Friday 12 May 2017

The 3 characteristics of Life - Anicca, Dukkha, Anatta


Even if we forget it when we are immersed in a moment of pleasure, each one of us is aware that existence is filled with sufferings, hassles, dissatisfactions of all kinds and that it never stops. This characteristic ( dukkha ) which is obvious, is described in all schools of thought, in all religious systems.

The concept of impermanence ( anicca ) is less clear. It is nevertheless often described in religious and philosophical systems.

As for the characteristic of absence of in-itself ( anatta ), it is a totally new notion of which only Buddha speaks. This is by far the most subtle and essential point of all knowledge. It is the basis of any understanding of dhamma .

Everything that exists in the universe is subject to three characteristics:

1. Anicca - The Aspect of Non-Permanence

Everything is limited to a certain duration and, consequently, to disappear.


Anicca is a pali word consisting of two words: "  nicca  " and the private particle "  a  ". "  Nicca  " is the idea of ​​permanence, continuity. Anicca means the absence of continuity, the absence of permanence. Anicca is a universal law that applies to all the phenomena of the universe, to all our sensitive experiences.


Everything that happens in the world, in our perceptions, is subject to disappear, as soon as it appears. What marks the aspect of non-permanence, the aspect of change, is precisely that the phenomena appear. It is at the moment when a phenomenon occurs that one is particularly informed of its aspect of non-permanence because before it appears it was not there, and then it is there, it has just appeared. So there has been a change, especially when a phenomenon appears. Then, this phenomenon will last for some time, and it will disappear ineluctably. If it has appeared, it is obligatory that it eventually disappear. This is valid for everything, there is no exception.

Anicca is a characteristic common to all phenomena, all the realities that are within our sensory experiences, conscious.

Thus, our consciousness is in perpetual mutation and all our experiences, even if we are dealing with experiences of meditation, experiences of transcendence or mystical experiences, are experiments in mutation. If we were able to reach through transcendental states of unification, such as we are described in spiritual literature, we could imagine having touched an eternal substance. An immutable substance that is not subject to this law of non-permanence. It is precisely because one has attained this experience that the fact of having attained it clearly shows that it is subject to change. Why ? Because before, this experiment was not reached. So there is something that has just begun, which is a fusional state of consciousness, Resulting from training in various spiritual exercises or meditations. So it is not yet the refuge we seek, stability, eternity. In fact, this refuge does not exist.


There are essentially two categories of training that we can follow. There are exercises that fall under the category of what we call samatha and practices that fall under the category of what we call vipassanā .


Vipassanā is a pali term that means direct vision, superior vision. Superior vision in the sense that it is superior to others, because it is direct, it is a direct view of reality.

What is reality? Reality is a fact that is inescapable, universally verified and applies to all phenomena. This fact is triple:

All the phenomena that have appeared will disappear.

All phenomena are taxable and subject to the law of impermanence and change, anicca .

All the phenomena that have appeared last a certain time. They last a while, but they do not last long. They always last too long when they are unsatisfactory and never long enough when they are pleasant.



They thus convey a property of dissatisfaction. Their presence is already source of dissatisfaction, it is called dukkha . Then, these phenomena cease, disappear independently of our will, our control. They disappear when it is necessary that they disappear. When the causes end up being absent, the phenomena disappear. This uncontrollable character of phenomena, it is called anatta . It is the absence of characteristics in itself, the absence of control, the absence of directive.


2. Dukkha - Suffering 

Everything is unsatisfactory. There is nothing to be trusted, there is nothing that can bring happiness.



Dukkha means pain, pain, suffering. It is a dominant feature in the world we live in. According to Buddha, the only fact of life is marked by the characteristic of dukkha , which is the punishment that manifests itself in all its forms. It may be the trouble that one experiences in sadness, in misery or in the difficulties of life. It can also be the pain that one can feel when one is saturated with pleasure, so much so that the object of pleasure becomes itself disgusting and repulsive. It is the pain of being separated from those we love, but it is also that of having to endure the presence of beings whom we do not love.

In one way or another, whether we like it or not, many of the situations we find ourselves in are painful. The teaching of Buddha has sometimes been accused of being pessimistic because of this assertion and it is sometimes said that the world is not that painful because there is hope. There is the hope of a better world, the hope of winning a paradise, of creating a happier world, of building a more human, more balanced environment. When people say that the world is not so unhappy because there is hope, Buddha in his teaching tends to tell us that it is precisely because there is hope that This shows that the world is much more unhappy than we think.


Hope for a Better Future

Thus, many humans live in the hope of a better future; Which is already a way of recognizing that the present is not that pleasant. Unfortunately, we can see that the world is full of difficulties. For some humans, it is even unbearable suffering, some must undergo very serious, very painful illnesses. Some humans have to suffer the oppression of crazy governments, some have to suffer accidents, disasters, and others, who do not face such raw suffering but have experienced in their lives all sorts of daily sorrows, Such as the difficulty of losing a loved one, the difficulty of having been sick, or, in other words.

This is why many humans - almost all of them - have, over the centuries, imagined an eternal, wonderful paradise where all beings live a perfect happiness. For some, this paradise is democracy; When one lives in a country oppressed by a totalitarian regime. For others it is wealth and prosperity; When one lives in a very poor country, where one has to work a lot to earn little. For some, it is the artificial paradise of drugs; When one lives in personal discomforts or in existential problems. For some, it is an idyllic paradise that is presented to the people whose work is exploited; When one makes oneself part of a religious clergy. Moreover, no religion - including Buddhism - seems to have escaped this rule.


Thus, we tend to imagine, to project in the future, in space too, a better world. What is good about this scheme is that it starts from the fact that the world we live in today is painful - it is already a good thing. The disadvantage of this approach is that it often makes humans unable to build a decent life for the present. Also, humans tend to turn away from a daily reality - which they must assume - to the benefit of an imaginary future they manufacture.



The Cessation of Suffering


Discontinuation rather than acquisition
According to him, the most important point is not the acquisition of happiness. The most important point is to arrive at the end, the cessation, the extinction, the disappearance of the punishment. Besides, when he tells us what the world is made of according to him, he says that it is made of dukkha , which is sorrow, pain. He tells us that there is of course a cause for this trouble, and that because there is pain and sorrow in the world, there must be the possibility of the end of the punishment. In the same way that it is because there exists the disease that there is healing. For if there were no disease there would of course be no cure.

He therefore does not present us with happiness, eternal life, the fact of living to live in divine worlds as the alternative, the solution, the answer to the question of suffering. He tells us that it is the end of suffering that is the alternative. In the same way that the alternative to light is obscurity; It is nothing else. For Buddha, the alternative to suffering is the cessation of suffering, and not anything else.

For example, we know that the opposite of hot is not cold. What we call "cold" is actually "less hot". It is a way of speaking, a convention, when one opposes the "cold" to the "hot". It is like "big" and "small". In fact, "small" is not the opposite of "big", it is simply "less great", it is also a way of speaking. When one says of a building: "This building is big", what is the opposite of a tall building? Is it a small building? Of course not because a "small" building simply means a "lesser" building. A building that we will believe small will remain great for an insect.

The opposite, the presence of a building, whether big or small, is the absence of building. The alternative to heat is lack of heat, lack of temperature (this is something humans never experience, because on earth, the coldest things still have a temperature).

The Solution
The alternative, the solution, to the question of punishment is its absence. It's that simple ! This is why in the teaching of Buddha the original teaching, as it can be found in the writings of the Theravada , does not speak to us so much of happiness, but speaks much more to us about the cessation of pain -  nirodha . To achieve the cessation of suffering, according to him, there is not much we can do. Because we can not take away the suffering. Suffering is not something you can catch, isolate, separate and remove. It's not like dirt in the laundry. When you take linen that is dirty, it is washed, the dirt is removed, and you have clean linen. With suffering, it does not work quite as well.

According to Buddha, to get to the end of suffering, it is enough simply to stop creating it, to stop producing it. Since it can not be removed, it should be avoided. To stop making suffering, it is enough simply to stop what causes it. Exactly as for a fire, we can not take it and take it away. If we want to extinguish a fire, we must stop the cause of the fire; We must stop what is responsible for the presence of fire. What is responsible for the presence of fire is that there is a fuel that is heated. It burns and gives fire. Therefore, when we want to extinguish a fire, we can not remove the flame. When water is thrown over a wood fire, water is not an element that will erase the fire - it has of course been studied scientifically. Simply put, the water will cool the wood that is on fire. Because the wood will be cooled, it will no longer produce gas, flammable gasolines. It will become cold again and for this reason the flame will disappear.

In the same way, when we want to treat cancer, removing cancer cells is not enough to cure cancer, because new cancer cells will come. A remedy must be found to prevent the appearance of these cells. If not, we will not be able to cure the disease.


The Path to Follow

The foundation of the path of liberation
Buddha gave us very clear explanations, technically easy enough to put in place to stop producing the causes of our miseries, our difficulties, our sorrows. To start already by ourselves. Everyone can start the work for himself. The more healthy people, the "healed" people, the balanced people, that is, the people Buddha called "noble beings", the better human society will be. This certainly should not prevent goodwill from finding economic, humanitarian, scientific or medical solutions to relieve the world of its suffering. As we can see, this is not enough.

To go further and arrive at a world with less pain, less suffering, we must first work on ourselves.

The work we can provide requires a minimum of control, personal discipline, vigilance, especially when we live in a world where we are surrounded by an environment that is not conducive to health and well-being . As soon as we make a move to get better, we are going to end up with many contradictions. Many people around us believe that what they do is good, that what they do is good, and do things hoping that this will bring them happiness. These are things, which very often break them down and contribute to an extra-civilized state of society.

On the other hand, as we follow the Buddha path, we realized that it was not necessary to do things to run after happiness but rather to stop doing things that invariably bring people To misfortune. That is why Buddha proposes in his medicine rather to stop doing harmful things, which are unhealthy and generating pain, to begin by stopping to do what is wrong. This requires some vigilance and some self-control.


3. Anatta - Theoretical Point of View

Everything is devoid of in-itself. There is no proper entity, nothing can be controlled.

This is the most subtle, the most difficult, and at the same time the most perfect doctrine which has never been exposed in the history of mankind. Its peculiarity is that it can be discovered, taught, revealed and reported only by an omniscient Buddha, a "  tathāgata  ", that is, a perfect being.

This is what happened twenty-five centuries ago when, renouncing the world, the pleasures of the senses, all ambition and all projects, Prince Siddhatta has absorbed himself in various Practices and spiritual exercises. Always dissatisfied with what they are leading to, he has come to an experience, a complete realization, at the end of which he was able to teach this new doctrine, unknown before him, and which is taught nowhere else but by his Pupils who succeeded him.

It is important to understand that the doctrine of anatta , as taught and expounded in what is called the theravāda , is totally unknown in any other system of thought or any other system of exegesis, Including in modern Buddhism called speculative, that is, Buddhism "  mahayāna  ".

Originally, the monk Gotama, the awakened one, the one called Buddha, discovered this principle. He discovered a radically new thing in the development of all the spiritual traditions of mankind. He will expose this discovery under the name of anatta.

It is important that, each one at his level, manages to have at least a basic and accessible understanding of what anatta is.



Only those who have achieved full realization have reached arahant , that is to say, complete enlightenment, which have an extremely vast capacity for reflection and investigation, complete and subtle In this doctrine. Those who have not arrived at this stage can only have a partial, truncated understanding, their capacity for investigation is more limited. As for those who have never seen nibbāna in their lives, they will not be able to have a correct and effective understanding of this doctrine. Nevertheless, someone very versed in the writings, of very scholarly, whose intellectual capacity is sufficiently developed, will nevertheless arrive at a good enough idea of ​​the thing, or rather not bad.

Anatta is a Pali word, not a Sanskrit word, which has absolutely nothing to do with its Sanskrit equivalent "anatman". If Buddha refused to use the Sanskrit language, if he chose to use his native dialect, which is the dialect "magadha", it is because there is a reason.

Buddha is someone who claims to have acquired omniscience. That is, the ability to know everything about everything. It is precisely this omniscience (allegedly, to the limit that we know if it is true) that he made choices, both as regards what he wanted to avoid and for what 'He wanted to cultivate.

The Pali Dialect


One of the five conditions for a "  tathāgata  " (a Buddha) to appear in the world is that it appears in this particular region of present-day India, called the "  majjhimadesa  " which means the middle region, the region Because it is geographically situated at a medium distance between coasts, mountains and forests. It is a bit the heart of the Indian peninsula. Also, it is in this region that the magadha dialect is used. Later, by the fact that the word of Buddha was written on paper, that it became canonized, the term "  pāḷi  " is used which can be translated as "canon". To refer to this dialect, we then replaced the word "magadha" with the word "  pāḷi  ".

In pāḷi , the literal meaning of the word anatta is divided as follows: "  a  " which is the private particle, which is found in French equivalent and "  atta  " which is the reflexive particle, translated into English by "self "And which does not really have an equivalent in a single French word. It is generally said "in itself". That is, the forms such as "m ', t', s'" which we use in French will be precisely expressed in pāḷi by the term "  atta  ".

Buddha did not use technical terms. He refused to use the Sanskrit words that refer to spiritual techniques and religious or mystical beliefs. He used words of everyday language, precisely used by the magadha people for the things of everyday life. There is not in the pāḷi a vocabulary proper to teaching, to ideas, to philosophical or religious conceptions. As soon as we wanted to teach these things, we used Sanskrit. Namely that Sanskrit and pāḷi are very close to each other but are not identical.

Translation of the word Anatta

anatta is the conjunction of two particles: the privative particle and particle designating the idea of reflexivity, reciprocity. If one wanted to find a French term to synthesize anatta , one could say: "absence of a self", "absence of what is in itself", "absence of a proper nature".

Very often, the word anatta is translated in the literature by the "non-ego" or the "non soi". This translation is quite improper. Even if, by extension and deduction, the idea of anatta suggests the absence of ego, self, soul, the word anatta in itself (this is the case of saying it) does not mean Absence of ego "," absence of self "or" absence of soul ". There are other terms to describe this in pāḷi . In English, one is obliged to use a word like "not self" or "none self" because the English have in their vocabulary a word designating the reflexive particle which is "self". For example, "myself" means "myself", "himself" means "himself". We thus find exactly as in pāḷi the addition of the particle "self" to designate "self". That is why the English have legitimately translated the word anatta by "not self" or "none self".
The problem is that when we started translating into French, we basically translated from English sources. So of course, the French intellectuals, who for the most part did not understand much about the teaching of the awakened, translated "not self" by "non soi". This is a mistake that unfortunately led to a misunderstanding in the minds of the majority of French-speaking readers.
This being said, in Sanskrit, the word "anatman" can effectively convey the idea of ​​"absence of self", "absence of soul", "absence of ego". But this is a Sanskrit word and not a Pali word. It is precisely on the basis of this Sanskrit word that the translators have given themselves the exaggerated freedom to translate the word anatta by the word "non soi", "non-ego" or "non soul".

The Absence of "in itself"

Anatta , is the absence of "in-itself", applicable to all things, ideas, characteristics and all material or mental phenomena. From this point of view, we can of course give details and explanations in order to understand that in this or that case, in this or that field, it is in this way that the doctrine of anatta expresses itself or Makes it feel. The typical description that you may have already heard is say, for example: Let's take a cart. This cart is subject to the law of anatta . We can not say that there really is a cart. Indeed, if one removes it piece by piece and is spread on the ground, one can no longer say that there is a cart. Yet all the parts are present.

It is a rather superficial and easy way of trying to make the idea of anatta understand , but it has the disadvantage of remaining encamped on this idea of ​​absence of substance, nucleus or soul. It is interesting to note that when Buddha himself was asked, and it is important to know what he described as an anatta , he did not take the example of the cart. He did not take the example. He is one of his pupils who, in order to make himself understood by some one, took this example. The example of a cow cut into pieces on the butcher's stall is also sometimes used.

When Buddha Explains Anatta

When Buddha exposes what he sees as this characteristic of absence of itself, he chooses a different way and, as we have suspected, remarkably effective. He said: "There is no body in this" atta ". Because if there was in this body " atta ", at that moment, " atta " would have the possibility of deciding or choosing whether this body is so or that it is not so. "

We find this demonstration in many sutta . Throughout his life, he very often uses this technique to make this presentation understand. 

Here's how it works ...

Someone is convinced that there is in this body a substance, a nucleus, an entity, or in any case that this body and this spirit are the emanation of an immutable, unconditioned and eternal principle.

Buddha said to him:

"Is this body immobile, immutable, or is it changing?" - He is subject to change (old age, sickness, decrepitude, etc.), noble Venerable. - What is subject to change, is it a source of pleasure or is it a source of dissatisfaction? - What is subject to change is a source of dissatisfaction, Lord. - How can the source of dissatisfaction be considered our property? "

One would have to be crazy to keep in his hands a burning coal, a source of pain. One would have to be crazy to keep this body, source of transformations and dissatisfactions. This is the particular point that Buddha addresses in his demonstration on anatta . This is the idea of ​​total absence of control. It is not just the idea that there is no owner or entity. It is also the idea of ​​lack of control. Anatta suggests the total absence of control.

For example, we would like to stop aging. We would like to keep a young body, dynamic, flexible and if possible beautiful and seductive. However, there is a natural aging process that is uncontrollable. There is no way to control this, not only because there is no one, there is no individual, there is no ego, but also because That it is impossible to control this. This is simply explained by the fact that there is no agent in the matter of the body that can control matter. There is no "self-control", there is no self-monitoring agent. Matter can not control itself. It is the same for the mind, it can not control matter and matter can not control the mind.



Sunday 7 May 2017

Overcome These Five Common Obstacles to Meditation


Introduction


Whatever our meditation -  samatha or vipassanā  - we may encounter various obstacles, which sometimes interfere with it and even paralyze it completely. These are the nīvaraṇa . Classified in five categories, none of these hindrances spares the beginner. They persist even among advanced meditators, but in a lessened form, however.

We only progress in meditation when we succeed in surpassing these nīvaraṇa. That is why it is important to learn how to recognize and avoid them. As long as the kilesa remain , even after escaping one or more of these obstacles, they can chain us again and at any moment. The better we know them, the less we will get trapped. It's like snakes. The better we know them, the less we get stung, even if the risk remains. And if these snakes, these obstacles, do not "sting" us more, it is not because they are more clement, but because we are attentive to the signs of attack and more skillful to dodge their "bites" .

Anything that can somehow constitute an impediment to meditation, enters one of these five  nīvaraṇa . By studying this group of five, we see that they are exclusively internal obstacles, that is, mental ones. But then, would external "attacks" such as noise or heat not be seen as obstacles? In reality, they are seen as obstacles only from the moment they are "allowed to enter". When there is noise or heat, we are hindered in our practice only if we pay attention and our spirit becomes irritated or hopes for a quieter, cooler state. 

Deep concentration allows you to completely ignore external attacks. However, It is much more difficult to manage with less concentration. In this case, before addressing the internal causes of the five impediments, care should be taken to find the conditions where the risks of external causes are as low as possible. We will therefore choose to meditate a place neither too warm nor too cold, relatively calm and quiet, without excess lighting, without difficulties to obtain its food, and far from all that arouses pleasures and attachments.

Once we have suitable conditions for our meditation, from the very first minute of practice, we will see how much the whole difficulty lies in the 5 hindrances ...


The Sensory Desire (kāmacchanda)


How to recognize kāmacchanda  ?

Whatever the sensation we may feel, if only for a brief moment, that it is only a small reflection, as soon as it is pleasant, kāmacchanda , the sensory desire, is there.

The opposite of kāmacchanda

When the sensory desire is totally absent, appears sukha , happiness .  The mind tastes the well-being provided by its ability to remain peacefully on its object.

The cause of kāmacchanda

Whether it is visions, sounds, touches, tastes, smells or thoughts, when it comes to pleasurable sensations, our mind sticks to it, delights in it and strongly attaches to it. Because of these sensations that can arise at any moment, appears the desire for these sensations, so that they last.

The antidote to kāmacchanda


  • Encourage the development of concentration in relation to that of energy, in particular by extending the seating time.
  • Be determined to remain focused only on his meditation object whatever happens.
  • Genuinely interested in the object of meditation.
  • Developing asubha In pali, asbha means "unpleasant" : contemplation on the unpleasant aspect of the body.
  • Balance the five indriya , that is, the five faculties of control.


The Discontent ( byāpāda )


How to recognize byāpāda  ?

At the slightest feeling of irritation, depreciation, rejection, anger or hatred, this is byāpāda .


Byāpāda can be engendered by the slightest thought of dissatisfaction and may concern distant things in the past.

The opposite of byāpāda

When discontent is totally absent, appears pīti , joy. This is the third of the five factors of 1 st jhāna . The mind is interested in its object.

The cause of byāpāda

When our mind evokes things conveying a sense of discord, such as disputes with other people, or refuses an uncomfortable situation, such as heat or harassing insects, byāpāda appears.

The antidote of byāpāda


  • Accept the idea that the only one responsible for our dissatisfaction is ourselves.
  • Think of all that Buddha had to endure for so many lives to be able to give us all cleared the precious path of the Dhamma.
  • Developing mettā bhāvanā  : meditation on benevolence.
  • Balance the five indriya , that is, the five faculties of control.


Laziness and Torpor (thina middha)


How to recognize thina middha  ?

When we are no longer able to remain properly on our meditation object, our concentration "slips" continuously, our energy and attention are blurred or extinct, it is thina middha .

The opposite of thina middha

When laziness and torpor are totally absent, appears vicāra , application sustained. It is the fourth of the five factors of 1 st jhāna . The spirit remains on its object.

The cause of thina middha

There is laziness or torpor as soon as the mind no longer has the main object of meditation, and energy decreases.

The antidote of thina middha


  • Promote energy development (eg, by reducing sitting time and walking more).
  • Stimulate the body physically: watch a moment light source, put cold water on the face, perform some stretches, meditate standing ...
  • Genuinely interested in the object of meditation.
  • Develop maraṇānussati  : careful consideration of the inevitability of death.
  • Balance the five indriya , that is, the five faculties of control.


Mental Agitation & Remorse (uddhacca kukkucca)


How to recognize uddhacca kukkucca  ?

When the mind is not quiet, it feels disturbed or disturbed - if only by a small detail - there is mental agitation. When the mind recites acts which it regrets, there is remorse. In both cases, it is unable to remain fixed on a single object.

We cling to these uncomfortable thoughts, feeling that we can not continue our meditation until the problem causing mental agitation or remorse is resolved.

The opposite of uddhacca kukkucca

When mental agitation and remorse are totally absent, appears ekkagata , the concentration of the mind in a single point. This is the fifth of the five factors of 1 st jhāna . The mind is totally unified to its object.


The cause of uddhacca kukkucca

As long as the mind is not focused on its object of meditation, it can feel boredom. Thus, there is no shortage of opportunities for entertainment. And when there is nothing, when we are motionless with our eyes closed in silence, the slightest thoughts, discomforts, anxieties, reflections, memories, guilt, feelings and sensations are like so many "television channels" Absorb insatiably, even when it is unpleasant. We love to talk about his problems!

If a single ant is allowed to see a cake, it invites the entire ant hill. In the same way, when we begin to "listen" to one of our even insignificant problems, we invite all the "anthill" of uddhacca kukkucca  : a myriad of worries of all kinds. This state of internal agitation can even cause physical itching.

If we do not heal well the quality of our actions, it will generate remorse during meditation. States where mental activity is relatively calm constitute a very favorable ground for the rise in the surface of the regrets and culpabilities linked to the misconduct of all kinds, even very old ones. It is therefore important to maintain a virtuous and irreproachable conduct as often as possible. Without pure virtue, meditation will only remain a field of obstacles.

The antidote to uddhacca kukkucca

  • Continuously maintaining virtuous behavior both physically and mentally, even when not meditating.
  • Give up feeling a sense of mental agitation or remorse, whatever it is and in what way.
  • Remember that the mind is delighted to seize any opportunity to entertain, even unpleasant feelings.
  • Be determined not to move at all. Physical or mental, any discomfort, discomfort or discomfort eventually disappear, provided you ignore it.
  • Balance the five indriya , that is, the five faculties of control.

The Doubt ( vicikicchā )


How to recognize vicikicchā  ?

If the path we follow seems to be complicated, our perception of things loses its clarity, confusion sets in and we can no longer advance or worse: we do not want to continue.

The confused mind, we can begin to doubt not only our capabilities, but also our guide, the taught method, meditation in general, Buddha or Dhamma.

The opposite of vicikicchā

When doubt is totally absent, appears vitakka , firm grasp. This is the first of the five factors of the 1st jhāna . The mind seizes its object.

In a certain way, doubt has the opposite of trust, but once it is perfectly established, it inevitably corresponds to a firm grasp of the object.

The cause of vicikicchā

The chief artisans of doubt are discouragement, "I can not do it any more. I do not know how to go about it ... "and skepticism," It's impossible. I have never seen that… ". Naturally, erroneous, contradictory or misinterpreted information can contribute to this.

Doubt is a feeling of blockage that paralyzes any desire for effort in practice. Our natural tendency is to use reflection to remedy it, but this one can at best only temporarily mask doubt because it is based on thoughts, and therefore on concepts.

The antidote of vicikicchā

  • Practice precepts, concentration and attention. Only the exercise of virtue, concentration, and attention is able to annihilate doubt.
  • Understand what is practiced by learning from competent and trustworthy individuals.
  • Develop buddhānussati  : the consideration of the qualities of Buddha.
  • Balance the five indriya , that is, the five faculties of control.

Monday 17 April 2017

Anattà or `No Self'


Anattà means `no self' and the doctrine of anattà is the Buddha's most unique and radical teaching. We usually assume that beyond our changing body, mind and experience is an unchanging and unique ego or self. Having identified this self as `me' we then identify other things as `mine'; `My spouse', `My property', `My religion', `My country', etc

This, according to the Buddha, is the cause of much of the distress and pain humans inflict upon themselves and others through greed, fear, ignorance, hatred and self-deception.

The Buddha said:  `Body is not self, feelings are not self, perception is not self, mental constructs are not self and consciousness is not self. When one sees this, one becomes detached from these things, being detached, the passions fade, when the passions have faded one is free, and being free, one knows one is free'.
Having identified this self as `me' we then identify other things as `mine'

It is sometimes said that the purpose of Buddhism is to destroy the self. This is not correct simply because there is no self to destroy

The Buddha taught that when the idea of a permanent metaphysical self or soul is seen to be an illusion, then one will cease to suffer and also cease to inflict suffering on others.


The Neuroscience of Anatta & Buddhism


Neuroscientists have verified the Buddhist belief of Not-Self. This post from Big Think delves into the meaning of what Buddhism calls the doctrine of ‘Anatta’.

Evan Thompson of the University of British Columbia has verified the Buddhist belief of anatta, or not-self. Neuroscience has been interested in Buddhism since the late 1980s, when the Mind and Life Institute was created by HH Dalai Lama and a team of scientists. The science that came out of those first studies gave validation to what monks have known for years — if you train your mind, you can change your brain. As neuroscience has begun studying the mind, they have looked to those who have mastered the mind.

While Buddha didn’t teach anatta to lay people, thinking it might be too confusing, the concept  is centered on the idea that there is no consistent self. The belief that we are the same one moment to the next, or one year to the next, is a delusion. Thompson says that “the brain and body is constantly in flux. There is nothing that corresponds to the sense that there’s an unchanging self.”

When there is no consistent self, it means that we don’t have to take everything so personally.

It is useful to look at a video of yourself from the past, or read something you wrote years ago. Your interests, perspective, beliefs, attachments, relationships, et al, have all changed in some way. Anatta doesn’t mean there’s no you; it just means that you are constantly changing, constantly evolving, and shape-shifting. Why is this important? Why does it matter if there’s no solid “you” or “me”?


Dr. Rick Hanson, author of Hardwiring Happiness and Buddha’s Brain, argues that when there is no consistent self, it means that we don’t have to take everything so personally. That is, our internal thoughts are only thoughts and don’t define us. External events are only external events and aren’t happening to us personally. Or as Tara Brach says, our thoughts are “real, but not true.”

There is tremendous liberation in not identifying ourselves with thoughts, or a set idea of who we are. There is then hope that we can overcome our vices or bad habits (of mind and body), because if we aren’t stuck with the self-limiting beliefs inherent with a consistent self, we may orient ourselves toward becoming more of who we want to be.

As science and Eastern thought continue to hang out with each other, there may be more 21st Century studies to back up 2,600-year-old thoughts. But, as HH Dalai Lama said, “Suppose that something is definitely proven through scientific investigation. … Suppose that fact is incompatible with Buddhist theory. There is no doubt that we must accept the result of the scientific research.”

Hearing a pro-science stance from a religious leader is a relief to many. In the end it seems Buddhism and neuroscience have similar goals: What is this thing we call the mind, and how can we use it to make ourselves a little less miserable and a little happier? 

Maybe even just 10 percent happier, as Dan Harris wrote. If there is no consistent self, it is at least my intention that my ever-changing self be clam and, well, 10 percent happier. No matter who I am.


Friday 14 April 2017

How Understanding 'Generosity' Can Ease Our Pain



According to the Buddha’s teachings, true happiness is something that, by its nature, gets spread around.

Generosity (dàna or càga) is a glad willingness to share what one has with others. Generosity is the proactive (carita) aspect of the second Precept (They are (1) not to harm living beings, (2) not to steal, (3) not to engage in wrong sexual behaviour, (4) not to lie and (5) not to take alcohol or intoxicating drugs); to abstain from taking what belongs to others. 

In Buddhism, generosity is seen as a strategy to weaken greed, a way of helping others and a means of lessening the economic disparities in society. Since it is one of the cardinal Buddhist virtues, the Buddha has a great deal to say about giving and sharing. He said we can give to guests, to those setting out on a journey, to the sick, the hungry, the poor and the first fruits to monks, nuns or spiritual teachers. The Jàtaka says: `From little give a little, from middling give middling and from much give much. There is no excuse for giving nothing'.

When we give or share we should, the Buddha advised, give with respect, thoughtfully, with our own hand if possible, give things that will benefit the recipient and after having considered how our gift might benefit them. With typical skill and insight, he asked us to see beyond the actual article given to what it can actually do for others. 


Thus he pointed out that: `In giving food one also gives life, beauty, happiness, strength and intelligence and in giving these five things one also partakes in them, both now and later'. While seeing the value of providing others with their material needs, the Buddha reminded us that the highest, the most helpful and precious thing we can give to others is the Dhamma.

However, one has to get things in perspective. Giving a sick person a book on Buddhism when he or she in desperate need of medicine or a doctor is not only inappropriate, it is also void of wisdom and compassion


This above point is highlighted by the incident in the traditional life of the Buddha. Once a man was so determined to hear the Dhamma that he came to where the Buddha was speaking straight after a long day's work. He had not even given himself time to rest, bathe or eat. Having come to know of this, the Buddha asked the monks to give the man something to eat before the Dhamma talk began.

If, by giving up a lesser happiness, One could experience greater happiness, A wise person would renounce the lesser To behold the greater.

Wednesday 12 April 2017

Dual Quality of Criticism - Helping to Distinguish Truth



Criticism is the act of pointing out the inadequacies or faults in a person or thing. While criticism is often perceived as negative it can actually have a crucial role in helping to distinguish truth from falsehood and right from wrong

Given this dual quality, the Buddha said that while criticism is valid, it has to be done with circumspection. A man once said to the Buddha that some people criticise the wrong but do not praise the worthy, others praise the worthy without criticising the wrong, some criticise the wrong and praise the worthy and others refrain from either criticising the wrong or praising the worthy

He then said to the Buddha that in his opinion the person who refrained from both criticism and praise is the best of the four. The Buddha responded to these observations by saying: `I maintain that one who criticises that which deserves criticism and praises that which deserves praise, at the right time, saying what is factual and true, is the best. And why? Because their timing is admirable'. 

Two things are suggested here. Before we point out the shortcomings in something or someone, Firstly we must make sure we are acquainted with the facts and that our criticism is validSecondly, our criticism must be done at the right time; e.g. when it is more likely to stimulate positive change. 

Criticising other people is better done in private rather than in public, to their face rather than behind their back, when we ourselves are free from the fault we are criticizing, and when we can honestly say that our motive is a desire to help the person

King Milinda Ask Questions

The Milindapanha says  of the Buddha's occasional criticism of others: `Just as hot water softens anything that can be made pliable, even so, the Tathàgatha's words, even when harsh, are carefully considered and imbued with compassion'(Mil.172).  

Referring to constructive criticism, the Buddhist philosopher Nàgarjuna wrote in his Ratanavàli:  `Rare are helpful speakers, rarer still are good listeners, but rarest of all are words that though unpleasant are helpful.'


Monday 10 April 2017

Five Basic Ideas From Buddhism That Everyone Must Know About



Buddhism is variously described as a spiritual tradition, a religion and a philosophy.

Now I can’t possibly do justice to the ancient wisdom of Buddhism in a short post like this. And I in no way want to distort or dilute these ideas. But as a psychologist I have been astounded at the psychological insight that is to be found in Buddhist teachings.

Though I don’t doubt that you would benefit more from them if you were, I believe that you do not have to be a practicing Buddhist to benefit from Buddhist ideas. Many of these teachings are relevant to any human being, especially in this materialistic and often troubled world that we find ourselves in.


1. The Importance of Gratitude


As human beings we are designed to be constantly moving forwards in our lives, goal-directed and grasping for more..... and more..... and yet more. This plays well to the business model of our western capitalist society because it means we can be sold more...and more......and yet more. There is no end to this wanting.


But Buddhism emphasizes the need to pay attention to what we already have. It’s easy to take for granted many things in our lives - the health of our children, that we will have a meal today, that we have a roof over our heads. When we look at our lives relative to many others in the world, there are often many things we notice that we might be grateful for.

Another thing that Buddhism reminds us to be grateful for is that we are alive at all. Think about all the events that had to take place since the beginning of time in order for you to be born. For instance every single one of your ancestors, going right back to the very first inklings of life in the primordial soup, had to meet and procreate at the exact moment that they did. And that’s mind boggling enough without thinking about the statistics involved once you factor in eggs and sperm and the biology of it all!

2. The Real Meaning of Karma


Any time a driver cuts in front of our car to change lane, only to find themselves stuck in a slower lane of traffic, my husband will giggle gleefully. “Well that’s karma for you!” he’ll say. But is it? Like my husband, many people think that karma is the universe’s way of teaching you a lesson. Of getting you back.

But there is nothing supernatural or mysterious about karma. A Buddhist understanding of karma is simply the idea that our thoughts and our actions have consequences. So good thoughts and kind actions contribute to good karma and future happiness. However, bad intent and unkind actions lead to bad karma and future suffering.

Another way of understanding how karma works is similar to the concept of conditioning. It is well known by psychologists that if you behave in a certain way, through the psychological phenomenon of conditioning you increase the chances that you will behave in that way again.

So if I shout at my children today, I am more likely to shout at them again tomorrow. If I can resist the urge to shout and can find another way to deal with a situation in which I might have shouted, I will be less likely to shout tomorrow. 

3. What Does This Moment Require?


There are frequently moments in life when we feel overwhelmed, and it can sometimes feel like we are being pulled in a million different directions.


In these sorts of situations our minds may be filled with unhelpful thoughts. But rather than asking of ourselves, “What is bothering me?” we should ask of ourselves “What does this moment require of me?” Once we have established the answer, we should do it.

Next time you are feeling overwhelmed (and consequently frustrated, resentful or irritated) stop ruminating about things that have happened in the past or that you are worried may happen in the future and focus on the exact moment and what needs to be done. Go on - try it!

4. Mindfulness


Very often we are so caught up in the endless stream of thoughts going through our minds that we don’t notice much of what is going on around us.

And yet at every single moment of our lives there is a virtually infinite amount of stimuli that we could choose to pay attention to instead of these thoughts. So you could choose to pay attention to what you can hear. However faint, even if it is just the sound of your own breathing, there will always be some sound you can hear. Or you could choose to pay attention to the way your feet feel inside your shoes or the way your back feels where it touches the chair.

When we can do this, even for just a few moments, we notice a calm feeling which is a reflection that our mind has stop flitting about from one thought to another and is momentarily focused on something other than our thoughts. This is what we mean by mindfulness. Very simply, it is about non-judgmental awareness of what is happening at any single moment.

5. The Middle Way


The Buddhist path is often called the “Middle Way” and can be thought of as one that runs between extremes. The Buddha believed that the wisest path in life was one of moderation. So whether it is striking a balance between being isolated and alone or being excessively dependent on others for company; over-exercising or not exercising at all; living a life of obscene over-indulgence or punitive austerity - life is about balance and Buddhism recognizes this.


Buddhism can provide answers to those who are seeking to answer questions about meaninglessness and purpose in life. It teaches a way of life that Buddhists argue is the only way to attain true happiness.

Though I am keenly aware that this post hardly scratches the surface of Buddhist teachings, should you find any of these ideas helpful, perhaps these seeds will inspire you to find out more.