Understanding Reality
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Can we find true happiness in life? There are moments of happiness
in our life but these do not last. Pleasant things we enjoy are susceptible
to change, they do not last. We do not really see the impermanence
of what is in ourselves and around ourselves, we always cling to what is
actually impermanent. The pleasant and unpleasant events of our lives
condition very much our feelings. We are slaves of the vicissitudes
of life. One day we are praised and then we are glad. The next
day we are treated unjustly and we are humiliated, and then we are sad.
There are in our life. We read in the "Gradual Sayings" (Book of
Eights, Ch I, par. 6) that the Buddha spoke to the monks about the eight
worldly conditions which obsess the world. He spoke with regard to
those who have not attained enlightenment as follows:
... monks, gain comes to the unlearned common average folk, who reflect
not thus: "This gain which has come is impermanent, painful and subject
to change." They know it not as it really is. Loss come...
fame... obscurity... blame... praise... contentment... pain... They reflect
not that such are impermanent, painful and subject to change, nor do they
know these conditions as they really are. Gain, loss and so forth
take possession of their minds and hold sway there. they welcome
the gain which has arisen; they rebel against obscurity. They welcome
the praise which has arisen; they rebel against blame. They welcome
the contentment which has arisen; they rebel against pain. Thus given
over to compliance and hostility, they are not freed from birth, old age,
death, sorrows, lamentations, pains, miseries and tribulations. I
say such folk are not free from ill.
We then read that for the "ariyan disciple," who has attained enlightenment,
the opposite is the case. We may wonder what the secret is of the
ariyan disciple. He sees things as they really are and is not enslaved
to the worldly conditions. Could we also become an ariyan
disciple? At this moment we are still "unlearned, common, average
folk." From the Buddha's teachings we learn that seeing realities
as they are can make us less enslaved to the worldly conditions.
Seeing things as they are, that is true wisdom. Do we see realities
as they are or do we live in dreams and fantasies? In our life there are
realities and there are imaginations or ideas which we form up in our mind.
We do not even know the difference between reality and imagination.
However, in order to see things as they really are we must know the difference
between what is real and what is not real.
We may wonder whether the Buddha's teaching is not a philosophical system
which deals with abstractions. On the contrary, the Buddha's teaching
helps us to know ourselves, to know our different moments of wholesomeness
and unwholesomeness. He taught the way to eradicate attachment, aversion
and ignorance.
Our thinking about reality is conditioned by many ideas we acquired through
our education an through the culture in which we are rooted. If we
want to understand what the Buddha taught we should not hold on to our
own ideas about reality and we should be open-minded to his teaching.
Then we will notice that his teaching is completely different from our
ideas about reality.
The Buddha taught about everything which appears no and which can be directly
experienced. He did not teach abstract ideas. What appears
no? Is it attachment, aversion or ignorance? Or is it generosity
or compassion? In our life there are wholesome moments and unwholesome
moments and these change very rapidly. We do not have one consciousness
or mimd, but many different moments of consciousness. Moments
of consciousness are realities, not imagination, and we can know them now,
at this moment, when they appear. Then we will notice that there
are many different moments of consciousness (cittas). When we, for
example, perform a good deed there are wholesome moments of consciousness,
but also unwholesome moments of consciousness may arise. Some slight
stinginess may arise, which we only know ourselves and which nobody else
may notice. There may be attachment to the person to whom we give
a gift, or there may be conceit. If we do not know when there is
an unwholesome moment of consciousness (akusala citta) how could we develop
wholesomeness?
Through the development of right understanding of the different moments
of consciousness we will better know our defilements and then we will see
that the cause of all sadness and misery is within ourselves and not outside
ourselves.
What are realities and what are imaginations? We use in our language
words in order to make ourselves understood. sometimes a word represents
something which is real, which can be directly experienced, and sometimes
a word denotes an abstract idea. We must find out what the Buddha
taught about reality, otherwise we will continue to be ignorant of what
occurs in ourselves and around ourselves. then it will be impossible
to eradicate our faults and vices and we will not be freed from our enslavement
to the worldly conditions.
Moments of consciousness are not imagination, they are realities which
can be directly experienced, now, at this moment. We can come to
know our good and bad qualities when they appear. We have attachment
and aversion with regard to what we experience through the eyes, the ears
and through the other senses. Before attachment or aversion with
regard to what we see can arise, there must be a moment of just seeing.
Is there seeing at this moment? It can be experienced, it is a reality.
Seeing, hearing, smelling, tasting, experiences through the bodysense and
through the mind are realities, they are not imaginations. They are
different moments of consciousness which can be directly experienced with
they appear. The Buddha spoke about realities which can be directly
experienced and there are different from abstract ideas and imaginations.
Seeing is the experience of what presents itself through the eyes, of what
is visible. Seeing is different from thinking about what we see, different
from attachment. Seeing just sees. Hearing is the experience
of what presents itself through the ears, of sound. Hearing is different
from thinking about what we hear such as someone's voice or the barking
of a dog. Sound is a reality, it can be directly experienced; but
sound itself does not experience anything, it is different from hearing.
Tasting experiences flavour. Flavour can be directly experienced
when it presents itself. Flavour itself does not experience anything,
it is different from tasting.
In our life there are two kinds of realities:
The
reality which knows or experiences something, nama, the reality which does
not know anything, rupa.
Generosity, kindness, aversion, seeing or hearing are mental phenomena
or namas, they experience different objects. Sound, flavour, hardness,
softness, heat or cold are physical phenomena or rupa, they do not know
anything.
If we want to know what is real we should ask ourselves: "Can it be directly
experienced?" What is real has a characteristic which there being the need
to think about it or to name it. Everything which is real can be
directly experienced through the eyes, the ears, the nose, the tongue,
the bodysense and the "mind-door," through these six doorways. Thus,
if we want to know whether something is real we should ask ourselves: "Can
it be directly experienced and through which of the six doorways?"
Namas and rupas are realities which can be directly experienced without
there being the need to think about them or to call them by a name.
Hearing is hearing for everybody, everywhere. We can give hearing
another name, but its characteristic is the same. Sound is sound
for everybody, everywhere. We can give sound another name but its
characteristic is the same. Attachment is attachment for everybody,
aversion is aversion for everybody. We can change their name, but
the realities are the same.
Generosity is a reality, it is nama. We may be inclined to think
that there is a person who is generous, that a self is generous, but generosity
does not stay. It is not self, only a kind of nama which arises and
falls away. Seeing is real, it is a kind of nama. We think,
"I see," but seeing does not stay, it is impermanent. Where is then
the self? There is no person. What we take for a person are
in reality only different namas an rupas which arise and then fall away
again. The nama and rupa in our life are realities which can be directly
experienced. They are real, but they do not stay. They arise
and then fall away immediately.
We are full of wrong ideas about reality, we believe that a self sees and
hears, that a self performs good deeds and bad deeds, the whole day there
is clinging to a self. Wrong view about reality cannot lead to any
good. So long as we believe in a self there cannot be any eradication
of attachment, aversion and ignorance and then we will always be enslaved
to the eight "worldly conditions" of gain and loss, fame and obscurity,
praise and blame, contentment and pain.
There is no self who experiences something. The seeing sees, the
hearing hears, the thinking thinks. What is the use of knowing this?
It is essential to know that not a self but different moments of consciousness
experience different objects. The can be only one moment of consciousness
at a time an it experiences one object. We may be inclined to think
that namas can last for a while. We may believe that thinking, for
example, can last form some time. In reality there are many different
moments of thinking and they think of only one object at a time.
Can we think of more than one thing at a time? This is impossible.
Seeing is a moment of consciousness and it experiences only one object:
the visible object. after seeing there can be thinking of what we
have seen or there can be hearing, but these moments cannot arise at the
same time. All these moments are different.
We should know nama and rupa as they appear one at a time through the six
doors. Ideas such as person, car or tree are not realities, they
cannot be directly experienced and thus they are not objets of which we
should develop insight.
The Buddha taught that only one nama or rupa can e known at a time, when
it presents itself through one of the six doors. We may understand
this in theory, but now we have to prove it through the direct experience
of realities. This is not easy, because we still cling to our won
view of reality. Still, we have to know the different objects which
present themselves one at a time through the different doorways.
Once I was having lunch with "Khun Sujin," my good friend in the Dhamma,
in a Chinese restaurant in Bangkok. I was served a duck's foot and
when I looked at it I had aversion. Khun Sujin said, "Just taste
it, try it, without paying attention to the shape and form." I tasted
it without paying attention to the shape and form. The taste was
good. At that time I did not understand yet the full meaning of Khun
Sujin's lesson, but she wanted to show me that the experience through the
eyes is one thing, ant eh experience through the tongue the eyes is one
thing, and the experience through the tongue quite another thing and thus
another reality. We join all the different experiences together into
a "whole" and we think" "I am eating a duck's foot." Duck's foot
is not a reality. What are the realities?
There is the experience of visible object,
there is visible object,
there is attention to shape and form, and this is different from seeing,
there is aversion,
there is tasting, the experience of flavour,
there is flavour,
there is thinking of the flavour.
Thus we see that there are different mental phenomena, namas, and physical
phenomena, rupas, and these can be known one at a time. We can begin
to develop right understanding of the realities of our life.
If we do not come to know namas and rupas which appear one at a time, we believe that a duck's foot, a person, a house or a car realities which exist. However, these things are ideas, not ultimate realities (paramattha dhammas). Namas and rupas which can be experienced one at a time are realities. Our life is namas and rupas which arise and fall away. When there is a clearer understanding of the realities which can be directly experienced, one nama or rupa at a time, there will be less confusion in our life and we will gradually learn that there is no self.
in order to develop right understanding of nama and rupa, there should
be mindfulness of them when they appear. There is no self who is
mindful but it is "sati" which is mindful. Sati is a term in Pali
(the language of the Buddhist scriptures) which can be translated as mindfulness,
non-forgetfulness or awareness. Sati is a mental factor which accompanies
each wholesome moment of consciousness. There are different kinds
and degrees of sati. When we are generous there is sati which is
non-forgetful of generosity. When we abstain from killing or other
unwholesome actions there is sati which prevents us from unwholesomeness.
There is sati with the development of calm (tranquil meditation) and it
is mindful of the meditation subject. Sati in the development of
insight or right understanding of realities has a different object: it
is mindful or non-forgetful of a nama or rupa which appears now.
At that moment there is no notion of a "self" or something which exists
and can stay.
We cannot induce sati whenever we want it. Listening to the Dhamma
and considering realities which appear can condition the arising of sati.
We should have right understanding of the object of awareness: the reality
which appears now, which is either nama or rupa, and we should remember
that only one reality appears at a time.
We are inclined to join many realities together into a "whole." I
thought that I could see a duck's foot, and I failed t understand that
seeing is different from thinking and and different from tasting.
One cannot see a duck's foot, seeing sees only visible object or colour.
Thinking can think of the idea of a duck's foot. Thinking itself
is a nama, it is reality, and sati can be mindful of thinking. That
idea of which we think is not a reality and thus it cannot be object mindfulness.
We cannot expect there to be many moments of sati in the beginning. Sati is non-forgetful of the reality which appears now, through one of the six doors, and at that moment understanding of that reality can develop. That kind of understanding is direct understanding of the reality which appears and it is different from theoretical understanding. The development of direct understanding of realities is the development of insight of the Buddha taught. it can only develop very gradually, during many lives.
Insight leads to detachment from the self. We learn that what we used to take for self are in reality many different elements, namas and rupas, which can be know when they appear. My husband and I had been invited to a restaurant where it was very cold. I have aversion towards cold and I was inclined to say something about it. But that would have been impatience and lack of consideration for our host and hostess. I considered that the namas and rupas which arise are beyond our control. They arise when there a re conditions for their arising. We always think that a self or a person can be master of nama or rupa. Sometimes it seems that we can, but it is not so in reality. The experience of bodily ease and pain belongs to the eight worldly conditions which we are not master of. The Buddha taught us to develop right understanding of realities which are already appearing in daily life, no matter whether they are pleasant or unpleasant. Sati can arise wherever we may be, in our daily life. Also when we do not feel well or when we are cold there can be mindfulness of realities. For example, if there can be a moment of mindfulness of only cold when it appears, there is at that moment no notion of "my feet which are cold" or "the cold draught," which are not realities but only ideas. After a moment of sati is never lost. Sati falls away, but it can condition a moment of sati again, later on. We may think of the eight worldly conditions, but he development of right understanding of realities will help us most of all to be more patient amidst the vicissitudes of life. Eventually the right understanding of realities will lead to complete detachment and to freedom from all sorrow.