Our Real Home

By Venerable Acharn Chah
(A talk addressed to an elderly lay-disciple
approaching her death)
Now determine in your mind to listen with respect to
the Dhamma. During the time that I am speaking, be as
attentive to my words as if it was the Lord Buddha himself sitting in front of
you. Close your eyes and make yourself comfortable, compose your mind and make
it one-pointed. Humbly allow the Triple Gem of wisdom, truth and purity to
abide in your heart as a way of showing respect to the Fully Enlightened One.
Today I have brought nothing material of any substance to offer
you, only Dhamma, the teachings of the Lord Buddha.
Listen well, you should understand that even the Buddha himself, with his great
store of accumulated virtue, could not avoid physical death. When he reached
old age he relinquished his body and let go of its heavy burden. Now you too
must learn to be satisfied with the many years you’ve already depended on your
body. You should feel that it’s enough.
You can compare it to household utensils that you’ve had for a long
time – your cups, saucers, plates and so on. When you first had them they were
clean and shining, but now after using them for so long, they’re starting to
wear out. Some are already broken, some have disappeared and those that are
left are deteriorating, they have no stable form, and its nature to be like
that. Your body is the same way – it’s been continually changing right from the
day you were born, through childhood and youth, until now it’s reached old age.
You must accept that. The Buddha said those conditions (sankharas),
whether they are internal conditions, bodily conditions, or external conditions
are not-self, their nature is to change. Contemplate this truth until you see
it clearly.
This very lump of flesh that lies here in decline is sacca-dhamma, the truth. The truth of this body is saccadhamma, and it is the unchanging teaching of
the Buddha. The Buddha taught us to look at the body, to contemplate it and to
come to terms with its nature. We must be able to be at peace with the body,
whatever state it is in. The Buddha taught that we should ensure that its only the body that is locked up in jail and not let the
mind be imprisoned along with it. Now as your body begins to run down and
deteriorate with age don’t resist that but don’t let your mind deteriorate with
it, keep the mind separate. Give energy to the mind by realizing the truth of
the way things are. The Lord Buddha taught that this is the nature of the body,
it can’t be any other way, having been born it gets old and sick and then it
dies. This is a great truth that you are presently encountering. Look at the
body with wisdom and realize it.
Even if your house is flooded or burnt to the ground, whatever the
danger that threatens it; let it concern only the house. If there’s a flood,
don’t let it flood your mind, if there is a fire, don’t let it burn your heart,
let it be merely the house, that which is external to you, that is flooded and
burned. Allow the mind to let go of its attachments. The time is ripe.
You’ve been alive a long time. Your eyes have seen any number of
forms and colors, your ears have heard so many sounds, and you’ve had any
number of experiences. And that’s all they were – just experiences. You’ve
eaten delicious foods and all the good tastes were just good tastes, nothing
more. The unpleasant tastes were a just unpleasant taste that’s all. If the eye
sees a beautiful form, that’s all it is, just a beautiful form. An ugly form is
just an ugly form. The ear hears an entrancing, melodious sound and it’s
nothing more than that. A grating, disharmonious sound is simply so.
The Buddha said that rich or poor, young or old, human or animal,
no being in this world can maintain itself in any one state for long,
everything experiences change and estrangement. This is a fact of life that we
can do nothing to remedy. But the Buddha said that what we can do is to
contemplate the body and mind so as to see their impersonality, see that
neither of them is “me” or “mine”. They have a mere provisional reality. It’s
like this house, it’s only nominally yours, and you couldn’t take it with you
anywhere. It’s the same with your wealth, your possessions and your family –
they’re all yours only in name, they don’t really belong to you, they belong to
nature. Now this truth doesn’t apply to you alone, everyone is in the same
position, even the Lord Buddha and his enlightened disciples. They differed
from us in only one respect and that was in their acceptance of the way things
are they saw that it could be no other way.
So the Buddha taught us to scan and examine this body, from the
soles of the feet up to the crown of the head and then back down to the feet
again. Just take a look at the body. What sort of things do you see? Is there
anything intrinsically clean there? Can you find any abiding essence? This
whole body is steadily degenerating and the Buddha taught us to see that it
doesn’t belong to us. It’s natural for the body to be this way, because all
conditioned phenomena are subject to change. How else would you have it be?
Actually there’s nothing wrong with the way the body is. It’s not the body that
causes you suffering it’s your wrong thinking. When you see the right wrongly,
there’s bound to be confusion.
It’s like the water of a river. It naturally flows down the
gradient; it never flows against it, that’s its nature. If a person were to go
and stand on a riverbank and seeing the water flowing swiftly down its course,
foolishly wanted it to flow back up the gradient, he would suffer. Whatever he
was doing, his wrong thinking would allow him no peace of mind. He would be
unhappy because of his wrong view, thinking against the stream. If he had right
view he would see that the water must inevitably flow down the gradient and until
he realized and accepted that fact the man would be agitated and upset.
The river that must flow down the gradient is like your body.
Having been young, your body’s become old and now it’s meandering towards its
death. Don’t go wishing it was otherwise, it’s not something you have the power
to remedy. The Buddha told us to see the way things are and then let go of our
clinging to them. Take this feeling of letting go as your refuge. Keep
meditating even if you feel tired and exhausted. Let your mind dwell with the
breath. Take a few deep breaths and then establish the mind on the breath,
using the mantra ‘Buddho’. Make this practice
habitual. The more exhausted you feel the more subtle and focused your
concentration must be, so that you can cope with the painful sensations that
arise. When you start to feel fatigued then bring all you’re thinking to a
halt, let the mind gather itself together and then
turn to Knowing the breath. Just keep up the inner recitation “Bud-dho, Bud-dho”. Let of all
externals. Don’t go grasping at thoughts of your children and relatives don’t
grasp at anything whatsoever. Let go. Let the mind unite in a single point and
let that composed mind dwell with the breath. Let the breath be its sole object
of knowledge. Concentrate until the mind becomes increasingly subtle, until
feelings are insignificant and there is great inner clarity and wakefulness.
Then when painful sensations arise they will gradually cease of their own
accord. Finally you’ll look on the breath as if it was a relative come to visit
you. When a relative leaves we follow him out and see him off. We watched until
he’s walked or driven out of sight and then we go back indoors. We watch the
breath in the same way. If the breath is coarse we know it is course, if it’s subtle
we know that it’s subtle. As it becomes increasingly fine we keep following it,
while simultaneously awakening the mind. Eventually the breath disappears
altogether and all that remains is the feeling of wakefulness. This is called
meeting the Buddha. We have that clear wakeful awareness that is called ‘Buddho’, the one who knows, the one who is awake, the radiant one. It is meeting and dwelling with the Buddha,
with knowledge and clarity. For it was only the historical flesh-and-blood
Buddha that entered Parinibbana, the true
Buddha, the Buddha that is clear radiant knowing, we can still experience and
attain today, and when we do the heart is one.
So let go, put everything down, everything except the knowing.
Don’t be fooled if visions or sounds arise in your mind during meditation. Put
them all down. Don’t take hold of anything at all. Just say with this non-dual
awareness. Don’t worry about the past or the future, just be still and you will
reach the place where there is no advancing, no retreating and no stopping,
where there’s nothing to grasp at or cling to. Why? Because
there’s no self, no ‘me’ or ‘mine’. It’s all gone. The Buddha taught us
to be emptied of everything in this way, not to carry anything with us. To know, and having known, let go.
Realizing the Dhamma, the path to freedom
from the Round of Birth and Death, is a job that we all have to do alone. So
keep trying to let go and to understand the teachings. Really put effort into
your contemplations. Don’t worry about your family. At the moment they are as
they are, in the future they will be like you. There is no one in this world
that can escape this fate. The Buddha told us to put down everything that lacks
a real abiding substance. If you put everything down you will see the truth, if
you don’t you won’t. That’s the way it is and it’s the
same for everyone in the world. So don’t worry and don’t grasp at anything.
Even if you find yourself thinking, well that’s all right too, as
long as you think wisely. Don’t think foolishly. If you think of your children
think of them with wisdom, not with foolishness. What ever the mind turns to,
then think and know that thing with wisdom, aware of its nature. If you know
something with wisdom then you let it go and there’s no suffering. The mind is
bright, joyful and at peace, and turning away from distractions it is
undivided. Right now what you can look to for help and support is your breath.
This is your own work, nobody else’s. Leave others to do their own
work. You have your own duty and responsibility and you don’t have to take on
those of your family. Don’t take anything else on, let it all go. That letting
go will make your mind calm. Your sole responsibility right now is to focus
your mind and bring it to peace. Leave everything behind you and do your own
work, fulfill your own responsibility. What ever arises in your mind, be it
fear of pain, fear of death, anxiety about others or whatever, say to it ‘Don’t
disturb me. You are not my business anymore’. Just keep saying this to yourself
when you see the dhammas arise.
What does the word dhamma refer
to? Everything is a dhamma. There is nothing
that is not a dhamma. And
what about ‘world’? The world is the very mental state that is agitating
you at this moment. “What will this person do? What will that person do? When I
am dead who will look after them? How will they manage?” This is all just ‘the
world’. Even the mere arising of a thought fearing death or pain is the world.
Throw the world away! The world is the way it is. If you allow it to arise in
the mind and dominate consciousness then the mind becomes obscured and can’t
see itself. So whatever appears in the mind just say “This isn’t my business. It’s impermanent, unsatisfactory and not self’.
Thinking you’d like to go on living for a long time will make you
suffer. But thinking you’d like to die right away or die very quickly isn’t
right either, its suffering isn’t it? Conditions don’t belong to us they follow
their own natural laws. You can’t do anything about the way the body is. You
can prettify it a little, make it look attractive and clean for a while, like
the young girls who paint their lips and let their nails grow long, but when
old age arrives, everyone’s in the same boat. That’s the way the body is, you
can’t make it any other way. But what you can improve and beautify is the mind.
Anyone can build a house of wood and bricks, but the Buddha taught
that that sort of home is not our real home, it’s only nominally ours. It’s a
home in the world and it follows the ways of the world. Our real home is inner
peace. An external material home may well be pretty but it is not very
peaceful. There’s this worry and then that, this anxiety and then that. So we
say it’s not our real home, it’s external to us, sooner or later we’ll have to
give it up. It’s not a place we can live in permanently because it doesn’t
truly belong to us, it’s part of the world. Our body
is the same, we take it to be self, to be ‘me’ and ‘mine’, but in fact it’s not
really so at all, it’s another worldly home. Your body has followed its natural
course from birth until now it’s old and sick and you can’t forbid it from
doing that, that’s the way it is. Wanting it to be different would be as
foolish as wanting a duck to be like a chicken. When you see that that’s
impossible; that a duck has to be a duck, that a chicken has to be a chicken
and that bodies have to get old and die, you will find strength and energy.
However much you want the body to go on and last for a long time, it won’t do
that.
The Buddha said
Anicca vata sankhara
Uppadavayadhammino
Upajjhitva nirujjhanti
Tesam vupasamo sukho
The word ‘sankhara’ refers to this
body and mind. Sankharas are impermanent and
unstable, having come into being they disappear, having arisen they pass away
and yet everyone wants them to be permanent. This is foolishness. Look at the
breath. Having come in it goes out, that’s its nature, that’s how it has to be.
The inhalation and exhalation have to alternate, there must be change. Sankharas exist through change, you can’t prevent
it. Just think: could you exhale without inhaling? Would it feel good? Or could
you just inhale? We want things to be permanent but they can’t be, it’s impossible. Once the breath has come in, it must go
out, when it’s gone out it comes in again and that’s natural, isn’t it? Having
been born we get old and sick and then we die, and that’s totally natural and
normal. It’s because sankharas have done their
job, because the in-breaths and the out-breaths have alternated in this way
that the human race is still here today.
As soon as we are born we are dead. Our birth and our death are
just one thing. It’s like a tree: when there’s a root there must be twigs; when
there are twigs there must be a root. You can’t have one without the other.
It’s a little funny to see how at a death people are so grief-stricken and
distracted, tearful and sad, and at a birth how happy and delighted. It’s delusion, nobody has ever looked at this clearly. I
think if you really want to cry then it would be better to do so when someone’s
born. For actually birth is death, death is birth, the root is the twig, the
twig is the root. If you’ve got to cry, cry at the root, cry at the birth. Look
closely: if there were no birth there would be no death. Can you understand
this?
Don’t think a lot. Just think ‘this is the way things are’. It’s
your work, your duty. Right now nobody can help you, there’s nothing that your
family and your possessions can do for you. All that can help you now is the
correct awareness.
So don’t waver. Let go. Throw
it all away.
Even if you don’t let go, everything is starting to leave anyway.
Can you see that, how all the different parts of your body are trying to slip
away? Take your hair: when you were young it was thick and black, now it’s
falling out. It’s leaving. Your eyes used to be good and strong and nor they’re
weak and your sight is unclear. When the organs have had enough they leave,
this isn’t their home. When you were a child your teeth were healthy and firm,
now they’re wobbly, perhaps you’ve got false ones. Your eyes, ears, nose tongue
– everything is trying to leave because this isn’t their home. You can’t make a
permanent home in a sankhara, you can stay for
a short while and then you have to go. It’s like a tenant watching over his tiny
little house with failing eyes. His teeth aren’t so good, his ears aren’t so
good, his body’s not so healthy, and every-thing is leaving.
So you needn’t worry about anything because this isn’t your real
home, it’s just a temporary shelter. Having come into this world, you should
contemplate its nature. Everything there is, is preparing to disappear. Look at
your body. Is there anything there that’s still in its original form? Is your
skin as it used to be? Your hair, it’s not the same, is it? Where has
everything gone? This is nature the way things are. When their time is up,
conditions go their way. This world is nothing to rely on – it’s an endless
round of disturbance and trouble, pleasures and pain. There’s no peace.
When we’ve no real home we’re like an aimless traveler out on the
road, going this way for a while and then that way, stopping for a while and
setting off again. Until we return to our real home we feel ill-at-ease
whatever we’re doing, just like one who’s left his village to go on a journey.
Only when he gets home again can he relax and be at ease.
Nowhere in the world is any real peace to be found. The poor have
no peace and neither do the rich. Adults have no peace, children have no peace,
the poorly educated have no peace and neither do the highly educated. There’s
no peace anywhere. That’s the nature of the world.
Those who have few possessions suffer and so do those who have
many. Children, adults, the aged, everyone suffers. The suffering of being old,
the suffering of being young, the suffering of being wealthy and the suffering
of being poor – it’s all nothing but suffering.
When you’ve contemplated things in this way you’ll see aniccam, impermanence, and dukkham,
unsatisfactoriness. Why are things impermanent and
unsatisfactory? It’s because they’re anatta,
not self.
Both your body that is lying here sick and painful and the mind
that is aware of it’s sickness and pain, are called dhammas. That which is formless, the thoughts,
feelings, and perceptions, is called namadhamma.
That which is racked with aches and pains is called rupadhamma.
The material is dhamma and the immaterial is dhamma. So we live with dhammas,
in dhammas, we are dhammas.
In truth there is no self anywhere to be found, there are only dhammas continually arising and passing away, as is
their nature. Every single moment we are undergoing birth and death. This is
the way things are.
When we think of the Lord Buddha, how truly he spoke, we feel how
worthy he is of salutation, reverence and respect. Whenever we see the truth of
something we see His teachings, even if we’ve never actually practiced Dhamma. But even if we have knowledge of the teachings,
have studied and practiced them, but still haven’t seen their truth, then we’re
still homeless.
So understand this point that all people, all creatures, are about
to leave. When beings have lived an appropriate time they go their way. The
rich, the poor, the young, the old, all beings must experience this change.
When you realize that that’s the way the world is, you’ll feel that
it’s a wearisome place. When you see that there’s nothing stable or substantial
you can rely on, you’ll feel wearied and disenchanted. Being disenchanted
doesn’t mean you’re averse though. The mind is clear. It sees that there’s nothing
to be done to remedy this state of affairs, it’s just the way the world is.
Knowing in this way you can let go of attachment, let it go with a mind that is
neither happy nor sad, but at peace with sankharas
through seeing with wisdom their changing nature. Anicca
vata sankhara – all sankharas are impermanent. To put it simply –
impermanence is the Buddha. If we see an impermanent phenomenon really clearly
we’ll see that it’s permanent, permanent in the sense that it’s subjection to
change is unchanging. This is the permanence that living beings possess. There
is continual transformation, from childhood through youth to old age and that
very impermanence, that nature to change, is permanent and fixed. If you look
at it like that your heart will be ease. It’s not just you that has to go
through this, it’s everyone.
When you consider things thus you’ll see them as wearisome and
disenchantment will arise. Your delight in the world of sense-pleasures will
disappear. You’ll see that if you have a lot of things, you have to leave a lot
behind; if you have few you leave behind few. Wealth is just wealth, long life
is just long life, and they’re nothing special.
What’s important is that we should do as the Lord Buddha taught and
build our own home, building it by the method that I’ve been explaining to you.
Build your home. Let go. Let go until the mind reaches the peace that is free
from advancing, free from retreating, free from stopping still. Pleasure is not
our home pain is not our home. Pleasure and pain both decline and pass away.
The Great Teacher saw that all sankharas
are impermanent and so He taught us to let go of our attachment to them. When
we reach the end of our life, we’ll have no choice any-way, we won’t be able to
take anything with us. So wouldn’t it be better to put things down before that?
They’re just heavy burden to carry around; why not throw off that load now? Why
bother to drag it around? Let go, relax, and let your family look after you.
Those who nurse the sick grow in goodness and virtue. One who is
sick and giving others that opportunity shouldn’t make things difficult for
them. If there’s pain or some problem or other let them know and keep the mind
in a wholesome state. One who is nursing parents should fill his or her mind with
warmth and kindness, not get caught in aversion. This is the one time when you
can repay the debt you owe them. From your birth through your childhood, as you
were growing up, you’ve been dependent on your parents. That we are here today
is because our mothers and fathers have helped us in so many ways. We owe them
an incredible debt of gratitude.
So today, all of you children and relatives gathered here together,
see how your parents become your children. Before you were their children, now
they become yours. They become older and older until they become children
again. Their memories go their eyes don’t see so well and their ears don’t
hear, sometimes they garble their words. Don’t let it upset you. All of you
nursing the sick must now know how to let go. Don’t hold onto things, just let
go and let them have their own way. When a young child is disobedient sometimes
the parents let it have its own way just to keep the peace, to make it happy.
Now your parents are like that children. Their memories and perceptions are
confused. Sometimes they muddle up your names or you ask them to give you a cup
and they bring a plate. It’s normal, don’t be upset by it.
Let the patient remember the kindness of those who nurse and
patiently endure the painful feelings. Exert yourself mentally, don’t let the
mind become scattered and agitated, and don’t make things difficult for those
looking after you. Let those who nurse the sick fill their minds with virtue
and kind-ness. Don’t be averse to the unattractive side of the job, to cleaning
up mucus and phlegm, or urine and excrement. Try your best. Everyone in the
family gives a hand.
These are the only parents you’ve got. They gave you life, they
have been your teachers, your nurses and your doctors – they’ve been everything
to you. That they have you brought up, taught you, shared their wealth with you
and made you their heirs is the great beneficence of parents. Consequently the
Buddha taught the virtues of katannu and katavedi, knowing our debt of gratitude and trying
to repay it. These two dhammas are
complementary. If our parents are in need, they’re unwell or in difficulty then
we do our best to help them. This is Katannukatavedi
it is a virtue that sustains the world. It prevents families from breaking up
it makes them stable and harmonious.
Today I have brought you the Dhamma as a gift in this time of illness. I have no material things to give to you, there seems to be plenty of those in the house already, and so I give you Dhamma, something which has a lasting worth, some-thing which you’ll never be able to exhaust. Having received it from me you can pass it on to as many others as you like and it will never be depleted. That is the nature of Truth. I am happy to have been able to give you this gift of Dhamma and hope it will give you strength to deal with your pain.