Taking Refuge in the Island within Ourselves | Dharma talk by Sr Chân Đức, 2020 12 03, Plum Village
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1:46 - 1:48Dear Thay, Dear Sangha
-
1:49 - 1:54In difficult moments, and
in not difficult moments also, -
1:55 - 1:57we have the practice of coming back
-
1:59 - 2:01to the island within ourself.
-
2:04 - 2:07We have a song,
“Being an Island Unto Myself” -
2:09 - 2:13and guided meditation
“Being an Island Unto Myself” -
2:16 - 2:22[singing] Being an island
Unto myself -
2:23 - 2:28as an island unto myself.
-
2:30 - 2:36Buddha is my mindfulness
-
2:36 - 2:41shining near, shining far
-
2:42 - 2:48Dharma is my breathing
-
2:48 - 2:58guarding bodhi and mind.
I am free. -
2:58 - 3:04Being an island unto myself
-
3:04 - 3:10as an island unto myself.
-
3:10 - 3:17Sangha is the five skandhas
-
3:17 - 3:22working in harmony.
-
3:23 - 3:35Taking refuge in myself,
coming back to myself -
3:35 - 3:44I am free, I am free,
I am free. [end singing] -
3:45 - 3:48So this practice has been
recommended to us -
3:48 - 3:53above all when we are in
difficult moments. -
3:53 - 3:59But in order to be able to
practice it when we are in difficulty, -
3:59 - 4:02we need to have a training,
we need to -
4:02 - 4:07train ourself when it’s not
difficult to come back -
4:07 - 4:15to ourself. So many times
the Buddha taught non-self, -
4:15 - 4:22and now we are practicing
coming back to our self. -
4:23 - 4:28Non-self is an idea,
and self is also an idea. -
4:29 - 4:35Non-self is the cure, the idea
to cure the idea of self. -
4:39 - 4:45So, primarily coming back to
our self means coming back -
4:45 - 4:52to our body, feeling our body
as it is in the present moment. -
4:54 - 4:59We have the layer of skin
on the outside of our body, -
5:00 - 5:07so in a way, our body has
limits, but we also know our -
5:07 - 5:13body depends on everything
outside of our body, also. -
5:14 - 5:16In this practice, we come
-
5:16 - 5:20back to our body primarily
-
5:22 - 5:25The example that we hear
the Buddha give -
5:26 - 5:35is the example of a turtle: has
a head, four legs, and a tail. -
5:37 - 5:41When the turtle is in a difficult
moment, the turtle will -
5:41 - 5:47draw back its legs, its head,
its tail under its shell. -
5:49 - 5:57So for us, it means bringing
back our eyes, ears, nose, -
5:57 - 6:04all those things that sense
the world around us, -
6:05 - 6:10not letting them go out,
be dispersed around us, -
6:11 - 6:17but coming back so we can
come back inside of ourself -
6:18 - 6:22and be there for ourself
to take care of ourself. -
6:24 - 6:28Because if we do not be there
to take care of ourself, -
6:28 - 6:35we cannot really be there to
take care of the other person. -
6:37 - 6:40When you take care of
somebody who is very sick, -
6:40 - 6:46you know very well that the
first thing you need to do -
6:47 - 6:53is come back and be solid
and stable in yourself. -
6:54 - 7:01So this exercise is taught us,
so that we can be solid, -
7:01 - 7:06and we can be stable in the
present moment. -
7:07 - 7:12When we hear the sound of
the bell, we come back to the -
7:12 - 7:18island in ourself. We become
a refuge for ourself. -
7:19 - 7:24The human mind has a
tendency to go out and try to -
7:24 - 7:30find a refuge in things around,
but we know if we’re not -
7:30 - 7:35stable ourself, then we cannot
have a place of refuge, -
7:36 - 7:43so also we practice coming
back to be a refuge for ourself. -
7:45 - 7:49Being an island unto myself.
Being a refuge for myself. -
7:50 - 7:57And my self is that island,
my self is that refuge. -
7:57 - 8:06In Chinese and Vietnamese
[C/V], self is the island, [C/V] -
8:06 - 8:18self is the refuge. In Pali,
atta dippha, atta sharana. -
8:26 - 8:31Then the Buddha teaches us,
to make it clearer, -
8:34 - 8:42the Dharma is your island,
the Dharma is your refuge. -
8:44 - 8:47That means that when we
come back to our true self, -
8:48 - 8:54we can find the Buddha in
ourself, the Dharma in ourself -
8:54 - 8:59and the Sangha in ourself.
-
9:02 - 9:08This wonderful teaching was
given to Ananda, Buddha’s -
9:08 - 9:18attendant, three times: twice
individually, and once with the -
9:18 - 9:26rest of the Sangha. The
Buddha gave this teaching at -
9:26 - 9:29end of the life of the Buddha,
-
9:30 - 9:33when the Buddha was
already 80 years old. -
9:35 - 9:39Maybe many people, they
took refuge in the Buddha; -
9:40 - 9:46there was the practice of the
three refuges in India at that time. -
9:47 - 9:50People, when they came and
listened to the teaching of the -
9:50 - 9:55Buddha, they would practice,
“I take refuge in the Buddha, -
9:55 - 10:00I take refuge in the Dharma,
I take refuge in the Sangha.” -
10:01 - 10:04Maybe people, when they
took refuge in the Buddha, -
10:04 - 10:09they were taking refuge in a
Buddha outside themselves, -
10:09 - 10:14but that Buddha, like
everything else, was -
10:14 - 10:19impermanent, and would not
be there much longer. -
10:20 - 10:26That is why the Buddha gave
that teaching to Ananda. -
10:29 - 10:33The Venerable Ananda was a
wonderful attendant for -
10:33 - 10:39Buddha. The Venerable
Ananda gave all his life, all -
10:39 - 10:42his being, attending the Buddha.
-
10:44 - 10:48So he did not have time so
much to practice coming back -
10:48 - 10:50to himself.
-
10:56 - 10:59In the last rains retreat that
-
10:59 - 11:04the Buddha was alive
-
11:05 - 11:07in Vaishali,
-
11:08 - 11:10the Buddha became very,
very sick. -
11:16 - 11:20In the sutra it says
bordering on death. -
11:22 - 11:26The Buddha was in a
lot of pain, his body became -
11:27 - 11:34extremely weak, and there
are times when it is very easy -
11:34 - 11:37when the body is in so much
pain, and so much -
11:38 - 11:44weakness, it’s easy to leave
the body, to die. -
11:45 - 11:47The Buddha knew that at
any moment, when he was -
11:47 - 12:01sick like that, that he could
die. Knowing that, looking -
12:01 - 12:07deeply and knowing he had
not taken leave of the Sangha -
12:07 - 12:13he had not said good-bye to
the sangha, maybe there was -
12:13 - 12:18some last instructions that the
Sangha still needed, Buddha -
12:18 - 12:27had not given. It is said that
Buddha had to make a strong -
12:27 - 12:33resolution, strong
determination, based on the -
12:33 - 12:40life force. A strong
determination to live for -
12:40 - 12:48some more months in order
to be able to give the -
12:48 - 12:52teachings that the Sangha
may still need. -
12:56 - 13:02I remember one time when
Thay, our teacher, was -
13:02 - 13:10very unwell, in Germany.
Thay could not eat anything -
13:10 - 13:18for a long time. Thay said,
“I am living by volition food.” -
13:20 - 13:24We know that volition
food is the third kind of food. -
13:25 - 13:28A very important food
for us. -
13:28 - 13:32So when the Buddha made
that determination to live -
13:32 - 13:38for some more months,
the Buddha was using volition food, -
Not Syncedthat food that comes from
within, when we come back -
Not Syncedto the island of the self. That
food does not come from -
Not Syncedwithout.
-
Not SyncedIf you think of the five
particular mental formations -
Not Syncedthe first one is zeal [...]
chanda. It is really wanting -
Not Syncedsomething. The second one
is adimoksha, [...] and that -
Not Syncedmeans determination,
resolution. -
Not SyncedWe all know that in our
practice, we develop -
Not Syncedthese mental formations,
the mental formation of -
Not Synceddetermination, because when
when we come to the practice -
Not Syncedand maybe for many years
afterwards, we have many -
Not Syncedhabit energies. If we want
really to transform them -
Not Syncedwe need a strong
determination, a strong -
Not Syncedresolution. So it’s said
that the Buddha resolved -
Not Syncedon what is one of the
first six universal -
Not Syncedmental formations [...]
universal mental formations -
Not Syncedin the Theravada tradition
What is that? That is -
Not Syncedjivitandriya, the life force,
the force for life that is there -
Not Syncedin all of us, in our
consciousness. -
Not SyncedThe Buddha gave his
attention to that -
Not Syncedmental formation,
the life force. -
Not SyncedUsing concentration, which
is another of the particular -
Not Syncedmental formations...
remember zeal, resolution -
Not Syncedor determination is the
second, and the third is -
Not Syncedmindfulness, concentration
the fourth, and the fifth is -
Not Syncedinsight. These are mental
formations that we can -
Not Syncedchoose to practice or not.
We can choose to use them -
Not Syncedin a wholesome or not
wholesome way. They are -
Not Syncedcalled particular mental
formations. -
Not SyncedSo the Buddha used
concentration in order to -
Not Syncedbe able to overcome the pain
and he was able to recover -
Not Syncedfrom his sickness. He went
outside his hut and sat -
Not Syncedoutside, and Ananda saw the
Buddha sitting outside, and -
Not SyncedAnanda was overwhelmed
with joy. -
Not Synced“The Buddha is going to live!
The Buddha is still alive!” -
Not SyncedAnanda came to the Buddha
and said, “How wonderful! -
Not SyncedHow wonderful! You are still
there, you are better, -
Not Syncedyou are going to be with us.”
Then Ananda said, “When the -
Not SyncedBuddha was sick like that,
my knees shook, I lost my -
Not Syncedconcentration, my mind
became confused.” -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said, “That won’t
do, Ananda.” -
Not SyncedThen gave the teaching of
being an island to yourself, -
Not Syncedto find the Buddha in
yourself. -
Not SyncedBuddha said that in a
short time, the Buddha will -
Not Syncednot be with you anymore, so
now is the time to practice -
Not Syncedbeing an island to yourself,
being a refuge for yourself, -
Not Syncedto find the Buddha within
you. -
Not SyncedAnanda said to the Buddha,
“Altho’ you were very sick, -
Not SyncedI had quite some hope that
you would get better, be -
Not Syncedwith us for longer, because
you had not yet told us -
Not Syncedwhat to do when you weren’t
there anymore. -
Not SyncedYou had not told us who
would guide the Sangha -
Not Syncedafter you were not there
anymore.” -
Not SyncedThen the Buddha said, “Oh,
Ananda, why...” -
Not SyncedAnanda said, “We were
waiting for you to make -
Not Syncedsome announcement
concerning the Sangha, -
Not Syncedwho would guide the sangha,
who would lead the sangha.” -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said, “What
more is the Sangha waiting -
Not Syncedfor? I have taught everythng, I
have taught all the practices.” -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said, “I am not a
teacher with a closed fist, -
Not SyncedI don’t hold anything back,
everything I practice I hand -
Not Syncedon to my disciples. What
more are you waiting for? -
Not SyncedIf you are waiting for me to
tell you who’s going to lead -
Not Syncedyou, who’s going to guide you
that is something I will not do, -
Not Syncedbecause the Buddha never
thinks, “I am in charge of -
Not Syncedthe Sangha, I direct the
Sangha.” -
Not SyncedThe Buddha is only a bhikkhu
like the other bhikkhus. -
Not SyncedIf the Buddha does not direct
the Sangha, why should the -
Not SyncedBuddha want to hand on to
somebody else -
Not Syncedto direct the Sangha?”
-
Not SyncedAfter that
-
Not Syncedthe Buddha set out on his
last tour, -
Not Syncedwanting, probably, to go back
to -
Not SyncedKapilavastu, the place
he came from, where he’d -
Not Syncedgrown up. So he went from
Nalanda, from Rajagriha, in -
Not Syncedthat direction. In the sutra
it says that when he came to -
Not SyncedSravasthi, the Buddha
received the news -
Not Syncedof the death of Shariputra
-
Not Syncedand Mogallana.
It’s strange, because -
Not SyncedShravasti is not really on
the route from Rajagriha to -
Not SyncedKapilavastu, it’s a 200 km
deviation. -
Not SyncedMaybe it’s a mistake, he
wasn’t in Shravasti, he was -
Not Syncedsomewhere else. So
then...we have...if you look in -
Not Syncedthe Samyutta Nikaya, [...]
in Chap. 47, which is about -
Not Syncedthe practice of mindfulness,
you will find 3 sutras about -
Not Syncedend of the life of the Buddha.
The first is sutra #9, it’s called -
Not SyncedGelanna, it means sickness,
it’s about the time when the -
Not SyncedBuddha was sick. The second
is #13, it’s called Chunda. -
Not SyncedChunda is the name of the
attendant of Ven. Shariputra. -
Not SyncedShariputra comes from
Nalanda, and he went back to -
Not SyncedNalanda with the Buddha.
When the Buddha and -
Not SyncedShariputra were in Nalanda
maybe Shariputra knew that -
Not Syncedhe would not meet the
Buddha again, so he came to -
Not Syncedthe Buddha, and said to the
Buddha, “Of all the Buddhas -
Not Syncedthat have been there in the
past, will be there in the -
Not Syncedfuture, and are there in the
present moment, you are the -
Not Syncednumber one, you are the
foremost Buddha.” -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said to
Shariputra, “How can you say that, -
Not SyncedShariputra? Did you know all
the Buddhas in the past? -
Not SyncedDo you know all the Buddhas
in the present, and in future in -
Not Syncedorder to say I am the
foremost?” Shariputra had to -
Not Syncedadmit he didn’t know all those
Buddhas. But he said, “When -
Not SyncedI look at the practice of the
Buddha, how the Buddha -
Not Syncedguards the six senses, always
practices mindfulness, I -
Not Syncedcannot think that any human
being could practice better -
Not Syncedthan that, so that is why I say
the Buddha is the foremost of -
Not Syncedall Buddhas.”
-
Not SyncedOf course, the Buddhas of the
past and the future, they also -
Not Syncedpractice to guard the six senses.
-
Not SyncedIn the end, the Buddha said
to Shariputra, “That is a good -
Not Syncedteaching that you can give to
people, that the Buddha is the -
Not Syncedone who practices guarding
the six senses at all times.” -
Not SyncedBut Shariputra was not to live
for much longer. -
Not SyncedAfter the Buddha had left
Nalanda, Shariputra had -
Not Syncedasked to stay behind.
Shariputra also became very -
Not Syncedsick, and died. His attendant,
Chunda, after the cremation, -
Not Syncedbrought the ashes, brought
the robe and the bowl, back -
Not Syncedto the Buddha, wherever the
Buddha was. First of all, -
Not Syncedwhenever Chunda arrived at
where the Buddha was, -
Not Syncedhe went to Ananda. He told
Ananda what had happened, -
Not Syncedthat the Ven. Shariputra had
died. -
Not SyncedAnanda said, “This is news
that together we need to bring -
Not Syncedto the Buddha.” So together
Chunda and Ananda went to -
Not Syncedthe Buddha, and told the
Buddha what had happened. -
Not SyncedThen Ananda said again,
“When I heard that Shariputra -
Not Syncedhad died, my knees shook, I
lost my stability, I became -
Not Syncedconfused in my mind,
because we had lost our -
Not Syncedelder brother.”
-
Not SyncedThe Buddha said, “When
Shariputra died, did he take -
Not Syncedaway your mindfulness with
him? Did he take away your -
Not Syncedconcentration and your insight?”
-
Not SyncedAnanda said, “No, he didn’t,
but Shariputra was an elder -
Not Syncedbrother we all took refuge in.
We knew that he could give -
Not Syncedus the teachings that we
needed. Now he’s no longer -
Not Syncedthere in the Sangha.”
-
Not SyncedThen, for the second time,
Buddha taught Ananda, -
Not Synced“Ananda, you should be an
island to yourself, you should -
Not Syncedbe a refuge to yourself. Let
the Dharma be your island, -
Not Syncedlet the Dharma be your
refuge, and do not take -
Not Syncedrefuge in any other person, in
any other thing. -
Not SyncedThat is the second time
Ananda received the teaching -
Not Syncedon being an island to yourself.
-
Not SyncedThe third time was in a sutra
we are all familiar with, -
Not Syncedbecause it’s part of our
chanting book, which is called -
Not Syncedthe Discourse on Taking
Refuge in Yourself; that is -
Not Syncedhow we translated it. If you
look in the Samyukta Agama -
Not Synced[...] #639 You’ll see that it is
called the Uposatha Sutra, -
Not Syncedand that is because uposatha
means the day when the -
Not SyncedPrecepts are recited, and it
happened to be the full moon -
Not Syncedday when the Buddha gave this sutra.
-
Not SyncedIn Pali, it is in the Samyutta
Nikaya [...] [Chap 47], #14, -
Not Syncedand it is called Ukkacela,
which is just the name of a -
Not Syncedplace where the Buddha gave
this teaching. -
Not Synced“I heard these words of the
Buddha one time, when the -
Not SyncedLord was staying in the
mango grove, in the cool -
Not Syncedshade of the mango trees, on
the bank of the river Ganges, -
Not Syncedin the forest of Magadha. The
elders Shariputra and -
Not SyncedMoggallana had recently
passed away. It was the full -
Not Syncedmoon day of the Uposatha
ceremony, and the Precepts -
Not Syncedwere being recited.
-
Not SyncedThe Buddha spread out his
sitting mat, and, facing the -
Not Syncedcommunity, after looking out,
he said, ”As I look at our -
Not Syncedcommunity, I see a large
space left by the -
Not SyncedVen. Shariputra and Moggallana.
-
Not SyncedIn the Pali version, it says, “It
appears to me there is an -
Not Syncedempty space in our Sangha.”
It APPEARS that there’s an -
Not Syncedempty space, because where
Shariputra and Moggallana -
Not Syncedhad been in the Sangha, we
can no longer see them there. -
Not SyncedOo, I forgot to say that two
weeks after Shariputra died, -
Not Syncedthe Ven. Moggallana died.
-
Not SyncedSo by the time the Buddha
gave this sutra, both -
Not SyncedShariputra and Moggallana had died.
-
Not SyncedSo, ‘it appears to me there is
a large space’, before, we -
Not Syncedcould always rely on
Moggallana and Shariputra to -
Not Syncedbe there, and now we see
they’re not there. -
Not SyncedThe Buddha uses the word
‘appears’, which means that it -
Not Syncedappears, but it’s not really like that.
-
Not SyncedIf you want, you can still find
Shariputra and Moggallana. -
Not Synced“In the Sangha, these two
venerable monks were the -
Not Syncedmost eloquent in giving
Dharma talks, encouraging -
Not Syncedand instructing all the other
monks, nuns, and -
Not Syncedlay people.”
-
Not SyncedThen the Buddha uses the word...searching for, looking
-
Not Syncedfor, looking for something.
“Oh monks, people look for -
Not Syncedtwo kinds of riches: material
riches, and the riches of the -
Not SyncedDharma. In their search for
material riches, they go to -
Not Syncedworldly people. In their search
for the riches of the Dharma, -
Not Syncedthey would go to Shariputra
and Moggallana. The -
Not SyncedTathagatha is not searching
for anything, whether it is -
Not Syncedmaterial or the Dharma.”
-
Not SyncedIf you remember, there’s a
verse in the Udanavagga in -
Not SyncedSanskrit, and it says the deer
take refuge in the countryside -
Not Syncedthe birds take refuge in the
sky, those who discriminate -
Not Syncedtake refuge in the Dharma,
and the arahats, those who -
Not Syncedhave enlightenment, take
refuge in Nirvana. -
Not SyncedThat is us, those who
discriminate. Discriminate -
Not Syncedhere means be able to
discriminate what is -
Not Syncedwholesome from what is
unwholesome, to rely on -
Not Syncedthe practice of the Precepts,
mindfulness, concentration, -
Not Syncedinsight, in order to train
ourselves in our daily life. -
Not SyncedSo here it says we can go for
refuge to our teachers for the -
Not Syncedriches of the Dharma, and we
are always looking for the -
Not Syncedriches of the Dharma to help
us to transform our afflictions. -
Not SyncedThose who have transformed
the afflictions do not need to -
Not Syncedsearch for the Dharma
anymore. -
Not SyncedMaybe they have found the
Dharma within themselves. -
Not SyncedThey just practice
mindfulness, concentration, -
Not Syncedand insight.
-
Not SyncedWe should remember, also,
that tho’ they do not search -
Not Syncedfor anything more, the
arahats always practice -
Not Syncedmindfulness.
All four pairs, and eight kinds -
Not Syncedof holy people in the Sangha,
from the stream-enterer to the -
Not Syncedarahat, they all practice
mindfulness, concentration, -
Not Syncedand insight.
When you become an -
Not Syncedarahat, you do not stop
practicing mindfulness. -
Not SyncedDoes that mean to say that
when we are looking for the -
Not SyncedDharma, we are not able to
be in touch with nirvana? -
Not SyncedNo, it doesn’t mean that.
Nirvana is available -
Not Syncedto us when we become a
stream-enterer, or even -
Not Syncedbefore. But, we cannot be in
touch with nirvana the whole -
Not Syncedtime, so we need to keep
listening to the Dharma, -
Not Syncedcontemplating the Dharma,
and putting the Dharma into -
Not Syncedpractice in order to be able to
be in touch with nirvana -
Not Syncedall the time.
-
Not SyncedThen the Buddha gives the
example of the tree, a very -
Not Syncedold, large tree. Like the oak
tree in the Lower Hamlet. -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said that that tree
was made of heartwood, -
Not Syncedit had very good wood inside
the tree, it’s not rotten inside. -
Not SyncedThat tree is the sangha,
the Sangha that has 8 kinds -
Not Syncedand 4 pairs of holy people.
The Sangha that practices -
Not Syncedmindfulness, concentration,
and insight is like a tree. -
Not SyncedThat tree, when it first starts,
has two large branches. They -
Not Syncedare the oldest branches, the
elder brother, or elder sister -
Not Syncedbranches of the Sangha.
Relying on all those branches -
Not Syncedother branches also grow on
the tree, just like a banana -
Not Syncedtree has the leaves, and the
first two leaves, they nourish -
Not Syncedall the other leaves that come
along afterwards. -
Not SyncedSo, Shariputra and Mogallana
were like the large branches, -
Not Syncedand when those large
branches break, there are still -
Not Syncedall the other branches, and
the tree, the Sangha, is still there. -
Not SyncedThe Buddha gave that example.
-
Not SyncedIn the Sangha of the
Tathagatha, Shariputra and -
Not SyncedMogallana were the greatest
students, so it’s natural that -
Not Syncedthey would enter nirvana first.
-
Not SyncedThe next paragraph is about
what is natural. -
Not SyncedActually, it says like this, if
you look at the Chinese, -
Not Syncedit says, ‘All phenomena that
are either born, or arise, -
Not Syncedor are made, or are
conditioned phenomena, -
Not Syncedall these phenomena have to
disintegrate, they have to -
Not Synceddecay. They cannot exist
without someday being -
Not Synceddecayed, without
disintegrating.’ -
Not SyncedThen it says, ‘If you want any
phenomena not to decay, -
Not Syncedthen that is something
impossible.’ -
Not SyncedSomehow, in our mind we
have an idea of something -
Not Syncedimpossible.
All phenomena, that means -
Not Syncedpsychological phenomena,
physiological phenomena, -
Not Syncedphysical phenomena...
they all disintegrate -
Not Syncedafter a time.
In our mind we have an idea -
Not Syncedthat there must be things that
don’t disintergrate, -
Not Syncedthe people we love, they don’t disintegrate.
-
Not SyncedBecause of that, when they
do, we have to suffer -
Not Syncedbecause we are not prepared.
-
Not SyncedSo in our practice, what we
are doing is we prepare -
Not Syncedourselves—like the
meditation we did this -
Not Syncedmorning: I am of the nature to
get sick—is a way to prepare -
Not Syncedourself, to face the reality of
what happens, so we don’t -
Not Syncedlive in a world of things that
are not possible, wanting -
Not Syncedthings that are not possible.
-
Not SyncedHere it says things that are
born. When we say things -
Not Syncedthat are born, we mean living
beings who are born from the -
Not Syncedwomb or the egg. Things that
arise means things that arise -
Not Syncedin dependence on other
things, things that arise like -
Not Syncedthe flowers, the trees.
Things that are made are -
Not Syncedwhat human beings can
make, those phenomena, like -
Not Syncedthe clothes we wear, are
made; they also disintegrate. -
Not SyncedThere’s nothing that can
escape disintegration. -
Not SyncedNot just human beings.
-
Not SyncedAnd all things which are
conditioned phenomena... -
Not Synceda conditioned phenomena is
something that relies on what -
Not Syncedis not itself in order to be
there. So we are conditioned -
Not Syncedphenomena, because we rely
on the food that we eat, -
Not Syncedwe rely on those around us,
in order to continue to -
Not Syncedmanifest. If we look around
us, most things are -
Not Syncedconditioned, nearly everything
is conditioned dharma. -
Not SyncedIt is said that only one thing
that is not conditioned, and -
Not Syncedthat is nirvana, because
nirvana is the removal of all -
Not Syncedconcepts.
-
Not SyncedEverything we cherish and
hold dear today we will have -
Not Syncedto let go of and be separated
from. -
Not Synced‘In not too long a time, I will
also pass away. Therefore, -
Not Syncedpractice being an island to
yourself. Know how to take -
Not Syncedrefuge in yourself, and not
take refuge in anyone or -
Not Syncedanything else. Practice taking
refuge in the island of the -
Not SyncedDharma.’ The Dharma here
means the practice of -
Not Syncedmindfulness.
-
Not Synced‘Meditate on the body in the
body, -
Not Syncednourishing right
understanding and -
Not Syncedmindfulness.’
-
Not SyncedIn this version that I have
here, he just talks about -
Not Syncedmeditating on the body in the
body, but if you read the -
Not Syncedsutra, you will see that it also
says meditate on the feelings -
Not Syncedin the feelings, on the
perceptions in the percep...on -
Not Syncedthe mind in the mind, and on
the dharmas in the dharmas. -
Not SyncedSo it includes all the four
establishments of -
Not Syncedmindfulness.
-
Not SyncedEven tho’ the Buddha
recovered from his illness, -
Not Syncedhis body was very weak
and he told Ananda that -
Not Syncedhe practiced something, it’s
called the animitta -
Not Syncedcetosamadhi. It means the
concentration on -
Not Syncedsignlessness.
-
Not Synced‘Nimitta’ means a sign.
Suffering is a sign, and -
Not Syncedno suffering is also a sign.
Permanence is a sign, -
Not Syncedimpermanence is also a sign.
A sign means a characteristic, -
Not Synceda mark of how something is.
In English we can call this -
Not Syncedsignlessness [of the mind
concentration]. -
Not SyncedWhen you have pain in your
body, it has to go along with -
Not Syncedthe suffering in your mind.
Normally it’s like that. -
Not SyncedAs soon as there is pain in
the body, the mind begins to -
Not Syncedfeel also in pain. That is why
sometime we say the mind -
Not Syncedand body suffer in unison, or
the mind and the body are -
Not Syncedhappy in unison.
We can say like that. -
Not SyncedBut if you practice, you can
recognize that the pain in the -
Not Syncedbody does not have to be the
pain in the mind. -
Not SyncedYou can take care of your
mind so that the pain does -
Not Syncednot influence your mind.
-
Not SyncedAt that point, you are not
caught in the sign of -
Not Syncedsuffering.
-
Not SyncedIn the Vajracchedika Sutra,
it just teaches about not being -
Not Syncedcaught in signs. Not being
caught in phenomena, but -
Not Syncedalso not being caught in signs
In the Vajracchedika we hear -
Not Syncedabout different kinds of signs
like human and living being... -
Not Syncedwait a minute...human, ah,
self, human, living being and -
Not Syncedlife span. But there are many
other signs as well that we -
Not Syncedget caught in. Suffering is one
of those signs that we get -
Not Syncedcaught in.
-
Not SyncedIn fact, when they talk about
the 3 signs in Theravada -
Not SyncedBuddhism, suffering is one of
them. Impermanence, no self, -
Not Syncedand suffering. But suffering
has an opposite, whose name -
Not Syncedis not suffering. In terms of
the Four Noble Truths, the -
Not Syncedfirst Noble Truth is suffering,
and the third Noble Truth is -
Not Syncednot suffering, the end of
suffering, the cessation of -
Not Syncedsuffering. If suffering is a sign,
then not suffering is also a -
Not Syncedsign. We can be caught in the
sign ‘suffering’, and we can -
Not Syncedalso be caught in the sign
‘not suffering’. -
Not SyncedAccording to the Buddha, we
practice the Middle Way, -
Not Syncedwhich is not being caught in
either extreme. -
Not SyncedBy practicing this samadhi,
this concentration, by not -
Not Syncedbeing caught in signs, the
Buddha was able to live fully -
Not Syncedenough in the last few months
of the Buddha’s life, and give -
Not Syncedthe teaching the Buddha gave
on being an island unto -
Not Syncedyourself. If the Buddha had
not lived for those last -
Not Syncedmonths, we may not have the
teaching for being an island -
Not Syncedto yourself, which is
something that we can all -
Not Syncedpractice in our daily lives, and
need to practice in our daily -
Not Syncedlives, in order [that] when we
come across difficult -
Not Syncedmoments, we can truly come
back and take care of our -
Not Syncedmind. By taking care of our
mind, we can also take care -
Not Syncedof our body.
-
Not SyncedComing back to mindfulness
of our body is the first -
Not Syncedestablishment of mindfulness.
The second establishment of -
Not Syncedmindfulness is coming back
to our feelings, and taking -
Not Syncedcare of our feelings. Feelings
are really what is the -
Not Syncedsuffering, what is the not
suffering that is due to kinds -
Not Syncedof feelings. When we practice
the concentration on -
Not Syncedsignlessness, we have to first
of all recognize that ‘this -
Not Syncedfeeling is suffering’, then we
have to go beyond the sign -
Not Syncedand recognize that that
feeling just comes from what -
Not Syncedis happening in our body, and
it doesn’t have to influence -
Not Syncedour mind. The feeling does
not have a separate self, it’s -
Not Syncedimpermanent and changing at
every moment. -
Not SyncedWe can concentrate on the
island in ourself in terms of -
Not Syncedour feelings and not just in
terms of our body. -
Not SyncedWhen we first start to island
of ourself, we come back to -
Not Syncedour body, and then we
recognize our feelings. -
Not SyncedThe Buddha said that those
practitioners—monks, nuns, -
Not Syncedlaymen, laywomen—who are
able to come back to the -
Not Syncedisland of self, take refuge in
the island of self, come back -
Not Syncedto the island of Dharma, take
refuge in the island of -
Not SyncedDharma, are the best
practitioners, both now, while -
Not Syncedthe Buddha is still alive, and
after the Buddha is no longer alive. -
Not Synced[bell] [BELL]
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