Common Sense. March 6, 2006

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Transcription:

Common Sense March 6, 2006 When the Buddha described the essence of his awakening, he boiled it down to a very simple principle, a principle of causality. That ss not usually what we want to hear. We want to hear about all the great cosmic visions he had. And he did have some cosmic visions leading up to his awakening. In the second watch of the night, he saw beings dying and being reborn all over the cosmos in line with their karma, in line with their actions. But that wasn st his awakening. His awakening was when he extracted a causal principle out of that: that what you do bears results. And so that became his laboratory: his actions. He watched what he was doing in his mind, and he saw which mind-states gave rise to sufering and which ones put an end to sufering. That ss how he arrived at the four noble truths. That ss how he arrived at true awakening: simply noticing that thoughts and feelings have an efect on the mind, and that some thoughts and some feelings have a better efect than others. That ss the whole principle of the path. oou try to develop thoughts and feelings that lead to an end of sufering. And as for the ones that lead to more sufering, you learn to let them go. It ss all very basic commonsensical, but most of us don st like to think in terms of common sense when it comes to the mind. We want something more magical. But magic doesn st work. What works is the common-sense approach that looks at things as they happen in the mind and notices the diference between skillful actions and unskillful ones and teaching yourself to choose the skillful ones. Now, some of the principles as to what ss skillful and not can be taught. For instance, you sve got the precepts. If you kill, it ss going to be unskillful. If you steal, if you have illicit sex, if you lie, if you take intoxicants, it ss going to be unskillful, it ss going to have a bad efect on the mind. These principles are true across the board. But there ss a lot more going on in the mind than just those actions. And to see the principle of cause and efect in the mind as it applies to those more subtle things, you have to be very observant, develop the qualities that allow you to be observant. First, you practice restraint of the senses. What this means is you sre very careful about what you look at, what you listen to, what you smell, taste, touch, and think because certain ways of looking, certain ways of listening can really wreak havoc in the mind. They can spark all kinds of greed, anger, and delusion. Sometimes the mind gets set on fre by just a single glance, or by listening to a single sound. It ss not the sights or the sounds or the smells that are the problem, though: The problem is the way you look at them, the way you listen.

So you sve got to be very observant. If you notice that, by looking at something in a certain way, you sre giving rise to greed, you sve got to learn either not to look at it or look at it in a diferent way. Because otherwise you set the mind on fre. So this requires that you be observant and that you be truthful with yourself. The Buddha said that above all else these were the two main virtues he was looking for in a student. He says, Bring me someone who ss observant, who ss truthful and no deceiver, and I sll teach that person the Dhamma. In other words, you don st deceive others about what you sre doing and you don st deceive yourself. If you want to see the truth, if you want to know the truth, you have to be true, you have to be honest with yourself. And a lot of the truths you sre looking at in the mind are very subtle which means that your honesty has to be very subtle and thorough, too, so that you can see the principle of cause and efect in your mind, detecting which truths are useful and which ones are not, which things that seem to be skillful really are skillful and which ones are not. When you sre dealing within the mind, nobody else can come in and rearrange the furniture and point out to you, Well, this has to be this way and that has to be that. oou can get instructions from the outside, there are hints and directions, but as for what you sre actually going to see and how sensitive you become and how skillful you become, that ss up to you. It ss up to your own honesty, your own truthfulness, so that you can actually observe cause and efect as they happen in the mind. It may sound like a tedious process, but think of all the sufering that you go through in life if you don st train the mind in this way: That ss a lot more tedious, a lot more burdensome. So try to focus on the present moment and see if you can tell what ss going on in the mind, what you sre doing and what efect it ss having on things. This is why concentration is such a central part of the path. It ss something you intentionally do. oou intend to stay with the breath and then you intend to stick with that intention. oou keep reinforcing that one intention: oou sre going to stay right here with the breath, you sre going to let the breath be comfortable. And then you learn to do whatever is needed to get the mind to stay with the breath consistently with a sense of ease, a sense of wellbeing. Then, once you sve set up a good intention like that in the mind, you begin to see the efect that it has. At the same time, you sre putting the mind in a good position where it can start seeing other things, within and without, more and more clearly. In this way, you can detect the ways in which the mind is sometimes dishonest with itself the way it covers things up, sloughs over things that it doesn st want to look at, doesn st want to admit. I you can develop a solid enough sense of well-being in the mind, then you sll be more willing to look at the things that in the past you covered up, that you pretended didn st exist. Because so much of the mind is flled with make-believe and so much of that makebelieve causes sufering. And then we pretend that the sufering isn st there, which just

compounds the problem. So learn to look at everything in the mind in terms of cause and efect and particularly in terms of which causes lead to sufering and which ones don st, which things you can choose to do that are skillful and which ones that would be unskillful. Remember that everything that happens in the mind is part of a causal chain. When you feel pain, it ss a result not only of physical events but also of the way the mind focuses on the pain. oou can increase or decrease the amount of sufering by the way you focus on the pain. The same with pleasure. Ceertain forms of pleasure, if you really focus on them, are helpful in making the mind clear and still. A sense of ease and well-being that comes with the breath: That ss a helpful kind of pleasure. Be careful simply that you don st wallow in the pleasure and lose track of the breath. It ss like building a scafolding up to build a building, but instead of working on the building, you see a cloud come past, it looks nice and sof, so you jump on the cloud and you go right through. In other words, the pleasure comes from the concentration, but as soon as you notice the pleasure, you drop the breath and go jumping into the pleasure. And it wears out, it dissipates, because the cause isn st there anymore. oou have to learn how to work on the cause, knowing that the pleasure ss there but not getting carried away by it. Stick with the cause to keep that pleasure coming. It ss a basic skill you want to develop in the mind. Learn how to approach the pleasure in such a way that you can keep it going. Not simply because you want to. The wanting in and of itself directs you in the right direction, but if that ss your only approach then you never get what you want because you sve never noticed where the cause is, and where ss the efect. oou sve got to watch these things carefully in the mind. oou can st just deal with abstractions. oou can st just deal with pretty cosmic thoughts and ideas. oou sve got to look specifcally at what ss happening in the mind with all your honesty, with all your truthfulness. Afer all, what guaranteed the validity of what the Buddha found was that he was a very honest person. If even there were the slightest sufering in his mind he would admit it: There was still something wrong, still something lacking. So many people get a nice, easy sense of calm in the mind and then they say, Well, this good enough, this might be it. And they turn a blind eye to whatever stress or sufering is still there in the mind. In that way, the meditation doesn st lead them to any truths at all because they re not truthful, they sre not honest. This quality of honesty is the most important thing in the practice. When the Buddha was training his seven-year-old son, Rahula, that ss what he started out with: being honest. Once he sd established honesty, truthfulness, as the most important principle in the practice, then he taught Rahula other things: how to observe his own mind, how to observe his own actions in

terms of cause and efect. And how to learn from his mistakes. This is important. oany times when a mistake happens, we don st like to admit it. We cover it up and that way, we lose an opportunity to learn. So don st think of this as instructions just for little kids. The Buddha starts out here because it ss important, because it ss crucial. Everything else depends on this one principle: that you learn how to observe your mind and you learn how to be truthful about it. See what you sre doing that ss causing harm for yourself and harm for others, and learn to stop. See what you could be doing that ss going to be more helpful and benefcial to yourself and to others, and learn how to do that no matter how hard it may be. Start with this principle of truthfulness. This is what gives you the foundation you sre going to need. Everything else builds on that. Don st skip over this, saying, I want to go up to the tenth foor, I want to go up to the twentieth foor, where the view is good. oou sve got to work on the foundation. If the foundation is solid, then it doesn st matter how many stories you build on top of it: It ss going to be solid all the way up. But if the foundation is weak, you can build one or two stories and the whole thing comes tumbling down without even the slightest earthquake. Some outside stimulus comes and hufs and pufs and blows the house down. So make sure your foundation is solid: that you sre really truthful about your actions and you really look at the mind to see what ss happening in terms of cause and efect. That way you take advantage of the central insight of the Buddha ss awakening: Some causes give their efects immediately: other causes give their efects over time. That ss the essence of his awakening. That ss the message he wanted to get across. He once went into a forest of what they call simsapa trees. The trees had little tiny leaves about the size of dimes. He picked up a handful and asked the monks, Which is greater: the leaves in my hand or the rest of the leaves in the forest? And the monks said, Well, of course, the rest of the leaves in the forest are far more. The Buddha then said that, in the same way, the things he had learned in the course of his awakening were like the leaves in the forest. As for what he taught, that was like the leaves in his hand. That wasn st because he was stingy or uncommunicative. It was just that the leaves in his hand were the instructions that can help put an end to sufering. Those were the truths that were useful to teach. And that central truth is just this: the principle of causality, causes and efects in your mind, particularly the efects that come from intention. So look very carefully at your intentions, be very truthful about them because this is one area where we tend to deceive ourselves. When we were little kids, we sd make mistakes and then our parents would come to punish us and we sd try to lie, to pretend it didn st happen. It was already broken when I lay down on it. I didn st mean to hit her. Afer a while, we get so used to lying to our parents that we start lying

to ourselves. This is where our main ignorance is. We lie about our intentions to ourselves and we lie about the results of our actions. As a result, we never get to learn anything useful. So. Basic principle: Be truthful about what you plan to do, be truthful about the actual results of your actions. Learn to connect the two to see what you can learn. And if you sre really observant, what you learn can take you all the way to the end of sufering. It ss a very commonsensical principle. And the challenge in our practice is just to see how far common sense can take us. As long as we sre true, we sll get to meet the truth. If we aren st, we won st. It ss as simple as that.