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Venerable
Ajahn Sumedho -
Consciousness and Sensitivity
Extracts from a talk given to the Theravada Class at the Buddhist
Society in London, September 1989 by Venerable Ajahn Sumedho.
Sometimes we approach meditation too much from an ideal of trying to
control the mind, and get rid of unwanted mental states. It can become
an obsession. Meditation can be just another thing we have to do; and
this worldly attitude tends to affect what we're doing. See meditation,
not as something to measure yourself as a person with, but as an
opportunity to be mindful and at peace with yourself and with whatever
mood or state you happen to be in at this moment. Learn to be one who's
at peace with the way things are, rather than trying to become
something, or to achieve a state that you'd like to have.
That whole way of thinking is based on delusion. I remember when I
started meditation in Thailand, all my ambitious and aggressive
tendencies would start taking over. The way I'd lived my life affected
how I would approach meditation. So I began to notice that I began to
let go of things and to accept even those tendencies, and to be
attentive to the way it is. The more you trust in that, the more quickly
you will understand the Dhamma, or the way out of suffering.
Notice how things affect your mind. If you've just come from your work
or from your home, notice what that does to your mind. Don't criticise
it - we're not here to blame, or to think that there's something wrong
with our profession if our mind isn't tranquil and pure and serene when
we come here. But notice the busyness of life: having to talk to people,
having to answer telephones, having to type, or to travel across London
in the rush hour. Maybe we're having to work with people that we don't
like in difficult, aggravating situations. Just notice - not to
criticise, but just to accept that these things do have an effect on us.
Recognise that this is the experience of consciousness and sensitivity.
That's what being born as a human being amounts to, isn't it? You're
born, and you have to live a lifetime as a conscious being in a very
sensitive form. So what impinges on you, what comes to you from the
objective world is going to affect you. It's just the way it is, there's
noting wrong with it. But then as ignorant human beings we take it all
personally, we tend to make everything very personal. It's as if I
shouldn't be affected by these things that impinge on me. I shouldn't
feel anger, or aversion, or greed, or irritation and frustration, envy,
jealousy, fear, anxiety - I shouldn't be feeling these things. If I were
a normal, healthy man I wouldn't have any of these problems. If I were a
normal, healthy man I wouldn't be sensitive at all - like a rhinoceros,
with a tough hide that nothing could ever get through!
But recognise that being human, we have these extremely sensitive forms.
So then you realise there's nothing really wrong with you. It's just the
way it is. Life is like this. We live in a society that is just the way
it is. Living in London or in suburbia, or in villages or whatever, we
can spend our time grumbling because it's not perfect, or there are many
things that are irritating, or not very nice about may aspects of our
lives. But then being sensitive is like this, isn't it? Sensitivity
means that we're going to, whatever it is - whether it's pleasant or
unpleasant, pleasurable, painful, beautiful, ugly - we're going to feel
it.
And so the way out of suffering is through mindfulness. When you're
truly mindful, there's no self. You're not taking life's experiences
from the assumptions of being a person. You can try to make yourself
insensitive - close your eyes, put ear plugs in your ears, try to be
totally insensitive, shut everything out. That's one type of meditation,
sensory deprivation. If you stay that way for a while then you feel very
calm, because nothing is demanded of you at that time. There's no kind
of harsh or stimulating, exciting or frustrating, impingement.
If you're mindful, you have an awareness of the purity of your mind
which is blissful. Your true nature is blissful and serene and pure. But
then, if you still have the wrong view about it you think, 'I have to
have a sensory deprivation experience all the time. I can't live in
London any more - even the Buddhist Society is too noisy!'
If our peace and serenity depend upon conditions being a certain way,
then we get very attached. We become enslaved, we want to control, and
then we become even more angry and upset if anything disrupts or gets in
the way of our peace. 'I've got to find some place, a cave. I've got to
get my own sensory deprivation tank and find the ideal situation - set
up all the conditions where I can keep everything at bay, so I can just
abide in the blissful serenity of the purity of the mind.' But then you
see, that's coming from desire, isn't it? A self-view - wanting to have
that experience because you remember it, liked it and want it again.
I remember one time on a retreat I got so attached to being peaceful
that I heard this person - some person was having trouble swallowing. So
I was sitting there, and that person would go 'gulp, gulp.' They weren't
very loud, but when you're attached to total silence, even a gulp can
upset you. So I got quite irritated, and wanted to throw that person out
of the meditation hall. But then reflecting on it, I realise that the
fault was in me, not in the person.
But mindfulness and understanding the Dhamma allow you to adapt and
accept life - the total life experience - without having to control it.
With mindfulness you don't have to hold on to bits and pieces that you
like, and then feel very threatened by the possibility of being
separated from them. Right meditation really allows you to be very brave
and adaptable, to be flexible with your life and all that that implies.
We don't have all that much control, do we? Much as we would like to be
able to control our lives, we recognise we really don't have that much
control. Some things just get out of our control. Things happen and
Mother Nature has her ways of letting us know that She's not just going
to follow our desires. Then there are fashions and revolutions, changing
conditions, population problems, and airplanes, televisions, technology,
pollution. How can we control it, and make it so that we are not being
affected by any of it - or only affected in the ways we like?
If we spend our lives trying to control everything, then we just
increase the suffering. Even if we get a measure of control over things,
we're still going to be like me with the person gulping in the
meditation hall; getting very angry when the neighbour turns on the
radio too loud, or the airplane flies low, or the fire engine goes by.
Now one thing you can recognise is that when you have a body, you have
to live with your body for a lifetime. And these bodies are conscious
and sensitive forms. This is just the way it is, this is what being born
means. Bodies grow up, then they start getting old, then there's old
age, sicknesses, diseases - this is a part of our human experience - and
then death. We have to accept the death and separation of loved ones.
This happens to all of us. Most of us will see our parents die, or even
our children, or spouse or friends, loved ones. Part of all human
experience is the experience of being separated from the loved.
By knowing the way it is, then you find yourself quite capable of
accepting life and not being depressed and bewildered by the way life
happens to be. Once you understand it and you see it in the right way,
then you're not going to create any wrong views about it. You're not
going to add to it with fears, and desires, and bitterness, and
resentments and blame. We have the ability to accept the way life
happens to us as individual beings. Even though we're terribly
sensitive, we're also tough survivors in this universe.
You look at where human beings manage to live, like Eskimos up in the
Arctic and people in deserts. In the most uninviting places on this
planet there's usually human habitation. When forced to, we can survive
anywhere.
Understanding Dhamma then allows us also to have a fearless attitude. We
being to realise that we can accept whatever happens. There's really
nothing to be afraid of. Then you can let go of life; you can follow it,
because you're not expecting anything out of it, and you're not trying
to control it. You have the wisdom, the mindfulness, the ability to roll
with the flow, rather than to be drowned by the tidal waves of life.
When you learn to take time to be silent, listen to yourself. Just use
the breathing and the body, just the natural rhythm, the feeling - the
way your body feels now. Put your attention onto the body, because the
body is a condition in nature - it's not really you. It's not 'my'
breathing any more, it's not personal. You breathe even if you're crazy,
or sick - and if you're asleep you're still breathing. The body
breathes. From birth to death it will be breathing. So breath is
something that we use as an object to focus on, to turn to. If we think
too much, our thoughts get very convoluted and complicated, but if we
bring attention just to the ordinary breathing of the body at this
moment, at that moment you're actually not thinking - you're attentive
to a natural rhythm.
Then you might start making problems out of it, 'Oh, I can't concentrate
on my breath, blah, blah, blah ….' Then it becomes 'me' again, trying to
be mindful of my breath. But actually in any one moment where you're
just with the breath, there's no self. Your self will arise when you
start thinking. When you're not thinking, there's no self; and when
you're mindful, then the thought isn't coming from the wrong view that
'I am a self.' So thought can be a way of reflection, a way of focussing
attention on Dhamma, rather than creating problems, criticism or anxiety
about myself and humanity.
Just contemplate, when you get angry you have to think, don't you? If
you stop thinking, the anger will go away. To be angry you have to
think, 'He said that to me, how dare he. That dirty so and so!'' But if
you should stop thinking and just use the breath, eventually the feeling
of the body that comes with anger will fade out, and then there is no
anger. So if you feel angry, just reflect on what it feels like as a
physical feeling. It's the same with any mood: contemplate, reflect on
the mood that you're in. Just work with it - not to analyse it or
criticise it - but merely to reflect on it how it is.
Sometimes people say, 'I get very confused when I meditate - how can I
get rid of confusion?' Wanting to get rid of confusion is the problem.
Being confused and not wanting it is just creating confusion. So what
does confusion feel like? Some of the more stimulating passions that we
can have are quite obvious. What we tend to not pay any attention to or
dismiss are the more subtle states like slight confusion, or hesitation,
or doubt, insecurity and anxiety. And of course, one side of us just
wants to get rid of it, just stomp it out - how do I get rid of it? If I
meditate, how can I get rid of my fears, anxiety?
With the right understanding, we see that the very desire-to-get-rid-of
is suffering. We can bear with the feeling of insecurity if we know what
it is, and that it changes, it's impermanent. So you begin to feel more
and more confident in just being aware and mindful, rather than trying
to develop your practice in order to become an enlightened person. The
assumption is that right now you're not enlightened, you've got a lot of
problems, you've got to change your life, you've got to make yourself
different. You're good enough the way you are right now, so you have to
meditate, and hopefully some time in the future you'll become something
that you'd like to become.
If you never see the delusion of that way of thinking, then it just
carries on. You never really become what you should be, no matter how
much effort you put into your meditations. After years of trying to
become enlightened, you always feel like a failure, because you've still
got the wrong attitude about it all.
Forest Sangha Newsletter: July 1990, Number 13
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