Sam said...
"What interests me nowadays is the complete and total termination
of the taints, clinging, karmic propensities, the complete and total
termination of suffering."
I totally agree. I hope to see your
future posts regarding this and how the experiences and realizations so
far have been or will be useful for this.
This post is written to address the blog comment above in the topic
My Thoughts on The Four Noble Truths. Readers should look into that post first to get the context for this posting.
First of all we have to understand that taints, clinging, karmic
propensities are empty. But it is not empty in the sense of being
non-existent, rather, it is empty of inherent existence due to dependent
origination. For example we may think that craving exists somewhere in
our 'minds' that we must somehow 'get rid of it'. This is having an
inherent view. This is like looking into the mirror and trying to
destroy the person appearing in the mirror by punching the mirror and
cracking the mirror in order to "destroy the person inside the mirror"
(as if there is a person living inherently inside the mirror, where in
reality what's reflected is a dependently originating, non-arising
appearance). That would be totally silly, and likewise trying to destroy
afflictive emotions conceived as inherently existing somewhere "in us"
without discerning its causes and conditions would be totally silly. If
you want to remove the reflection, you have to discern the whole chain
of dependencies which leads to that, and those afflictive causes are to
be remedied. To have insight into the emptiness and dependent
origination of our afflictive condition is to realize the
Total Exertion of Karmic Tendencies Likewise, thankfully our suffering is not inherently existing but arises
due to dependent origination, and what is arising is fundamentally
non-arising and free from extremes. Precisely because of this, we can
discern the whole chain of dependent origination whereby ignorance
depends on taints, taints dependents on ignorance, setting the whole
chain of suffering. If we understand this, we don't focus our efforts on
the wrong place. Things don't exist inherently - they manifest due to
dependent origination, and when the causes and conditions are present,
no effort or will can prevent them from arising, that is the nature of
manifestation. If we fail to understand emptiness in the context of
dependent origination, we will fall into a non-Buddhist or nihilistic
version of emptiness, and it will not liberate us.
In the path of Buddhadharma, since we understand dependencies, we do not
attempt to get rid of afflictive emotions by hard will, or by
dissociation (which strengthens the fundamental delusion of an
inherently existing subject and an inherently existing object), or other
ways based on the view of inherent existence - which is akin to
punching the mirror to get rid of the reflection. At the same time, we
are not saying "they are purely an illusion, nothing to work on" (let's
try that tactic when your clothes catch fire!). What we're saying is
that by directly penetrating the dependent origination and emptiness of
taints, precisely because they are illusory and not inherently existing,
we can understand the necessity to apply the right remedy which cuts
the basis for suffering (the 12 links from ignorance... to death). What
path? The engagement in right view and right practice, in which integral
conduct allows the arising of integral samadhi which allows the arising
of integral wisdom, which results in the cessation of ignorance and the
chains. With the arising of wisdom, the chain of afflictive dependent
origination is released.
As Nagarjuna pointed out, it is precisely because of emptiness that the
soteriological values of Buddhadharma can work at all. This is nicely
explained in
http://ccbs.ntu.edu.tw/FULLTEXT/JR-PHIL/ew103934.htm :
(Excerpt)
Nagarjuna's
Critique of the Dharma
In chapter XXIV of the Karikas,
NAgarjuna continues his attack on the Abhidharma philosophers by
analyzing the Four Noble Truths, and argues that-like causality,
impermanence, suffering, and bondage-they, too, are "empty."
The problem of this chapter needs to be seen against the background
of the preceding section. If the Abhidharma views of causality are
"empty," as Nagarjuna says they are, and if causality is a
central feature of Buddhist praxis, then Nagarjuna seems to undermine
everything that is vital to Buddhism. He begins chapter XXIV by
expressing the Abhidharma position in the following way:
If
all of this is empty,
Neither arising nor ceasing,
Then for
you, it follows that
The Four Noble Truths do ont exist.
If
the Four Noble Truths do not exist,
Then knowledge,
abandonment,
Meditation and manifestation
Will be completely
impossible.
p.571
If these things do not exist,
The
four fruits will not arise.
Without the four fruits, there will be
no attainers of the fruits.
Nor will there be the faithful.
If
so, the spiritual community will not exist.
Nor will the eight
kinds of person.
If the Four Noble Truths do not exists,
There
will be no true Dharma.
If there is no doctrine and spiritual
community,
How can there be a Buddha?
If emptiness is conceived
in this way,
The three jewels are contradicted.
(Garfield 1995,
p.67)
In the passages above, the Abhidharma opponent is saying
that if Nagarjuna is right about "emptiness," then the very
practices that make Buddhism soteriologically efficacious will be
destroyed. That is, if it is true that the Four Noble Truths are
"empty," then there is no such thing as the Buddha, the
Dharma, and the Sangha, no such thing as impermanence, "non-self,"
and nirvana, and the practices that supposedly lead to liberation
will be destroyed. Nagarjuna responds to the opponent by saying that
he has misunderstood "emptiness":
We say that this
understanding of yours
Of emptiness and purpose of emptiness
And
of the significance of emptiness is incorrect.
As a consequence
you are harmed by it.
(Garfield 1995, p.68)
Because the
opponent has taken "emptiness" to signify the nonexistence
of the Four Noble Truths, he is "harmed by it"-in other
words, he sees "emptiness" as destructive. But his reason
for thinking of "emptiness" in this way is that he thinks
that a "correct" meditation on causality, the aggregates,
and the Four Noble Truths is necessary for liberation.
Nagarjuna
responds to this assumption by reversing the tables and saying, in
effect, that it is not "emptiness" that destroys practice,
but the very idea that such things as causality, the aggregates, and
the Four Noble Truths are "inherent," essential, or
necessary:
If you perceive the existence of all things
In
terms of svabhava,
Then this perception of all things
Will be
without the perception of causes and conditions.
Effects and
causes
And agent and action
And conditions and arising and
ceasing
And effects will be rendered impossible.
(Garfield
1995, p.69)
p.572
Nagarjuna goes on to say that the
reason essences militate against causal conditions, arising, ceasing,
agency, and so forth is that the idea of essence entails
independence, and if things are by nature independent then it is
impossible for them to interact causally. If this is true then there
is no "dependent arising," and without "dependent
arising" it is impossible to make sense of the ability to
cultivate a virtuous life. In other words, without the process of
change the whole idea of cultivating the "fruits" of a
Buddhist life is rendered nonsensical. Nagarjuna responds by saying
that Buddhist praxis must be "empty" if we are to make any
sense of the Four Noble Truths:
If dependent arising is
denied,
Emptiness itself is rejected.
This would contradict
All
of the worldly conventions.
If emptiness is rejected,
No
action will be appropriate.
There would be action which did not
begin,
And there would be agent without action.
If there is
svabhava, the whole world
Will be unarising, unceasing,
And
static. The entire phenomenal world
Would be immutable.
If
it (the world) were not empty,
Then action would be without
profit.
The act of ending suffering and
Abandoning misery and
defilement would not exist.
(Garfield 1995, p.72)
Nagarjuna
has thus shifted the debate. Whereas the Abhidharma thinker begins
with the assumption that a "correct" meditation on the
Dharma is a necessary prerequisite for liberation, Nagarjuna
undercuts this by saying that if one takes the Dharma as essential,
that is, as necessary, then the very essence of Buddhism is
undermined. Like the first chapter on causation, Nagarjuna is
reminding the Abhidharma philosophers here about nonattachment. The
Four Noble Truths are supposed to be medicinal "rafts" that
help specific sentient beings overcome their attachments, but if one
becomes attached to the practices of nonattachment then one has
missed the entire point of Buddhism. Thus, Nagarjuna says that the
Dharma-which includes causation, impermanence, suffering, bondage,
and liberation-is "empty."
Now, after the awakening of twofold emptiness, we simply engage and meet
conditions to allow the latent tendencies to self-liberate without
modification. Practice becomes practice-enlightenment, where every
engagement in daily activities becomes an opportunity to release our
deeply held clinging - I, me, mine, inherent existence.
(Practice-enlightenment is a term in Soto Zen to denote the path as the
actualization of one's wisdom, so one's practice is no longer 'for'
enlightenment but an 'actualization' of enlightenment in every mundane
activities from sitting to walking to talking.. etc)
For example when I talk with people, there is no I, no others, only the
situation and activity that is totally exerted... no clinging to center,
self, mine... this allows the afflictions to dissolve. This is only
possible after anatta and emptiness, if we merely rest in clarity of
'Awareness', it would not be sufficient to dissolve the bonds.
To
understand why insights into anatta and emptiness help we have to
understand that all our afflictions are rooted in the view of an
inherently existing I, me, mine, in inherently existing self and things
and ownership. For example if someone's child is lost or dies, you may
not feel mentally afflicted, but when it comes to your sons and
daughters, you may feel afflicted, because there is ownership, I and
mine making involved, which results in holding onto someone as 'dear to
me'.
To address this question more thoroughly let me just quote some people including myself here:
"We
cannot get rid of suffering by saying, "I will not suffer." We cannot
eliminate attachment by saying, "I will not be attached to anything,"
nor eliminate aggression by saying, "I will never become angry." Yet, we
do want to get rid of suffering and the disturbing emotions that are
the immediate cause of suffering.
The
Buddha taught that to eliminate these states, which are really the
results of the primary confusion of our belief in a personal self, we
must get rid of the fundamental cause.
But
we cannot simply say, "I will not believe in the personal self." The
only way to eliminate suffering is to actually recognize the experience
of a self as a misconception, which we do by proving directly to
ourselves that there is no such personal self. We must actually realise
this. Once we do, then automatically the misconception of a self and our
fixation on that "self" will disappear.
Only
by directly experiencing selflessness can we end the process of
confused projection. This is why the Buddha emphasized meditation on
selflessness or egolessness. However, to meditate on egolessness, we
must undertake a process that begins with a conceptual understanding of
egolessness; then, based on that understanding, there can be meditation,
and finally realization." - Khenchen Thrangu Rinpoche, Pointing Out the Dharmakaya
"Though worldly beings cultivate meditative stabilization,
They do not destroy the discrimination of self.
They are greatly disturbed by the return of afflictive emotions,
As was the case of the cultivation of meditative stabilization by Udraka.
If phenomena are individually analyzed as selfless
And what has been analyzed is meditated upon,
That is the cause for attaining the fruit, nirvana.
Through any other cause one does not go to peace..."
- King of Meditative Stabilizations Sutra
"Monks, when a monk’s mind frequently remains acquainted with the
recognition of selflessness in what is unsatisfactory, his mind is rid
of “I-making” and “mine-making” with regard to this conscious body and
externally with regard to all representations, and has transcended
conceit, is at peace, and is well liberated."
- AN 7.49 DutiyasaññÄ� Sutta
"When our own self is involved, we emphasize that connection: now it is "my body," "my stuff," "my friends," or "my car."
We exaggerate the object's attractiveness, obscuring its faults and
disadvantages, and become attached to it as helpful in acquiring
pleasure, whereby we are forcibly led into lust, as if by a ring in our
nose. We might also exaggerate the object's attractiveness, making
something minor into a big defect, ignoring its better qualities, and
now we view the object as interference with our pleasure, being led into
hatred, again as if by a ring in our nose. Even if the object does not
seem to be either agreeable or disagreeable but just an ordinary thing
in the middle, ignorance continues to pervail, although in this case it
does not generate desire or hatred. As the Indian scholar-yogi Nagarjuna
says in his Sixty Stanza Reasoning:
How could great poisonous afflictive emotions not arise In those whose minds are based on inherent existence? Even when an object is ordinary, their minds Are grasped by the snake of destructive emotions.
Cruder
conceptions of "I" and "mine" evoke grosser destructive emotions, such
as arrogance and belligerance, making trouble for yourself, your
community, and even your nation. These misconceptions need to be
identified by watching your own mind.
As the Indian thinker and yogi Dharmakirti says in his exposition of Buddhist thinking:
In one who exaggerates self
There is always adherence to "I."
Through that adherence there is attachment to pleasure.
Through attachment disadvantages are obscured.
And advantages seen, whereby there is strong attachment,
And objects that are "mine" are taken up as means
of achieving pleasure.
Hence, as long as there is attraction to self,
So long do you revolve in cyclic existence."
- H.H. Dalai Lama, "How to See Yourself as You Really Are"
Also in
2009:
(10:17 PM) Thusness: though anatta is a seal, it also requires one to arise the insight to feel liberated.
(10:18
PM) Thusness: when a practitioner realizes the anatta nature of
manifestation, at that moment without the sense of observer, there is no
negative emotions.
(10:19 PM) Thusness: there is only vivid sensation of the all arising as presence
(10:27 PM) Thusness: when u r angry, it is a split
(10:28 PM) Thusness: when u realized its anatta nature, there is just vivid clarity of all the bodily sensations
even when there is an arising thought of something bad, it dissolves with no involvement in the content
(10:29 PM) Thusness: to be angry, a 'someone' must come into the content
(10:29 PM) Thusness: when there is no involvement of the extra agent, there is only recoiling and self liberations
(10:33 PM) Thusness: one should differentiate arising thought from the active involvement of the content
(10:34
PM) Thusness: a practitioner that realizes anatta is only involved
fully in the vivid presence of the action, phenomena but not getting
lost in content
Kyle also informed me last year:
"...The anatta definitely severed many emotional
afflictions, for the most part I don't have negative emotions anymore.
And either the anatta or the strict shamatha training has resulted in
stable shamatha where thoughts have little effect and are diminished by
the force of clarity. I'm also able to control them, stopping them for
any amount of desired time etc. but I understand that isn't what is
important.
Can I fully open to whatever arises I would say yes. I
understand that every instance of experience is fully appearing to
itself as the radiance of clarity, yet timelessly disjointed and
unsubstantiated..
"
And I wrote last year:
"I
remember Kyle telling me how since the realization of anatta it has
severed many emotional afflictions, for the most part he doesn't have
negative emotions anymore. In my experience this has also been the case.
It wasn't always the case as I used to be capable of anger, throwing
temper, and so on. This just doesn't happen nowadays... since anatta
I've noticed large chunks of emotional afflictions not just anger has
sort of disappeared.
It's
like the habitual way of seeing and relating with the world through
dualistic and inherent view as independent, separate beings interacting
with independent, separate others along with its stories have
disappeared. There is just impersonal and totally exerted actions and
experiences experienced in vivid clarity, without needing to leave
traces.
So
perhaps the most ultimate advice for overcoming afflictions is: work
hard contemplating and practicing insight and calm-abiding in tandem,
those can really make permanent changes to your patterns of emotional
afflictions that are not meagre."