The Art of Living
Everyone seeks peace and harmony, because these are what we
lack in our lives. From time to time we all experience agitation,
irritation, disharmony, suffering; and when one suffers from
agitation, one does not keep this misery limited to oneself.
One keeps distributing it to others as well. The agitation permeates
the atmosphere around the miserable person. Everyone who comes
into contact with him also becomes irritated, agitated. Certainly
this is not the proper way to live.
One ought to live at peace with oneself, and
at peace with all others. After all, a human being is a social
being. He has to live in society--to live and deal with others.
How are we to live peacefully? How are we to remain harmonious
with ourselves, and to maintain peace and harmony around us,
so that others can also live peacefully and harmoniously?
One is agitated. To come out of the agitation,
one has to know the basic reason for it, the cause of the suffering.
If one investigates the problem, it will become clear that whenever
one starts generating any negativity or defilement in the mind,
one is bound to become agitated. A negativity in the mind, a
mental defilement or impurity, cannot exist with peace and harmony.
How does one start generating negativity? Again,
by investigating, it becomes clear. I become very unhappy when
I find someone behaving in a way which I don't like, when I
find something happening which I don't like. Unwanted things
happen and I create tension within myself. Wanted things do
not happen, some obstacles come in the way, and again I create
tension within myself; I start tying knots within myself. And
throughout life, unwanted things keep on happening, wanted things
may or may not happen, and this process or reaction, of tying
knots--Gordian knots--makes the entire mental and physical structure
so tense, so full of negativity, that life becomes miserable.
Now one way to solve the problem is to arrange
that nothing unwanted happens in my life and that everything
keeps on happening exactly as I desire. i must develop such
power, or somebody else must have the power and must come to
my aid when I request him, that unwanted things do not happen
and that everything I want happens. But this is not possible.
There is no one in the world whose desires are always fulfilled,
in whose life everything happens according to his wishes, without
anything unwanted happening. Things keep on occurring that are
contrary to our desires and wishes. So the question arises,
how am I not to react blindly in the face of these things which
I don't like? How not to create tension? How to remain peaceful
and harmonious?
In India as well as in other countries, wise
saintly persons of the past studied this problem--the problem
of human suffering--and found a solution: if something unwanted
happens and one starts to react by generating anger, fear or
any negativity, then as soon as possible one should divert one's
attention to something else. For example, get up, take a glass
of water, start drinking--your anger will not multiply and you'll
be coming out of anger. Or start counting: one, two, three,
four. Or start repeating a word, or a phrase, or some mantra,
perhaps the name of a deity or saintly person in whom you have
devotion; the mind is diverted, and to some extent, you'll be
out of the negativity, out of anger.
This solution was helpful: it worked. It still
works. Practicing this, the mind feels free from agitation.
In fact, however, the solution works only at the conscious level.
Actually, by diverting the attention, one pushes the negativity
deep into the unconscious, and on this level one continues to
generate and multiply the same defilements. At the surface level
there is a layer of peace and harmony, but in the depths of
the mind there is a sleeping volcano of suppressed negativity
which sooner or later will explode in violent eruption.
Other explorers of inner truth went still further
in their search; and by experiencing the reality of mind and
matter within themselves they recognized that diverting the
attention is only running away from the problem. Escape is no
solution: one must face the problem. Whenever a negativity arises
in the mind, just observe it, face it. As soon as one starts
observing any mental defilement, it begins to lose strength.
Slowly it withers away and is uprooted.
A good solution: it avoids both extremes--suppression
and free license. Keeping the negativity in the unconscious
will not eradicate it; and allowing it to manifest in physical
or vocal action will only create more problems. But if one just
observes, then the defilement passes away, and one has eradicated
that negativity, one is freed from the defilement.
This sounds wonderful, but is it really practical?
For an average person, is it easy to face the defilement? When
anger arises, it overpowers us so quickly that we don't even
notice. Then overpowered by anger, we commit certain actions
physically or vocally which are harmful to us and to others.
Later, when the anger has passed, we start crying and repenting,
begging pardon from this or that person or from God: 'Oh, I
made a mistake, please excuse me!' But the next time we are
in a similar situation, we again react in the same way. All
that repenting does not help at all.
The difficulty is that I am not aware when
a defilement starts. It begins deep in the unconscious level
of the mind, and by the time it reaches the conscious level,
it has gained so much strength that it overwhelms me, and I
cannot observe it.
Then I must keep a private secretary with me,
so that whenever anger starts, he says, 'Look master, anger
is starting!' Since I cannot know when this anger will start,
I must have three private secretaries for three shifts, around
the clock! Suppose I can afford that, and the anger starts to
arise. At once my secretary tells me, 'Oh, master, look--anger
has started!' The first thing I will do is slap and abuse him:
'You fool! Do you think you are paid to teach me?' I am so overpowered
by anger that no good advise will help.
Even supposing wisdom prevails and I do not
slap him. Instead I say, 'Thank you very much. Now I must sit
down and observe my anger.' Yet it is possible? As soon as I
close my eyes and try to observe the anger, immediately the
object of anger come into my mind--the person or incident because
of which I become angry. Then I am not observing the anger itself.
I am merely observing the external stimulus of the emotion.
This will only serve to multiply the anger; this is no solution.
It is very difficult to observe any abstract negativity, abstract
emotion, divorced from the external object which aroused it.
However, one who reached the ultimate truth
found a real solution. He discovered that whenever any defilement
arises in the mind, simultaneously two things start happening
at the physical level. One is that the breath loses its normal
rhythm. We start breathing hard whenever a negativity comes
into the mind. This is easy to observe. At subtler level, some
kind of biochemical reaction starts within the body--some sensation.
Every defilement will generate one sensation or another inside,
in one part of the body or another.
This is a practical solution. An ordinary person
cannot observe abstract defilements of the mind--abstract fear,
anger, or passion. But with proper training and practice, it
is very easy to observe respiration and bodily sensations--both
of which are directly related to the mental defilements.
Respiration and sensation will help me in two
ways. Firstly, they will be like my private secretaries. As
soon as a defilement starts in my mind, my breath will lose
its normality; it will start shouting, 'Look, something has
gone wrong!' I cannot slap my breath; I have to accept the warning.
Similarly the sensations tell me that something has gone wrong.
Then having been warned, I start observing my respiration, my
sensation, and I find very quickly that the defilement passes
away.
This mental-physical phenomenon is like a coin
with two sides. On the one side are whatever thoughts or emotions
are arising in the mind. One the other side are the respiration
and sensations in the body. Any thought or emotion, any mental
defilement, manifests itself in the breath and the sensation
of that moment. Thus, by observing the respiration or the sensation,
I am in fact observing the mental defilement. Instead of running
away from the problem, I am facing reality as it is. Then I
shall find that the defilement loses its strength: it can no
longer overpower me as it did in the past. If I persist, the
defilement eventually disappears altogether, and I remain peaceful
and happy.
In this way, the techniques of self-observation
shows us reality in its two aspects, inner and outer. Previously,
one always looked with open eyes, missing the inner truth. I
always looked outside for the cause of my unhappiness; I always
blamed and tried to change the reality outside. Being ignorant
of the inner reality, I never understood that the cause of suffering
lies within, in my own blind reactions toward pleasant and unpleasant
sensations.
Now, with training, I can see the other side
of the coin. I can be aware of my breathing and also of what
is happening inside me. Whatever it is, breath or sensation,
I learn just to observe it, without losing the balance of the
mind. I stop reacting, stop multiplying my misery. Instead,
I allow the defilement to manifest and pass away.
The more one practices this technique, the
more quickly one will find one will come out of negativity.
Gradually the mind becomes freed of the defilements; it becomes
pure. A pure mind is always full of love--selfless love for
all others; full of compassion for the failings and sufferings
of others; full of joy at their success and happiness; full
of equanimity in the face of any situation.
When one reaches this stage, the entire pattern
of one's life starts changing. It is no longer possible to do
anything vocally or physically which will disturb the peace
and happiness of others. Instead, the balanced mind not only
becomes peaceful in itself, but it helps others also to become
peaceful. The atmosphere surrounding such a person will become
permeated with peace and harmony, and this will start affecting
others too.
By learning to remain balanced in the face
of everything one experiences inside, one develops detachment
towards all that one encounters in external situations as well.
However, this detachment is not escapism or indifference to
the problems of the world. A Vipassana meditator becomes more
sensitive to the sufferings of others, and does his utmost to
relieve their suffering in whatever way he can--not with any
agitation but with a mind full of love, compassion and equanimity.
He learns holy indifference--how to be fully committed, fully
involved in helping others, while at the same time maintaining
the balance of his mind. In this way he remains peaceful and
happy, while working for the peace and happiness of others.
This is what the Buddha taught; an art of living.
He never established or taught any religion, any 'ism'. He never
instructed his followers to practice any rites or rituals, any
blind or empty formalities. Instead, he taught just to observe
nature as it is, by observing reality inside. Out of ignorance,
one keeps reacting in a way which is harmful to oneself and
to others. But when wisdom arises--the wisdom of observing the
reality as it is--one come out of this habit of reaction. When
one ceases to react blindly, then one is capable of real action--action
proceeding from a balanced mind, a mind which sees and understands
the truth. Such action can only be positive, creative, helpful
to oneself and to others.
What is necessary, then, is to 'know thyself'--advice
which every wise person has given. One must know oneself not
just at the intellectual level, the level of ideas and theories.
Nor does this mean to know just at the emotional or devotional
level, simply accepting blindly what one has heard or read.
Such knowledge is not enough. Rather one must know realty at
the actual level. One must experience directly the reality of
this mental-physical phenomenon. This alone is what will help
us to come out of defilements, out of suffering.
This direct experience of one's own reality,
this techniques of self-observation, is what is called 'Vipassana'
meditation. In the language of India in the time of the Buddha,
passana meant seeing with open eyes, in the ordinary way; but
Vipassana is observing things as they really are, not just as
they seem to be. Apparent truth has to be penetrated, until
one reaches the ultimate truth of the entire mental and physical
structure. When one experiences this truth, then one learns
to stop reacting blindly, to stop creating defilements--and
naturally the old defilements gradually are eradicated. One
come out of all the misery and experiences happiness.
There are three steps to the training which
is given in a Vipassana meditation course Firstly, one must
abstain from any action, physical or vocal, which disturbs the
peace and harmony of others. One cannot work to liberate oneself
from defilements in the mind while at the same time one continues
to perform deeds of body and speech which only multiply those
defilements. Therefore, a code of morality is the essential
first step of the practice. One undertakes not to kill, not
to steal, not to commit sexual misconduct, not to tell lies,
and not to use intoxicants. By abstaining from such action,
one allows the mind to quiet down sufficiently so that it can
proceed with the task at hand.
The next step is to develop some mastery over
this wild mind, by training it to remain fixed on a single object:
the breath. One tries to keep one's attention for as long as
possible on the respiration. This is not a breathing exercise:
one does not regulate the breath. Instead one observes natural
respiration as it is, as it comes in, as it goes out. In this
way one further calms the mind so that it is no longer overpowered
by violent negativities. At the same time, one is concentrating
the mind, making it sharp and penetrating, capable of the work
of insight.
These first two steps of living a moral life
and controlling the mind are very necessary and beneficial in
themselves; but they will lead to self-repression, unless one
takes the third step - purifying the mind of defilements by
developing insight into one's own nature. This is Vipassana:
experiencing one's own reality, by the systematic and dispassionate
observation of the ever-changing mind-matter phenomenon manifesting
itself as sensation within oneself. This is the culmination
of the teaching of the Buddha: self-purification by self-observation.
This can be practiced by one and all. Everyone
faces the problem of suffering. it is a universal disease which
requires a universal remedy--not a sectarian one. When one suffers
from anger, it is not a Buddhist anger, Hindu anger, or Christian
anger. Anger is anger. When one become agitated as a result
of this anger, this agitation is not Christian, or Hindu, or
Buddhist. The malady is universal. The remedy must also be universal.
Vipassana is such a remedy. No one will object
to a code of living which respects the peace and harmony of
others. No one will object to developing control over the mind.
No one will object to developing insight into one's own reality,
by which it is possible to free the mind of negativities. Vipassana
is a universal path.
Observing reality as it is by observing the
truth inside--this is knowing oneself at the actual, experiential
level. As one practices, one keeps coming out of the misery
of defilements. From the gross, external, apparent truth, one
penetrates to the ultimate truth of mind and matter. Then one
transcends that, and experiences a truth which is beyond mind
and matter, beyond time and space, beyond the conditioned field
of relativity: the truth of total liberation from all defilements,
all impurities, all suffering. Whatever name one gives this
ultimate truth, is irrelevant; it is the final goal of everyone.
May you all experience this ultimate truth.
May all people come out of their defilements, their misery.
May they enjoy real happiness, real peace, real harmony.
MAY ALL BEINGS BE HAPPY
The above text is based upon a talk given by
Mr. S.N. Goenka in Berne, Switzerland.