Chapter 9
Set Up Exercises
In Theravada Buddhist countries, it is traditional to begin each
meditation session with the recitation of a certain set of formulas. An
American audience is likely to take one glance at these invocations and to
dismiss them as harmless rituals and nothing more. The so-called rituals,
however, have been devised and refined by a set of pragmatic and dedicated men
and women, and they have a thoroughly practical purpose. They are therefore
worthy of deeper inspection.
The Buddha was considered contrary in his own day. He was born
into an intensely over-ritualized society, and his ideas appeared thoroughly
iconoclastic to the established hierarchy of his own era. On numerous
occasions, he disavowed the use of rituals for their own sake, and he was quite
adamant about it. This does not mean that ritual has no use. It means that
ritual by itself, performed strictly for it's
own sake, will not get you out of the trap. If you believe that mere recitation
of words will save you, then you only increase your own dependence on words and
concepts. This moves you away from the wordless perception of reality rather
than toward it. Therefore, the formulae which follow must be practiced with a
clear understanding of what they are and why they work. They are not magical
incantations. They are psychological cleansing devices which require active
mental participation in order to be effective. Mumbled words without intention
are useless. Vipassana meditation is a delicate
psychological activity, and the mental set of the practitioner is crucial to
its success. The technique works best in an atmosphere of calm, benevolent
confidence. And these recitations have been designed to foster those attitudes.
Correctly used, they can act as a helpful tool on the path to liberation.
The Threefold Guidance
Meditation is a tough job. It is an inherently solitary activity.
One person battles against enormously powerful forces, part of the very
structure of the mind doing the meditating. When you really get into it, you
will eventually find yourself confronted with a shocking realization. One day
you will look inside and realize the full enormity of what you are actually up
against. What you are struggling to pierce looks like a solid wall so tightly
knit that not a single ray of light shines through. You find yourself sitting
there, staring at this edifice and you say to yourself, "That? I am
supposed to get past that? But it's impossible! That is all there is. That is
the whole world. That is what everything means, and that is what I use to
define myself and to understand everything around me, and if I take that away
the whole world will fall apart and I will die. I cannot get through that. I
just can't."
It is a very scary feeling, a very lonely feeling. You feel like,
"Here I am, all alone, trying to punch away something so huge it is beyond
conception." To counteract this feeling, it is useful to know that you are
not alone. Others have passed this way before. They have confronted that same
barrier, and they have pushed their way through to the light. They have laid
out the rules by which the job can be done, and they have banded together into
a brotherhood for mutual encouragement and support. The Buddha found his
way through this very same wall, and after him came
many others. He left clear instructions in the form of the Dhamma to guide us along the same path. And he founded
the Sangha, the brotherhood of monks to
preserve that path and to keep each other on it. You are not alone, and the
situation is not hopeless.
Meditation takes energy. You need courage to confront some pretty
difficult mental phenomena and the determination to sit through various
unpleasant mental states. Laziness just will not serve. In order to pump up
your energy for the job, repeat the following statements to yourself. Feel the
intention you put into them. Mean what you say.
"I am about to tread the very path that has been walked by
the Buddha and by his great and holy disciples. An indolent person cannot
follow that path. May my energy prevail. May I succeed."
Universal Loving-Kindness
Vipassana meditation is an exercise in mindfulness, egoless awareness. It
is a procedure in which the ego will be eradicated by the penetrating gaze of
mindfulness. The practitioner begins this process with the ego in full command
of mind and body. Then, as mindfulness watches the ego function, it penetrates
to the roots of the mechanics of ego and extinguishes ego piece by piece. There
is a full blown Catch-22 in all this, however. Mindfulness is egoless
awareness. If we start with ego in full control, how do we put enough
mindfulness there at the beginning to get the job started? There is always some
mindfulness present in any moment. The real problem is to gather enough of it
to be effective. To do this we can use a clever tactic. We can weaken those
aspects of ego which do the most harm, so that mindfulness will have less
resistance to overcome.
Greed and hatred are the prime manifestations of the ego process.
To the extent that grasping and rejecting are present in the mind, mindfulness
will have a very rough time. The results of this are easy to see. If you sit
down to meditate while you are in the grip of some strong obsessive attachment,
you will find that you will get nowhere. If you are all hung up in your latest
scheme to make more money, you probably will spend most of your meditation
period doing nothing but thinking about it. If you are in a black fury over
some recent insult, that will occupy your mind just as fully. There is only so
much time in one day, and your meditation minutes are precious. It is best not
to waste them. The Theravada tradition has developed a useful tool which will
allow you to remove these barriers from your mind at least temporarily, so that
you can get on with the job of removing their roots permanently.
You can use one idea to cancel another. You can balance a negative
emotion by instilling a positive one. Giving is the opposite of greed.
Benevolence is the opposite of hatred. Understand clearly now: This is not an
attempt to liberate yourself by autohypnosis. You cannot condition
Enlightenment. Nibbana is an unconditioned state. A
liberated person will indeed be generous and benevolent, but not because he has
been conditioned to be so. He will be so purely as a manifestation of his own
basic nature, which is no longer inhibited by ego. So this is not conditioning.
This is rather psychological medicine. If you take this medicine according to
directions, it will bring temporary relief from the symptoms of the malady from
which you are currently suffering. Then you can get to work in earnest on the
illness itself.
You start out by banishing thoughts of self-hatred and self-
condemnation. You allow good feelings and good wishes first to flow to
yourself, which is relatively easy. Then you do the same for those people
closest to you. Gradually, you work outward from your own circle of intimates
until you can direct a flow of those same emotions to your enemies and to all
living beings everywhere. Correctly done, this can be a powerful and
transformative exercise in itself.
At the beginning of each meditation session, say the following
sentences to yourself. Really feel the intention:
1. May I be well, happy and peaceful. May
no harm come to me. May no difficulties come to me. May no problems come to me. May
I always meet with success. May I also have patience,
courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome inevitable
difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
2. May my parents be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
3. May my teachers be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
4. May my relatives be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
5. May my friends be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
6. May all indifferent persons be well, happy and peaceful. May no harm come to them.
May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come
to them. May they always meet with success.
May they also have patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet
and overcome inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
7. May my enemies be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
8. May all living beings be well, happy and peaceful.
May no harm come to them. May no difficulties come to them. May no problems come to them.
May they always meet with success. May they also have
patience, courage, understanding, and determination to meet and overcome
inevitable difficulties, problems, and failures in life.
Once you have completed these recitations, lay aside all your troubles
and conflicts for the period of practice. Just drop the whole bundle. If they
come back into your meditation later, just treat them as what they are,
distractions.
The practice of Universal Loving-Kindness is also recommended for
bedtime and just after arising. It is said to help you sleep well and to
prevent nightmares. It also makes it easier to get up in the morning. And it
makes you more friendly and open toward everybody, friend or foe, human or
otherwise.
The most damaging psychic irritant arising in the mind
particularly at the time when the mind is quiet, is
resentment. You may experience indignation remembering some incident that
caused you psychological and physical pain. This experience can cause you
uneasiness, tension, agitation and worry. You might not be able to go on
sitting and experiencing this state of mind. Therefore, we strongly recommend
that you should start your meditation with generating Universal
Loving-Kindness.
You sometimes may wonder how can we wish:
"May my enemies be well, happy and peaceful. May no harm come to them; may
no difficulty come to them; may no problems come to them; may they always meet
with success. May they also have patience, courage, understanding and
determination to meet and overcome inevitable difficulties, problems and
failures in life"?
You must remember that you practice loving-kindness for the
purification of your own mind, just as you practice meditation for your own
attainment of peace and liberation from pain and suffering. As you practice loving-kindness
within yourself, you can behave in a most friendly manner without biases,
prejudices, discrimination or hate. Your noble behavior helps you to help
others in a most practical manner to reduce their pain and suffering. It is
compassionate people who can help others. Compassion is a manifestation of
loving-kindness in action, for one who does not have loving-kindness cannot
help others. Noble behavior means behaving in a most friendly and most cordial
manner. Behavior includes your thought speech and action. If this triple mode
of expression of your behavior is contradictory, your behavior cannot be noble
behavior. On the other hand, pragmatically speaking, it is much better to
cultivate the noble thought, "May all beings be
happy minded" than the thought, "I hate him". Our noble thought
will one day express itself in noble behavior and our spiteful thought in evil
behavior.
Remember that your thoughts are transformed into speech and action
in order to bring the expected result. Thought translated into action is
capable of producing tangible result. You should always speak and do things
with mindfulness of loving-kindness. While speaking of loving-kindness, if you
act or speak in a diametrically opposite way you will be reproached by the
wise. As mindfulness of loving-kindness develops, your thoughts, words and
deeds should be gently, pleasant, meaningful, truthful and beneficial to you as
well as to others. If your thoughts, words or deeds cause harm to you, to
others or to both, then you must ask yourself whether you are really mindful of
loving-kindness.
For all practical purposes, if all of your enemies are well, happy
and peaceful, they would not be your enemies. If they are free from problems,
pain, suffering, affliction, neurosis, psychosis, paranoia, fear, tension,
anxiety, etc., they would not be your enemies. Your practical solution to your
enemies is to help them to overcome their problems, so you can live in peace
and happiness. In fact, if you can, you should fill the minds of all your enemies
with loving-kindness and make all of them realize the true meaning of peace, so
you can live in peace and happiness. The more they are in neurosis, psychosis,
fear, tension, anxiety, etc., the more trouble, pain and suffering they can
bring to the world. If you could convert a vicious and wicked person into a
holy and saintly individual, you would perform a miracle. Let us cultivate
adequate wisdom and loving- kindness within ourselves to convert evil minds to
saintly minds.
When you hate somebody you think, "Let him be ugly. Let him
lie in pain. Let him have no prosperity. Let him not be right. Let him not be
famous. Let him have no friends Let him, after death, reappear in an unhappy
state of depravation in a bad destination in perdition." However, what
actually happens is that your own body generates such harmful chemistry that
you experience pain, increased heart beat, tension, change of facial
expression, loss of appetite for food, deprivation of sleep and appear very
unpleasant to others. You go through the same things you wish for your enemy.
Also you cannot see the truth as it is. Your mind is like boiling water. Or you
are like a patient suffering from jaundice to whom any
delicious food tastes bland. Similarly, you cannot appreciate somebody's
appearance, achievement, success, etc. As long as this condition exists, you
cannot meditate well.
Therefore we recommend very strongly that you practice loving-
kindness before you start your serious practice of meditation. Repeat the
proceeding passages very mindfully and meaningfully. As you recite these
passages, feel true loving-kindness within yourself first and then share it
with others, for you cannot share with others what you do not have within
yourself.
Remember, though, these are not magic formulas. They don't work by
themselves. If you use them as such, you will simply waste time and energy. But
if you truly participate in these statements and invest them with your own
energy, they will serve you will. Give them a try. 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