A personal blog by a graying (mostly Anglo with light African-American roots) gay left leaning liberal progressive married college-educated Buddhist Baha'i BBC/NPR-listening Professor Emeritus now following the Dharma in Minas Gerais, Brasil.
RIGHT VIEW Understanding the Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering
What is the cessation of
suffering? It is the remainderless fading away and ceasing, the giving
up, relinquishing, letting go, and rejecting of craving. (MN 9)
When one knows and sees thoughts as they actually are, then one is not
attached to thoughts. When one abides unattached, one is not infatuated,
and one’s craving is abandoned. One’s bodily and mental troubles are
abandoned, and one experiences bodily and mental well-being. (MN 149)
Reflection
Since suffering
is caused by craving, the cessation of craving brings about the end of
suffering. We have seen how this works for each of the sense modalities,
and now we turn to the mind as the sixth pathway of experience. We are
attached to certain thoughts—usually the ones that feel good—and we
struggle against others, which results in a lot of mental troubles. We
gain well-being by letting go of both forms of craving.
Daily Practice
Right view can
be a practice in itself, a practice of gaining insight into the nature
of our experience. Seeing thoughts as they actually are, as arising and
passing conditioned events, helps us get free of attachment to them.
Thoughts are not wrong, but we suffer in direct proportion to our
infatuation with them. Craving can be relinquished, if only for a
moment. Abandon bodily and mental troubles and get free—if only for a
moment.
Tomorrow: Cultivating Appreciative Joy One week from today: Understanding the Noble Truth of the Way to the Cessation of Suffering
Share your thoughts and join the conversation on social media #DhammaWheel
Instead
of death being perceived as gloomy and gruesome and scary, I believe we
can talk more about the beauty of death and its connection with life.
There can be a space for that.
Amanda Stronza, “Restoring Dignity to Our Animal Kin”
What’s in a Painting?: The Fierce Protector By Jeff Watt
Explore
the iconography of tantric Buddhism’s Mahakala, a class of deities
whose wrathful appearance refers not to aggression or anger but to
intensity.
RIGHT MINDFULNESS Establishing Mindfulness of Feeling
A person goes to the forest
or to the root of a tree or to an empty place and sits down. Having
crossed the legs, one sets the body erect. One establishes the presence
of mindfulness. (MN 10) One is aware: “Ardent, fully aware, mindful, I
am content.” (SN 47.10)
When feeling a neither-pleasant-nor-painful feeling in the body,
one is aware: “Feeling a bodily neither-pleasant-nor-painful feeling …
one is just aware, just mindful: 'There is feeling.'” And one abides not
clinging to anything in the world. (MN 10)
Reflection
Of the three kinds of feeling tone—pleasant, painful, and neither-pleasant-nor-painful—it
is this third, neutral feeling that is the most challenging to the
practice of mindfulness. Feeling tones arise in a steady stream, just
like the stream of consciousness; the practice is to pay close enough
attention to the textured sensation of each moment. The object is one
thing (sight, sound, etc.), and the feeling tone that arises with it is
another.
Daily Practice
Sit quietly for
some stretch of time and attend carefully to all the neutral sensations
in the body. You might even scan systematically from head to foot
looking for all the feeling tones that are occurring. Some are obviously
pleasant, some are clearly painful. What about the rest? These are the
neutral sensations—you feel them, but they do not feel good or bad. They
are just there. Feel what it's like to feel what is just there.
RIGHT CONCENTRATION Approaching and Abiding in the Second Phase of Absorption (2nd Jhāna)
With the stilling of applied and
sustained thought, one enters upon and abides in the second phase of
absorption, which has inner clarity and singleness of mind, without
applied thought and sustained thought, with joy and the pleasure born of
concentration. (MN 4)
Reflection
The mind is
capable, through training, of becoming more concentrated than is usual
in ordinary daily experience. The Buddha describes this as a natural
process, unfolding as the body and mind become gradually happier and
more tranquil while the mind is focusing upon a single object. In the
second phase of this process, discursive thinking gradually fades away
as the feeling of pleasure and well-being grows stronger and deepens.
Daily Practice
As you sit
quietly and focus on your breathing, the thoughts and memories and plans
that so habitually inhabit the mind begin to settle, and the mind
becomes calmer. At a certain point thoughts may cease altogether.
Awareness of sensory experience remains strong, but it is no longer
mediated by words, images, or concepts. The need to re-engage the mind
with an object and hold it there is no longer needed, so these functions
drop away.
Tomorrow: Understanding the Noble Truth of the Cessation of Suffering One week from today: Establishing Mindfulness of Mind and Abiding in the Third Jhāna
Share your thoughts and join the conversation on social media #DhammaWheel
The
aim of meditation isn’t to eliminate thought, it’s to free ourselves
from suffering. As Ajahn Chah points out, our aim is “to get peaceful…
The practice … is for developing wisdom and understanding.”
Walking with the Buddha:
A Pilgrimage to India & Nepal With Tricycle & Vishvapani Blomfield February 8–21, 2025
Follow
in the footsteps of the Buddha as we explore the lands that he walked
in his time, from Lumbini to Kushinagar and each important pilgrimage
site in between, on this carbon-negative journey.