We are our Ancestors and
The Sutra on Measuring
and Reflecting

© Thich Nhat Hanh
Dear Friends,
Today is the 26th of
March and we are in the New Hamlet in the Spring
Retreat.
When we hear the
sound of the bell, we should open ourselves up to allow
all the generations of ancestors in us to hear the bell
at the same time as we do. It means we shouldn’t
imprison ourselves in a shell of self – we should allow
our ancestors to listen to the bell at the same time.
That is our practice at that moment, because all the
generations of ancestors, including our father and our
mother are in us in a very concrete way - in every cell
of our body. The body contains the mind – the soma
contains the psyche, and we could say that the mind also
contains the body. That means that the psyche contains
the soma and that psyche includes feelings, perceptions,
mental formations and consciousness and we should learn
to see our mental formations are made out of cells, just
as the body is made out of cells. The cells of the body
contain the cells of the consciousness and the cells of
the consciousness contain the cells of the body.
Psyche and soma are
just two sides of the same reality. There isn’t one that
precedes the other, just like the particle and the wave
are two aspects of the same reality. The wave contains
the particle, just as the particle contains the wave.
The reality of us is the reality of body and mind. We
could call ourselves psyche and we could call ourselves
soma, but in fact psyche and soma are two aspects
manifesting from one reality. If we look into one cell
of our body, or one cell of our consciousness, we
recognize the presence of all the generations of
ancestors in us – that is the truth. Our ancestors are
not just human beings. Before human beings appeared we
were other species. We have been trees, plants, grasses,
minerals, squirrels and deer. We have been monkeys and
one-celled animals and all these generations of
ancestors are present in each cell of our body as well
as our mind and we are the continuation of this stream
of life. Therefore, when we hear the bell, it is not a
separate "I" which is listening to the bell, but it is
the stream, the vast stream of life, and this is the
practice of no-self. We talk a lot about no-self. We
could talk about it very fluently but we don’t practice
no-self, we just talk about it. When we hear the sound
of the bell and we allow all the generations of
ancestors and all our descendants, which are already
present in our body, to hear it also then we are
experiencing the reality of no-self which the Buddha
taught. No-self is not some vague idea, but it is a
reality which we carry in our very person and we only
need to listen properly to the bell and we can go beyond
the shell of self. We can go beyond the prison of the
idea of a separate self and we allow the sound of the
bell to penetrate every generation of the past and the
future which is in us.
We were earlier
talking about guava fruit. Even when the guava fruit is
not yet ripe, it has all its seeds of future trees. When
we are only 4 years old we think we can only be a child
4 years old... we can only be a little brother, but in
fact we are already a mother, already a father. A little
novice of 12 or 13 years old plays the role of a
disciple, but he already has his own disciples in his
person and he has disciples of his disciples in his
person already. So when he hears the sound of the bell,
the young novice must open his heart so that all the
generations of ancestral teachers can hear the bell at
the same time, so that all the generations of his blood
family can hear the bell at the same time, and so that
all the generations of his future students, in him now,
can hear the bell. And if he practices like that, he is
practicing ‘no-self’ and he is able to see the wonder of
no-self and he is giving a Dharma talk on no-self. To
listen to the bell like that is to hear the bell
according to the highest teachings.
When we take a step
on the green grass of spring, we walk in such a way that
allows all our ancestors to take a step with us. our
peace, our joy, our freedom, which are in each step,
penetrate each generation of our ancestors and each
generation of our descendants. If we can walk like that,
that is a step taken in the highest dhyana. When we take
one step we see hundreds and thousands of ancestors and
descendants taking a step with us, and when we take a
breath we are light, at ease, calm. We breathe in such a
way that all the generations of ancestors are breathing
with us and all the generations of our descendants are
also breathing with us... if we breathe like that, only
then are we breathing according to the highest
teachings. We just need a little mindfulness, a little
concentration and then we can look deeply and see. At
first we use the method of visualization and we see, as
we walk, all the ancestors putting their foot down as we
put our foot down, and gradually we don’t need to
visualize any more – each step we take, we see that that
step is the step of all people in the past.
When you are cooking
a dish of food - something you have learnt from your
mother or your father, a dish that has been handed down
through generations of your family – you should look at
your hand and smile because this hand is the hand of
your mother, the hand of your grand-mother. Those who
have made this dish are making this dish now and that is
the truth! We are not the inventors of this dish, we are
just continuing. We see our mothers hand, our
grand-mothers hand, and the hands of all our ancestors
making this dish. When we are in the kitchen cooking, we
can realize the highest teachings – we don’t have to go
into the meditation hall to practice this. We have so
many opportunities, the problem is – do we know how to
make the most of them? We have our teacher, we have our
Sangha, we have our dharma teachings, we have all the
conditions that are necessary to do this and we should
use these opportunities. This is not a theory, this is
real experience of our daily life... it is real
life.
In the past, your
grandfather – did he play volleyball? No, he didn’t,
because in those days they didn’t have volleyball... Did
your grandmother go jogging every day? Did your
grand-mother have the opportunity to practice dwelling
in the present moment while she was walking... while she
was running? When we are running we should allow our
grandmother to run in us, and it is the truth that your
grandmother is running in you. She is in each
cell of your body. You carry all your ancestors in you
when jogging, when doing walking meditation and when you
are realizing the practice of dwelling happily in the
present moment. Maybe other generations didn’t have the
opportunity to practice like this. Now we have the
opportunity. We have received the practice as taught by
our teachers and when we do that practice we bring
happiness and joy to countless generations of ancestors,
whether we’re practicing walking, running, or breathing.
We have produced
Plum Village in order to be able to do these things,
because in the town, in the society, we don’t have the
right conditions to be able to walk like we do, to be
able to breathe, to smile like we do, to wash clothes
and to cook like we do in Plum Village. An environment
where we can feel at ease, where we can do these things
in a very leisurely way, in order to practice dwelling
happily in the present moment. We know that many people
have supported, and have brought time and energy to give
us an environment where we can take steps at ease, where
we can breathe in and out like this... where we can cook
like this... where we can practice like this. And when
we practice like this, we are doing it for all times –
for the past and for the future. Thanks to our taking
steps like this, and breathing and smiling and sitting
like this, we are able to liberate so many generations.
We liberate them by getting out of the shell of our
separate self.
Western
psycho-therapy aims at healing and bringing us a self
which is stable and wholesome, but the psycho-therapy in
the West is still caught in the idea of ‘self’.
Psycho-therapy in the West can bring about a little
transformation, a little healing, but it cannot go very
far because Western psycho-therapy is still caught in
the idea of a ‘self’. According to Western
psycho-therapy, the family can bring about ease and
peace and joy; but because of misfortune our family has
not been able to bring about that. So now, how can our
practice take us out of this misfortune so that we can,
once again, bring back happiness and peace in our lives.
Western psychology is based on the idea that we had a
self that was happy and at peace and joy and we have to
revive and restore that state of peace, happiness and
joy that we had before. But in the light of the practice
of Buddhism, for as long as we are caught in the idea of
a separate self, ignorance is still in us – in our body
and in our mind. Therefore, the practice of no-self is
the most wonderful way to heal. Practicing no-self is to
get out of the narrow idea of the self, to see the
intimate relation between what is self and what is
not-self. That way, ignorance is healed and all the
suffering, the anger, the jealousy, and the fear, will
disappear, and the fruit which is achieved is a thousand
times greater than the healing which is based on the
idea of a separate self.
We are people who
have problems... psychological problems, and we ask
ourselves questions like – "Who am I? When my mother
and father came together, did they want me to come into
this world or did they just come together and I was the
result... rather like a misfortune, an accident... Did
they want to have me or did I just appear as an
accident? My mother and father came together in a
thoughtless way and because of that I came into this
world..." If I think like that, I will suffer.
There are people who say, "When I came into this
life did my parents want to keep me or did they want to
destroy me – did they want to have an abortion?"
Many people suffer when they think that their parents
may have wanted to have an abortion. "Who am I? Was
I wanted? What is the meaning of my life?" We are
inclined to ask questions like that and when we try and
answer those questions we suffer because we are caught
in an idea of a separate self. When a young child grows
up and if he knows that in the past, his mother had
wanted to have an abortion, that child will suffer a
lot. He knows that his parents didn’t want to have that
child and it was an accident that the child was born and
if the child knows that, he will suffer very much and
that suffering will bring about illnesses. How will the
psycho-therapist be able to help that child? "Does
my life have a meaning? Where do I come from? Who am I?"
These questions can be the source of abnormalities, of
sufferings in the life of a person, but if we look
deeply, according to the way the Buddha taught, we can
see the reality of no-self and we will no longer ask
questions like that. This is one of the essential points
which we learn in the Sutra on the Middle Way.
First of all we see that we are a continuation of a
stream of life. Whether our parents wanted us or not is
not so important. Maybe our father and mother didn’t
want us, or didn’t want us yet, but our grandparents and
our ancestors wanted us to come into life and that is
the truth. The truth is that our ancestors, our
grandparents, always want a continuation. If it’s not
this generation, it will be the next generation. There
are always generations who want us to be their
continuation and if we can answer that way, then the
child will not suffer from thinking their parents didn’t
want them, because any parents have their ups and downs
– their good moments and their not-so-good moments.
Sometimes they are full of love and sometimes they are
full of anger, and this love and anger is not the only
thing that they have. It is not only from them, but from
all generations and when we can see that their love and
their anger comes from all generations, we no longer
blame our parents. We see that our parents have good
things as well as very unwholesome things.
In the East, we are
forced to someone to marry someone we hate and we say,
"Why do our parents make us marry this person we don’t
like?" But after we have lived with this person for
two or three years, we discover that the person they
made us marry is very likeable and we thank our parents
– we see that our parents had a certain wisdom in
judging that person to be a good husband and they had a
good reason to allow this coming together to happen. We
all have friends, who in the beginning we didn’t like at
all - we hated them! When we saw that person we hated
them so much, but after a while we discover that person
is a very good friend and therefore that moment of
hatred is not everything. It is just a moment; it is not
eternal and after that moment of hatred there are
moments of great love and therefore hatred and love are
just on the surface. Deeper than that is something else
and when we can see that, we are not sad and we don’t
say things like – "Do my father and mother love me
or not?", because maybe, at one point during the
pregnancy, they didn’t want me, but after I was born
they loved me very much and they are very happy I was
born. So we see we are our father and mother. We see we
are our grandparents and when we get out of the shell of
self we are no longer made to suffer by the question "Was
I wanted?" Therefore, when we study Buddhism and
practice according to the no-self teachings of Buddhism,
we are able to liberate ourselves and also liberate
numberless generations of ancestors and descendants in
us.
In our childhood we
may have been through stages of great difficulties. We
have been wounded, we have had traumas and we generally
do not want to remember those stages of suffering. In us
there is a protective defense mechanism, we want to
defend ourselves against our suffering. Every time we
are in touch with the experience of suffering, we cannot
bear it and therefore the thing called "defense
mechanism" tries to hide these things deep down in our
unconscious mind and when someone comes along and digs
up these sufferings, we cry, we weep, we are sorrowful
and we cannot eat for a couple of days. But running away
from our suffering is not the best way to deal with it.
Therefore, in Buddhism we are taught that we should
practice mindfulness. We should produce the energy of
mindfulness and return and embrace the young child who
is wounded in us. That young child can have been very
heavily wounded – very severely wounded, but because,
for many decades, we haven’t had the strength to deal
with it, we have tried to run away from that suffering.
We have not dared to face it and therefore the wounded
child in us continues to suffer and is asking for care
and love, but we do the opposite – we run away. We are
always running away, because we are afraid of suffering
and therefore the method of Buddhism is to practice in
such a way that we produce the energy of mindfulness and
with the energy of mindfulness we are no longer afraid.
We are able to return and we are able to recognize that
child in us. We are able to embrace that child in us and
we are able to talk to that child in us. When we have
the energy of mindfulness we have the capacity to
embrace that child like we would embrace a young brother
or sister who has been wounded and we say, "I have,
in the past, left you alone – I have gone away from
you... now I am very sorry. I am going to embrace you.."
We have to embrace that child and, if necessary, we have
to cry together with that child perhaps while we are
doing sitting meditation. We have to talk to that child
with the language of love... We can go into the forest
and do that. We can call that child a little sister or
little brother.
Among us there are
people who have practiced this and after a period of
practice there has been a diminution of their suffering
and a transformation. After that, the relationship
between that person and their brothers and sisters and
friends become much easier, because they have come back
to themselves and healed the wounded child in
themselves. The people around us, our brothers and
sisters, may also have a severely wounded child in them
and we can help them if we have managed to help
ourselves. And therefore, after we have healed
ourselves, we see the relationship between ourselves and
others has become much better, much easier. We see more
peace, more love in us. In Buddhism, we see that that
wounded child is not just us... not only us. It may also
be our mother, because our mother has suffered
throughout her life. Our father has suffered, and our
mother and father did not meet the Dharma in order to be
able to look after the wounded child in themselves and
therefore, that wounded child in us is our mother
who has been wounded as a child. So when we are
embracing the wounded child in us, we are embracing all
our mothers of generations in the past – all the wounded
children of our past generations. This practice is not a
practice for ourselves alone, but it is a practice for
numberless generations of ancestors and descendants.
Therefore, when we are able to embrace the child who has
been wounded in us, we are able to embrace our mother
and our father. Maybe our father and our mother had
suffered and the baby, the child, in them has not yet
been looked after, not yet been healed, and so we heal
the wounded child in us for our father, for our mother,
and for our grandparents. If we don’t do it now, when
will we do it? Now we have our teacher. Now we have our
friends. Now we have our Sangha... and we don’t do it,
so when will we do it? The years and months we spend in
Plum Village are not to give us knowledge, to form us in
Buddhist studies, because Plum Village is not a
university for us to come and receive the heap of
knowledge which, later on, we will take with us in order
to get a job or in order to teach to others. Plum
Village is a place where we are able to practice
embracing and transforming the wounded child in us. In
us, the wounded child is always there, is always
waiting, and we have abandoned it. Now we have to return
to her and recognize her; accept her presence, embrace
her, weep with her, and with the energy of mindfulness,
heal her. And in the light of the Sutra on the
Middle Way, we know that this child, who has been
wounded, is not just us, but it is also the child of
other generations. It is the wounded child of our
mother, the wounded child of our father, the wounded
child of our grandparents and when we practice, we
practice for all our ancestors.
Where is that child?
That child is lying in each cell of our body. There is
no cell of our body which does not have that wounded
child in it. The cells of our consciousness and the
cells of our body. Our consciousness is made of cells
and in each cell of our consciousness, of our mental
formations, that wounded child is there – abandoned,
severely wounded. We don’t have to look for that child a
long way away in the past... 3 million years ago. We
don’t have to look for that child in our childhood or in
the time of our great-grandparents because all the truth
of that wounded child, all the suffering of that wounded
child is lying, right now, in the present moment, in
each cell of our body and our consciousness. We just
have to go back to ourselves and be in touch and we will
see all of this. You are inscribed in each cell of your
body and your mind. You don’t have to go back to the
past, that child lies in the present. The wounds, the
suffering, the sadness... it is present in every cell of
your body just as the awakened wisdom of your ancestors,
of the Buddha, the happiness of the Buddha, is also
present in every cell of your body. You should know how
to return to it and make use of it – these elements of
happiness, of awakened wisdom, in order to produce the
energy of mindfulness and embrace the child who has been
wounded. The wounds, as well as the happiness, are in
each and every one of your cells. The Buddha, the
ancestors, and the teachers have handed down this
awakened wisdom that is lying in each cell of your body.
You just need to return, with your breathing and your
steps to produce the energy of mindfulness and wisdom
and that energy will embrace and heal you, and it will
heal the wounded child in you.
We are people who
have ignorance in each cell of our body and our mind.
That ignorance is called Avidya– lack of
clarity. It means the "inability to see" things which
are just lying there, we don’t know that they’re there.
Avidya– no seeing, no clarity. This term is in
Buddhism, it means lack of light, lack of insight, lack
of seeing... That wounded child is lying there and we
don’t even know the wounded child is there. The wounded
child in us is a reality, but we can not see it and that
inability to see it is called ignorance. This child has
been severely wounded. It really needs us to return to
it and accept it, to embrace it, but we don’t know that
it’s there and we are running away from it. That
attitude – if you don’t want to use ‘ignorance’... what
do you call it? We are looking to make money, making
profit, but at the same time we are not aware of what is
really happening in us, and that ignorance brings about
energies that make us sick. In each cell of our body,
each cell of our consciousness, there is this ignorance.
It is like a drop of ink in a glass of water. That
ignorance is in each cell of our body. It stops us from
seeing reality and it pushes us in the direction of
darkness so that we do things which are foolish and
which make us suffer even more and which makes the
wounded child in us even more wounded. That energy of
darkness is called ‘impulse’ and everyday our impulses
push us to do things, to say things, which are ignorant
because the basis of our impulses is ignorance. We are
sad, we are angry, we blame, we are jealous... all these
things are the energy of impulse and the basis of that
is ignorance. These impulses – we do not see them. They
lie in our consciousness. Our consciousness is ‘wrong’
consciousness. It is full of ignorance and impulse.
Buddhist psychology
has two parts. One we talk about is ‘mind consciousness’
and the other is ‘store consciousness’. In Western terms
we talk about the ‘unconscious’ and the ‘subconscious’
and in Buddhism these two things are contained in the
Alaya consciousness, the store consciousness.
We push our severely wounded child down into those
regions. The deeper, the better. The child is calling,
crying out for help from those places, but we don’t hear
and all this is ignorance and therefore, ignorance has
brought about our present consciousness. In each cell of
our body and in every cell of our consciousness, we have
the subconscious and the unconscious, and the energy of
them pushes us to live our daily life superficially and
foolishly, bringing about more and more suffering for
ourselves and those who live around us. Therefore, what
we are learning in the practice is - from ignorance, to
make clarity. How can we have light in the darkness? We
are walking in the dark, so we do things opposite to
what we want to do and we know that we want light. Light
means being able to light up a lamp and we have to take
that light out of our body and our consciousness.
Because, in our body and our consciousness, not only is
there ignorance and impulses, but there is also awakened
understanding because we have been handed down the seeds
of understanding by our ancestors. The thing is... we
never use them! Buddha has handed them down to us; our
teacher has handed down to us; we receive them and we
hide them away. We store them away and we don’t use
them. It is like we have a lamp which we never light up
and that lamp is called mindfulness and the oil of that
lamp is our breathing, our steps, our smile, our working
in mindfulness. We have to light up that lamp. Light up
the lamp of mindfulness and the light will shine out and
the darkness will cease, will dissipate.
When light is there,
there will not be ignorance and when ignorance retreats,
these impulses are no longer produced because clarity
brings about a different energy which is called ‘bodhicitta’.
The great aspiration – the ‘mind of love’ - it is also
energy, just like impulses are energy, but this is an
energy with light in it and impulses are full of
darkness. When we have lit up the lamp, we have a
different energy than when we are in darkness. That is
the energy of understanding, of bodhicitta, and
when we have the energy of bodhicitta already,
our consciousness is illumined and so it’s called ‘prajna’,
‘wisdom’. Wisdom and consciousness have the same basis,
but we can talk about consciousness only when it has
ignorance in it, but when consciousness is lit up by
bodhicitta, we no longer call it ‘consciousness’,
we call it wisdom, prajna, understanding. If we
have the wisdom of bodhicitta in each cell of
our body and of our consciousness, there is happiness.
We have a ‘manifestation’ body – Nirmanakaya.
We still have eyes, ears, nose, tongue and body, but in
each cell there is love, there is bodhicitta,
there is wisdom and understanding. Therefore, the key of
the practice is to light up the lamp. We have a gatha
which is very good... whenever we turn on the light, we
say, "Lighting up the candle, I make an offering to
all the Buddhas, the numberless Buddhas, to lighten up
the face of the earth." Before I light the lamp, I
breathe and I say this gatha. I see that the ignorance
of my mind gives way to the light of my mind. In our
mind, there is the light of understanding and in the
room, there is the light of the lamp. It is not enough
just to turn on the light, because if you just turn on
the light, or light the candle, that is only an outer
light. We have to turn on the inner light, the light of
mindfulness. So when the young novice has just become a
monk, he has to learn these poems so that every time he
lights the lamp, he can light up understanding in his
heart as well. If he doesn’t do that, however many times
he turns on the light in the room, he will never change
the darkness in his mind into the light of his mind.
When we can say that
we have forgotten the wounded child in ourselves, we
feel great compassion for that child. We see how we have
to practice our breathing and our mindful walking in
order to be able to be stable enough to embrace that
child, to comfort and heal that child. If the light of
mindfulness is great, if it is clear, if it is
sufficient, we will see that that child is not just
ourselves, but it is also our mother, our father. Our
mother and our father have suffered and they have not
had the opportunity to embrace the child in them, so we
are doing it for them. Because the wounded child in us
is also our father, is also our mother... ask yourself –
is there any understanding that is greater than that
understanding? We talk a lot about understanding, but is
any understanding higher than the understanding of
Buddhism? When we can smile, we know we are smiling for
our mother and our father, we know we are liberating our
mother and our father. If we practice like that then the
questions which make people suffer – "Who am I? Did
my mother really want me? Did my father really want me?
What meaning does my life have?" - all those
questions become meaningless. In the Sutra on the
Middle Way, the Sutra on Interdependent Arising,
and the Sutra on Great Emptiness, we will see
that if we can only practice, we will be able to go
beyond these questions which make people suffer so
much–.– We don’t need those sufferings any more.
We don’t need to go
to Ireland or go to China to find our roots. We don’t
need to go back to the old native land. We just need to
be in touch with every cell in our body. We can find out
it’s because of father, mother and all of our ancestors
who are present in a very real way in each cell of our
body. Even the bacteria are our ancestors, and the
awakened understanding has been transmitted to us from
all generations and all the sentient beings, but also
insentient beings – so-called beings without feelings –
have their own wisdom. Scientists today talk about life
as matter which is inert. Before there was life this
world, this universe, was a kind of... in the West we
call it ‘primordial soup’... from which everything came.
All the neutrons, electrons, the inert matter, became
living matter. It began to be a fungi, an amoeba, and
then fish. They always use the word matter, because they
have been influenced into thinking that in the beginning
there was just matter, there was just soma. They don’t
see that matter contains spirit. Object of perception
is also perception. The thing which they call matter
- the object of our perception - is also perception, so
it is also mind. So mind contains matter and matter
contains mind. They are two faces of the same reality,
sometimes something manifests as matter and sometimes
something manifests as mind. The elementary particle can
be called a wave or it can also be called a particle,
because sometimes it appears as a wave and sometimes it
appears as a particle, it is both things. You would say
"Something cannot be both form – both particle and wave
– those two things... how can they be one?", but in
fact, these two things are one. We are both father and
child, sometimes we manifest as father and sometimes we
manifest as child... or mother. As soon as the guava
fruit is born, it has guava seeds in it, so it is
already a mother or a father.
So this is ‘thinking
matter’, they say that human beings are ‘thinking
matter’. The matter now has thinking in it or thinking
manifests from matter. Scientists say that there was a
stage when human beings first stood up, they no longer
crawled along, and they call the human species at that
time ‘homo erectus’. Then afterwards they had a kind of
man called ‘homo habilis’, and then ‘homo sapien’, and
‘homo sapien’ is the thinking matter. Now we have
another expression, ‘homo conscious’, which means the
human being who is aware, who is mindful. A human being
who knows – "I will get sick... I will grow old... I
will die...", that is a person who is aware and because
of that awareness, that person suffers more. That
awareness brings about anxiety and fear, called
‘anguish’, and this brings about ill health. People ask,
"Do other species have less awareness and therefore do
not have the suffering of thinking ‘Oh, I will get old,
I will die’ ", If other species do have that awareness
it is a slight awareness. if they get sick, they get
sick and they don’t have to worry about getting sick.
But because human beings have this ‘anguish’, we have
questions of philosophy, like "Who am I? What will
happen to me?", we have the kind of questions that
people sometimes asked, as recorded in the Sutras, "Did
I exist in the past? If I did exist in the past, what
kind of animal was I? Was it a beautiful animal? Was it
an ugly animal.... Was I a frog? Will I exist in the
future, and if I exist in the future, what kind of
animal will I be? Will I have a beautiful face? Will I
have a long tail?" All these questions that we ask come
from this anguish and it brings about a lot of illness.
Did my parents want
me? Was it an accident that I was born? Does anybody
love me? All those questions make us suffer so much! And
they come from our thinking - from this anguish, but the
capacity to be aware – that is, the human being who is
mindful – that is what will save us. That awareness will
help us to know that the environment of this planet
belongs to all species and will help us to realize that
the human species is destroying the environment. When
people are aware of these sufferings... they have come
from political oppression... have witnessed injustice in
society... When people can really see these things, they
have the capacity to stop what they are doing and to
help others to stop in order to go in a different
direction which will not destroy our planet. Our
awareness brings about our anxiety and our anguish, but
if we know how to use that awareness, that mindfulness,
we will be able to see the state we are in and we know
what we should do and what we should not do in order to
be able to transform and bring about peace and happiness
and life for the future. The Buddha was one of the most
beautiful people of the human species who we call ‘homo
conscious’. We have the homo erectus; the homo habilis
(the skillful man), and we have the homo sapiens – (the
thinking man). But now we have the expression ‘homo
conscious’, (the aware man). It is an expression which
has been used by people – it was not invented by me.
So when we are
having a meal, we should eat in such a way that allows
leisure, ease and happiness, because it is really a deep
practice to eat together. Just as with your breathing
and working, eat in such a way that your ancestors can
eat with you. Your father eats with you, your
grandfather and grandmother eat with you. Sit at ease,
like someone who has no problems, no anxiety. The Buddha
taught us that when we eat we should not allow ourselves
to be lost in meaningless thinking and conversation. We
should dwell in the present moment to be deeply in touch
with the food and the Sangha around us. Eat in such a
way that we are happy, at ease, that we have peace, so
that each of our ancestors and descendants in us can
benefit. In former times, when I was 4 or 5 years old,
every time my mother went to the market, she brought me
back a cake made of bean paste. Before my mother came
back, I would be playing in the garden with the snails
and the pebbles, and when my mother came back I was very
happy to see her and I took the cake that she gave me
and I went off to eat it in the garden. I knew I mustn’t
eat it quickly. I wanted to eat it slowly - the slower,
the better. I’d just chew a little bit off the edge to
allow the sweetness of the biscuit to go into my mouth
and I’d look up at the blue sky. I’d look down at the
dog. I’d look at the cat. That is how I ate the cake and
it took me half an hour to eat it. I had no worries... I
wasn’t worried about fame, honour, about profit... so
that cake of my childhood is a souvenir. All of us have
lived moments like that, when we are not craving for
anything, not regretting anything. We are not asking
ourselves philosophical questions like "Who am I?"
Are we able to eat a cake like that now? Drink a cup of
tea like that? Enjoy ourselves in our environment? We
come to Plum Village to learn to do these things again,
the things which we thought we could no longer do. We
have come to learn how to walk again. To walk solidly,
like a free person, without spirits chasing after us. We
have come here to learn how to sit. To sit at ease as if
we are sitting on a lotus flower, not sitting on hot
coals. Sitting on hot coals, we just jump up and down
the whole time – we lose all our peace. Here, we learn
how to breathe, how to smile; we learn how to cook. Our
mother taught us how to eat, how to drink, how to stand
up, how to walk, how to speak... everything! Now we have
to learn these things over again. We have to be born
again in the light of the true Dharma, the true
teachings of the Buddha.
We are going to
study the Sutra on Shining the Light. This is
not a Sutra spoken by the Buddha, it is a Sutra spoken
by Mahamoggallana. It is in the canon and in the canon
we see there are sutras not only spoken by the Buddha,
but also spoken by the disciples of the Buddha. We are
very happy about this, because we see the continuation
of the Buddha right in the life time of the Buddha.
Often after his disciples had given teachings, the
Buddha would praise them and say, "If I had spoken, I
would have said exactly the same...", so we see how the
Buddha supported and encouraged his students and we see
how the continuation of the Buddha was there, even in
the lifetime of the Buddha. The original name of this
sutra; was Anumana , which means ‘Measuring
and Reflecting’, it is very necessary for monks and
nuns. In the Chinese canon, it is called the Sutra
on Inviting. Besides Shariputra, Mahamoggallana,
Ananda and Katyayana, there are nuns, such as
Dharmadhina, who gave talks. These talks by nuns have
also been recorded in the Sutras.
SUTRA ON MEASURING
AND REFLECTING: (Wednesday Evening)
Thus have I heard.
At one time the Venerable Mahamoggallana was staying
with the Bhagga people in Sumsumaragira, in the Deer
Park in the Bhesakala grove. The Venerable
Mahamoggallana addressed the bhikkhus: "Dharma friends."
"Yes friend", they replied to the Venerable
Mahamoggallana. The Venerable Mahamoggallana spoke as
follows:
"It is possible that
a monk should make the following request: "Speak to me,
Reverend Monks." If he is difficult to speak to, endowed
with qualities which make him difficult to deal with,
intolerant, not good at grasping what is taught, then
those who practice the path of sublime conduct with him
will think he is not one to be spoken to, he is not one
to be instructed, he is not someone we can have
confidence in. What are the qualities which make someone
difficult to approach?
We should know that
Mahamoggallana was one of those who had a part in
building the Sangha. Shariputra and Mahamoggallana were
given the role of building Sangha, so that the Sangha
would have happiness. Of course, there were other monks
beside Shariputra and Mahamoggallana who also practiced
Sangha-building. However, we know that these were the
two monks who played that role most of all. We know that
when Shariputra passed away, Ananda could not stand up
because the passing away of Shariputra left a huge gap
in the Sangha. When we study the sutra, we see how, in
the time of Buddha, there were monks in the Sangha who
did not go along with the Sangha. There were people
whose behaviour did not allow other monks to approach
them and to help them, so these people lived like a drop
of oil in a bowl of water. They could not make progress
and they could not bring happiness to themselves or the
Sangha and, aware of this, Mahamoggallana gave this
teaching, so that everyone in the Sangha could practice.
When we live in the Sangha and there is harmony, we can
enjoy ourselves, we can talk to anybody in the Sangha
and be happy, and we can also make others happy. But if
we are not able to communicate with other members of the
Sangha, if nobody wants to be close to us, then we are
isolated and when we are isolated we cannot be happy and
we cannot make the Sangha happy.
In the past, there
was a practice of silence... that is, it is like
‘putting into Coventry’, to ‘isolate’. We don’t talk to
that person at all, and in the temple they practiced
that. They used the method of isolating that person, as
that person causes suffering to happen in the Sangha.
Everybody is silent with regard to that person; they
don’t talk to that person. But in the practice of Plum
Village, we have never needed to use the practice of
isolation as we have other methods. When we isolate
someone, it is as if we have given up hope in that
person. We feel we cannot teach that person any more. In
the beginning, people try their best to help the person,
but after a while they give up hope. They say that there
is no benefit for that person to stay here and there is
no benefit for us for that person to stay here and so
they use the final practice they can use, and that is to
isolate that person. So we know that practice is the
final effort and it really shows that the Sangha has
failed and the person who was isolated has failed as
well. Isolation means we have failed, we are defeated,
we have no capacity to intervene in order to help that
person and to help the Sangha.
In the past they
didn’t talk about ‘shining the guiding light’, which is
what we practice today. But, in fact, the practice of
shining the guiding light did exist in the time of the
Buddha. In the practice of the Parivarana ceremony, the
monks would shine lights on each others practice, but in
Plum Village we practice shining light in the practice
throughout the year, not just once a year. Before
someone receives the precepts, before someone becomes a
dharmacharya, during retreats and at the end of
retreats, we practice ‘shining the guiding light’. If
we’ve practiced this ‘shining the guiding light’ it
means that we haven’t given up and that we intervene
with the strength of the Sangha in order to help. If one
person shines light, it is not enough to help that
person transform, but if the whole Sangha shines the
light, it is. Imagine there is someone in the Sangha who
is isolated and will not listen to anyone else and
nobody likes to come to that person and help them. If we
allow that situation to continue a long time, until we
have no other way but to practice isolation - it is a
great shame. It is a great shame for the Sangha and a
great shame for the person who is isolated, so we need
to have another method to use and that is ‘shining
guiding light’.
In the sutra,
Mahamoggallana suggests methods – not just for one
person, but for everyone in the Sangha to use. Because
we do not want to become a part of the Sangha which no
one dares to approach, because we haven’t got the
capacity to listen deeply, because we have very heavy
habit energies which we follow without knowing that
we’re making others suffer. When we live in a Sangha, we
take refuge in that Sangha and we make use of that
Sangha to encourage us, to support us and teach us. If
we isolate ourselves, if we don’t know how to obey, if
we are not easy to speak to, even though our brothers
and sisters want to help us, they cannot and finally we
have to leave our Sangha. It is a great shame for us,
and a great shame for our Sangha. So, when we read the
Sutra, we can learn from Mahamoggallana and we can apply
what we learn in our daily life. At the same time, we
are able to see the methods which, in the time of the
Buddha, Mahamoggallana taught and which, today, we are
still practicing in Plum Village and which we can
contribute to future generations for their practice,
without having to use the method called isolation.
Mahamoggallana brings up the reasons which make it
impossible for us to be able to talk to someone set
apart in the Sangha. If he has wrong desires and is
controlled by his wrong desires, that is the reason
which makes it difficult for us to talk to him. In the
most recent English version it says; A bhikkhu has evil
wishes and is dominated by evil wishes... I have
translated ‘evil wishes’ as ‘wrong desires’. In Chinese,
it means some sort of infatuation - some sort of
attachment.
When a part of a
Sangha is overwhelmed by an attachment and it stops the
rest of the Sangha from being able to approach that
person, we don’t want anybody to mention to us that we
are attached. We have some kind of attachment to another
person in the Sangha or a person outside the Sangha and
the Sangha knows about it. Some people may have come and
have pointed it out to us, but we always try to avoid
it, we don’t want the help of the Sangha. This
attachment is the first reason that Mahamoggallana gives
as a reason which makes it impossible for the Sangha to
be able to approach us and talk to us. This brother,
this sister, is caught in their attachment and therefore
the Sangha cannot approach them and help them. Are we in
that situation? Do we have some wrong desire, some wrong
attachment that is going to isolate us, just as it has
isolated the other person in the Sangha? That is called
‘looking in the mirror’ - we see that others who have
been attached have been isolated, and they cannot accept
whenever anybody comes to encourage them to do
differently. So the first thing which makes it difficult
for the Sangha to approach us and talk to us is when we
are caught in a wrong attachment. It means that our
attachment is unwholesome. It is an attachment with
another person in the Sangha, or somebody outside the
Sangha.
The second reason is
that he only knows how to praise himself and criticize
others. The bhikkhu who praises himself and despises
others is difficult to approach. There are people who
only want their self-pride to be protected and they
haven’t the capacity to praise anybody else in the
Sangha, except themselves. They can only talk about the
weaknesses of other people. They have no capacity to
praise others in the Sangha. That has happened - it
happens in all of the hamlets. There are people who have
never opened their mouth to praise one of their brothers
or sisters. They only wait until their brothers and
sisters have some weakness or short-coming and then they
talk about it, and if somebody can’t see our good points
and praise our good points, then we cannot bear it. We
don’t have the capacity to praise anyone else, we don’t
have the capacity to ‘water the flowers’ of others, and
we cannot speak well of others. Standing before that
person we cannot talk about their positive things, and
we cannot talk about their positive things to other
people either, if we are like that then we will be
isolated in our Sangha. This is someone who really wants
to be praised. Everybody has positive and negative
points, but some people only want to talk about the
negative things of other people, they’re very stingy,
very mean. We know that the other person has
short-comings and they have to transform those
short-comings, but we have to be able to see the
positive things in that person too. Sometimes we just
see the unwholesome things and they blind us to the
wholesome things in that person. The other person has
made us suffer one time and when we look at that person,
all we see is that one time they made us suffer. We are
unable to see all the goodness and sweetness they have
contributed to the Sangha. We are never able to open our
mouth to praise people.
Now, when we see
somebody like that in the Sangha, we come back to
ourselves and we ask ourselves – "Am I like that? Am I
someone who just sees the faults of others and am I not
able to see or talk about the good points in other
people?" And when someone just wants to be praised and
wants to despise others, we see that person and we ask
ourselves, "Am I like that? Do I want to be isolated
because I’m like that?" If we have some prejudice about
one of our brothers or sisters, we have to practice and
ask ourselves the question: "Besides the weaknesses I
see in that person, have they any strengths?" And we
have to number those strengths. When I talk to another
person about that person, can I talk about the good
points of that person to others, and if I can’t then I’m
isolating myself. Or, in the case of a person who is
easily angered... A bhikkhu who is angry and who is
mastered by his anger is difficult to approach. Maybe we
don’t have a very cruel nature, but we may get angry
very easily. People get tired of that and they don’t
want to get near us, they don’t dare talk to us. They
don’t want to have a conversation with us because we get
angry so easily. We are easily mastered by our anger and
that means we cannot be master of ourselves when we are
in that state. When somebody gets angry easily and
cannot be master of themselves, they are easily isolated
and other parts of the Sangha don’t dare come near that
person, to converse with them, to help them. But we have
to ask ourselves – if somebody else in the Sangha is
like that, am I like that too? Do I easily get angry? Am
I easily mastered by my anger?
The fourth reason is
the bhikkhu who is angry and because of his anger he
bears a grudge and is difficult to approach. There’s
some people who, once they have gotten angry, forget
everything... they are not angry anymore. But there are
the people who get angry and then they bear a grudge
afterwards and the light of their eyes and their words
and their way of behavior makes us want to go and sit
somewhere else. Because he holds a grudge, we avoid that
person as if he were a leper. He doesn’t manifest his
anger in an expressive way, but holds that grudge and
that grudge influences his way of speech, his way of
thinking and his actions. When we bear a grudge like
that the Sangha will not want to talk to us. A bhikkhu
is angry and because of his anger he talks unkindly and
people don’t dare come near him because of this and so
he’s isolated. He gets angry and it shows on his face
and in his speech that he is angry and when we speak in
an angry way, people don’t dare come near us.
A bhikkhu who, when
corrected, corrects in turn the one who has corrected
him, is difficult to approach. Instead of saying "Thank
you for having pointed out my fault to me", he corrects
that person in return. When you say "You think you are
better than me, do you?", or "I know I didn’t close the
door in mindfulness, but your lack of mindfulness is
even greater than mine"... if we say something like that
then that person won’t correct us any more. If two or
three people correct us and we act like that then nobody
will want to correct us any more and we will be
isolated. We have to look and see if we’re like that
because we must not become an element of the Sangha like
that. A bhikkhu, who, when corrected, disparages the one
who corrected him is difficult to approach. Disparages
means, "Your practice is so bad already and you don’t
look after your own practice... all you think about is
other peoples faults..."
The ninth thing is –
a bhikkhu who, when corrected, retorts, is difficult to
approach. We see that the person is trying to help us,
but we also want to blame them in return... so the
advice of the others is not received by us and no-one
will dare to approach us. Sometimes the other person
doesn’t really show us the mistake we have made. They
are talking about something else, but because we have an
internal formation, thinking that people are going to
criticize us, when they say something we think they are
criticizing us even when they’re not. So we disparage
that other person, we retort to that other person, even
though that person isn’t even trying to correct us. We
think that people are taking a devious route in order to
criticize us, when in fact they are not even talking
about us at all.
The tenth thing is a
bhikkhu who, when corrected, evades the question by
asking another or changes the subject. He evades the
question by asking other questions. There are people
like that. So, a bhikkhu, who, when corrected, evades
the question by asking another changes the subject. He
acts in a ‘gross’ way... somebody whose actions are
‘gross’ has evil intention and nobody wants to come near
him. Someone who is jealous and sulky may make people
afraid of them and if we have these characteristics they
will avoid us. A person who is jealous does not know how
to share the merit and cannot practice no-self. When
they see the other person is happy... the other person
is loved and valued, they cannot bear it. They ask "Why
am I not valued? Why am I not loved? The other person is
loved, is valued... has that person done something such
as saying unkind things about me behind my back which
has made them valued and made me not valued?" But if we
see there are people around us who are loved and valued,
it should make us happy because that person is my
brother, my sister, and when they are happy I can share
their happiness. Being able to do that makes me light
and fresh and we know that when another is light and
fresh, we are also. When we are light and fresh, we are
loved and we are valued, but if we are jealous then we
lose all our fresh-ness and all our light-ness and
therefore we are not able to enjoy or profit from the
good qualities of others. Therefore, jealousy can
destroy our happiness and the happiness of the Sangha
and make it impossible for others to be able to approach
us. That kind of person is unmindful...
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