Chapter 12
Dealing with Distractions – II
So there you are meditating beautifully. Your body is totally
immobile, and you mind is totally still. You just glide right along following
the flow of the breath, in, out, in, out...calm, serene and concentrated.
Everything is perfect. And then, all of a sudden, something totally different
pops into your mind: "I sure wish I had an ice cream cone." That's a
distraction, obviously. That's not what you are supposed to be doing. You
notice that, and you drag yourself back to the breath, back to the smooth flow,
in, out, in...and then: "Did I ever pay that gas
bill?" Another distraction. You notice that one, and you haul yourself back to the breath. In, out, in,
out, in..."That new science fiction movie is out. Maybe I can go see it
Tuesday night. No, not Tuesday, got too much to do on Wednesday. Thursday's
better..." Another distraction. You pull yourself
out of that one and back you go to the breath, except that you never quite get
there because before you do that little voice in your head goes, "My back
is killing me." And on and on it goes, distraction after
distraction, seemingly without end.
What a bother. But this is what it is all about. These
distractions are actually the whole point. The key is to learn to deal with
these things. Learning to notice them without being trapped
in them. That's what we are here for. The mental wandering is
unpleasant, to be sure. But it is the normal mode of operation of your mind.
Don't think of it as the enemy. It is just the simple reality. And if you want
to change something, the first thing you have to do is see it the way it is.
When you first sit down to concentrate on the breath, you will be
struck by how incredibly busy the mind actually is. It jumps and jibbers. It
veers and bucks. It chases itself around in constant circles. It chatters. It
thinks. It fantasizes and daydreams. Don't be upset about that. It's natural.
When your mind wanders from the subject of meditation, just observe the
distraction mindfully.
When we speak of a distraction in Insight Meditation, we are
speaking of any preoccupation that pulls the attention off the breath. This
brings up a new, major rule for your meditation: When any mental state arises strongly enough to distract you from the object of meditation,
switch your attention to the distraction briefly. Make the distraction a
temporary object of meditation. Please not the word temporary. It's quite
important. We are not advising that you switch horses in midstream. We do not
expect you to adopt a whole new object of meditation every three seconds. The
breath will always remain your primary focus. You switch your attention to the
distraction only long enough to notice certain specific things about it. What
is it? How strong is it? and, how long does it last?
As soon as you have wordlessly answered these questions, you are through with
your examination of that distraction, and you return your attention to the
breath. Here again, please note the operant term, wordlessly. These questions
are not an invitation to more mental chatter. That would be moving you in the
wrong direction, toward more thinking. We want you to move away from thinking,
back to a direct, wordless and nonconceptual
experience of the breath. These questions are designed to free you from the
distraction and give you insight into its nature, not to get you more
thoroughly stuck in it. They will tune you in to what is distracting you and
help you get rid of it--all in one step.
Here is the problem: When a distraction, or any mental state,
arises in the mind, it blossoms forth first in the unconscious. Only a moment
later does it rise to the conscious mind. That split-second difference is quite
important, because it time enough for grasping to occur. Grasping occurs almost
instantaneously, and it takes place first in the unconscious. Thus, by the time
the grasping rises to the level of conscious recognition, we have already begun
to lock on to it. It is quite natural for us to simply continue that process,
getting more and more tightly stuck in the distraction as we continue to view
it. We are, by this time, quite definitely thinking the thought, rather than
just viewing it with bare attention. The whole sequence takes place in a flash.
This presents us with a problem. By the time we become consciously aware of a
distraction we are already, in a sense, stuck in it. Our three questions are a
clever remedy for this particular malady. In order to answer these questions,
we must ascertain the quality of the distraction. To do that, we must divorce
ourselves from it, take a mental step back from it, disengage from it, and view
it objectively. We must stop thinking the thought or feeling the feeling in
order to view it as an object of inspection. This very process is an exercise
in mindfulness, uninvolved, detached awareness. The hold of the distraction is
thus broken, and mindfulness is back in control. At this point, mindfulness
makes a smooth transition back to its primary focus and we return to the
breath.
When you first begin to practice this technique, you will probably
have to do it with words. You will ask your questions in words, and get answers
in words. It won't be long, however, before you can dispense with the formality
of words altogether. Once the mental habits are in place, you simply note the
distraction, note the qualities of the distraction, and return to the breath.
It's a totally nonconceptual process, and it's very
quick. The distraction itself can be anything: a sound, a sensation, an
emotion, a fantasy, anything at all. Whatever it is, don't try to repress it.
Don't try to force it out of your mind. There's no need for that. Just observe
it mindfully with bare attention. Examine the distraction wordlessly and it
will pass away by itself. You will find your attention drifting effortlessly
back to the breath. And do not condemn yourself for having being distracted.
Distractions are natural. They come and they go.
Despite this piece of sage counsel, you're going to find yourself
condemning anyway. That's natural too. Just observe the process of condemnation
as another distraction, and then return to the breath.
Watch the sequence of events: Breathing. Breathing.
Distracting thought arises. Frustration arising over the distracting thought.
You condemn yourself for being distracted. You notice the self condemnation.
You return to the breathing. Breathing. Breathing. It's really a very natural, smooth-flowing cycle,
if you do it correctly. The trick, of course, is patience. If you can learn to
observe these distractions without getting involved, it's all very easy. You
just glide through the distractions and your attention returns to the breath
quite easily. Of course, the very same distraction may pop up a moment later.
If it does, just observe that mindfully. If you are dealing with an old,
established thought pattern, this can go on happening for quite a while,
sometimes years. Don't get upset. This too is natural. just
observe the distraction and return to the breath. Don't fight with these
distracting thoughts. Don't strain or struggle. It's a waste. Every bit of
energy that you apply to that resistance goes into the thought complex and
makes it all the stronger. So don't try to force such thoughts out of your
mind. It's a battle you can never win. Just observe the distraction mindfully
and, it will eventually go away. It's very strange, but the more bare attention
you pay to such disturbances, the weaker they get. Observe them long enough,
and often enough, with bare attention, and they fade away forever. Fight with
them and they gain in strength. Watch them with detachment and they wither.
Mindfulness is a function that disarms distractions, in the same
way that a munitions expert might defuse a bomb. Weak distractions are disarmed
by a single glance. Shine the light of awareness on them and they evaporate
instantly, never to return. Deep-seated, habitual thought patterns require
constant mindfulness repeatedly applied over whatever time period it takes to
break their hold. Distractions are really paper tigers. They have no power of
their own. They need to be fed constantly, or else they die. If you refuse to
feed them by your own fear, anger, and greed, they fade.
Mindfulness is the most important aspect of meditation. It is the
primary thing that you are trying to cultivate. So there is really no need at
all to struggle against distractions. The crucial thing is to be mindful of
what is occurring, not to control what is occurring. Remember, concentration is
a tool. It is secondary to bare attention. From the point of view of mindfulness,
there is really no such thing as a distraction. Whatever arises in the mind is
viewed as just one more opportunity to cultivate mindfulness. Breath, remember,
is an arbitrary focus, and it is used as our primary object of attention.
Distractions are used as secondary objects of attention. They are certainly as
much a part of reality as breath. It actually makes rather little difference
what the object of mindfulness is. You can be mindful of the breath, or you can
be mindful of the distraction. You can be mindful of the fact that you mind is
still, and your concentration is strong, or you can be mindful of the fact that
your concentration is in ribbons and your mind is in an absolute shambles. It's
all mindfulness. Just maintain that mindfulness and concentration eventually
will follow.
The purpose of meditation is not to concentrate on the breath,
without interruption, forever. That by itself would be a useless goal. The
purpose of meditation is not to achieve a perfectly still and serene mind. Although
a lovely state, it doesn't lead to liberation by itself. The purpose of
meditation is to achieve uninterrupted mindfulness. Mindfulness, and only
mindfulness, produces Enlightenment.
Distractions come in all sizes, shapes and flavors. Buddhist philosophy
has organized them into categories. One of them is the category of hindrances.
They are called hindrances because they block your development of both
components of mediation, mindfulness and concentration. A bit of caution on
this term: The word 'hindrances' carries a negative connotation, and indeed
these are states of mind we want to eradicate. That does not mean, however,
that they are to be repressed, avoided or condemned.
Let's use greed as an example. We wish to avoid prolonging any
state of greed that arises, because a continuation of that state leads to
bondage and sorrow. That does not mean we try to toss the thought out of the
mind when it appears. We simply refuse to encourage it to stay. We let it come,
and we let it go. When greed is first observed with bare attention, no value judgements are made. We simply stand back and watch it
arise. The whole dynamic of greed from start to finish is simply observed in
this way. We don't help it, or hinder it, or interfere with it in the
slightest. It stays as long as it stays. And we learn as much about it as we
can while it is there. We watch what greed does. We watch how it troubles us,
and how it burdens others. We notice how it keeps us perpetually unsatisfied,
forever in a state of unfulfilled longing. From this first-hand experience, we
ascertain at a gut level that greed is an unskillful way to run your life.
There is nothing theoretical about this realization.
All of the hindrances are dealt with in the same way, and we will
look at them here one by one.
Desire: Let us suppose you have
been distracted by some nice experience in meditation. It could be pleasant
fantasy or a thought of pride. It might be a feeling of self-esteem. It might
be a thought of love or even the physical sensation of bliss that comes with
the meditation experience itself. Whatever it is, what follows is the state of
desire -- desire to obtain whatever you have been thinking about or desire to
prolong the experience you are having. No matter what its nature, you should handle
desire in the following manner. Notice the thought or sensation as it arises.
Notice the mental state of desire which accompanies it as a separate thing.
Notice the exact extent or degree of that desire. Then notice
how long it lasts and when it finally disappears. When you have done
that, return your attention to breathing.
Aversion:
Suppose that you have been distracted by some negative experience. It could be
something you fear or some nagging worry. It might be guilt or depression or
pain. Whatever the actual substance of the thought or sensation, you find
yourself rejecting or repressing -- trying to avoid it, resist it or deny it.
The handling here is essentially the same. Watch the arising of the thought or
sensation. Notice the state of rejection that comes with it. Gauge the extent
or degree of that rejection. See how long it lasts and when
it fades away. Then return your attention to your breath.
Lethargy:
Lethargy comes in various grades and intensities, ranging from slight
drowsiness to total torpor. We are talking about a mental state here, not a
physical one. Sleepiness or physical fatigue is something quite different and,
in the Buddhist system of classification, it would be categorized as a physical
feeling. Mental lethargy is closely related to aversion in that it is one of
the mind's clever little ways of avoiding those issues it finds unpleasant.
Lethargy is a sort of turn-off of the mental apparatus, a dulling of sensory
and cognitive acuity. It is an enforced stupidity pretending to be sleep. This
can be a tough one to deal with, because its presence is directly contrary to
the employment of mindfulness. Lethargy is nearly the reverse of mindfulness.
Nevertheless, mindfulness is the cure for this hindrance, too, and the handling
is the same. Note the state of drowsiness when it arises, and note its extent
or degree. Note when it arises, how long it lasts, and when it passes away. The
only thing special here is the importance of catching the phenomenon early. You
have got to get it right at its conception and apply liberal doses of pure
awareness right away. If you let it get a start, its growth probably will out pace your mindfulness power. When lethargy wins, the
result is the sinking mind and/or sleep.
Agitation:
States of restlessness and worry are expressions of mental agitation. Your mind
keeps darting around, refusing to settle on any one thing. You may keep running
over and over the same issues. But even here an unsettled feeling is the
predominant component. The mind refuses to settle anywhere. It jumps around
constantly. The cure for this condition is the same basic sequence.
Restlessness imparts a certain feeling to consciousness. You might call it a
flavor or texture. Whatever you call it, that unsettled feeling is there as a definable
characteristic. Look for it. Once you have spotted it, note how much of it is
present. Note when it arises. Watch how long it lasts, and see
when it fades away. Then return your attention to the breath.
Doubt: Doubt has its own
distinct feeling in consciousness. The Pali tests
describe it very nicely. It's the feeling of a man stumbling through a desert
and arriving at an unmarked crossroad. Which road should he take? There is no
way to tell. So he just stands there vacillating. One of the common forms this
takes in meditation is an inner dialogue something like this: "What am I
doing just sitting like this? Am I really getting anything out of this at all?
Oh! Sure I am. This is good for me. The book said so. No, that is crazy. This
is a waste of time. No, I won't give up. I said I was going to do this, and I
am going to do it. Or am I being just stubborn? I don't know. I just don't
know." Don't get stuck in this trap. It is just another hindrance. Another
of the mind's little smoke screens to keep you from doing the most terrible
thing in the world: actually becoming aware of what is happening. To handle
doubt, simply become aware of this mental state of wavering as an object of
inspection. Don't be trapped in it. Back out of it and look at it. See how
strong it is. See when it comes and how long it lasts. Then watch it fade away,
and go back to the breathing.
This is the general pattern you will use on any distraction that
arises. By distraction, remember we mean any mental state that arises to impede
your meditation. Some of these are quite subtle. It is useful to list some of
the possibilities. The negative states are pretty easy to spot: insecurity,
fear, anger, depression, irritation and frustration.
Craving and desire are a bit more difficult to spot because they
can apply to things we normally regard as virtuous or noble. You can experience
the desire to perfect yourself. You can feel craving for greater virtue. You
can even develop an attachment to the bliss of the meditation experience
itself. It is a bit hard to detach yourself from such altruistic feelings. In
the end, though, it is just more greed. It is a desire for gratification and a
clever way of ignoring the present-time reality.
Trickiest of all, however, are those really positive mental states
that come creeping into your meditation. Happiness, peace,
inner contentment, sympathy and compassion for all beings everywhere.
These mental states are so sweet and so benevolent that you can scarcely bear
to pry yourself loose from them. It makes you feel like a traitor to mankind.
There is no need to feel this way. We are not advising you to reject these
states of mind or to become heartless robots. We merely want you to see them
for what they are. They are mental states. They come and they go. They arise
and they pass away. As you continue your meditation, these states will arise
more often. The trick is not to become attached to them. Just see each one as
it comes up. See what it is, how strong it is and how long it lasts. Then watch
it drift away. It is all just more of the passing show of your own mental
universe.
Just as breathing comes in stages, so do the mental states. Every
breath has a beginning, a middle and an end. Every
mental states has a birth, a growth and a decay. You
should strive to see these stages clearly. This is no easy thing to do,
however. As we have already noted, every thought and sensation begins first in
the unconscious region of the mind and only later rises to consciousness. We
generally become aware of such things only after they have arisen in the
conscious realm and stayed there for some time. Indeed we usually become aware
of distractions only when they have released their hold on us and are already
on their way out. It is at this point that we are struck with the sudden
realization that we have been somewhere, day-dreaming, fantasizing, or
whatever. Quite obviously this is far too late in the chain of events. We may
call this phenomenon catching the lion by is tail, and it is an unskillful
thing to do. Like confronting a dangerous beast, we must approach mental states
head-on. Patiently, we will learn to recognize them as they arise from
progressively deeper levels of our conscious mind.
Since mental states arise first in the unconscious, to catch the
arising of the mental state, you've got to extend your awareness down into this
unconscious area. That is difficult, because you can't see what is going on
down there, at least not in the same way you see a conscious thought. But you
can learn to get a vague sense of movement and to operate by a sort of mental
sense of touch. This comes with practice, and the ability is another of the
effects of the deep calm of concentration. Concentration slows down the arising
of these mental states and gives you time to feel each one arising out of the
unconscious even before you see it in consciousness. Concentration helps you to
extend your awareness down into that boiling darkness where thought and
sensation begin.
As your concentration deepens, you gain the
ability to see thoughts and sensations arising slowly, like separate bubbles,
each distinct and with spaces between them. They bubble up in slow motion out of the
unconscious. They stay a while in the conscious mind and then they drift away.
The application of awareness to mental states is a precision
operation. This is particularly true of feelings or sensations. It is very easy
to overreach the sensation. That is, to add something to it above and beyond
what is really there. It is equally easy to fall short of sensation, to get
part of it but not all. The ideal that you are striving for is to experience
each mental state fully, exactly the way it is, adding nothing to it and not
missing any part of it. Let us use pain in the leg as an example. What is
actually there is a pure flowing sensation. It changes constantly, never the
same from one moment to the next. It moves from one location to another, and
its intensity surges up and down. Pain is not a thing. It is an event. There should
be no concepts tacked on to it and none associated with it. A pure unobstructed
awareness of this event will experience it simply as a flowing pattern of
energy and nothing more. No thought and no rejection. Just
energy.
Early on in our practice of meditation, we need to rethink our
underlying assumptions regarding conceptualization. For most of us, we have
earned high marks in school and in life for our ability to manipulate mental
phenomena -- concepts -- logically. Our careers, much of our success in
everyday life, our happy relationships, we view as largely the result of our
successful manipulation of concepts. In developing mindfulness, however, we
temporarily suspend the conceptualization process and focus on the pure nature
of mental phenomena. During meditation we are seeking to experience the mind at
the pre-concept level.
But the human mind conceptualizes such occurrences as pain. You
find yourself thinking of it as 'the pain'. That is a concept. It is a label,
something added to the sensation itself. You find yourself building a mental
image, a picture of the pain, seeing it as a shape. You may see a diagram of
the leg with the pain outlined in some lovely color. This is very creative and
terribly entertaining, but not what we want. Those are concepts tacked on to
the living reality. Most likely, you will probably find yourself thinking:
"I have a pain in my leg." 'I' is a concept. It is something extra
added to the pure experience.
When you introduce 'I' into the process, you are building a
conceptual gap between the reality and the awareness viewing that reality.
Thoughts such as 'Me', 'My' or 'Mine' have no place in direct awareness. They
are extraneous addenda, and insidious ones at that. When you bring 'me' into
the picture, you are identifying with the pain. That simply adds emphasis to
it. If you leave 'I' out of the operation, pain is not painful. It is just a
pure surging energy flow. It can even be beautiful. If you find 'I' insinuating
itself in your experience of pain or indeed any other sensation, then just
observe that mindfully. Pay bare attention to the phenomenon of personal
identification with the pain.
The general idea, however, is almost too simple. You want to
really see each sensation, whether it is pain, bliss or boredom. You want to
experience that thing fully in its natural and unadulterated form. There is
only one way to do this. Your timing has to be precise. Your awareness of each
sensation must coordinate exactly with the arising of that sensation. If you
catch it just a bit too late, you miss the beginning. You won't get all of it. If you hang on to any sensation past the time when it has memory.
The thing itself is gone, and by holding onto that memory, you miss the arising
of the next sensation. It is a very delicate operation. You've got to cruise
along right here in present time, picking things up and letting things drop
with no delays whatsoever. It takes a very light touch. Your relation to
sensation should never be one of past or future but always of the simple and
immediate now.
The human mind seeks to conceptualize phenomena, and it has
developed a host of clever ways to do so. Every simple sensation will trigger a
burst of conceptual thinking if you give the mind its way. Lets us take
hearing, for example. You are sitting in meditation and somebody in the next
room drops a dish. The sounds strike your ear. Instantly you see a picture of
that other room. You probably see a person dropping a dish, too. If this a familiar environment, say your own home, you probably
will have a 3-D technicolor mind movie of who did the
dropping and which dish was dropped. This whole sequence presents itself to
consciousness instantly. It just jumps out of the unconscious so bright and
clear and compelling that it shoves everything else out of sight. What happens
to the original sensation, the pure experience of hearing? It got lost in the
shuffle, completely overwhelmed and forgotten. We miss reality. We enter a
world of fantasy.
Here is another example: You are sitting in meditation and a sound
strikes your ear. It is just an indistinct noise, sort of a muffled crunch; it
could be anything. What happens next will probably be something like this.
"What was that? Who did that? Where did that come from? How far away was
that? Is it dangerous?". And on and on you go,
getting no answers but your fantasy projection. Conceptualization is an
insidiously clever process It creeps into you
experience, and it simply takes over. When you hear a sound in meditation, pay
bare attention to the experience of hearing. That and that
only. What is really happening is so utterly simple that we can and do
miss it altogether. Sound waves are striking the ear in a certain unique
pattern. Those waves are being translated into electrical impulses within the
brain and those impulses present a sound pattern to consciousness. That is all.
No pictures. No mind movies. No concepts. No interior dialogues about the
question. Just noise. Reality is elegantly simple and
unadorned. When you hear a sound, be mindful of the process of hearing.
Everything else is just added chatter. Drop it. The same rule applies to every
sensation, every emotion, every experience you may have. Look closely at your
own experience. Dig down through the layers of mental bric-a-brac and see what
is really there. You will be amazed how simple it is, and how beautiful.
There are times when a number of sensations may arise at once. You
might have a thought of fear, a squeezing in the stomach and an aching back and
an itch on your left earlobe, all at the same time. Don't sit there in a
quandary. Don't keep switching back and forth or wondering what to pick. One of
them will be strongest. Just open yourself up and the most insistent of these
phenomena will intrude itself and demand your attention.
So give it some attention just long enough to see it fade away. Then return to
your breathing. If another one intrudes itself, let it in. When it is done,
return to the breathing.
This process can be carried too far, however. Don't sit there
looking for things to be mindful of. Keep your mindfulness on the breath until
something else steps in and pulls your attention away. When you feel that
happening, don't fight it. Let you attention flow naturally over to the
distraction, and keep it there until the distraction evaporates. Then return to
breathing. Don't seek out other physical or mental phenomena. Just return to
breathing. Let them come to you. There will be times when you drift off, of
course. Even after long practice you find yourself suddenly waking up,
realizing you have been off the track for some while. Don't get discouraged.
Realize that you have been off the track for such and such a length of time and
go back to the breath. There is no need for any negative reaction at all. The
very act of realizing that you have been off the track is an active awareness.
It is an exercise of pure mindfulness all by itself.
Mindfulness grows by the exercise of mindfulness. It is like
exercising a muscle. Every time you work it, you pump it up just a little. You
make it a little stronger. The very fact that you have felt that wake-up
sensation means that you have just improved your mindfulness power. That means
you win. Move back to the breathing without regret. However, the regret is a
conditioned reflex and it may come along anyway--another mental habit. If you
find yourself getting frustrated, feeling discouraged, or condemning yourself,
just observe that with bare attention. It is just another distraction. Give it
some attention and watch it fade away, and return to the breath.
The rules we have just reviewed can and should be applied
thoroughly to all of your mental states. You are going to find this an utterly
ruthless injunction. It is the toughest job that you will ever undertake. You
will find yourself relatively willing to apply this technique to certain parts
of your experience, and you will find yourself totally unwilling to use it on
the other parts.
Meditation is a bit like mental acid. It eats away slowly at
whatever you put it on. We humans are very odd beings. We like the taste of
certain poisons and we stubbornly continue to eat them even while they are
killing us. Thoughts to which we are attached are poison. You will find
yourself quite eager to dig some thoughts out by the roots while you jealously
guard and cherish certain others. That is the human condition.
Vipassana meditation is not a game. Clear awareness is more than a
pleasurable pastime. It is a road up and out of the quagmire in which we are
all stuck, the swamp of our own desires and aversions. It is relatively easy to
apply awareness to the nastier aspects of your existence. Once you have seen
fear and depression evaporate in the hot, intense beacon of awareness, you want
to repeat the process. Those are the unpleasant mental states. They hurt. You
want to get rid of those things because they bother you. It is a good deal
harder to apply that same process to mental states which you cherish, like
patriotism, or parental protectiveness or true love. But it is just as
necessary. Positive attachments hold you in the mud just as assuredly as
negative attachments. You may rise above the mud far enough to breathe a bit
more easily if you practice Vipassana meditation with
diligence. Vipassana meditation is the road to Nibbana. And from the reports of those who have toiled
their way to that lofty goal, it is well worth every effort involved.
Chapter 13
Mindfulness (Sati)
Mindfulness is the English translation of the Pali
word Sati. Sati is an activity. What exactly is that? There can be
no precise answer, at least not in words. Words are devised by the symbolic
levels of the mind and they describe those realities with which symbolic
thinking deals. Mindfulness is pre-symbolic. It is not shackled to logic.
Nevertheless, Mindfulness can be experienced -- rather easily -- and it can be
described, as long as you keep in mind that the words are only fingers pointing
at the moon. They are not the thing itself. The actual experience lies beyond
the words and above the symbols. Mindfulness could be describes in completely
different terms than will be used here and each description could still be
correct.
Mindfulness is a subtle process that you are using at this very
moment. The fact that this process lies above and beyond words does not make it
unreal--quite the reverse. Mindfulness is the reality which gives rise to
words--the words that follow are simply pale shadows of reality. So, it is
important to understand that everything that follows here is analogy. It is not
going to make perfect sense. It will always remain beyond verbal logic. But you
can experience it. The meditation technique called Vipassana
(insight) that was introduced by the Buddha about twenty-five centuries ago is
a set of mental activities specifically aimed at experiencing a state of
uninterrupted Mindfulness.
When you first become aware of something, there is a fleeting
instant of pure awareness just before you conceptualize the thing, before you
identify it. That is a stage of Mindfulness. Ordinarily, this stage is very short.
It is that flashing split second just as you focus your eyes on the thing, just
as you focus your mind on the thing, just before you objectify it, clamp down
on it mentally and segregate it from the rest of existence. It takes place just
before you start thinking about it--before your mind says, "Oh, it's a
dog." That flowing, soft-focused moment of pure awareness is Mindfulness.
In that brief flashing mind-moment you experience a thing as an
un-thing. You experience a softly flowing moment of pure experience that is
interlocked with the rest of reality, not separate from it. Mindfulness is very
much like what you see with your peripheral vision as opposed to the hard focus
of normal or central vision. Yet this moment of soft, unfocused, awareness contains
a very deep sort of knowing that is lost as soon as you focus your mind and
objectify the object into a thing. In the process of ordinary perception, the
Mindfulness step is so fleeting as to be unobservable. We have developed the
habit of squandering our attention on all the remaining steps, focusing on the
perception, recognizing the perception, labeling it, and most of all, getting
involved in a long string of symbolic thought about it. That original moment of
Mindfulness is rapidly passed over. It is the purpose of the above mentioned Vipassana (or insight) meditation to train us to prolong
that moment of awareness.
When this Mindfulness is prolonged by using proper techniques, you
find that this experience is profound and it changes your entire view of the
universe. This state of perception has to be learned, however, and it takes
regular practice. Once you learn the technique, you will find that Mindfulness
has many interesting aspects.
The Characteristics of Mindfulness
Mindfulness is mirror-thought. It reflects only what is presently
happening and in exactly the way it is happening. There are no biases.
Mindfulness is non-judgmental observation. It is that ability of
the mind to observe without criticism. With this ability, one sees things without
condemnation or judgment. One is surprised by nothing. One simply takes a
balanced interest in things exactly as they are in their natural states. One
does not decide and does not judge. One just observes. Please note that when we
say "One does not decide and does not judge," what we mean is that
the meditator observes experiences very much like a
scientist observing an object under the microscope without any preconceived
notions, only to see the object exactly as it is. In the same way the meditator notices impermanence, unsatisfactoriness
and selflessness.
It is psychologically impossible for us to objectively observe
what is going on within us if we do not at the same time accept the occurrence
of our various states of mind. This is especially true with unpleasant states
of mind. In order to observe our own fear, we must accept the fact that we are
afraid. We can't examine our own depression without accepting it fully. The
same is true for irritation and agitation, frustration and all those other uncomfortable
emotional states. You can't examine something fully if you are busy reflecting
its existence. Whatever experience we may be having, Mindfulness just accepts
it. It is simply another of life's occurrences, just another thing to be aware
of. No pride, no shame, nothing personal at stake--what is there, is there.
Mindfulness is an impartial watchfulness. It does not take sides.
It does not get hung up in what is perceived. It just perceives. Mindfulness
does not get infatuated with the good mental states. It does not try to
sidestep the bad mental states. There is no clinging to the pleasant, no
fleeing from the unpleasant. Mindfulness sees all experiences as equal, all
thoughts as equal, all feelings as equal. Nothing is
suppressed. Nothing is repressed. Mindfulness does not play favorites.
Mindfulness is nonconceptual awareness.
Another English term for Sati is 'bare attention'. It is not thinking.
It does not get involved with thought or concepts. It does not get hung up on
ideas or opinions or memories. It just looks. Mindfulness registers
experiences, but it does not compare them. It does not label them or categorize
them. It just observes everything as if it was occurring for the first time. It
is not analysis which is based on reflection and memory. It is, rather, the
direct and immediate experiencing of whatever is happening, without the medium
of thought. It comes before thought in the perceptual process.
Mindfulness is present time awareness. It takes place in the here
and now. It is the observance of what is happening right now, in the present
moment. It stays forever in the present, surging perpetually on the crest of
the ongoing wave of passing time. If you are remembering your second-grade
teacher, that is memory. When you then become aware that you are remembering
your second-grade teacher, that is mindfulness. If you
then conceptualize the process and say to yourself, "Oh, I am
remembering", that is thinking.
Mindfulness is non-egoistic alertness. It takes place without
reference to self. With Mindfulness one sees all phenomena without references
to concepts like 'me', 'my' or 'mine'. For example, suppose there is pain in
your left leg. Ordinary consciousness would say, "I have a pain."
Using Mindfulness, one would simply note the sensation as a sensation. One
would not tack on that extra concept 'I'. Mindfulness stops one from adding
anything to perception, or subtracting anything from it. One does not enhance
anything. One does not emphasize anything. One just observes exactly what is
there--without distortion.
Mindfulness is goal-less awareness. In Mindfulness, one does not
strain for results. One does not try to accomplish anything. When one is
mindful, one experiences reality in the present moment in whatever form it takes. There is nothing to be achieved. There is
only observation.
Mindfulness is awareness of change. It is observing the passing
flow of experience. It is watching things as they are changing. it is seeing the birth, growth, and maturity of all
phenomena. It is watching phenomena decay and die. Mindfulness is watching
things moment by moment, continuously. It is observing all phenomena--physical,
mental or emotional--whatever is presently taking place in the mind. One just
sits back and watches the show. Mindfulness is the observance of the basic
nature of each passing phenomenon. It is watching the thing arising and passing
away. It is seeing how that thing makes us feel and how we react to it. It is
observing how it affects others. In Mindfulness, one is an unbiased observer
whose sole job is to keep track of the constantly passing show of the universe
within. Please note that last point. In Mindfulness, one watches the
universe within. The meditator who is developing
Mindfulness is not concerned with the external universe. It is there, but in
meditation, one's field of study is one's own experience, one's thoughts, one's
feelings, and one's perceptions. In meditation, one is one's own laboratory.
The universe within has an enormous fund of information containing the reflection
of the external world and much more. An examination of this material leads to
total freedom.
Mindfulness is participatory observation. The meditator
is both participant and observer at one and the same time. If one watches one's
emotions or physical sensations, one is feeling them at that very same moment.
Mindfulness is not an intellectual awareness. It is just awareness. The
mirror-thought metaphor breaks down here. Mindfulness is objective, but it is
not cold or unfeeling. It is the wakeful experience of life, an alert
participation in the ongoing process of living.
Mindfulness is an extremely difficult concept to define in words
-- not because it is complex, but because it is too simple and open. The same
problem crops up in every area of human experience. The most basic concept is
always the most difficult to pin down. Look at a dictionary and you will see a
clear example. Long words generally have concise definitions, but for short
basic words like 'the' and 'is', definitions can be a page long. And in
physics, the most difficult functions to describe are the most basic--those
that deal with the most fundamental realities of quantum mechanics. Mindfulness
is a pre-symbolic function. You can play with word symbols all day long and you
will never pin it down completely. We can never fully express what it is.
However, we can say what it does.
Three Fundamental Activities
There are three fundamental activities of Mindfulness. We can use
these activities as functional definitions of the term: (a) Mindfulness reminds
us of what we are supposed to be doing; (b) it sees things as they really are;
and (c) it sees the deep nature of all phenomena. Let's examine these
definitions in greater detail.
(a) Mindfulness reminds you of what you are supposed to be doing . In meditation, you put your attention on one
item. When your mind wanders from this focus, it is Mindfulness that reminds
you that your mind is wandering and what you are supposed to be doing. It is
Mindfulness that brings your mind back to the object of meditation. All of this
occurs instantaneously and without internal dialogue. Mindfulness is not
thinking. Repeated practice in meditation establishes this function as a mental
habit which then carries over into the rest of your life. A serious meditator pays bare attention to occurrences all the time,
day in, day out, whether formally sitting in meditation or not. This is a very
lofty ideal towards which those who meditate may be working for a period of
years or even decades. Our habit of getting stuck in thought is
years old, and that habit will hang on in the most tenacious manner. The only
way out is to be equally persistent in the cultivation of constant Mindfulness.
When Mindfulness is present, you will notice when you become stuck in your thought
patterns. It is that very noticing which allows you to back out of the thought
process and free yourself from it. Mindfulness then returns your attention to
its proper focus. If you are meditating at that moment, then your focus will be
the formal object of meditation. If your are not in formal meditation, it will be just a pure
application of bare attention itself, just a pure noticing of whatever comes up
without getting involved--"Ah, this comes up...and now this, and now
this... and now this".
Mindfulness is at one and the same time both bare attention itself
and the function of reminding us to pay bare attention if we have ceased to do
so. Bare attention is noticing. It re- establishes itself simply by noticing
that it has not been present. As soon as you are noticing that you have not
been noticing, then by definition you are noticing and then you are back again
to paying bare attention.
Mindfulness creates its own distinct feeling in consciousness. It
has a flavor--a light, clear, energetic flavor. Conscious thought is heavy by
comparison, ponderous and picky. But here again, these are just words. Your own
practice will show you the difference. Then you will probably come up with your
own words and the words used here will become superfluous. Remember, practice
is the thing.
(b) Mindfulness sees things as they really are. Mindfulness adds nothing to perception and it
subtracts nothing. It distorts nothing. It is bare attention and just looks at
whatever comes up. Conscious thought pastes things over our experience, loads
us down with concepts and ideas, immerses us in a churning vortex of plans and
worries, fears and fantasies. When mindful, you don't play that game. You just
notice exactly what arises in the mind, then you
notice the next thing. "Ah, this...and this...and now
this." It is really very simple.
(c) Mindfulness sees the true nature of all phenomena. Mindfulness and only Mindfulness can perceive
the three prime characteristics that Buddhism teaches are the deepest truths of
existence. In Pali these three are called Anicca (impermanence), Dukkha
(unsatisfactoriness), and Anatta
(selflessness--the absence of a permanent, unchanging, entity that we call Soul
or Self). These truths are not present in Buddhist teaching as dogmas demanding
blind faith. The Buddhists feel that these truths are universal and
self-evident to anyone who cares to investigate in a proper way. Mindfulness is
the method of investigation. Mindfulness alone has the power to reveal the
deepest level of reality available to human observation. At this level of
inspection, one sees the following: (a) all conditioned things are inherently
transitory; (b) every worldly thing is, in the end, unsatisfying; and (c) there
are really no entities that are unchanging or permanent, only processes.
Mindfulness works like and electron microscope. That is, it
operates on so fine a level that one can actually see directly those realities
which are at best theoretical constructs to the conscious thought process.
Mindfulness actually sees the impermanent character of every perception. It
sees the transitory and passing nature of everything that is perceived. It also
sees the inherently unsatisfactory nature of all conditioned things. It sees
that there is no sense grabbing onto any of these passing shows. Peace and
happiness cannot be found that way. And finally, Mindfulness sees the inherent
selflessness of all phenomena. It sees the way that we have arbitrarily
selected a certain bundle of perceptions, chopped them off from the rest of the
surging flow of experience and then conceptualized them as separate, enduring,
entities. Mindfulness actually sees these things. It does not think about them,
it sees them directly.
When it is fully developed, Mindfulness sees these three
attributes of existence directly, instantaneously, and without the intervening
medium of conscious thought. In fact, even the attributes which we just covered
are inherently unified. They don't really exist as separate items. They are
purely the result of our struggle to take this fundamentally simple process
called Mindfulness and express it in the cumbersome and inadequate thought
symbols of the conscious level. Mindfulness is a process, but it does not take
place in steps. It is a holistic process that occurs as a unit: you notice your
own lack of Mindfulness; and that noticing itself is a result of Mindfulness;
and Mindfulness is bare attention; and bare attention is noticing things
exactly as they are without distortion; and the way they are is impermanent (Anicca) ,
unsatisfactory (Dukkha), and selfless (Anatta). It all takes place in the space of a few
mind-moments. This does not mean, however, that you will instantly attain
liberation (freedom from all human weaknesses) as a result of your first moment
of Mindfulness. Learning to integrate this material into your conscious life is
another whole process. And learning to prolong this state of Mindfulness is
still another. They are joyous processes, however, and they are well worth the
effort.
Mindfulness (Sati) and Insight (Vipassana)
Meditation
Mindfulness is the center of Vipassana
Meditation and the key to the whole process. It is both the goal of this
meditation and the means to that end. You reach Mindfulness by being ever more
mindful. One other Pali word that is translated into
English as Mindfulness is Appamada , which means non-negligence or an absence of madness. One
who attends constantly to what is really going on in one's mind achieves the
state of ultimate sanity.
The Pali term Sati also bears the
connotation of remembering. It is not memory in the sense of ideas and pictures
from the past, but rather clear, direct, wordless knowing of what is and what
is not, of what is correct and what is incorrect, of what we are doing and how
we should go about it. Mindfulness reminds the meditator
to apply his attention to the proper object at the proper time and to exert
precisely the amount of energy needed to do the job. When this energy is
properly applied, the meditator stays constantly in a
state of calm and alertness. As long as this condition is maintained, those
mind-states call "hindrances" or "psychic irritants" cannot
arise--there is no greed, no hatred, no lust or laziness. But we all are human
and we do err. Most of us err repeatedly. Despite honest effort, the meditator lets his Mindfulness slip now and then and he
finds himself stuck in some regrettable, but normal, human failure. It is
Mindfulness that notices that change. And it is Mindfulness that reminds him to
apply the energy required to pull himself out. These
slips happen over and over, but their frequency decreases with practice. Once
Mindfulness has pushed these mental defilements aside, more wholesome states of
mind can take their place. Hatred makes way for loving kindness, lust is replaced
by detachment. It is Mindfulness which notices this change, too, and which
reminds the Vipassana meditator
to maintain that extra little mental sharpness needed to keep these more
desirable states of mind. Mindfulness makes possible the growth of wisdom and
compassion. Without Mindfulness they cannot develop to full maturity.
Deeply buried in the mind, there lies a mental mechanism which
accepts what the mind perceives as beautiful and pleasant experiences and
rejects those experiences which are perceived as ugly and painful. This
mechanism gives rise to those states of mind which we are training ourselves to
avoid--things like greed, lust, hatred, aversion, and jealousy. We choose to
avoid these hindrances, not because they are evil in the normal sense of the
word, but because they are compulsive; because they take the mind over and
capture the attention completely; because they keep going round and round in
tight little circles of thought; and because they seal us off from living
reality.
These hindrances cannot arise when Mindfulness is present.
Mindfulness is attention to present time reality, and therefore, directly
antithetical to the dazed state of mind which characterizes impediments. As meditators, it is only when we let our Mindfulness slip
that the deep mechanisms of our mind take over -- grasping, clinging and
rejecting. Then resistance emerges and obscures our awareness. We do not notice
that the change is taking place -- we are too busy with a thought of revenge,
or greed, whatever it may be. While an untrained person will continue in this
state indefinitely, a trained meditator will soon
realize what is happening. It is Mindfulness that notices the change. It is
Mindfulness that remembers the training received and that focuses our attention
so that the confusion fades away. And it is Mindfulness that then attempts to
maintain itself indefinitely so that the resistance cannot arise again. Thus,
Mindfulness is the specific antidote for hindrances. It is both the cure and
the preventive measure.
Fully developed Mindfulness is a state of total non-attachment and
utter absence of clinging to anything in the world. If we can maintain this
state, no other means or device is needed to keep ourselves free of
obstructions, to achieve liberation from our human weaknesses. Mindfulness is
non-superficial awareness. It sees things deeply, down below the level of
concepts and opinions. This sort of deep observation leads to total certainty,
and complete absence of confusion. It manifests itself primarily as a constant
and unwavering attention which never flags and never turns away.
This pure and unstained investigative awareness not only holds
mental hindrances at bay, it lays bare their very mechanism and destroys them.
Mindfulness neutralizes defilements in the mind. The result is a mind which
remains unstained and invulnerable, completely unaffected by the ups and downs
of life.
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