Chapter 1
Meditation: Why Bother?
Meditation
is not easy. It takes time and it takes energy. It also takes grit,
determination and discipline. It requires a host of personal qualities which we
normally regard as unpleasant and which we like to avoid whenever possible. We
can sum it all up in the American word 'gumption'. Meditation takes 'gumption'.
It is certainly a great deal easier just to kick back and watch television. So
why bother? Why waste all that time and energy when you could be out enjoying
yourself? Why bother? Simple. Because
you are human. And just because of the simple fact that you are human,
you find yourself heir to an inherent unsatisfactoriness
in life which simply will not go away. You can suppress it from your awareness
for a time. You can distract yourself for hours on end, but it always comes
back--usually when you least expect it. All of a sudden, seemingly out of the
blue, you sit up, take stock, and realize your actual situation in life.
There you are, and you suddenly realize that you are spending your whole life
just barely getting by. You keep up a good front. You manage to make ends meed somehow and look OK from the outside. But those
periods of desperation, those times when you feel everything caving in on you,
you keep those to yourself. You are a mess. And you know it. But you hide it
beautifully. Meanwhile, way down under all that you just know there has got be
some other way to live, some better way to look at the world, some way to touch
life more fully. You click into it by chance now and then. You get a good job.
You fall in love. You win the game. and for a while,
things are different. Life takes on a richness and clarity that makes all the
bad times and humdrum fade away. The whole texture of your experience changes
and you say to yourself, "OK, now I've made it; now I will be happy".
But then that fades, too, like smoke in the wind. You are left with just a
memory. That and a vague awareness that something is wrong.
But there is really another whole realm of depth and sensitivity available in
life, somehow, you are just not seeing it. You wind up feeling cut off. You
feel insulated from the sweetness of experience by some sort of sensory cotton.
You are not really touching life. You are not making it again. And then even
that vague awareness fades away, and you are back to the same old reality. The
world looks like the usual foul place, which is boring at best. It is an
emotional roller coaster, and you spend a lot of your time down at the bottom
of the ramp, yearning for the heights.
So what is wrong with you? Are you a freak? No. You are just human. And you
suffer from the same malady that infects every human being. It is a monster in
side all of us, and it has many arms: Chronic tension,
lack of genuine compassion for others, including the people closest to you,
feelings being blocked up, and emotional deadness. Many, many
arms. None of us is entirely free from it. We may deny it. We try to
suppress it. We build a whole culture around hiding from it, pretending it is
not there, and distracting ourselves from it with goals and projects and
status. But it never goes away. It is a constant undercurrent in every thought
and every perception; a little wordless voice at the back of the head saying,
"Not good enough yet. Got to have more. Got to make it better. Got to be
better." It is a monster, a monster that manifests everywhere in
subtle forms.
Go to a party. Listen to the laughter, that brittle-tongued voice that says fun
on the surface and fear underneath. Feel the tension, feel the pressure. Nobody
really relaxes. They are faking it. Go to a ball game. Watch the fan in the
stand. Watch the irrational fit of anger. Watch the uncontrolled frustration
bubbling forth from people that masquerades under the guise of enthusiasm, or
team spirit. Booing, cat-calls and unbridled egotism in the
name of team loyalty. Drunkenness, fights in the stands. These are the
people trying desperately to release tension from within. These are not people
who are at peace with themselves. Watch the news on TV. Listen to the lyrics in
popular songs. You find the same theme repeated over and over in variations. Jealousy, suffering, discontent and stress.
Life seems to be a perpetual struggle, some enormous effort against staggering
odds. And what is our solution to all this dissatisfaction? We get stuck in the
' If only' syndrome. If only I had more money, then I would be happy. If only I
can find somebody who really loves me, if only I can lose 20 pounds, if only I
had a color TV, Jacuzzi, and curly hair, and on and on forever. So where does
all this junk come from and more important, what can we do about it? It comes
from the conditions of our own minds. It is deep, subtle and pervasive set of
mental habits, a Gordian knot which we have built up bit by bit and we can
unravel just the same way, one piece at a time. We can tune up our awareness,
dredge up each separate piece and bring it out into the light. We can make the
unconscious conscious, slowly, one piece at a time.
The essence of our experience is change. Change is incessant. Moment by moment
life flows by and it is never the same. Perpetual alteration is the essence of
the perceptual universe. A thought springs up in you
head and half a second later, it is gone. In comes another one, and that is
gone too. A sound strikes your ears and then silence. Open your eyes and the
world pours in, blink and it is gone. People come into your life and they leave
again. Friends go, relatives die. Your fortunes go up and they go down.
Sometimes you win and just as often you lose. It is incessant: change, change,
change. No two moments ever the same.
There is not a thing wrong with this. It is the nature of the universe. But
human culture has taught u some odd responses to this endless flowing. We
categorize experiences. We try to stick each perception, every mental change in
this endless flow into one of three mental pigeon holes. It is good, or it is
bad, or it is neutral. Then, according to which box we stick it in, we perceive
with a set of fixed habitual mental responses. If a particular perception has
been labeled 'good', then we try to freeze time right there. We grab onto that
particular thought, we fondle it, we hold it, we try
to keep it from escaping. When that does not work, we go all-out in an effort
to repeat the experience which caused that thought. Let us call this mental
habit 'grasping'.
Over on the other side of the mind lies the box labeled 'bad'. When we perceive
something 'bad', we try to push it away. We try to deny it, reject it, get rid
of it any way we can. We fight against our own experience. We run from pieces
of ourselves. Let us call this mental habit 'rejecting'. Between these two
reactions lies the neutral box. Here we place the experiences which are neither
good nor bad. They are tepid, neutral, uninteresting and boring. We pack
experience away in the neutral box so that we can ignore it and thus return
jour attention to where the action is, namely our endless round of desire and
aversion. This category of experience gets robbed of its fair share of our
attention. Let us call this mental habit 'ignoring'. The direct result of all
this lunacy is a perpetual treadmill race to nowhere, endlessly pounding after
pleasure, endlessly fleeing from pain, endlessly ignoring 90 percent of our
experience. Than wondering why life tastes so flat. In the final analysis, it's
a system that does not work.
No matter how hard you pursue pleasure and success, there are times when you
fail. No matter how fast you flee, there are times when pain catches up with
you. And in between those times, life is so boring you could scream. Our minds
are full of opinions and criticisms. We have built walls all around ourselves
and we are trapped with the prison of our own lies
and dislikes. We suffer.
Suffering is big word in Buddhist thought. It is a key term and it should be
thoroughly understood. The Pali word is 'dukkha', and it does not just mean the agony of the body.
It means the deep, subtle sense of unsatisfactoriness
which is a part of every mental treadmill. The essence of life is suffering,
said the Buddha. At first glance this seems exceedingly morbid and pessimistic.
It even seems untrue. After all, there are plenty of times when we are happy.
Aren't there? No, there are not. It just seems that way. Take any moment when
you feel really fulfilled and examine it closely. Down under the joy, you will
find that subtle, all-pervasive undercurrent of tension, that no matter how
great the moment is, it is going to end. No matter how much you just gained,
you are either going to lose some of it or spend the rest of
your days guarding what you have got and scheming how to get more. And
in the end, you are going to die. In the end, you lose everything. It is all
transitory.
Sounds pretty bleak, doesn't it? Luckily it's not; not at all. It only sounds
bleak when you view it from the level of ordinary mental perspective, the very
level at which the treadmill mechanism operates. Down under that level lies another whole perspective, a completely different way
to look at the universe. It is a level of functioning where the mind does not
try to freeze time, where we do not grasp onto our experience as it flows by,
where we do not try to block things out and ignore them. It is a level of
experience beyond good and bad, beyond pleasure and pain. It is a lovely way to
perceive the world, and it is a learnable skill. It is not easy, but is
learnable.
Happiness and peace. Those are really the prime issues
in human existence. That is what all of us are seeking. This often is a bit
hard to see because we cover up those basic goals with layers of surface
objectives. We want food, we want money, we want sex,
possessions and respect. We even say to ourselves that the idea of 'happiness'
is too abstract: "Look, I am practical. Just give me enough money and I
will buy all the happiness I need". Unfortunately, this is an attitude
that does not work. Examine each of these goals and you will find they are superficial.
You want food. Why? Because I am hungry. So you are
hungry, so what? Well if I eat, I won't be hungry and then I'll feel good. Ah
ha! Feel good! Now there is a real item. What we really seek is not the surface
goals. They are just means to an end. What we are really after is the feeling
of relief that comes when the drive is satisfied. Relief,
relaxation and an end to the tension. Peace, happiness, no more
yearning.
So what is this happiness? For most of us, the perfect happiness would mean
getting everything we wanted, being in control of everything, playing Caesar,
making the whole world dance a jig according to our every whim. Once again, it
does not work that way. Take a look at the people in history who have actually
held this ultimate power. These were not happy people. Most assuredly they were
not men at peace with themselves. Why? Because they were
driven to control the world totally and absolutely and they could not.
They wanted to control all men and there remained men who refused to be
controlled. They could not control the stars. They still got sick. They still
had to die.
You can't ever get everything you want. It is impossible. Luckily, there is
another option. You can learn to control your mind, to step outside of this
endless cycle of desire and aversion. You can learn to not want what you want,
to recognize desires but not be controlled by them. This does not mean that you
lie down on the road and invite everybody to walk all over you
. It means that you continue to live a very normal-looking life, but
live from a whole new viewpoint. You do the things that a person must do, but
you are free from that obsessive, compulsive drivenness
of your own desires. You want something, but you don't need to chase after it.
You fear something, but you don't need to stand there quaking in your boots.
This sort of mental culture is very difficult. It takes years. But trying to
control everything is impossible, and the difficult is preferable to the
impossible.
Wait a minute, though. Peace and happiness! Isn't that what civilization is all
about? We build skyscrapers and freeways. We have paid vacations, TV sets. We
provide free hospitals and sick leaves, Social Security and welfare benefits.
All of that is aimed at providing some measure of peace and happiness. Yet the
rate of mental illness climbs steadily, and the crime rates rise faster. The
streets are crawling with delinquents and unstable individuals. Stick you arms outside the safety of your own door and somebody
is very likely to steal your watch! Something is not working. A happy man does
not feel driven to kill. We like to think that our society is exploiting every
area of human knowledge in order to achieve peace and happiness.
We are just beginning to realize that we have overdeveloped the material aspect
of existence at the expense of the deeper emotional and spiritual aspect, and
we are paying the price for that error. It is one thing to talk about
degeneration of moral and spiritual fiber in America today, and another thing
to do something about it. The place to start is within ourselves.
Look carefully inside, truly and objectively, and each of us will see moments
when "I am the punk" and "I am the crazy". We will learn to
see those moments, see them clearly, cleanly and without condemnation, and we
will be on our way up and out of being so.
You can't make radical changes in the pattern of your life until you begin to
see yourself exactly as you are now. As soon as you do that, changes flow
naturally. You don't have to force or struggle or obey rules dictated to you by
some authority. You just change. It is automatic. But arriving at the initial
insight is quite a task. You've got to see who you are and how you are, without
illusion, judgement or resistance of any kind. You've
got to see your own place in society and your function as a social being.
You've got to see your duties and obligations to your fellow human beings, and
above all, your responsibility to yourself as an individual living with other
individuals. And you've got to see all of that clearly and as a unit, a single
gestalt of interrelationship. It sounds complex, but it often occurs in a
single instant. Mental culture through meditation is without rival in helping
you achieve this sort of understanding and serene happiness.
The Dhammapada is an ancient Buddhist text which
anticipated Freud by thousands of years. It says: "What you are now is the
result of what you were. What you will be tomorrow will be the result of what
you are now. The consequences of an evil mind will follow you like the cart
follows the ox that pulls it. The consequences of a purified mind will follow
you like you own shadow. No one can do more for you than your own purified
mind-- no parent, no relative, no friend, no one. A well-disciplined mind
brings happiness".
Meditation is intended to purify the mind. It cleanses the thought process of
what can be called psychic irritants, things like greed, hatred and jealousy,
things that keep you snarled up in emotional bondage. It brings the mind to a
state of tranquility and awareness, a state of concentration and insight.
In our society, we are great believers in education. We believe that knowledge
makes a cultured person civilized. Civilization, however, polishes the person
superficially. Subject our noble and sophisticated gentleman to stresses of war
or economic collapse, and see what happens. It is one thing to obey the law
because you know the penalties and fear the consequences. It is something else
entirely to obey the law because you have cleansed yourself from the greed that
would make you steal and the hatred that would make you kill. Throw a stone
into a stream. The running water would smooth the surface, but the inner part
remains unchanged. Take that same stone and place it in the intense fires of a
forge, and the whole stone changes inside and outside. It all melts.
Civilization changes man on the outside. Meditation softens him within, through
and through.
Meditation is called the Great Teacher. It is the cleansing crucible fire that
works slowly through understanding. The greater your
understanding, the more flexible and tolerant you can be. The greater your understanding, the more compassionate you can be. You
become like a perfect parent or an ideal teacher. You are ready to forgive and
forget. You feel love towards others because you understand them. And you
understand others because you have understood yourself. You have looked deeply
inside and seen self illusion and your own human failings. You have seen your
own humanity and learned to forgive and to love. When you have learned
compassion for yourself, compassion for others is automatic. An accomplished meditator has achieved a profound understanding of life,
and he inevitably relates to the world with a deep and uncritical love.
Meditation is a lot like cultivating a new land. To make a field out of a
forest, fist you have to clear the trees and pull out the stumps. Then you till
the soil and you fertilize it. Then you sow your seed and you harvest your
crops. To cultivate your mind, first you have to clear out the various
irritants that are in the way, pull them right out by the root so that they
won't grow back. Then you fertilize. You pump energy and discipline in the
mental soil. Then you sow the seed and you harvest your crops of faith, morality , mindfulness and wisdom.
Faith and morality, by the way, have a special meaning in this context.
Buddhism does not advocate faith in the sense of believing something because it
is written in a book or attributed to a prophet or taught to you by some authority
figure. The meaning here is closer to confidence. It is
knowing that something is true because you have seen it work, because
you have observed that very thing within yourself. In the same way, morality is
not a ritualistic obedience to some exterior, imposed code of behavior.
The purpose of meditation is personal transformation. The you
that goes in one side of the meditation experience is not the same you that
comes out the other side. It changes your character by a process of
sensitization, by making you deeply aware of your own thoughts, word, and
deeds. Your arrogance evaporated and your antagonism dries up. Your mind
becomes still and calm. And your life smoothes out.
Thus meditation properly performed prepares you to meet the ups and down of
existence. It reduces your tension, your fear, and your worry. Restlessness
recedes and passion moderates. Things begin to fall into place and your life
becomes a glide instead of a struggle. All of this happens through
understanding.
Meditation sharpens your concentration and your
thinking power. Then, piece by piece, your own subconscious motives and
mechanics become clear to you. Your intuition sharpens. The precision of your
thought increases and gradually you come to a direct knowledge of things as they
really are, without prejudice and without illusion. So is this reason enough to
bother? Scarcely. These are just promises on paper.
There is only one way you will ever know if meditation is worth the effort.
Learn to do it right, and do it. See for yourself.
About the Author - Preface - Introduction - Chapter 1 - Chapter 2 - Chapter 3 -
Chapter 4 - Chapters 5 -
Chapter 6 - Chapter 7 - Chapter 8 - Chapter 9 - Chapter 10 – Chapter 11 – Chapter 12 - Chapter 13 - Chapter 14 - Chapter 15 - Chapter 16 - Distribution Agreement