Ways to Consider Samadhi

By: Rob Burbea

…samadhi is usually translated as ‘concentration’, but in many respects that does not convey the fullness, or the beauty, of what it really means.  Therefore we shall keep it in the original language...  For samadhi involves more than just holding the attention fixed on an object with a minimum of wavering.  And it certainly does not necessarily imply a spatially narrowed focus of the mind on a small area.  Instead here we will emphasize that what characterizes states of samadhi is some degree of collectedness and unification of mind and body in a sense of well-being.  Included in any such state will also be some degree of harmonization of the internal energies of the mind and the body.  Steadiness of mind, then, is only one part of that. 

 …although, as the Buddha did, we can certainly delineate a range of discrete states of samadhi (the jhanas), in this present context let us rather view it mostly as a continuum: of depth of meditation, of well-being, of non-entanglement, and of the refinement of consciousness.  [The advantage of this perspective is that there is less chance that] the relationship with practice becomes fraught with wondering too much if one “has it” or “doesn’t have it”, is “succeeding” or “failing”, is “in” or “out”.  Instead of relating to samadhi practice in terms of measurement or achievement of some goal, it is usually much more helpful, more kind, and less self-alienating to conceive of it as a caring, both in the present and in the long term, for the heart and mind.

From Seeing That Frees: Meditations on Emptiness and Dependent Arising. Rob Burbea (1965-2020) was the Resident Teacher at Gaia House in England. He was an exceptionally gifted and innovative Dharma teacher, drawing on the Insight tradition, Tibetan emptiness practice, depth and archetypal psychology and the imaginal. A wealth of his teachings in both text and audio can be found at hermesamara.org

How Samadhi Can Arise With Zazen Practice

By John Daido Loori

Whether we work on the breath, with a koan, or shikantaza, zazen eventually leads to samadhi.  The first indication is usually an off-sensation of the body.  This happens most frequently during sesshin because of the long periods of sitting.  When you sit for a while without moving the body, it stops receiving information about its edges through the senses, such as the friction of your clothing, or an itch on your leg.  So, although you know the body is there, you don’t feel it.  Some people get frightened at this point and involuntarily their body twitches and defines its edges.  Then they slowly move to that place again, and gradually they learn to trust it and they begin to go a little further each time.  Next comes the off-sensation of the mind.  The mind is dependent on thoughts, but when the thoughts disappear, the mind disappears, the self disappears.  That constant reflex action that says, “I’m here, I’m here, I’m here” is the ego manifesting itself.  This is when we realize that we are constantly re-creating ourselves.

From The Art of Just Sitting. John Daido Loori (1931-2009) was the Abbott of Zen Mountain Monastery in Mount Tremper, New York. He received Dharma Transmission from Taizan Maezumi Roshi. He also received Dharma Transmission in the Harada-Yasutani and Inzan lineages of Rinzai Zen as well.

Attributes of the Mind With Samadhi

By: Bhikkhu P.A. Payutto

The mind with samadhi contains the following main attributes:

1.        Strong and vigorous.  It is compared to a stream of water channeled into one direction, which has greater power than water that has been allowed to flow about without direction.

2.        Calm and serene, still and deep.  It is like a pool or lake of still water, the surface untouched by wind and unbroken by waves. 

3.        Clear, lucid, transparent.  It is like still water, without ripples, in which any dust has settled to the bottom.

4. Pliant and malleable, or fit for work, because it is not tense, not willful, not confused, not dull, not agitated.

From: The Essential Buddhadhamma:The Teachings and Practice of Theravada Buddhism. Bhikkhu Payutto is widely acknowledged as one of Thailand’s foremost Buddhist scholars. His Essential Buddhahamma is considered to be one of the most significant scholarly works on the Buddhism of the Pali Canon published in the last century. It was first published in Thailand in 1971 and was recently translated into English.

The Sublime Joy Realized Through Dharma Practice

By Nyanaponika Thera

Life, though full of woe, holds also sources of happiness and joy, unknown to most. Let us teach people to seek and to find real joy within themselves and to rejoice with the joy of others! Let us teach them to unfold their joy to ever sublimer heights! Noble and sublime joy is not foreign to the Teaching of the Enlightened One. Wrongly, the Buddha’s Teaching is sometimes considered to be a doctrine diffusing melancholy. Far from it: the Dhamma leads step by step to an ever purer and loftier happiness.

Nyanaponika Thera (1901-1994), born Siegmund Feniger, was a German born Theravada monk and scholar who lived in Sri Lanka. He was a Jewish refugee from Nazi Germany. Nyanaponika Thera was a co-founder of the Buddhist Publication Society and the author of, among other things, The Heart of Buddhist Meditation, an excellent guide to mindfulness meditation and his most famous work. Upon his death, he was given a state funeral in Sri Lanka.

The Buddha on Equanimity

As a solid mass of rock is not stirred by the wind, so a sage is not stirred by the wind.

As a deep lake is clear and undisturbed, so a sage becomes clear upon hearing the Dharma.

Virtuous people always let go, they don’t prattle about pleasures and desires.

Touched by happiness and then by suffering, the sage shows no sign of being elated or depressed.

From the Dhammapada.

Mettā Toward Self is Not Getting Rid of Anything

Pema Chödrön

…[L]ovingkindness—maitrī (Pali, mettā)—toward ourselves doesn’t mean getting rid of anything. Maitrī means that we can still be crazy, we can still be angry. We can still be timid or jealous or full of feelings of unworthiness. Meditation practice isn’t about trying to throw ourselves away and become something better. It’s about befriending who we are already. The ground of practice is you or me or whoever we are right now, just as we are. That’s what we come to know with tremendous curiosity and interest.

Curiosity involves being gentle, precise, and open—actually being able to let go and open. Gentleness is a sense of good-heartedness toward ourselves. Precision is being able to see clearly, not being afraid to see what’s really there. Openness is being able to let go and to open. When you come to have this kind of honesty, gentleness, and good-heartedness, combined with clarity about yourself, there’s no obstacle to feeling lovingkindness for others as well.

From “No(thing) to Improve”, Tricycle Magazine, March 20, 2021

Love Yourself and You Won't Hurt Others

By: Ānāgarika Munindra

If I do not love myself, I cannot love others also. If we really love ourselves, we cannot think wrongly, cannot talk wrongly, cannot act wrongly. If you know how to love yourself, you do not bring hatred anywhere. Mind is the forerunner of all good and evil. When mind becomes purified, it creates good karma. When mind is nonpolluted, then your action will be pure, the world will be pure. When you talk, it will be wise, nice, friendly. If you do not understand your anger and mind is influenced by anger, it becomes poisonous, and you suffer physically. When you act, it will create tension. It is the same for everybody.

From Living This Life Fully: Stories and Teachings of Munindra, by Mirka Knaster.

Munindra (1915-2003) was an Indian Vipassana teacher in the lineage of Mahasi Sayadaw. He was a teacher to Joseph Goldstein and Sharon Salzberg, among many others.

The Eleven Advantages of Mettā, According to the Buddha

The Buddha addressed the monks gathered at Jetavana at Anathapindika’s Monastery, in Savatthi as follows, regarding the advantages of mettā:

"Monks, eleven advantages are to be expected from the release (deliverance) of heart by familiarizing oneself with thoughts of loving-kindness (metta), by the cultivation of loving-kindness, by constantly increasing these thoughts, by regarding loving-kindness as a vehicle (of expression), and also as something to be treasured, by living in conformity with these thoughts, by putting these ideas into practice, and by establishing them. What are the eleven?

1. "He/she sleeps in comfort. 2. He/she awakes in comfort. 3. He/she sees no evil dreams. 4. He/she is dear to human beings. 5. He/she is dear to non-human beings. 6. Devas (gods) protect him/her. 7. Fire, poison, and sword cannot touch him/her. 8. His/her mind can concentrate quickly. 9. His/her countenance is serene. 10. He/she dies without being confused in mind. 11. If he/she fails to attain arahantship (the highest sanctity) here and now, he/she will be reborn in the brahma-world.”

From the Discourse on Advantages of Mettā, Anguttara Nikaya, 11.16, translated by Piyadassi Thera, and modified for gender inclusivity.

We Don't Need to Watch

By: Charlotte Selver

Is there watching and wishing…as opposed to simply being present and surprised by what sensations simply come and are there?  The art is not to watch it or to try to feel it but just to be there in it. 

Most of us are still under the influence of an education in which we were constantly watched, and watching, and judging was constantly asked from us.  It was asked by our parents, and it was asked by our teachers, but they didn’t understand what the organism actually is.  We have very much more endowment for being aware, for being alert, than most people realize.  I must admit that it is not easy to know the difference between letting something be conscious and watching it.  And it doesn’t come by trying to get it.  It will only come if we are hungry for it.  We don’t need to watch; we simply could be awake.  The moment we watch ourselves, we split ourselves in two.

Giving Up On Doing Things the "Right Way"

By: Charles Brooks

As children, we naturally gave full attention to everything, though it all may have changed every moment.  Then the authorities told us about our responsibility not just to do things but to do them right.  Since then, our attention has been divided between what we are doing and whether we are doing it right.  ….. we are not able to give our attention fully; there are too many whispers of conscience distracting us.  We must take the bull by the horns and deliberately practice, feeling how we do what we do, gradually learning to give up the cherished notions of the right way and the wrong way, which simply lead us away from the task itself, and coming more and more to feel the real situation and what it asks of us.

Following Your Own Authority

By: Charles Brooks

During my life, I have often rejected one authority only to accept another.  Underneath, I was afraid at the thought of living in a world where there was not someone, somewhat like myself, who knew.  But I have now come to feel that, to know what one is doing with life, it is no use to consult authorities.  It is precisely through the veils which authorities have spun for us that our own ears and eyes and nerves must begin to penetrate if our hands are to grasp the world and our hearts to feel it.  We must recover our own capacity to taste for ourselves.  Then we shall be able to judge also.

A Relationship of Respect and Wonder

By: Charlotte Selver

There’s a certain relationship which we have to have with our inner functioning. That of respect and that of wonder. When we are quiet enough and positive enough that we can follow these fine indications inside which lead us to more functioning, we will find out what precious qualities we have which we don’t usually use.

On Not Wasting Time

By: Eihei Dogen

Even when you are uncertain, do not use this one day wastefully. It is a rare treasure to value. Do not compare it to an enormous jewel. Do not compare it to a dragon’s bright pearl. Old sages valued this one day more than their own living bodies. Reflect on this quietly. A dragon’s pearl may be found. An enormous jewel may be acquired. But this one day out of a hundred years cannot be retrieved once it is lost. What skillful means can retrieve a day that has passed? No historical documents have recorded any such means. Not to waste time is to contain the passage of days and months within your skin bag without leaking. Thus, sages and wise ones in olden times valued each moment, each day, and each month more than their own eyeballs or the nation’s land. To waste the passage of time is to be confused and stained in this floating world of name and gain. Not to miss the passage of time is to be in the way for the sake of the way.

Once you have clarity, do not neglect a single day. Wholeheartedly practice for the sake of the way and speak for the sake of the way. We know that buddha ancestors of old do not neglect each day’s endeavor. Reflect on this every day. Sit near a bright window and reflect on this, on mellow and flower-filled days. Sit in a plain building and remember it on a solitary rainy evening. Why do the moments of time steal your endeavor? They not only steal one day but steal the merit of many kalpas. What kind of enemy is the passage of time? How regrettable! Your loss of time would all be because of your negligence of practice. If you were not intimate with yourself, you would resent yourself.

From: Gyoji (Continuous Practice), translated by Mel Weitsman and Kaz Tanahashi, with David Schneider, Treasury of the True Dharma Eye: Zen Master Dogen’s Shobogenzo

"You are the song of your own making..."

By: Susan Suntree

You are the song of your own making

without knowing the notes.

Music rises without tongue

no strings no reeds

the sound begins

as a chorus.

Desert winds encircling brush

and spare stalks of grass--

how the dry sticks sing

is what the wind wants to know.

How do you hear

when even your ears are singing?

Note: Susan Suntree is a poet, long-time Zen practitioner and long-time member of the Just Show Up Zen Sangha.

Continuous Practice

By: Eihei Dogen

On the great road of buddha ancestors there is always unsurpassable practice, continuous and sustained.  It forms the circle of the way and is never cut off.  Between aspiration, practice, enlightenment, and nirvana, there is not a moment’s gap; continuous practice is the circle of the way.  This being so, continuous practice is undivided, not forced by you or others.  The power of this continuous practice confirms you as well as others.  It means your practice affects the entire earth and the entire sky in the ten directions.  Although not noticed by others or by yourself, it is so.

***

The effect of such sustained practice is sometimes not hidden.  Therefore, you aspire to practice.  The effect is sometimes not apparent.  Therefore, you may not see, hear, or know it.  Understand that although it is not revealed, it is not hidden.

As it is not divided by what is not hidden, apparent, existent, or not existent, you may not notice the causal conditions that led you to be engaged in the practice that actualizes you at this very moment of unknowing.  The reason you don’t see it is that becoming conscious of it is not anything remarkable.  Investigate in detail that it is so because the causal condition [the aspiration] is no other than continuous practice, although continuous practice is not limited by the causal condition.

From Gyoji (Continuous Practice), in Treasury of the True Dharma Eye: Zen Master Dogen’s Shobogenzo, Edited by Kazuaki Tanahahi

The Buddha's Enlightenment Story

By: Andrew Olendzki

(Condensed and abbreviated, from Lion’s Roar, September 29, 2020)

…the Buddha had an unusual ability not only to apply himself to anything he undertook, but, more importantly, to turn away from it and find a new way forward when he realized it was not effective--even when he was under duress to conform. This is first demonstrated when he walked away from a privileged upbringing to join a counterculture of forest dwelling ascetics. The world he was raised in was quite content with pursuing a life of sensual pleasure, as long as one also worked to gain wealth and did one's duty as a member of the elite ruling class. As a prince named Siddhartha he was groomed for this world, but turned away from it to search for something more meaningful…Gratification of the senses and the enjoyments of worldly success seem to him shallow and pointless if human life inevitably ends in old age, sickness, and death.

…He learned the ancient arts of meditation from a series of teachers, and here demonstrated for a second time the same ability to follow his own path in the face of great pressure to do otherwise.  As the wanderer now known as Gautama, he quickly mastered the concentration skills used to attain subtle and exalted mental states, and was invited by his teachers to join them as a leader of their community.  While this would have entailed honor and prestige among his fellow wanderers, he turned down the offer and set off again to follow his own path. Meditation was a valuable practice but only a temporary refuge. He was in search of a deeper wisdom, a solution that penetrated into the very nature of human suffering and showed how to end it once and for all.

In the next phase of his life the man who would become the Buddha took up the practice of extreme asceticism, following the guidance of peers who were convinced that by turning away from all pleasure and embracing pain one could root out the desire that holds a person in bondage to rebirth.  Starving himself to within an inch of his life, he eventually realized that this too was not leading to any extraordinary insights, and decided to start eating normally. This incensed his companions, who accused him of being weak and giving up too easily. Yet once again he was able to measure the value of a practice using his own experience rather than by accepting the opinion of others, and once again he set out alone to find another way.

Before long the wanderer Gautama, seated under a tree on a single particular night, had the transformative experience after which he became known as Buddha, “one who is awake.” What was the nature of this experience, and how did it change him so profoundly? What happened to him under that tree? However else it came to be understood over the centuries, we can be sure it involved a deep psychological transformation.

The Buddha's inner explorations had revealed suffering to be caused by three toxic emotional traits buried deep in the human psyche. When triggered by the pleasure/pain reflex, they emerge again and again as unhealthy mental states that cause unskillful and harmful behavior. Among these are greed--the craving to pursue, acquire, and hold on to anything that feels good--and its opposite, hatred, the craving to resist, destroy, or push away anything that feels bad. Together, greed and hatred serve to keep us discontented, always wanting our experience to be different than it is, either pleasant or less painful.

The third and most important toxin, he realized, was delusion--a basic ignorance pervading all our perceptions and views, leading us to presume the world is more stable than it is, to assume gratification is more sustainable than it is, and to think of ourselves as more substantial than we actually are.

With meditation the Buddha was able to see the world as the unfolding of a process rather than as a collection of things.  He saw that every moment is different, every event is unique, and each transient phenomenon arises and passes away in deep interrelationship with other phenomena. Human experience consists of episodes of consciousness in which information gathered by the senses is felt as pleasant or painful, interpreted to fit a narrative, and responded to in skillful or unskillful ways. When greed, hatred, or delusion are present, blazing like fires that scorched the mind and body, suffering is born; when these are absent, suffering goes to rest.

That night under the tree of awakening, the Buddha extinguished the fires of greed, hatred, and delusion, becoming a person within whom they were “fully quenched” (nirvana). As he described himself soon after his awakening: “All attachments have been severed, the heart’s been led away from pain; tranquil, one rests with utmost ease, the mind has found its way to peace.”  This is a description not of cosmological transcendence but of deep psychological healing.