Know and Let Go
Venerable
Phra Acharn Sangwahn Khemmako
(Translation Brigitte Schrottenbacher)
May those who listen to this Dhamma-talk, progress in their meditation-practice, may the
Dhamma that you hear now, fill your heart with
happiness and satisfaction about the Buddha’s teaching!
The Buddha is in the mind, the Dhamma is in the mind and the Sangha
of the Noble Ones is in the mind.
The three treasures are in your own mind, so do not let your mind wander
anywhere else outside yourself but stay within yourself. Know what goes on in
your mind right now. If you think good, know it, if
you think bad, know it. Know you think good, know you
think bad. The heart knows. In your heart you know, you are mindful and fresh.
This makes you - your mind - good.
You know, your heart knows, is mindful and
fresh. The heart knows what is going on in the mind. If the mind is thinking
the heart knows it. If you practice like that, you can see and understand the Dhamma. The heart knows the Dhamma.
It knows what goes on in the mind.
This is what we call cittanupassana.
Dhammanupassana is the knowing of the present Dhamma. It
lets you know what the Buddha taught. If you do not yet know, practice now. Know
and let go. Practice knowing and letting go. Know, if you think good and if you think bad, you know it. Know it in the
present moment. You can also know while breathing in “Bud-“, while
breathing out “-dho”. “Bud-“ “-dho”, “Bud-“ “-dho”,
“Bud-“ “-dho”.
Think “Bud-“ while
breathing in and you know, think “-dho” while breathing
out and know. You know the breathing in, and you know the breathing out. If you
know like that, if you really know like that, then it’s like the Buddha himself
is here, to know the breathing in and the breathing out. The Buddha reached
enlightenment by watching the breathing in and the breathing out.
Make up your mind, that you would like to
know, what the Buddha knew. You want to see old age, sickness and death. You
want to see it and know it. You want to know it with eyes and ears. Those of you,
who have entered the order of the Sangha, remember
that your preceptor, who gave you the precepts, wanted you to know old age,
sickness and death. To get a deeper
understanding of these truths, the preceptor gave you in the ordination
ceremony the five “outer” meditation objects (panca
kammatthana): hair of the head (kesa), hair that grows all over the body (loma), nails of fingers and toes (nakha), teeth (danta),
and skin (tacco).
It is the first meditation instruction, a
monk receives. If then the monk doesn’t strive, recollect and practice these
five objects, if he does not strive for liberation, then the question comes up
– why did he ordain?
You really should reflect on these five
objects: hair of the head, hair of the body, nails of fingers and toes, teeth
in your mouth and the skin. Reflect on these five objects of contemplation,
which the preceptor gave to you in the ordination ceremony and not just monks -
but every person who ordains should see and contemplate these five objects.
Now I give these instructions to you - contemplate
the hair of the head, hair of the body, nails of fingers and toes, teeth and skin.
Go through these objects again and again. Repeat: hair of the head, hair of the
body, nails, teeth and skin, try to see them – know them.
The monk who leads the ordination procedure
also says: “Kinamosi” and the initiate
answers: “Ama
bhante.” I do translate the meaning of this as:
take “Namo” to yourself, or drink the Dhamma. You should pay respect to the Buddha. Repeat
“Namo tassa Bhagavato, Arahato, Samma Sambuddhassa”. (Homage
to the Blessed One, who is far from all defilements, the One – who reached
perfect enlightened through Himself).
When I instruct you today I want you to “Kinamosi - Dhamma”
– take “Namo” to yourself, and pay respect to
the Buddha, by practicing his instructions. This is really paying respect to
the Buddha. Consider the hair on the top of your head, hair that grows all over
your body, the nails of your fingers and toes, the teeth in your mouth and the
skin in which your body is wrapped in. Know and contemplate your body. Close
your eyes and see as if your eyes are opened. Know and reflect. Let this
practice become the power of your mind.
A monk is someone who meditates and
sharpens his concentration. If you practice, you act like a monk. Someone who
is sitting in meditation, and sharpens his concentration, can be called a monk.
Practice as if you polish a Buddha statue. Polish your mind, so that it is
respectfully following the Buddha’s teaching. First you have to apply some
cleaning liquid and then rub diligently with some pieces of cloth, to remove
all the dirt from the Buddha statue. After doing this, the Buddha statue looks
shiny and bright - like new. Your mind will be delighted. While doing the work,
you feel happiness and when you’ve finished the work your mind will be filled
with delight and satisfaction.
If you want to practice meditation, then it’s
important that you know your body. Know - you sit like a Buddha statue. Let the
mind dwell within the body and do not allow it to go anywhere else outside of
your body. Imagine that you clean a Buddha statue. See the Buddha statue and think
that the Buddha is in your mind, the Dhamma is
in your mind and the Sangha of the Noble Ones
is in your mind.
If you prepare your mind like that, then
concentration will arise and you will feel joy. What you did not know before -
now, this knowledge can arise, what you never saw before, now you can see it.
The meditator knows if the mind is calm and he knows if
it is not calm. He should know everything. He should know and see. If the mind
thinks about this and that, he just knows. He knows and let go of it. If the
mind changes quickly, he knows that. See that the mind is all the time changing
– just know that and let go. Think: I sit here and try to develop concentration;
I sit and develop the mind as a monk should do.
Then imagine again that you sit there like
a Buddha statue, knowing that the Buddha is in your heart, know that the Dhamma is in your heart, and know that the Sangha is in your heart. If you see it like that,
then the five hindrances will disappear, and you can become a Noble One. You
should practice like that, before you die. Practice, to become
free from death. “Paramatta” – the
absolute, is deathless. But first you have to see and know death and dying. You
have to see reality.
Know that the Buddha has developed his mind
to the highest state – keep this in your mind while meditating. Know that the Buddha,
the Dhamma and the Sangha
are very precious and high developed. Think of that. But if the Sangha doesn’t practice meditation then there can’t
be any development of the mind. The Sangha,
the students of the Buddha, have to practice mediation, without lethargy, today
and tomorrow. It’s like eating. You have to eat today and you have to eat
tomorrow. You can’t stop eating and so it is with practicing meditation. You
have to do it every day. Practice daily and you will be someone who progresses
in Dhamma.
If you sit here and practice, you do
something for your progress, what your eyes couldn’t see, now you can see it,
what your mind didn’t know – now can you know it. This
will show your progress. Your heart will be filled with faith in the Dhamma that the Buddha taught. You will know by
yourself that what the Buddha taught is the truth. You will know it through
your own experience. That’s the way to become a Noble One (ariya).
In this way you can become an Arahant – an
Enlightened One, by practicing like that, you can realize the four steps of
enlightenment viz. stream-winner (sotapanna),
once-returner (sakadagami),
non-returner (anagami)
and the highest step - the fully enlightened one (arahant).
Practice as much as you can. Laziness
destroys and avoids your progress. Know, when the breath comes in, and know when
the breath goes out. Rapture will appear when you breathe in, and there will be
rapture when you breathe out. If the mind of a meditator
reaches this level, then he is able to overcome the five hindrances. Sloth and
torpor, restlessness, doubts, anger and greed – the five hindrances – can’t
bother him anymore.
If you overcome these hindrances then you
are someone who really progresses in Dhamma. If
you sit and practice like that, you will see the truth of Dhamma
by yourself. Then you don’t have to ask anyone anymore. You will know and see
the Dhamma by yourself, through your own
experience. I want you to make up your mind and practice, what the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha
has taught.
If you keep five or eight precepts, you can
reach the state of a stream-winner (sotapanna),
but you really have to keep these precepts. You don’t know when, it’s like
planting a seed and diligently watering it, then one day the plant will flower.
Happiness arises in your mind and you might want to offer the flower to the
Buddha. That is what happens to the mind of a meditator.
His mind will be filled with joy.
One flower is not as beautiful as many
flowers put together to a flower arrangement. A meditator
develops morality, concentration and wisdom. This is arranging the flowers.
Your heart is a beautiful flower, like a lotus in a pond. But if there is only
one lotus it’s not as beautiful as if there are many of them. Therefore water
them diligently and it will become like the beautiful flower arrangements here
in this Meditation hall.
Different flowers have different colors and
the leaves have yet another color. But everything together makes these
arrangements so beautiful.
Flowers change their color, by reflecting
on this, you can see impermanence (anicca). Know
that it is the same with your body. It has to whither like these flowers. When
you pay respect to the Buddha, you might burn incense and candles. The incense
burn down and then they are gone and the candle slowly burns down until it
extinguishes. Watching this and reflecting on it, will show you the truth of
impermanence. You are someone who sees and knows.
As a meditator
you should develop mindfulness in everything you do and you will know and see
the truth in everything. You will see the truth of impermanence in everything. Try
to practice as much as you can. It’s important to develop concentration and to
see the true nature of things, to see impermanence. That is what the Buddha
taught.
So, practice a lot, don’t let up and stay
“on the ball”. Practice “Bud-“ while breathing
in, “-dho” while breathing out, have
mindfulness by breathing in and have mindfulness by breathing out. If you do
that, rapture and joy will arise in the mind and the hindrances will disappear.
No more sloth and torpor will come up. Rapture will increase your
concentration. The hindrances avoid that you see Dhamma.
Rapture will help you to cut these hindrances and you will see the truth of Dhamma, you will see impermanence. If you see
impermanence, go on and practice even more, do as much as you can. Increase
your experience. See and know what the Buddha taught. The Buddha taught us to
see our body and mind and to see that they are impermanent and this is real suffering.
Sitting for a long time lets suffering arise
in the body. Pain arises and this pain is hard to endure. We have to know and
let go. But bodily pain is really hard to endure. The Buddha himself practiced very
hard. He ate so little that he wasn’t able to walk anymore. His body became so
thin and the blood almost dried out. There were only bones and skin left and he
was near to death. Then he realized that this is not the right way. He will die
before he reaches enlightenment and freedom from defilements. He understood that
this is the wrong way to practice. By practicing like that, the mind will not be
properly trained. It’s the mind that is important and not the body.
If you do not eat enough you can’t be successful
and if you eat too much, the hindrances will appear and you won’t be able to
practice either. Eat and then sleep – so you can’t reach Nibbana.
A farmer has to plough his field. He eats
and then he goes and does his work. However the climate may be, if there is
rain or heat – he has to go and do his job. As meditator
you have to do it like that. Nothing should keep you away from practicing. Eating
too much and then going to sleep – that’s not the way to reach Nibbana. Eat and be aware, when you feel it is
enough, drink water to fill up the stomach. That’s what the Buddha recommended.
Then you will be able to overcome the hindrances.
In the Buddha’s time there was a
rich man, who was very fat. He had the habit to come to the temple on Uposatha day. One day he was approaching the Buddha
and asked: “Venerable Sir, what can I do, I always eat too much and then I feel
very uncomfortable. The only thing I can do is go to sleep.” The Buddha recommended
that he should tell one of his servants to count each spoonful he was eating
and then to find out with how many spoonfuls he would feel well. Then he should
stop eating and fill his stomach with some more water. After eight days, on the
following Uposatha day, the rich man came again
and told the Buddha, that he feels very happy now; his stomach doesn’t feel that
full anymore.
As a meditator
you have to be aware and know what is the right amount for
you to eat, so that you are still able to meditate. Sometimes it tastes
very delicious and you eat too much, then when you drink water you are too
full. When trying to meditate, it doesn’t work because the hindrances are too
strong and you go to sleep. You have no clearness of mind.
The five hindrances avoid that you enter
concentration and you are not able to reach Nibbana.
Sloth and torpor avoid that you enter concentration. They avoid that the
knowledge of remembering past existences (pubbenivasanussati-nana)
appears and you will not be able to know what the Buddha taught.
As meditator you
should check yourself all the time. You should not be foolish but know by
yourself why the hindrances arise and how to overcome them. Then you will
progress in the Dhamma. In this way, you can
become a noble one. Citta-vimangsa is the name
of this virtue. Consider how to overcome these hindrances when they appear in
the mind. The hindrances obstruct our progress in many ways. They lead to
negligence in keeping the moral principles, we cannot enter concentration and
no knowledge can arise. All this happens because of the five hindrances.
If a boxer is not strong and quick enough
to fight his opponent in the ring, then he will be knocked out. If
concentration, mindfulness and energy are well developed, you will be able to
knock out the hindrances. That’s sure. You have to be very careful and defend
yourself with hands and feet until you knock out the hindrances completely. If
you can’t do it while sitting, then stand up and do some standing meditation,
if this doesn’t work, do walking meditation. These are useful methods to
overcome the hindrances. Absorption and Nibbana
can happen in these postures as well. If you walk, do it slowly and mindfully.
One good example is the venerable Ananda.
The first Buddhist council was arranged
three months after the final Nibbana (Parinibbana) of the Buddha and only full enlightened
ones (arahants) were allowed to join the
council. It was very important that the venerable monk Ananda,
who was the secretary of the Buddha, would join the council, because he had the
most knowledge of the Buddha’s teachings, but he had only reached the first
step on the way to Nibbana (stream-entry) by
that time. The Buddha himself stated that the venerable Ananda
would reach Arahantship before the council
should happen. So his fellow monks encouraged him to practice hard these three
months to be able to reach enlightenment and join the council.
The venerable Ananda,
practiced very intensively for three months. The night before the council took place;
he had still not reached enlightenment and felt very upset. He decided to do
all night long meditation. Towards dawn he felt exhausted and his mind was restlessly
thinking. So he thought – I give up and have a little rest before I continue. While
he was mindfully lying down – his head had not yet touched the pillow – he
attained enlightenment, and gained lots of supernatural powers. The next day at
the Sangha-meeting some monks saw him coming
out of the earth, some saw him coming through the air.
This shows that as a meditator
you have to practice mindfulness even while lying on. All four postures are
important. Sitting, walking, standing and lying on. For the venerable Ananda it was the moment he could let go of all the
pressure and all the expectations he had build up in his mind. He let go and
reached enlightenment.
When you lay down know while breathe in “Bud-“,
breathe out “-dho”. “Bud-dho”, until you sleep away. The moment you wake up,
start immediately with “Bud-“while breathing in and “-dho” while breathing out. When you wake up the mind
is still pure – it’s not occupied by thoughts and so it can easily enter
concentration. Some could see Dhamma the
moment they woke up. Wisdom arose in that very moment. If you see the Dhamma you do not have to ask anyone anymore, the Dhamma will teach you. You are on the way to become
a noble one.
While lying down, you think of the Buddha,
while sitting, you think of the Buddha, while standing, you think of the Buddha
and while walking, you think of the Buddha – “Buddho”.
If the mind is prepared like that, then it is likely that you may reach Nibbana. So, try to keep up your mindfulness – while
sitting, walking, standing and while lying on. Make the effort to follow these
instructions. Then you will be able to reach Nibbana
like many before you. Don’t waste your time anymore with useless things. Know
what comes and then let it go. Know and let go. Whatever thoughts may appear,
you know them and let them go. Don’t care further about them. Know and let go. That’s
the way to build up equanimity in the mind. If equanimity is not strong yet,
continue, go on – know and let go.
If you could pass the hindrances – know it,
if rapture and joy arise – know it, if you are able to let go – know it. Try to
practice as much as possible. Know if the body feels light. If the body feels
light, then the mind feels light too and you are on the noble path. Body and
mind feel light, the noble path arises. If these factors come together, then
the mind starts to know and see. You are someone who progresses in meditation.
If the hindrances appear – know it, if they
disappear - know it. Know and let go. Follow these instructions and you will
progress in Dhamma. Know and let go. These are only a
few words, but their essence is deep. Never forget that you have to practice by
yourself. You have to do it. No one can do it for you.
If you can’t see the breath anymore, you
don’t have to look for it. Just sit still, know and let go. Know and let go
with calm mind. If the breath wants to come in again – just know it. If it enters
again you know it. Does it cease again – know it. Know and let go. Practice
like that and wisdom will arise for sure.
Don’t think that laziness and anger are
yours, don’t think desire is yours. That’s why you should know and let go. If
your mindfulness and contemplation is getting better then anger and desire,
laziness and all the other obstacles will disappear naturally, by themselves. You
don’t have to do anything. Just watch how the mind is changing. See how these
things arise in the mind, see them change and see how they disappear. This is
seeing the Dhamma and you know that the
hindrances have ceased.
Today we do an official funeral and you
might see, what you never saw before, you might know, what you never knew
before. Just watch carefully. How is the mind now before the funeral? What goes
on in the mind, when the fire burns? I want you to watch yourself, your mind, carefully.
You are meditators, and in such moments it is
possible to get a deep insight into the true nature of things. So watch
carefully. If the hindrances cease, it is possible to see Dhamma
and even to reach Nibbana. See the full truth.
That’s what I want you to be prepared for. The mediation should lead you to
that goal.
Once there where monks meditating in the
forest, a tiger came and caught one of them. He cried out loudly: “help, help.”
– the other monks seeing the situation shouted out:”we
cannot help you; you have to help yourself now, think of morality,
concentration and wisdom, patience and endurance – help yourself”. The monk,
hearing this, started to apply mindfulness and contemplated, he knew he wasn’t
enlightened yet and he could not escape the tiger anymore. So he was only
thinking in terms of the Dhamma. He had great
fear and a lot of pain, because he wasn’t enlightened yet. He took refuge in
the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha. The tiger bit him here and there and the
monk just watched the feelings. The tiger didn’t reach the heart yet, when the
monk attained full enlightenment, through his contemplation of feelings – in
the mouth of the tiger.
This story is taking from the Tripitaka. My teacher Acharn
Maha Tong told me this story and I kept it in my mind
all the time. When I was a newly ordained monk, practicing on the graveyard in Wat Bantueng, I experienced a lot
of fear. This graveyard was famous for its fierce ghosts.
I was meditating while walking, standing
and sitting and I was awake most of the time, because I could hear every little
sound and fear arose easily. I was there completely alone and there was no one
else who could help me. I sat straight like a candle and did not fall asleep. Soon
concentration and with it calmness arose. I only watched my own mind. I applied
concentration, mindfulness and contemplation. If I wouldn’t have had concentration, I wouldn’t have been able to see
things as they really are. But if the mind is concentrated, then fear cannot
bother you. It will not even arise anymore.
The knowledge of
past existences won’t arise if you are still bothered by the five hindrances.
That’s why I
really wish you, that you practice diligently and that you may overcome the
hindrances. If you are not successful yet, invite the Buddha, the Dhamma and the Sangha into your heart. These three treasures have
been successful before you. They know. So invite their wisdom into your heart.
This is what I
want to teach you.
May you all have
moral principles (sila), develop
concentration (samadhi) and gain
wisdom (panna)!
May you practice
with diligence, patience and endurance!
May you have the
energy to do it and may all of you progress in your meditation!
Morality,
concentration and wisdom are only words but if you do meditate and develop them
- then you will know. You will know this is concentration, you will know this
is wisdom. You do not just know their names, but you experience them. Then you
start to see Dhamma and you will
understand.
May all of you
be able to reach the four paths and the four fruitions and the One – Nibbana. For this I wish you good luck!
May all beings be happy!!!