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Showing posts with label Buddhism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Buddhism. Show all posts

Friday, May 26, 2017

The forty subjects for meditation

In the 5th century CE, an Indian Buddhist monk left India to Sri Lanka, where he settled in Anuradhapura. Not much more is known of this monk, Buddhaghosa, except through his monumental commentary on the Suttas, the Visuddhimagga - Path of Purification.


Perhaps the main reason for the Visuddhimagga's appeal stretching to our time is its detailed instructions on meditation, clarifying some obscure points in the original Suttas.

Some learned Ajaans (namely Buddhadasa), in modern times, envisioned a return to the sources, considering that only the Suttas and the Vinaya are the Buddha's words: not the Visuddhimagga, not even the Abhidhamma (the third Pitaka - Basket of Scriptures - of the Pali canon).

Here are the forty subjects for meditation you can find in the Visuddhimagga, together with references (links) to the original Suttas.

Ten devices (kasina) [The Greater Discourse to Sakuludāyin, MN 77]
  1. Earth device
  2. Water device
  3. Fire device
  4. Air or wind device
  5. Blue device
  6. Yellow device
  7. Red device
  8. White device
  9. Limited space device
  10. Consciousness (MN77) or Light (VSM) device

Ten kinds of foulness of a corpse [Kayagata-sati Sutta, MN 119]
  1. A corpse that is bloated
  2. A corpse that is livid (has patchy discoloration)
  3. A corpse that is festering (trickling with pus in broken places)
  4. A corpse that is cut up
  5. A corpse that is gnawed
  6. A corpse that is scattered
  7. A corpse that is hacked and scattered
  8. A corpse that is bleeding
  9. A corpse that is worm-infested
  10. A corpse that is a skeleton

Ten recollections [Ekadhammapali Sutta, AN 1.296-297]
  1. Recollection of the Buddha
  2. Recollection of the Dhamma
  3. Recollection of the Sangha
  4. Recollection of Virtue
  5. Recollection of Generosity
  6. Recollection of the Devas
  7. Mindfulness of Death
  8. Mindfulness of the Physical Body
  9. Mindfulness of Breathing
  10. Recollection of Peace

Four divine abodes [Kalama Sutta, AN 3.65]
  1. Loving-kindness
  2. Compassion
  3. Sympathy
  4. Equanimity

Four immaterial states [Ariyapariyesana Sutta, MN 26]
  1. Sphere of Infinite Space
  2. Sphere of Infinite Consciousness
  3. Sphere of No-thingness
  4. Sphere of Neither Perception nor Non-Perception

One perception [Sañña Sutta, AN 7.46]
  1. Perception of the loathsomeness of food

One defining [Dhatu-vibhanga Sutta, MN 140]
  1. Analysis of the four physical elements

There are several contemporary expositions on the forty subjects for meditation, but I would like to leave you a very concise one, by the Mahasi Sayadaw, in Buddhist Meditation and its Forty Subjects. It is, as far as I know, the only text where the Sayadaw gives instruction, in parallel, on samatha and vipassana meditation.



As I said before, mindfulness of breathing (the 9th recollection, above) is still the most used meditation subject. It is said to be appropriate for all meditators' temperaments, conducive to the deepest meditative states (not all forty subjects are), and safe (
not all forty subjects are)If you want to try other meditation subjects please try and find a suitable meditation master - it will not be easy.

Monday, May 8, 2017

Gymnosophists - the naked philosophers

When Alexander the Great's army invaded India, sometime around 320 BC, his Greek followers were puzzled to find what they called 'naked philosophers' - the gymnosophists.

The Greek found nothing out of the ordinary in 'street philosophy'; after all, Alexander had been tutored by the great Aristotle. They also found nothing out of the ordinary in male nakedness since there was no concept of shame associated with the body. The word 'gymnos' - naked - can be found in gymnasium - a place to exercise naked.

As happens many times, it was the conjunction of two common things that felt, maybe, odd: naked philosophers...

We can easily imagine those gymnosophists to be the ancestors of modern naga babas.


One Greek philosopher, a member of Alexander's court, seemed to be especially struck by Indian philosophy: Pyrrho of Elis, known today as the founder of skepticism.



Not much is known today about Pyrrho. In fact, what remains of his philosophy is a fourth-hand report: a summary of Pyrrhonism which was preserved by Eusebius, quoting Aristocles, quoting Pyrrho's student Timon, in what is known as the "Aristocles passage:"

"Whoever wants to live well must consider these three questions: First, how are pragmata (ethical matters, affairs, topics) by nature? Secondly, what attitude should we adopt towards them? Thirdly, what will be the outcome for those who have this attitude?" Pyrrho's answer is that "As for pragmata they are all adiaphora (undifferentiated by a logical differentia), astathmeta (unstable, unbalanced, not measurable), and anepikrita (unjudged, unfixed, undecidable). Therefore, neither our sense-perceptions nor our doxai (views, theories, beliefs) tell us the truth or lie; so we certainly should not rely on them. Rather, we should be adoxastous (without views), aklineis (uninclined toward this side or that), and akradantous (unwavering in our refusal to choose), saying about every single one that it no more is than it is not or it both is and is not or it neither is nor is not."

This exposition has led Christopher Beckwith to find some parallel with the Buddhist three marks of existence: anicca (impermanence), dukkha (suffering), anatta (absence of an inherent, independent self), and to infer an influence of early Buddhism on Pyrrhonism.

While there is a clear formal similarity - three characteristics that are negatively defined - and we can equate adiaphora with anatta and astathmeta with anicca, anepikrita and the following consequences, which seem to be the core of Pyrrho's thought, remain unpaired, as does the Buddhist view of suffering.

We can find, however, a perfect parallel between anepikrita and one of the tenets of a less known religion that was contemporary with Buddhism: Jainism. These are


Ahimsa - non-violence,
Aparigraha - non-possessiveness,
Tapas - asceticism, and
Anekantavada - many-sidedness, pluralism, pluralism of viewpoints.

Not only anekantavada is strikingly analogous to Pyrrho's anepikrita but the primitive Jains (and some today) were naked ascetics - gymnosophists.




I will return to Jainism some time in the future. This beautiful religion deserves to be better known in the West. For the time being, you can freely browse the online Jain Library.

Tuesday, April 11, 2017

Mantra: meditation is not confessional

When we hear the word 'mantra' what comes to mind?

Hare Krishna?


Credit: http://www.krishnayoga.info/radhanath-swami/the-hunger-for-krishna/

Actually
Hare Krishna Hare Krishna
Krishna Krishna Hare Hare
Hare Rama Hare Rama
Rama Rama Hare Hare

is an old Hindu, Vaishnava, mantra, probably dating back to the 15th century CE.

A mantra is just a sentence, heavily loaded with significance, which helps us to concentrate - or meditate. Significance does not equate to linguistic meaning. What is maybe the oldest Sanskrit mantra, Om, cannot be translated.



If we slowly pronounce it A - U - M, lengthening the 'M', it induces a peaceful, insightful state of mind.

Theravada Buddhism doesn't use mantras much. However, some of the forest tradition masters recommend using the word Buddho to help in the beginning stages of concentration: thinking 'Buddh' while inhaling and 'dho' while exhaling.

And this is the key.

We aren't used to watch our breath and soon our mind runs away like a crazy monkey. Associating words with each in and out breath helps us to keep focused.

Ajaan Maha Boowa said that he spent several days repeating Buddho in every waking moment. And he didn't sleep much...

Aren't the Lord's Prayer and the Hail Mary mantras, especially when concatenated in a rosary? The four largest religions in the world, Christianity, Islam, Buddhism, and Hinduism, all use prayer beads.

If, like me, you have trouble concentrating, especially at the beginning of a meditation session, use a mantra. Only two conditions: it must be meaningful to your heart and it must have an even number of syllables (or just one - OM) so that you can sync it with your breath.

Some of the mantras that I use are


OM

BUDDHO

OM NAMO BUDDHAYA

OM MANI PADME HUM

OM NAMAH SHIVAYA

So, why not


MARY

or


YAHWEH

or


ALLAH


?

Wednesday, April 5, 2017

Samatha meditation and vipassana meditation

Two methods of Buddhist meditation

Phra Ajan Jerapunyo, Abbot of Watkungtaphao, meditating in Sirikit Dam, Thailand. Wikimedia Commons.

If you read about it, you'll find endless discussions among learned monks.
Essentially, the issue boils down to three attitudes:
 - You can attain enlightenment by samatha (serenity) meditation alone.
 - You can attain enlightenment by vipassana (insight) meditation alone.
 - You need both.

Let's see the problem with a little more detail.


Samatha meditation

This is what I tried to introduce in a previous post. You calm your mind's ripples by focusing on a single very well defined meditation subject, like breath, blue, water, or the Buddha - there are forty of them. When a sensory input or a thought arrives, you mindfully return to your meditation subject.

If you can still your mind enough, you are now practicing samadhi. Further along, sometimes you get a sign (nimitta) - colors, shapes, sounds, scents - which shows you are entering jhana (Pali for the Sanscrit dhyana). Some say you can enter jhana without the nimitta appearing first. There are four jhana states, or levels, which can be followed by four formless attainments, in a progression from grosser to more refined forms of consciousness.


Simple suttas blog. Pt. 2 Is Jhana Really Necessary (hint: yes)

The Buddha said that His enlightenment occurred after attaining all four jhanas and then the four formless states. At His death bed, He walked through the four jhanas in direct, then reverse, then direct order again, and He died in what is called His Parinibbana (state beyond nirvana, or nirvana in death).

Many modern meditation masters, such as the Pa Auk Sayadaw or Ajahn Brahm, consider that jhana is the way to nibbana (nirvana).

Don't overthink this. Keep on with mindfulness of breathing, for all your life if need be.

Vipassana meditation

Vipassana is more analytical. You are trying to get insight into the nature of all phenomena as impermanent, suffering, and selfless (anicca, dukkha, anatta).


Anicca-dukkha-anatta, by Michael Bond.

https://fineartamerica.com/featured/anicca-dukkha-anatta-michael-bond.html

So, when a sensory input or a thought arrives at your mind, you watch it with detachment and see it arise, stay for a while and go away. I mentioned this earlier relating to the pain that - always! - happens after some time of sitting meditation.

Vipassana meditation is spread worldwide today, thanks to the work of a lay master, S. N. Goenka, a pupil of another layman, Sayagyi U Ba Khin (once accountant general of Burma), who learned vipassana meditation with Webu Sayadaw, a monk who was regarded as enlightened. All three were Burmese so, in a way, the modern Vipassana Movement was born in Burma.



So, what should I do?

A polemic took place between the Burmese Mahasi Sayadaw and the Sri Lankan monk Soma Thera, in the late 1950s. The Sayadaw defended that nibbana is attainable by 'dry insight' - vipassana alone - and the other monk defended the necessity of samadhi. There is an account of this polemic in Satipatthana Vipassana: Criticisms and Replies. Dry.


Mahasi Sayadaw. http://www.mahasiusa.org/sayadaw.html

If you google "vipassana meditation" you get 733,000 hits, while "jhana meditation" gets you 129,000. On the other hand, if you search "vipassana" and "jhana" in accesstoinsight.org you get 155 and 368 hits, respectively. This shows that, while vipassana, maybe because it seems easier, has a much wider global following, the Dhamma texts, on the other hand, have much more samatha references.

My experience tells me that you cannot have the necessary concentration to observe the transient nature of all phenomena without previous samatha practice. If you take a vipassana 10-days course from the Goenka 'school', you'll find that the first two days are dedicated to samatha meditation. You should, by the way.

"Serenity and insight are the two great wings of Buddhist meditation. They each have a special role to play in the path to Awakening. While some modern approaches seek to marginalize serenity in favor of ‘dry’ insight, the Buddha’s own discourses place serenity right at the center of the path" in A Swift Pair of Messengers by Bhante Sujato (the messengers are samatha and vipassana.)

Anyway...

Don't overthink this. Keep on with mindfulness of breathing.

Friday, March 31, 2017

Savasana - the corpse

The hardest yoga pose

The corpse posture, savasana, is said to be the hardest yoga pose to fully accomplish.



But, well, anything is hard to fully accomplish!

Savasana should always be at the beginning and at the end of your physical (hatha) yoga sessions.

Undress and lie down on your back, with your arms beside you and your legs slightly apart - somewhere between 2 inches (5cm) and one foot (30cm) between your heels.

Take a few deep and slow breaths.

Your hands may rest on the floor palm up or palm down, whatever feels more comfortable and, most of all, effortless. Remember you are a corpse.

You also have to find the best position for your head by trial and error, sliding the back on the floor, so that it is closer or further away from the shoulders - but always looking up.

Now, close your eyes and feel.

Feel the touch of the floor on your body, feel gravity's pull down.

And... Relax.

This is easier said than done. As with everything, there are methods.

Begin feeling your right foot. Is it relaxed? Does it tilt naturally to the right side or are you unconsciously trying to keep it up? Let it go. Are there any points of stress on your right foot? Relax them. Are you curling up your big toe? Let it go.

Slowly move your attention - your mindfulness - up your right leg, until you reach the hip. Identify and relax all points of stress. When your right leg is totally relaxed, move to the left foot, leg and hip, slowly, the same way as before.

You get the idea.

Proceed slowly through the buttocks, the pelvis, the abdomen, the thorax, right hand, arm, and shoulder, left hand, arm, and shoulder, and the neck. The trickiest part is probably the head, especially the face. Depending on your head's pitch your jaw may fall a bit when you relax it. If you're very good at this, after relaxing the neck muscles, the jaw, and the tongue, you may even begin to snore! Stay awake.

After letting go all the stress in the facial muscles, take a fast tour of the whole body. It should feel completely relaxed. Corpse-like...

The Buddha advised to contemplate death (maranasati) with each in and out breath - and this is an easy and refreshing way to begin doing it.

Savasana is a good practice before formal sitting meditation because it allows for a smooth transition between the struggle of daily life and the peacefulness of meditation.


For the same reason, you should do it before your hatha yoga practice. Try this:
  1. When you feel fully relaxed, spread your arms to the sides while inhaling; take three full breaths, then
  2. Bring your hands to the chest in 'anjali' while exhaling; take three full breaths, then
  3. Project your arms up while exhaling; take three full breaths, then
  4. Stretch your arms back while inhaling; take three full breaths, then
  5. Do the previous steps in reverse order until you are back in savasana.
Respiration might seem too complicated but in fact is simple: the general 'rule' is to inhale with expansive, outward, or upward movements and to exhale with contractile, inward, or downward, movements. In time, you'll find your own respiratory rhythm to accompany your asana practice.

Just remember two things: slow down and sustain. It is much better to sustain a pose for three breaths than to repeat it three times. This is not calisthenics. Eventually your 'yoga rhythm' will extend to your life.

Monday, March 27, 2017

Free books on Buddhism and Yoga

The gift of Dhamma excels all other gifts (Dhammapada 354)


Painting of the Buddha's first discourse, turning the Dharmacakra.
Sanskrit Astasahasrika Prajnaparamita Sutra manuscript. Nalanda, Bihar, India. Circa 700-1100 CE.
Wikimedia Commons

One (...) should not go about as a trader in the Dhamma (Udana 6.2)


In our society we are used to paying for stuff. There is also a culture that if something is free it must be worthless.

The survival of Buddhism, on the other hand, has always been based on dana - donations.

We can call it donationware...

When I first became a Buddhist, in the 1970's, there was not much information available, except on books, few and expensive. With the Internet we began having access to free ebooks, mainly Theravada, the oldest branch of Buddhism, prevalent today in Sri Lanka, Burma (Myanmar), Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia.

In the Theravada tradition books are free, temple stays and retreats are free, and no one will ask you for payment. You should freely give, though. It's dana and a great feeling of helping to support those nice bald men in orange robes.

Other traditions don't take the above Udana and Dhammapada quotations to the letter, so it's harder to find free Vajrayana or Zen books, for example.

You know you can find anything online if you put yourself to it. Just remember that illegal downloads are a violation of the second moral precept - not taking anything which was not given to you. More on that later.

Even more than Buddhism, Yoga is big business in the West, so it's also difficult to find free resources online.

Here goes a limited list of trustworthy sites I visit, in alphabetical order. Feel free to add more in your comments.


Buddhism




Yoga