car.
-
31:36 - 31:38it's not sort of verbal,
it's just automatic now -
31:38 - 31:41but you know what to do, when to do it.
-
31:41 - 31:46because of the training with
mindfulness and wisdom -
31:46 - 31:51And there you get the sense of shame and
understand the moral consequences of these -
31:51 - 31:54because you have been there, done that
you understood it. -
31:54 - 31:57When there is that moral shame and
moral dread then it was said; -
31:57 - 32:00that restraint to the sense faculties
possess their main cause -
32:00 - 32:03'I don't want to get into this anymore,
I have done it so many times, -
32:03 - 32:06I've been burnt
-
32:06 - 32:10So that restraint has its' cause.
-
32:10 - 32:13When there is restraint of the
sense faculties -
32:13 - 32:16then the virtuous behaviour
has it's main cause. -
32:16 - 32:20With the virtuous behaviour
as its' main cause -
32:20 - 32:26then the great Jhānas
possess their main cause -
32:26 - 32:29When there is Jhāna the knowledge
and vision of things as they really are -
32:29 - 32:31possess their main cause
-
32:31 - 32:34When there is knowledge and vision
of things as they really are -
32:34 - 32:37nibbāna or fading away
possess their main cause -
32:37 - 32:43When there is nibbāna or fading away
liberation possess its main cause. -
32:43 - 32:46So when a tree is sufficient in
branches and foliage -
32:46 - 32:50its new shoots barks, softwood
and hardwood grow to fullness. -
32:50 - 32:54So too when there is
mindfulness and wisdom ... -
32:54 - 32:59the liberation possess its main cause.
-
32:59 - 33:03Questions on that one?
-
33:03 - 33:07You can see in this one, I will go back
again to the positive one here -
33:07 - 33:12When you have one thing, then sooner
or later when there are sufficient -
33:12 - 33:17branches and foliage, of course
the shoots and barks will actually grow. -
33:17 - 33:21They don't have to desire to grow
it's cause and effect -
33:21 - 33:26When there is virtuous behaviour, then
these other things happen in due course -
33:26 - 33:31Not straight away;
but as the tree develops -
33:31 - 33:35it will come to fullness.
-
33:35 - 33:44Question - when they sustained
over time.. these things; -
33:44 - 33:47then they becomes the cause
for the next thing -
33:47 - 33:50you just do it once or twice or
then you fall off; then you do -
33:50 - 33:52once or twice more.
-
33:52 - 33:57Ajahn-Indeed. The simile which they used
of a tree is a very good one. -
33:57 - 34:03Once you have the foliage,
there are lots of branches -
34:03 - 34:05of course that takes a while
-
34:05 - 34:10but it's going to happen.
The tree is going to grow. -
34:10 - 34:14The next one here-
The Delusion -
34:14 - 34:19Meditators, some say that a first
beginning of delusion cannot be seen -
34:19 - 34:22such that; before then
it was only wisdom -
34:22 - 34:25and after that delusion came to exist.
-
34:25 - 34:29I know that sometimes people say
that people are born innocent -
34:29 - 34:32and saintly like a young child.
-
34:32 - 34:40Sometimes no.. they do carry on
carry their past experiences -
34:40 - 34:42So first beginning of delusion
-
34:42 - 34:44cannot be seen that
-
34:44 - 34:48before then it was only wisdom
after that delusion came to exist. -
34:48 - 34:51This is the idea like beginning of things.
-
34:51 - 34:57And it makes a point that instead of
focusing on the beginning of things -
34:57 - 35:03beginning of worlds, planets and stuff
-
35:03 - 35:07This is more like talking about the
beginning of the -
35:07 - 35:11streams of consciousnesses of beings
-
35:11 - 35:15which inhabits this stuff.
-
35:15 - 35:20So I did always rail against that
in science -
35:20 - 35:22where they say the beginning
of worlds... -
35:22 - 35:25what do you mean the world;
not just the stuff -
35:25 - 35:27its not just
'who made the car' -
35:27 - 35:30but where did the drivers come from?
-
35:30 - 35:35You know the people sitting
in the driving seat, instead of stuff -
35:35 - 35:38So in Buddhism they were
much more concerned -
35:38 - 35:43with the beginning of the streams of
consciusnesses -
35:43 - 35:49which can take rebirth in so many
different forms of existence -
35:49 - 35:55one of those forms being this
planet Earth. -
35:55 - 36:00So some say that first beginning of
delusion can not be seen.. -
36:00 - 36:02such that before then was only wisdom
-
36:02 - 36:04after that delusion came to exist
-
36:04 - 36:07I say that delusion has
a nutriment -
36:07 - 36:09The idea of a nutriment
-
36:09 - 36:12not like which cause with
a flip of a switch -
36:12 - 36:16but a nutriment, food, sustenance
-
36:16 - 36:24which again reinforces the idea of
a general slow continuous growth -
36:24 - 36:28So just like a tree has its' nutriments
-
36:28 - 36:32which would be like a good soil
and water and sun -
36:32 - 36:36and nothing to disturb it
-
36:36 - 36:40that delusion or the five hindrances
-
36:40 - 36:44delusion is avijjā
seeing which in the wrong way -
36:44 - 36:47has its nutriments and that's the
five hindrances -
36:47 - 36:50Many of you know the five hindrances,
-
36:50 - 36:57the nīvarana, the wanting in terms
of the realm five senses -
36:57 - 37:03aversion, sloth and torpor
restlessness and remorse -
37:03 - 37:07and skeptical doubt.
-
37:07 - 37:13I'll just go a little bit further
into that... why not -
37:13 - 37:18that when there is a wanting
you see what you want to see -
37:18 - 37:23if you see what you want to see
it distorts sort of perception -
37:23 - 37:27which is covered by delusion,
it is wish full thinking -
37:27 - 37:31And the next hindrance, aversion
becomes like denial. -
37:31 - 37:33You do not want to see
-
37:33 - 37:37it really upsets you, which is scary
-
37:37 - 37:39And of course sloth and torpor
-
37:39 - 37:43that's when the mind is too dull
to see clearly -
37:43 - 37:45And the next one is restlessness-
-
37:45 - 37:48you are not focused enough
you are just falling all over the place -
37:48 - 37:51you only see fragments of reality
-
37:51 - 37:54rather than staying long enough to
penetrate into it -
37:54 - 37:56and skeptical doubt
-
37:56 - 38:00is again part of... I would call it a part of
restlessness -
38:00 - 38:03because this can't be right,
that can't be right -
38:03 - 38:06you are interfering, you are restless
with things rather than leaving it alone -
38:06 - 38:11and letting the information just
come up to you. -
38:11 - 38:17So the five hindrances, you can
see how the human psychology -
38:17 - 38:21they become the nutriment for
delusion. -
38:21 - 38:24And the five hindrances have
a nutriment -
38:24 - 38:27That's the three kinds of
misconduct -
38:27 - 38:29by body, speech and mind.
-
38:29 - 38:33They tend to reinforce those hindrances.
-
38:33 - 38:37Three kinds of misconduct has a
nutriment -
38:37 - 38:39the lack of sense restraint.
-
38:39 - 38:41The lack of sense restraint
has a nutriment -
38:41 - 38:43lack of mindfulness and wisdom
-
38:43 - 38:46And it comes a little bit more
-
38:46 - 38:47Before mindfulness and wisdom
-
38:47 - 38:52Lack of mindfulness and wisdom has a
nutriment careless attention -
38:52 - 38:54So sometimes when people say
mindfulness is really important -
38:54 - 38:58Wisdom is Important
yes but how do you become mindful -
38:58 - 39:00so you have to have
Careful Attention -
39:00 - 39:05But why do you have careless attention
it's the lack of faith, lack of like trust -
39:05 - 39:09Lack of faith has a nutriment
not hearing the true Dhamma -
39:09 - 39:11Not hearing the true Dhamma
has a nutriment -
39:11 - 39:15not associating with
good persons -
39:15 - 39:21This is sathpurisha which usually
refers to people who've seen the Dhamma -
39:21 - 39:27Thus not associating with..
it's basically Aryans becomes full -
39:27 - 39:29fills up not hearing the good dhamma,
-
39:29 - 39:31not hearing the good dhamma
becomes full -
39:31 - 39:34fills up the lack of faith
-
39:34 - 39:37Lack of faith becomes full
fills up careless attention. -
39:37 - 39:39Careless attention becomes full
-
39:39 - 39:42fills up the lack of
mindfulness and wisdom -
39:42 - 39:45Lack of mindfulness and
wisdom becomes full -
39:45 - 39:48fills up none restraint of the sense faculties
-
39:48 - 39:51none restraint of the sense faculties
becoming full -
39:51 - 39:54fills up the three kinds of
misconduct -
39:54 - 39:56The three kinds of misconduct
becoming full -
39:56 - 39:58fill up the five hindrances
-
39:58 - 40:00The five hindrances becoming full
-
40:00 - 40:02fill up delusion
-
40:02 - 40:06Thus there is nutriment for delusion,
and in this way it keeps full. -
40:06 - 40:08Just as, when rain pours down
-
40:08 - 40:12in thick droplets on a mountaintop
the water flows down along the slope -
40:12 - 40:16and fills the clefts, gullies, and creeks;
-
40:16 - 40:18these, becoming full, fill up the pools;
-
40:18 - 40:21these, becoming full,
fill up the lakes; -
40:21 - 40:23these, becoming full, fill up the streams;
-
40:23 - 40:25these, becoming full,
fill up the rivers; -
40:25 - 40:28and these, becoming full,
fill up the great ocean -
40:28 - 40:33thus there is nutriment for the
great ocean and in this way it keeps full. -
40:33 - 40:36So too, not associating with
good persons, becoming full, -
40:36 - 40:40fulfills not hearing the good Dhamma….
(so on, so on) -
40:40 - 40:43The five hindrances, becoming full,
fill up delusion -
40:43 - 40:48Thus there is nutriment for delusion,
and in this way keeps full. -
40:48 - 40:49And on the opposite
-
40:49 - 40:55Meditators; true knowledge and liberation
(Enlightenment) has its nutriment -
40:55 - 40:58the seven factors of enlightenment
-
40:58 - 41:05And for those of you... OK quickly run
through the seven factors of enlightenment -
41:05 - 41:09It's Mindfulness, Exploring the Dhamma
-
41:09 - 41:16it's energy, it's joy, it's tranquility
-
41:16 - 41:21it's stillness and it is equanimity
-
41:21 - 41:24Sometimes I don't know about
equanimity, sometimes I feels like -
41:24 - 41:28translating it as contentment
instead of equanimity. -
41:28 - 41:33Sometimes equanimity people call
as indifference. -
41:33 - 41:37So obviously the equanimity
the Upekkhā -
41:37 - 41:39literally means just 'looking on'
-
41:39 - 41:44Contentment may be.. but not quiite
a good word but it's getting -
41:44 - 41:46much closer than equanimity
-
41:46 - 41:49which sometimes people think
is indifference -
41:49 - 41:52So those are the Seven Factors
of Enlightenment -
41:52 - 41:55They have a nutriment and
that is the satipaṭṭhāna -
41:55 - 41:57Four focuses of mindfulness
-
41:57 - 42:00The four focuses of mindfulness
have a nutriment -
42:00 - 42:04The three kinds of good conduct
-
42:04 - 42:07You have to do the good conduct
first of all. -
42:07 - 42:09The three kinds of good conduct
have a nutriment -
42:09 - 42:10restraint of the sense faculties
-
42:10 - 42:12Restraint of the sense faculties
have a nutriment -
42:12 - 42:14Mindfulness and wisdom
-
42:14 - 42:18Mindfulness and wisdom have a nutriment
Careful Attention -
42:18 - 42:20Careful attention have a nutriment
faith -
42:20 - 42:22Faith has a nutriment
hearing the true Dhamma -
42:22 - 42:24Hearing the true Dhamma has
a nutriment -
42:24 - 42:28the association with
good persons (with Aryans) -
42:28 - 42:32and association with good persons
being full -
42:32 - 42:34fills up hearing the true Dhamma
-
42:34 - 42:37Hearing the good Dhamma becomes full
fills up faith -
42:37 - 42:39Faith becomes full
fills up careful attention -
42:39 - 42:42Careful attention becomes full
for mindfulness and wisdom -
42:42 - 42:48I read faith also as
inspiration as well -
42:48 - 42:51Mindfulness and wisdom becoming full
fill up restraint of the sense faculties -
42:51 - 42:54restraint of the sense faculties
becoming full -
42:54 - 42:57fills up the three kinds of good conduct
body, speech and mind -
42:57 - 42:59Three kinds of good conduct becoming full
-
42:59 - 43:03fill up the four focuses of mindfulness
the satipaṭṭhāna -
43:03 - 43:05the four focuses of mindfulness
becoming full -
43:05 - 43:07fill up the seven enlightenment factors
-
43:07 - 43:11the seven factors of enlightenment
becoming full -
43:11 - 43:16fill up the true knowledge and liberation
-
43:16 - 43:19Thus there is nutriment
for true knowledge and liberation -
43:19 - 43:22and in this way they become full.
-
43:22 - 43:23And again similarly
-
43:23 - 43:26When rain pours down in thick droplets
on a mountain top -
43:26 - 43:29the water flows down along the slope
-
43:29 - 43:32and fills the clefts,
the gullies, and creeks; -
43:32 - 43:34these becoming full,
fill up the pools; -
43:34 - 43:36these, becoming full, fill up the lakes
-
43:36 - 43:37these, becoming full,
fill up the streams; -
43:37 - 43:40these becoming full, fill up the rivers;
-
43:40 - 43:43these becoming full,
fill up the great ocean; -
43:43 - 43:47thus there is nutriment for the great ocean
and in this way it becomes full. -
43:47 - 43:49Causes and effect
-
43:49 - 43:51So too, associating with good persons
becoming full, -
43:51 - 43:54fills up hearing the good Dhamma..
-
43:54 - 43:55to the seven Enlightenment Factors
-
43:55 - 44:00to true knowledge and
liberation. -
44:00 - 44:05So questions on that one; comments?
-
44:05 - 44:10OK did you get their on time?
-
44:10 - 44:12It was Bonny first of all
-
44:12 - 44:19Not audible
-
44:19 - 44:26It's one of the most famous
of the cause and effect sequences -
44:26 - 44:29You have one?
-
44:29 - 44:40Not audible
-
44:40 - 44:46Because these Seven Enlightenment Factors
includes the Jhānas -
44:46 - 44:49These are fulfilling these things.
-
44:49 - 44:54Further below; this is
just one example -
44:54 - 44:59there is some of the other examples
are coming as well. -
44:59 - 45:04These are not contradictory
-
45:04 - 45:06if you put them all together
-
45:06 - 45:11you can see this is quite a very
simple consistent practice. -
45:11 - 45:19which comes up I think at the
end of these -
45:19 - 45:22and it's the Eight-fold Path.
-
45:22 - 45:24So first of all--
-
45:24 - 45:32Craving ; meditators
(Ajahn inquiring which sutta) -
45:32 - 45:37Incapable
Are you on 10.76 now -
45:37 - 45:42Where is the ....
10.76 is it now? -
45:42 - 45:49OK then this is the same thing.
-
45:49 - 45:51OK this is pretty much
the same thing. -
45:51 - 45:59So let's go to 10.76
-
45:59 - 46:07OK now this shows the path
in the sense of the -
46:07 - 46:13Stream-winning, Non Returning
and Arahants -
46:13 - 46:16way of looking at the path to freedom.
-
46:16 - 46:20Meditators if these three things
are not found in the world. -
46:20 - 46:22The Buddha, the Arahant
the perfectly enlightened one -
46:22 - 46:24would not arise in the world.
-
46:24 - 46:26And the Dhamma, the discipline
proclaimed by them -
46:26 - 46:29would not shine in the world
-
46:29 - 46:31What three?
-
46:31 - 46:33By them 'plural'
-
46:33 - 46:37Because it is not just one Buddha
there were many Buddhas -
46:37 - 46:41What three? Birth, old age and death.
-
46:41 - 46:44But because these things are
found in the world -
46:44 - 46:48the Buddha, the Arahants
the perfectly enlightened ones -
46:48 - 46:51arise in the world and the Dhamma
and discipline proclaimed by them -
46:51 - 46:53shines in the world.
-
46:53 - 46:59Without having abandoned
these three things -
46:59 - 47:04one is incapable of abandoning
birth, old age and death. -
47:04 - 47:08What three?
Wanting, ill-will and delusion. -
47:08 - 47:11lobha, dvesha and moha
-
47:11 - 47:13Without having abandoned
these three things -
47:13 - 47:17one is incapable of abandoning
wanting, ill-will and delusion. -
47:17 - 47:20What three?
The view of a permanent essence -
47:20 - 47:25doubt and wrong grasp
of rituals and duties -
47:25 - 47:31Those are the first three
samyojanas or fetters -
47:31 - 47:34Without having abandoned
these three things -
47:34 - 47:37one is incapable of abandoning
a view of a permanent essence -
47:37 - 47:41doubt and wrong grasp of
rituals and duties -
47:41 - 47:44in other words achieving
Stream-winning -
47:44 - 47:45What three?
-
47:45 - 47:51Careless attention, following a
wrong path and mental sluggishness -
47:51 - 47:53Without having abandoned these
three things -
47:53 - 47:56one is incapable of abandoning
careless attention, following a wrong path -
47:56 - 47:58and mental sluggishness.
-
47:58 - 47:59What three?
-
47:59 - 48:02muddled mindedness which is
weak mindfulness -
48:02 - 48:06lack of wisdom and
mental distraction. -
48:06 - 48:09Without having abandoned these three
things -
48:09 - 48:13one is incapable of abandoning
muddled mindedness, -
48:13 - 48:15lack of wisdom and mental distraction.
-
48:15 - 48:16What three?
-
48:16 - 48:18Lack of desire to see Noble Ones
-
48:18 - 48:21Lack of desire to hear the
Noble Dhamma -
48:21 - 48:23and a mind bent on criticism
-
48:23 - 48:27That's where I got the
fault finding mind from -
48:27 - 48:29Without having abandoned
these three things -
48:29 - 48:32one is incapable of abandoning the
-
48:32 - 48:33Lack of desire to see
Noble ones -
48:33 - 48:36Lack of desire to hear the Noble Dhamma
-
48:36 - 48:38and a mind bent on criticism
-
48:38 - 48:39What three?
-
48:39 - 48:43Restlessness, none restraint
and immorality. -
48:43 - 48:45Without having abandoned these
three things -
48:45 - 48:47one is incapable of abandoning
-
48:47 - 48:49restlessness, none restraint
and immorality -
48:49 - 48:50what three?
-
48:50 - 48:52Lack of faith, stinginess and
laziness -
48:52 - 48:55Without having abandoning
these three things one is incapable -
48:55 - 48:58of abandoning lack of faith
stinginess and laziness -
48:58 - 48:59What three?
-
48:59 - 49:04Disrespect, being difficult to correct
and bad friendship -
49:04 - 49:06Without having abandoned
these three things -
49:06 - 49:11one is incapable of abandoning
disrespect, being difficult to correct -
49:11 - 49:12and bad friendship
-
49:12 - 49:13What three?
-
49:13 - 49:17Moral shamelessness,
moral recklessness and heedlessness. -
49:17 - 49:21Meditators, one who is morally shameless
and morally reckless -
49:21 - 49:24instead of morally dread I put reckless
instead -
49:24 - 49:26This is Hiri-ottappa
-
49:26 - 49:30One has Hiri-ottappa
is heedless -
49:30 - 49:33One who is heedless is incapable of
abandoning disrespect -
49:33 - 49:38being difficult to correct
and bad friendship -
49:38 - 49:41One who has bad friends is incapable of
abandoning lack of faith -
49:41 - 49:43stinginess and laziness.
-
49:43 - 49:47You are influenced by you friends
like in that simile -
49:47 - 49:51of the elephant which lost his happiness.
-
49:51 - 49:54One who is lazy is incapable of
abandoning restlessness -
49:54 - 49:58none restraint and immorality.
-
49:58 - 50:02The lazy are restless
-
50:02 - 50:04You think the lazy sleeps all day
-
50:04 - 50:07but actually it causes more
restlessness -
50:07 - 50:10One who is immoral is incapable
of abandoning -
50:10 - 50:12lack of desire to see the noble ones
-
50:12 - 50:16lack of desire to hear the Noble Dhamma
and a mind bent on criticism -
50:16 - 50:21it's one blames other people
for ones' immorality. -
50:21 - 50:26The one who has a mind bent on criticism
is incapable of abandoning -
50:26 - 50:29muddle mindfulness, lack of wisdom and
mental distraction -
50:29 - 50:32One who is mentally distracted is
incapable of abandoning -
50:32 - 50:36careless attention, following the wrong
path and mental sluggishness -
50:36 - 50:39One who is mentally sluggish is
incapable of abandoning the -
50:39 - 50:43view of a permanent essence
that's a soul self, -
50:43 - 50:46doubt and
the wrong grasp of ritual and duties -
50:46 - 50:49Those are the first three fetters.
-
50:49 - 50:55With not being abandoned means
that one hasn't penetrated the dhamma -
50:55 - 50:58One hasn't become a stream winner.
-
50:58 - 51:03One who has doubt is incapable of
abandoning wanting, ill-will and delusion -
51:03 - 51:05Without abandoning those
first three things -
51:05 - 51:12you can't abandon the wanting,
the ill-will, delusion to become a -
51:12 - 51:16first of all the first two things to
become a non returner -
51:16 - 51:19and the last one to become an Arahant
-
51:19 - 51:22Without having abandoned wanting
ill will and delusion -
51:22 - 51:26one is incapable of abandoning
birth, old age and death. -
51:26 - 51:29So now the positive one here
-
51:29 - 51:33said to reinforce what has already
being said -
51:33 - 51:37Meditators having abandoned
these three things -
51:37 - 51:40one is capable of abandoning
birth, old age and death. -
51:40 - 51:41What three?
-
51:41 - 51:46Having abandoned wanting,
ill-will and delusion -
51:46 - 51:48Having abandoned these three things
-
51:48 - 51:50one is capable of abandoning
wanting, ill-will and delusion -
51:50 - 51:51What three?
-
51:51 - 51:54The view of a permanent essence
doubt and -
51:54 - 51:57wrong grasp of rituals and duties.
-
51:57 - 52:01Having abandoned these three things
one is capable of abandoning -
52:01 - 52:04the view of a permanent essence
-
52:04 - 52:06doubt and wrong grasp of
rituals and duties, what three? -
52:06 - 52:11careless attention, following a
wrong path and mental sluggishness -
52:11 - 52:14Having abandoning these three things
-
52:14 - 52:15one is capable of abandoning
careless attention, -
52:15 - 52:18following the wrong path
and mental sluggishness -
52:18 - 52:18What three?
-
52:18 - 52:22you have to abandon to abandon
a more refined three -
52:22 - 52:26muddle mindfulness, lack of
wisdom and mental distraction -
52:26 - 52:28Having abandoned these three things
-
52:28 - 52:30one is capable of abandoning
muddle mindfulness -
52:30 - 52:32lack of wisdom and distraction
-
52:32 - 52:32What three?
-
52:32 - 52:36Lack of desire to see noble ones
lack of desire to hear the noble dhamma -
52:36 - 52:39and a mind bent on criticism
-
52:39 - 52:46It is in places like this that
I emphasis that the idea of transmission -
52:46 - 52:48being influenced by others
-
52:48 - 52:52you can see here that you do need
to be around -
52:52 - 52:58to see and to hear those who have
also penetrated the Dhamma, the Aryans -
52:58 - 53:02for a person to progress.
-
53:02 - 53:05you do need a sense of a transmission
-
53:05 - 53:09Having abandoned these three things
one is capable of abandoning -
53:09 - 53:13lack of desire to see the Noble Ones,
lack of desire to hear the Noble Dhamma -
53:13 - 53:14and the mind bent on criticism.
-
53:14 - 53:15What three?
-
53:15 - 53:19Restlessness, non restraint and immorality
-
53:19 - 53:22Restless people, non restraint,
immoral people -
53:22 - 53:25They tend not even want to come close.
-
53:25 - 53:28Having abandoned these three things
one is capable of abandoning -
53:28 - 53:31restlessness, non restraint and immorality
-
53:31 - 53:32What three?
-
53:32 - 53:34Lack of faith, stinginess and laziness.
-
53:34 - 53:39When some inspiration arises,
when you are generous and -
53:39 - 53:41not lazy then you will find that
-
53:41 - 53:47ones morality, ones' restraint
start to improve. -
53:47 - 53:50Having abandoned these three
things one is capable of abandoning -
53:50 - 53:51lack of faith, stinginess and laziness
-
53:51 - 53:52What three?
-
53:52 - 53:56Disrespect, being difficult to correct
and bad friendships -
53:56 - 53:58Having abandoned these three things
-
53:58 - 54:01one is capable of abandoning disrespect,
being difficult to correct -
54:01 - 54:02and bad friendships.
What three? -
54:02 - 54:09Moral shamelessness
recklessness and heedlessness. -
54:09 - 54:13Meditators, one who has a sense of
moral shame, moral dread is heedful -
54:13 - 54:15One who is heedful is capable of
-
54:15 - 54:19abandoning disrespect, being difficult to
teach and bad friendship -
54:19 - 54:21One who has good friends is
capable of abandoning -
54:21 - 54:23lack of faith, stinginess and laziness
-
54:23 - 54:26One who is energetic is
capable of abandoning restlessness -
54:26 - 54:28non restraint in morality.
-
54:28 - 54:31One who is virtuous is capable of
abandoning lack of desire to see noble ones -
54:31 - 54:34to hear the noble dhamma and mind
bent on criticism -
54:34 - 54:37One whose mind is not bent on criticism
-
54:37 - 54:42is capable of abandoning muddle
mind, lack of wisdom and distraction -
54:42 - 54:44One who has an un-distracted mind
-
54:44 - 54:48is capable of abandoning careless
attention, following a wrong path -
54:48 - 54:49and mental sluggishness.
-
54:49 - 54:51One who has an un-sluggish mind
-
54:51 - 54:53is capable of abandoning the
view of a permanent essence -
54:53 - 54:55doubt and wrong grasp of rituals
and duties -
54:55 - 55:01One without a view of a
permanent essence -
55:01 - 55:03doubt and wrong grasp of rituals
-
55:03 - 55:07and duties are capable of
abandoning -
55:07 - 55:09wanting, ill-will and delusion.
-
55:09 - 55:10Having abandoned wanting
ill-will and delusion -
55:10 - 55:16one is capable of avoiding
birth, old age and death. -
55:16 - 55:18Questions?
-
55:18 - 55:26Yes
-
55:28 - 55:36Q. Ajahn can you please expand on wrong
grasp of rituals and duties? -
55:36 - 55:41OK. This is the Sīlabbata-parāmāsa
-
55:41 - 55:47Sometimes people say attachments
to rights and rituals -
55:47 - 55:52by which they want to abandon
all rights and all rituals -
55:52 - 55:57even things like
paying respect to the Buddha -
55:57 - 55:59doing some bowing
-
55:59 - 56:03even to offering food at the
right time to the monks -
56:03 - 56:07'it's just all rituals; all rights'
-
56:07 - 56:13But of course rights and rituals
they do have a meaning to them. -
56:13 - 56:21To even to say Namo Thassa before
I started this presentation -
56:21 - 56:26it is to get an atmosphere
of respect -
56:26 - 56:29It's not that rights and rituals are wrong
-
56:29 - 56:34It's just we want to make sure
we understand why we have those rituals -
56:34 - 56:37why we have those rights.
-
56:37 - 56:44It is the word Sīlabbata
and parāmāsa -
56:44 - 56:47Sīla is precepts, it's virtue
-
56:47 - 56:53So does it mean that we have to
abandon all our precepts, all our virtue? -
56:53 - 56:55We understand just how it works,
-
56:55 - 56:58what actually is virtue.
-
56:58 - 57:08Sometimes the people say
'ah you know you should never ever lie' -
57:08 - 57:11If you lie a bad person
-
57:11 - 57:17But then a lot of times ..
we know that little story of -
57:17 - 57:19that wife who told her husband
-
57:19 - 57:23that the man in the next bed
having the same operation -
57:23 - 57:25he was going to have
-
57:25 - 57:29that his wife,
-
57:29 - 57:31the wife told her husband
-
57:31 - 57:34Oh Jack is fine, no problem
he survived the operation -
57:34 - 57:40because she didn't want her husband
to be afraid. -
57:40 - 57:43He was going to have the heart by-pass
-
57:43 - 57:47and he came so close to dying
Don, you remember Don -
57:47 - 57:50he mostly go over to the Armadale group
-
57:50 - 57:54But anyway he was on the edge of
life and death -
57:54 - 57:57probably if his wife had told him
the truth -
57:57 - 58:00it would have probably killed him.
-
58:00 - 58:02So was it a good thing?
-
58:02 - 58:05His wife asked me afterwards
'I lied to my husband' -
58:05 - 58:09she was so upset, she called me
directly after she said that -
58:09 - 58:11to Bodhinyana Monastery
-
58:11 - 58:13I picked up. Of course
she was so distraught -
58:13 - 58:17I lied to my husband
first time in 37 years -
58:17 - 58:27Then I sort of said afterwards 'Well once
every 37 years but no more than that' -
58:27 - 58:29That wasn't like a car blush
-
58:29 - 58:35But what it really was saying
that the sila is the red traffic lights -
58:35 - 58:39You are not supposed to go
through the red traffic lights. -
58:39 - 58:43But if I had a heart attack and
you were driving me -
58:43 - 58:48please go through the red traffic lights
to save; the seconds count. -
58:48 - 58:50So all precepts sīla
-
58:50 - 58:53If you understand why they are there for
-
58:53 - 58:55was even more powerful than
the preceppts -
58:55 - 58:59then you can actually understand
why if you break a precept -
58:59 - 59:02it doesn't mean that we don't want
to see you in this -
59:02 - 59:04Buddhist Society of Western Australia
ever again -
59:04 - 59:07you are not excommunicated.
-
59:07 - 59:12Something much more important.
-
59:12 - 59:16That's why even for monks, if a monk
breaks a precept, -
59:16 - 59:18we have ways of just
-
59:18 - 59:20you should just acknowledge
to another monk -
59:20 - 59:22'I am sorry I shouldn't
have done that, but I did it'. -
59:22 - 59:27And be restraint in the future.
And that's it. -
59:27 - 59:30So that's the right grasp of virtue.
-
59:30 - 59:35We don't abandon it and throw it out
and just do whatever we want, -
59:35 - 59:43in fact we use it for the purposes of
restraint. -
59:43 - 59:48Question-not Audible
-
59:48 - 59:52OK time what rituals are to be avoided;
-
59:52 - 59:54sometimes I get into trouble with this
-
59:54 - 59:58But thinking that by just chanting chanting
chanting, chanting, chanting -
59:58 - 60:03hour after hour; that's going to
get you enlightened. -
60:03 - 60:09or excess bowing, 10,000 bows
100,000 bows or whatever -
60:09 - 60:13or what other rituals are there?
-
60:13 - 60:16There are so many other rituals
that people have -
60:16 - 60:20but are they really part of the path?
-
60:20 - 60:24Sometimes you say no.
-
60:24 - 60:29Yes .. has a question
on some sort of a ritual -
60:29 - 60:30Is that some ritual?
-
60:30 - 60:37or even just some of the ways
we have our funeral rituals -
60:37 - 60:42sometimes you have to just
praise again Judy, Judy Rushworth -
60:42 - 60:46who just had such a simple
funeral service, that's wonderful -
60:46 - 60:51just her coffin was a cardboard box.
-
60:51 - 60:55and he just did it so beautifully
really Buddhist -
60:55 - 61:02you don't show your love of a person
by having an expensive mahogany coffin -
61:02 - 61:05with silk and goodness know what else.
-
61:05 - 61:11And you show them by just
by your respect. -
61:11 - 61:16Question-Venerable Sir that's why we
appreciate the precepts; -
61:16 - 61:23in Buddhism it's to refrain from,
rather than thou shall not. -
61:23 - 61:26because everything is more
realistic -
61:26 - 61:30and it gives us the opportunity to
appreciate the way -
61:30 - 61:37we are only human and we are not all
enlightened, but we are still on the path. -
61:37 - 61:41yes very good.
Thank you. -
61:41 - 61:48Question--inaudible
-
61:48 - 61:49You get told-off
-
61:49 - 61:52and then
Thank you very much for that demeanor -
61:52 - 61:54and then just carry on.
-
61:54 - 61:56Don't do it next time.
-
61:56 - 61:59Silly thing;
but I won't tell you off for that -
61:59 - 62:04So The Wrong Cause 10-103
-
62:04 - 62:12This I flagged this
This is the Eight-fold Path -
62:12 - 62:17Meditators depending upon the
wrong cause you fail, not success -
62:17 - 62:21For one of wrong view,
wrong motivation originates. -
62:21 - 62:27You know motivation is my translation,
suggested translation, for Sankappa -
62:27 - 62:30usually people call 'wrong intention'
-
62:30 - 62:33but I think it is motivation.
-
62:33 - 62:35For one of wrong view
wrong motivation originates -
62:35 - 62:37For one of
wrong motivation wrong speech originate. -
62:37 - 62:41For one of wrong speech
wrong action originates -
62:41 - 62:44From wrong action wrong livelihood
originates -
62:44 - 62:46From wrong livelihood
wrong endeavour originates. -
62:46 - 62:50Endeavour is more like restraining
-
62:50 - 62:53One of wrong endeavour
wrong mindfulness originates -
62:53 - 62:58It is because you are not restraining
anything. -
62:58 - 63:01Just the mindfulness doesn't really
have the -
63:01 - 63:04power of restraining the five hindrances
so it is very weak. -
63:04 - 63:07Remember in the Satipaṭṭhāna
-
63:07 - 63:11it's one of the pre-requisites of every
Satipaṭṭhāna practice, -
63:11 - 63:15having restrained the five hindrances.
-
63:15 - 63:19That's 'vineyya loke abhijjhā domanassaṃ';
-
63:19 - 63:21usually translated and I don't know why
-
63:21 - 63:27because it is such an indefensible,
I would say, translation -
63:27 - 63:31'having abandoned grief and
courteousness for the world' -
63:31 - 63:33that's indefensible in my opinion.
-
63:33 - 63:35And having
-
63:35 - 63:39for one of wrong mindfulness
wrong stillness originates -
63:39 - 63:41samādhi, meditation.
-
63:41 - 63:44For one of wrong stillness
wrong knowledge originates -
63:44 - 63:47for one of wrong knowledge
wrong liberation originates. -
63:47 - 63:50In this way dependence on
this wrong causes failure -
63:50 - 63:54In dependence on the right
causes, success not failure -
63:54 - 63:56When you have right view
-
63:56 - 63:58the right motivation originates
-
63:58 - 64:01when you have the right view
you have the motivation of -
64:01 - 64:04'Make peace, be kind, be gentle'
-
64:04 - 64:11or to be more accurate the first
one should be 'letting go' renunciation, -
64:11 - 64:14kindness and gentleness.
that comes from right view. -
64:14 - 64:17that means you get right motivation
-
64:17 - 64:20From right motivation
right speech -
64:20 - 64:22If you are letting go, being kind
being gentle -
64:22 - 64:27the speech will be pretty harmless.
-
64:27 - 64:29From one of right speech
right action originates -
64:29 - 64:32One of right action
right livelihood originates -
64:32 - 64:35from one of right livelihood
right endeavour originates -
64:35 - 64:38Because it all comes from
the right motivation -
64:38 - 64:42of letting go, being kind, being gentle.
-
64:42 - 64:46For one of right endeavour
(renunciation, kindness gentleness ) -
64:46 - 64:48the mindfulness gets very strong.
-
64:48 - 64:53For one of right mindfulness
the Jhāna Samma Samādhi originates -
64:53 - 64:56From the Jhāna right knowledge originates
-
64:56 - 64:59For one of right knowledge
right liberation originates -
64:59 - 65:03In this way, in dependence of this
right causes success. -
65:03 - 65:05And this was important to me
-
65:05 - 65:09because when I first got hold of the
Aṅguttara Nikāya -
65:09 - 65:11reading it in Pali I was looking
-
65:11 - 65:13where the heck is the
Eight-fold Path? -
65:13 - 65:16I looked in the eights
that's where I thought it would be. -
65:16 - 65:19And you can see this is in the tens
-
65:19 - 65:23Because they have the Path
which is view, motivation, speech -
65:23 - 65:27action, livelihood, endeavour
mindfulness and stillness samādhi -
65:27 - 65:29That was the path
-
65:29 - 65:32And where that path leads to
the destination if you wish -
65:32 - 65:38Which is the knowledge ñāṇa
this is the real deep understanding of -
65:38 - 65:40what's happening
-
65:40 - 65:48and the liberation which comes from
that insight. -
65:48 - 65:53Now this is one of my favourites
-
65:53 - 65:58For an immoral person
non regret lacks its main cause -
65:58 - 66:03when there is regret
happiness lacks its main cause -
66:03 - 66:06when there is no happiness
Joy lacks its main cause -
66:06 - 66:08When there is no joy
tranquility lacks its main cause -
66:08 - 66:12When there is no tranquility
pleasure suka lacks it main cause -
66:12 - 66:15When there is no pleasure
Jhāna lacks its main cause -
66:15 - 66:18When there is no Jhāna
Seeing things as they really are -
66:18 - 66:19lacks it main cause
-
66:19 - 66:22And when there is no
seeing things as they really are -
66:22 - 66:24Nibbidā lacks its main cause.
-
66:24 - 66:27When there is no Nibbidā
fading away lacks it main cause -
66:27 - 66:32And when there is no fading away
liberation lacks its main cause -
66:32 - 66:35And again the simile of the tree
-
66:35 - 66:40Now meditation of a virtuous person
-
66:40 - 66:45then non regret possess its main cause.
-
66:45 - 66:50When you are virtuous, you have
no regret at all. -
66:50 - 66:54When there is no regret
a sense of happiness arises. -
66:54 - 66:57When there is happiness
joy possesses its main cause -
66:57 - 67:00When there is joy
tranquility possesses its main cause -
67:00 - 67:02See from joy there is a
sense of tranquility -
67:02 - 67:06that's bodily and mental tranquility.
-
67:06 - 67:07When there is tranquility
-
67:07 - 67:11this beautiful pleasure, the sukha
possesses its main cause. -
67:11 - 67:14And from the pleasure the Jhāna
possesses its main cause. -
67:14 - 67:18This is where you often hear;
the monks know this -
67:18 - 67:20because I quote this so often
-
67:20 - 67:23sukhino cittam samadhiyati
-
67:23 - 67:31From Sukha, from happiness the
mind attains samādhi, stillness -
67:31 - 67:35and pleasure; this beautiful pleasure
this beautiful contentment -
67:35 - 67:40the joy you feel even earlier on
in meditation -
67:40 - 67:42When there is Jhāna
-
67:42 - 67:45seeing things as they really are
possesses its main cause -
67:45 - 67:47When there is seeing things as
they really are -
67:47 - 67:49nibbidā possesses its main cause.
-
67:49 - 67:52When there is nibbidā fading away
possesses its main cause -
67:52 - 67:57When there is fading away liberation
possesses its main cause. -
67:57 - 67:59I am just going to do the
last one straight away -
67:59 - 68:01because this is one of the
-
68:01 - 68:03once I am sure you know by now
-
68:03 - 68:06Ajahn Brahmali has told this and
i teach this a lot -
68:06 - 68:12It's the whole idea of
stopping your will -
68:12 - 68:16and just allowing the process to happen
-
68:16 - 68:19This is the famous Upanisa Sutta
-
68:19 - 68:23meditators when one is virtuous
-
68:23 - 68:28one does not need to will
let me be free from regret -
68:28 - 68:33it is natural that one who is virtuous
becomes free from regret. -
68:33 - 68:37It's a natural progression
without will -
68:37 - 68:40When one is free from regret
-
68:40 - 68:43one does not need to will
'let me be happy' -
68:43 - 68:50it is natural that one who is free
from regret becomes happy. -
68:50 - 68:51When one is happy one
-
68:51 - 68:56does not need to will 'let me
be joyful' have this pīti -
68:56 - 68:59It is natural that one who is
virtuous becomes joyful -
68:59 - 69:03When one is joyful one does
not need to will -
69:03 - 69:05'Let me be tranquil'
-
69:05 - 69:10It is natural that one who is joyful
becomes tranquil -
69:10 - 69:12You are so content, fulfilled,
you are hapy -
69:12 - 69:16you don't need to do very much.
-
69:16 - 69:20When one is tranquil one does
not need to will -
69:20 - 69:23'Let me feel the mental pleasure
of sukha ' -
69:23 - 69:26I made the point here
'mental pleasure of sukha' -
69:26 - 69:29It is natural that one who is
tranquil experiences that -
69:29 - 69:32mental pleasure of sukha
-
69:32 - 69:38Going out and seeing all
the flowers as if they've been shinned up -
69:38 - 69:42And seeing the sky, so incredibly
beautiful -
69:42 - 69:46and this beautiful smells
of whatever you managed to -
69:46 - 69:49comes across your eyes.
-
69:49 - 69:53Because your tranquility and the energy
which comes from that -
69:53 - 69:56you have mental pleasure.
-
69:56 - 69:58And when one experiences
mental pleasure -
69:58 - 70:03One does not need to will
let me enter Jhāna -
70:03 - 70:04It is natural that one who
-
70:04 - 70:08experience the mental pleasure
enters the Jhāna -
70:08 - 70:11From the happiness, the mental pleasure
the joy. -
70:11 - 70:13One of the reasons why some
people say -
70:13 - 70:15'ah you get attached to that Jhāna'
-
70:15 - 70:18please don't listen to that
gomayung -
70:18 - 70:20Buddha said again and again
-
70:20 - 70:24that mental pleasure is the
path into the deep meditations -
70:24 - 70:26And when one is experiencing Jhāna
-
70:26 - 70:28one does not need to will
-
70:28 - 70:30'Let me see things as they really are'
-
70:30 - 70:34You don't have to do vipassana
vipassana does you -
70:34 - 70:37it does you in; literally.
-
70:37 - 70:42So when the Jhāna happens
-
70:42 - 70:47you don't need to will
let me see things as they really are -
70:47 - 70:49It is natural that one who has
experienced Jhāna would -
70:49 - 70:52see things as they truly are.
-
70:52 - 70:55When one sees things
as they really are -
70:55 - 70:59one does not need to will
Let me experience nibbidā, fading away -
70:59 - 71:05It is natural that the one who is virtuous
experience nibbidā, the fading away -
71:05 - 71:08And I'll do one little simile here
-
71:08 - 71:12It was a similes of the
one of the similes of a blind man -
71:12 - 71:15who was.. somebody went to the village
-
71:15 - 71:21and was setting this wonderful
you might call it... -
71:21 - 71:23no I don't know enough of the fashion
-
71:23 - 71:26They call it Banaris Cloth
-
71:26 - 71:29which was the most
fashionable and expensive cloth -
71:29 - 71:31you can get in India at the time
-
71:31 - 71:33and everyone was buying some
-
71:33 - 71:36so this blind fellow said
'ah yeah I'll take some too' -
71:36 - 71:40And the sales person being
very doggy and immoral -
71:40 - 71:42got out a dirty old rag and said
-
71:42 - 71:46'ah this is the best of all the
cloth which I have -
71:46 - 71:49because he couldn't see
it was all stained -
71:49 - 71:53He got tricked by the salesman
and bought it for lot of money -
71:53 - 71:57And a week later a doctor came
through the village -
71:57 - 72:00and just like the Fred Hollaws Foundation
-
72:00 - 72:02And they restored his sight.
-
72:02 - 72:03And as soon as he got his
sight back -
72:03 - 72:06he saw he had been sold a dirty
old rag -
72:06 - 72:10for what he thought was an
expensive cloth -
72:10 - 72:14And of course you get nibbidā
towards that cloth -
72:14 - 72:16throw it away.
-
72:16 - 72:19Because once you see things
as they truly are -
72:19 - 72:21your eyes are opened
-
72:21 - 72:23these things which you thought
were really wonderful -
72:23 - 72:25good fun
-
72:25 - 72:30since you were mentally blind
-
72:30 - 72:34you throw them away
and they'll fade away -
72:34 - 72:37So when one experiences
nibbidā fading away -
72:37 - 72:40one does not need to will
let me realise liberation -
72:40 - 72:43it is natural that one who is
experiencing nibbidā, fading away -
72:43 - 72:46will realize liberation.
-
72:46 - 72:50That is Enlightenment being
a natural process -
72:50 - 73:00you don't do it, it does you; it happens
-
73:00 - 73:08So, any questions or comments?
-
73:09 - 73:11Sadhu Sadhu Sadhu
-
73:12 - 73:15May be there are some comments or
questions from overseas -
73:15 - 73:19because these things are live streamed.
-
73:19 - 73:24And we will see what we have from
overseas -
73:24 - 73:26Here we go
-
73:26 - 73:32OK from USA, from Poland
and from nowhere; it got a question mark -
73:32 - 73:36What is your best advise for the sort of
practitioner unable to get to the Sangha -
73:36 - 73:41to develop mindfulness
and wisdom simultaneously? -
73:41 - 73:45If you cannot get to a Sangh physically
-
73:45 - 73:51at least you can get to the Sangha
just on YouTube or on talks -
73:51 - 73:54or on Podcast
-
73:54 - 73:57So it's wonderful that you can
actually do that these days. -
73:57 - 74:01When it came to in the
commentaries -
74:01 - 74:06when they said 'well does it really
mean to be associate with Noble Ones -
74:06 - 74:08and they said at the very minimum
-
74:08 - 74:13to associate with the suttas,
be able to read them. -
74:13 - 74:16Because those are like words of the
Noble Ones, Words of the Buddha. -
74:16 - 74:20To really get into those and
that's one of the best things. -
74:20 - 74:26So if you a sort of practitioner unable
to get to a Sangha physically -
74:26 - 74:28at least you can get almost like the echo
-
74:28 - 74:33of the Aryans in the Suttas and
may be later on -
74:33 - 74:36you can go and find a Sangha
-
74:36 - 74:39who sometimes people say...
-
74:39 - 74:41who was it?
-
74:41 - 74:44years a go when I went to
Singapore -
74:44 - 74:48I think Michael Jackson was performing
in Singapore and -
74:48 - 74:55people were flying all the way
from Japan and Hong Kong -
74:55 - 75:00and certainly all over from Indonesia
to see Michael Jackson in Singapore -
75:00 - 75:02and paying a lot of money for that.
-
75:02 - 75:06In other words they would travel
a long distance to see -
75:06 - 75:12a someone who was certainly
not an enlightened one -
75:12 - 75:19but they would do that because
they thought it was important. -
75:19 - 75:23So sometimes if it is really really
is important -
75:23 - 75:26sometimes you can make the effort.
-
75:26 - 75:29actually to go and visit
people who you have -
75:29 - 75:30confidence and faith in.
-
75:30 - 75:33because you can't always
hang out with them -
75:33 - 75:37but at least you can visit them
and just get a bit of inspiration. -
75:37 - 75:42And the next one is from Poland
-
75:42 - 75:47If mindfulness head's narration
saying to do good things -
75:47 - 75:49how does it relate to
consciousness? -
75:49 - 75:53Is it a means of thinking
things too thoroughly? -
75:53 - 75:58If mindfulness is head's narration
saying to do good things -
75:58 - 76:01I can't quite
understand this one -
76:01 - 76:09What was that first thing on mindfulness
(Ajahn looking at the computer) -
76:10 - 76:14Just going through my...
-
76:18 - 76:22I am not quite sure.. but there was
a one which I called mindfulness 8.81 -
76:22 - 76:25When there is no mindfulness and wisdom
the sense of moral shame and -
76:25 - 76:28moral dread lack their main cause.
-
76:28 - 76:35If mindfulness is the head's narration
saying to do good things -
76:35 - 76:38OK how does it relate
to consciousness -
76:38 - 76:41Is it a means of thinking things
through thoroughly? -
76:41 - 76:43No if it's mindfulness
-
76:43 - 76:45Mindfulness is just the
-
76:45 - 76:47basically it's an awareness
-
76:47 - 76:49has to be with some
wisdom -
76:49 - 76:54but the mindfulness gathers
the information -
76:54 - 77:00sometimes I look at the idea
of a experiment in science -
77:00 - 77:02you are aware,
you gather that information -
77:02 - 77:05you find out just how the
-
77:05 - 77:10needles in the measurements
apparatus moves this way and that way -
77:10 - 77:12you keep taking recordings
-
77:12 - 77:15but as much as possible
-
77:15 - 77:20now without trying to
second guess the results -
77:20 - 77:24So you try and gather the information
-
77:24 - 77:27as objectively as you possibly can
-
77:27 - 77:30and then
once you got that mindfulness -
77:30 - 77:32not thinking things through
thoroughly -
77:32 - 77:35because thinking things through thoroughly
-
77:35 - 77:37is not really thorough
-
77:37 - 77:40thinking usually goes round
in circles -
77:40 - 77:43It's getting the information
-
77:43 - 77:48So that you can just
see things deeper than you saw before -
77:48 - 77:51thinking things too thoroughly
using logic and reason -
77:51 - 77:54sometimes goes against
-
77:54 - 77:59just against what's really
out there. -
77:59 - 78:01So what I think is important here
-
78:01 - 78:03is to do good things,
-
78:03 - 78:06mindfulness sees what is happening
-
78:06 - 78:09and it can soon feel
-
78:09 - 78:12doesn't matter what other people say
-
78:12 - 78:13that if you do this
-
78:13 - 78:16You take alcohol or drugs
-
78:16 - 78:19people say 'ah whats wrong with that?'
-
78:19 - 78:22you can feel it causing a lot of
problems and difficulties -
78:22 - 78:24even though all your friends say
-
78:24 - 78:28'oh no jut take it, it's find
no problem at all' -
78:28 - 78:31you feel from your own
awareness -
78:31 - 78:35that this is something
which doesn't feel right -
78:35 - 78:37And that's not through thinking it through
-
78:37 - 78:41One of the examples of that
I think I got a few minutes here -
78:41 - 78:47was that somebody told me
that there was a TV program -
78:47 - 78:55about 50 years after the massacre
during the Vietnam war of My Lai -
78:55 - 78:59when a group of American Soldiers
were ordered to go into that village -
78:59 - 79:02and shoot and kill every man, woman
and child indiscriminately -
79:02 - 79:05No matter who they were.
-
79:05 - 79:08And a journalist saw that
-
79:08 - 79:13it became big news and it
became a scandal. -
79:13 - 79:17But 50 years after that a TV Program
-
79:17 - 79:20its only anecdotes I never saw
that program myself -
79:20 - 79:28They said one of the people
in that military contingent -
79:28 - 79:29who was supposed to
-
79:29 - 79:31who was ordered into that village
-
79:31 - 79:33to indiscriminately kill men
women and children -
79:33 - 79:37one of them was a black African Soldier
-
79:37 - 79:40Sorry an African American Soldier
-
79:40 - 79:43and he refused to go in
-
79:43 - 79:50even though he knew refusing an order
during a war will end up in military jail -
79:50 - 79:52for 3 or 4 years.
-
79:52 - 79:56He was willing to take that
unfair punishment in my opinion -
79:56 - 80:00because he felt it was wrong
-
80:00 - 80:01And when he was interviewed
-
80:01 - 80:04He was not an intellectual
-
80:04 - 80:08his education was
minimal. -
80:08 - 80:13He joined the Army just to get out of
the ghetto to get a career, to get a life. -
80:13 - 80:17And that was the only possibility
prospect for him -
80:17 - 80:20But even though he wasn't highly educated
-
80:20 - 80:23he wasn't religious apparently.
-
80:23 - 80:27But he said I just could not do that
it was wrong, I felt it was wrong -
80:27 - 80:34he did not think it through thoroughly
-
80:34 - 80:38Because sometimes those thoughts
can deceive us. -
80:38 - 80:40Instead he felt it.
-
80:40 - 80:46Mindfulness and wisdom
far more powerful than thoughts -
80:46 - 80:49So anyway the last question here
-
80:49 - 80:55How does the Sangha avoid social
rigidity or legalistic behavior norms; -
80:55 - 80:59the mind itself impinge on
Enlightenment. -
80:59 - 81:01That's an interesting question.
-
81:01 - 81:05How does the Sangha avoid
social rigidity -
81:05 - 81:11Not quite sure in what form
social rigidity you mean -
81:11 - 81:20but there are times when the
social; I don't know whether -
81:20 - 81:23you can can it hierarchies.
-
81:23 - 81:26The hierarchies, the who is a senior,
who is a junior? -
81:26 - 81:30There are times when that is irrelevant
-
81:30 - 81:36when monks sit together and
we don't know who is senior, who is junior -
81:36 - 81:39We are just good friends.
-
81:39 - 81:41I learned that when I went to visit
-
81:41 - 81:46the fiercest-est of all the monks in
Thailand Ajahn Maha Boowa. -
81:46 - 81:52And just after work all the monks
novices whoever was there -
81:52 - 81:56sit around in the dying shed
having a cup of tea -
81:56 - 81:58And Ajahn Maha Boowa would come
-
81:58 - 82:02and he would take sometimes
the lowest seat -
82:02 - 82:06and just chat as if he was just,
you know just a old friend -
82:06 - 82:08rather than such a senior teacher.
-
82:08 - 82:11Ajahn Chah would sometimes be the same.
-
82:11 - 82:16So social rigidity, legalistic behaviour
-
82:16 - 82:20The legalistic behaviour of
monastics -
82:20 - 82:24If you have a look at it has
so many loop holes -
82:24 - 82:27So many ways of you can
interpret it this way -
82:27 - 82:29interpret it that way
-
82:29 - 82:32And because of those legalistic
loop holes -
82:32 - 82:38sometimes it is not sort of
hard; -
82:38 - 82:43in fact it is not so much legalistic
as common sense. -
82:43 - 82:46For example of that
-
82:46 - 82:52As a monk you may know this
you hang around monks -
82:52 - 82:53such a long time.
-
82:53 - 82:58the equivalent is for Bhikkhunis
as well, for nuns -
82:58 - 83:03we can't have an interview in private
with a member of the opposite gender. -
83:03 - 83:08So you may really say 'I need to
talk to you Ajahn Brahm in private about this' -
83:08 - 83:12So imagine if I went into a close
office with you -
83:12 - 83:16and taught you for 30 minutes and
an hour -
83:16 - 83:20And after that you came out
with a nice smile on your face -
83:20 - 83:21totally innocent
-
83:21 - 83:28but because some people have
malice in them unfortunately -
83:28 - 83:32they say 'Ah we know what you got up
to in, you two were in that room -
83:32 - 83:35And there is no way that you can
defend yourself -
83:35 - 83:38So that's one of the reasons
why the Buddha -
83:38 - 83:41set up these legal procedures
-
83:41 - 83:44Monks you have to be careful
-
83:44 - 83:48Not everybody has your best
will at heart -
83:48 - 83:51So defend yourself just by
making sure -
83:51 - 83:57you are never alone in
uncompromising situations -
83:57 - 84:05That means these days
there is a huge problem -
84:05 - 84:12with sexual harassment
-
84:12 - 84:16people given opportunities
-
84:16 - 84:21and their defilements take them
over and they do terrible things. -
84:21 - 84:30So the legalistic separation in
our Vinaya, Theravada -
84:30 - 84:33is acutely turned out to
protect us. -
84:33 - 84:38Protect us in ways which
now the time I could never imagine -
84:38 - 84:42So sometimes its being restrained
-
84:42 - 84:44and being cautious.
-
84:44 - 84:49And that's actually a lot of
what we see -
84:49 - 84:53not rigidity or legalistic but
after a while -
84:53 - 84:56if you live in a celibate community
those are really required -
84:56 - 85:04Doesn't impinge upon Enlightenment
at all; it just helps by -
85:04 - 85:12allowing a person to be apart from
things which could give temptations -
85:12 - 85:13some of the other things
-
85:13 - 85:16which I remember learning
from Ajahn Maha Boowa, -
85:16 - 85:18he said
never have expensive things -
85:18 - 85:21if there are expensive things
in a monastery -
85:21 - 85:26just don't allow people to
be tempted -
85:26 - 85:28So we do have things like
donation boxes -
85:28 - 85:30but make sure they are
emptied out -
85:30 - 85:32or they are locked
-
85:32 - 85:33If you leave money lying around
-
85:33 - 85:36it would tempt someone
sooner or later. -
85:36 - 85:40And he was saying; if you leave
money lying around -
85:40 - 85:44you also make bad kamma
-
85:44 - 85:47in the sense that you are
making it available and tempting -
85:47 - 85:50sort of other people
to break their precepts. -
85:50 - 85:54I thought that was
an interesting take -
85:54 - 85:59that you close your windows so
burglars won't get tempted to come in. -
85:59 - 86:02We try to do that; we are not
always all that good at it -
86:02 - 86:04because I do remember once
-
86:04 - 86:10we were, I was being driven into
I forget what we were doing -
86:10 - 86:12but there wasn't enough time
-
86:12 - 86:14to get back to Bodhinyana
monastery -
86:14 - 86:19so a certain person parked the car
parked our monastery vehicle -
86:19 - 86:25It was somewhere in Northbridge
-
86:25 - 86:29just to go to lunch by the
side of the road -
86:29 - 86:31I have been in that place for Lunch
opposite side of the road -
86:31 - 86:34about half an hour when the
driver said I can't find the keys -
86:34 - 86:37I don't know where the keys are
in the car -
86:37 - 86:40So he looked in his pockets
thought must have dropped them -
86:40 - 86:44So went across the road we
found the keys were in the car -
86:44 - 86:52with the engine running, doors
all open for half an hour in Northbridge -
86:52 - 86:53(audience laugh)
-
86:53 - 86:57We got away with it
I don't know why -
86:57 - 87:00Such a stupid thing to do.
-
87:00 - 87:02You shouldn't do that
-
87:02 - 87:05because that is putting temptation
in peoples' way -
87:05 - 87:06So anyway
-
87:06 - 87:09Hopefully that answers
some of those questions -
87:09 - 87:12May not be adequate because
-
87:12 - 87:14sometimes when you send a message
over the internet -
87:14 - 87:18sometimes it is nice if we can
just ask back again and -
87:18 - 87:19have a bit of a discussion
-
87:19 - 87:24so we really understand
exactly where you are coming from -
87:24 - 87:25on that question.
-
87:25 - 87:28How does the Sangha avoid
social rigidity or legalistic behavious -
87:28 - 87:30norms of mind
does it impinge upon Englightenment -
87:30 - 87:33Its a good question but
I don't know exactly -
87:33 - 87:36if I answered it to your
satisfaction. -
87:36 - 87:38Is there any other questions here
-
87:38 - 87:40Yes John
-
87:40 - 87:47Ajahn just the thought about
kamma -
87:47 - 87:51Its always being said that you
have to be fully knolwdge -
87:51 - 87:52of what you are doing.
-
87:52 - 87:54before you can make bad kamma
-
87:54 - 87:56then you just said that
-
87:56 - 88:00if leaving money around someone
took it -
88:00 - 88:02you are also responsible for it
-
88:02 - 88:06so there are actually two
types of ways of making a bad kamma -
88:06 - 88:07isn't it?
-
88:07 - 88:14It's almost like the bad kamma
of omission -
88:14 - 88:19you had no intention to hurt or harm
-
88:19 - 88:25but you know your intention just
should be to care -
88:25 - 88:27it's not just to hurt or harm
-
88:27 - 88:32it's your duty of care which
is very important these days. -
88:32 - 88:36So you had no intention to hurt somebody
-
88:36 - 88:41but you had a duty to look after
them. -
88:41 - 88:51In other words I may leave a piece
of toast in the toaster -
88:51 - 88:53and it wasn't turned off
-
88:53 - 88:58I never intend to burn down
the tempu -
88:58 - 89:01but my carelessness could do that
-
89:01 - 89:07So that's why for Kamma it's
also the heedlessness -
89:07 - 89:13yes intention but intention
is also the stupidity that -
89:13 - 89:17you should have looked after
somebody -
89:17 - 89:19I should have been careful
enough to make sure the -
89:19 - 89:21toaster was turned off.
-
89:21 - 89:24I didn't burn down
you can see the evidence is out there -
89:24 - 89:28you can see the evidence out there.
-
89:28 - 89:36OK it is 4.30 now so its time
we should pack up -
89:36 - 89:39and Thank you everybody from
overseas for -
89:39 - 89:44joining this teaching today
-
89:44 - 89:49and also for all the mothers
Happy Mothers Day Everybody! -
89:49 - 89:57Sadhu Sadhu Sadhu
- Title:
- Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018
- Description:
-
Part 12: Ajahn Brahm takes the 12th sutta class, working from the book "Word of the Buddha" by Venerable Nyanatiloka.
Please support the BSWA in making teachings available for free online via Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/BuddhistSocietyWACopyright Buddhist Society of Western Australia
- Video Language:
- English
- Team:
Buddhist Society of Western Australia
- Project:
- Word of the Buddha series by Ajahn Brahm
- Duration:
- 01:30:43
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Eug accepted English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 | |
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Eug edited English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 | |
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Kanch Boralessa edited English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 | |
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Kanch Boralessa edited English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 | |
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Kanch Boralessa edited English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 | |
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Kanch Boralessa edited English subtitles for Word of the Buddha (part 12) | Ajahn Brahm | 13 May 2018 |