
| This is what should be done
by one who is skilled in goodness and who knows the path of peace: Let them be...contented and easily satisfied, unburdened with duties, and frugal in their ways. (Metta Sutta Sn 143-4) |
Yet I'm sure that within all of you there is also something else, something beyond that mind that is always wanting and craving and trying to hold on to our identity and experiences, that recognizes and resonates to this word renunciation. Whenever I've talked about this theme with other people, often they say that although the word horrifies them in a way, there is also a fascination, an echo of something we intuitively long for. This is the aspect of renunciation that I hope to tap into as we explore this very deep theme. As the contemporary Indian thinker Raimundo Panikkar says, "Not everyone has the inclination to take up the vocation of monasticism, but all of us have some part of us which is a monk or a nun; and that should be cultivated." So as we consider these teachings and reflections that speak to that part of all of us which is a monk or a nun, it is not necessarily something that involves having a shaved head or wearing a robe. It is an attitude, a way of approaching life, which essentially boils down to giving up seeking our fulfillment from the experiences of our life, of needing them to have a particular quality, and giving our energy instead to understanding experience itself.
When we understand this, we can start to glimpse that renunciation is
not a matter of doing something or having to create something, or getting
rid of something or exterminating something in life. Rather it is moving
towards non-contention, a sense of rest and relaxation—not having constantly
to try and manipulate and control and evade and maneuver any more. We are
able to open in a fearless way and relax into the experience of the moment,
whatever its quality may be. In opening to receive life, we still engage
in the conventional level of reality--the social level of moral values,
identities, mother and father, livelihood and mortgages. If we grasp these
things and expect complete fulfillment from them, we will always be disappointed.
But if we see our life as an opportunity to understand Dhamma--the way
things are--that is renunciation. This letting go is very freeing. Whatever
comes to us is Dhamma, and there is a joy in being in contact with Truth,
whatever its particular flavor. Renunciation can sound like passivity,
a "door mat" philosophy, but actually it is the opposite. True response-ability--the
ability to respond wisely and compassionately to life--naturally arises
in the non-attached mind. There can be both activity and letting go.
| I have seen the misery of pleasures.
I have seen the security involved in renouncing them: So now I will go. I will go on into the struggle. This is to my mind delight. This is where my mind finds bliss. (Sn 424) |
| I do not say that you can attain purity
by views, traditions, insight, morality or conventions; nor will you attain purity without these. But by using them for abandonment, rather than as positions to hold on to, you will come to be at peace without the need to be anything. (Sn 839) |
After the sutta considers the insight, seeing clearly, which is the
foundation of all our practice, it goes on to explore very practical ways
in which we can support and actually put into practice letting go, abandoning
that which is hindering our life in everyday situations: 1) restraining—a
wise use of the senses that does not give rise to outflows of self. One
manifestation of the insight into impermanence is that one starts quite
naturally to restrain oneself; 2) using—how we use the things of our life,
the material objects, our homes, our clothes, our food, and more subtly,
how we use the time in our life; 3) and 4) enduring and avoiding how to
bring insight and clarity into the more unbearable aspects of our life.
We have to endure some things and we have to avoid some others. We consider
carefully which things are worth enduring and which things are best avoided.
5) removing —how we can actually remove and free ourselves from things
which are unwholesome or harmful in our life; and 6) developing--how, through
letting go of what is unwholesome, we move toward what is supporting enlightenment,
freedom, peace, and what is supporting wholesome, beautiful mind-states.
| The days and nights are relentlessly passing;
How well am I spending my time? This should be reflected upon again and again by one who has gone forth. (AN 10.87) |
| Lose the greed for pleasure.
See how letting go of the world is peacefulness. There is nothing that you need to hold on to and there is nothing that you need to push away. (Sn 1098) |
| Whatever bliss in the world is found in sensual
pleasures,
and whatever there is of heavenly bliss-- These are not worth one sixteenth part
|
| Who so has turned to renunciation,
Turned to detachment of the mind, Is filled with all-embracing love And freed from thirsting after life. (AN 5.55) |
| Whatever is not yours, monks,-- abandon it!
When you have abandoned it, that will lead to your welfare and happiness for a long time. And what is it that is not yours? Material form is not yours--abandon it! Feeling is not yours--abandon it! Perception is not yours--abandon it! Formations are not y ours--abandon them! Consciousness is not yours--abandon it! When you have abandoned it, that will lead to your welfare and happiness for a long time. (MN 22) |
This is very useful training as to how we can anchor ourselves more amidst sense experience without being drawn in to it. The body, being the first foundation of mindfulness, is the most easy within which to sustain attention—and the least deceptive. Our body is a very honest thing. It doesn't tell us lies, like the mind that rationalizes and tries to convince us it has good reasons for following its wishes and whims. So the body is a very good place to use as a first base for our expeditions into the more hair-raising spheres of the mind, and it's where attention should gravitate towards as a kind of anchoring post.
The image is often used of this post firmly stuck in the ground. When there's something fixed in one place, and you start pulling against it, you notice there's a tugging. But if you have no reference point, then the mind is just constantly shooting off here and there and--oops, there we are again swinging through the trees. And we haven't noticed because there was nothing to refer to, there's no contrast to movement. Anchoring the attention within the breathing (when we are in a situation where it is possible to be that refined), or as we sit here, feeling the body pressing against the seat; feeling the whole body, the posture, sitting, standing, walking, lying down--this is anchoring the mind in the body. A very simple thing, and yet it does start to give us a tremendous possibility; now the mind hasn't been drawn out, grabbing hold of something—but has a space within it. A space within which it can see what's going on.
So we start to contemplate sense experience with an inner questioning:
"How am I seeing this?"instead of just seeing something and "Oh, I want
it!" Your whole energy has shot out through your eyes and you've completely
lost that post, that centeredness. Instead, turning inwards, we notice
"Ah, the eye has seen something attractive." We can reflect on that. This
is something that can be known. We can notice our habitual response to
a pleasant sight, for example, or a particular sound, or a memory, or the
way someone speaks to us, the tone of voice, a thought: "How am I receiving
this? How does it feel?" This very simple awareness is in itself restraint.
And it's the beginning of a true renunciation. When we step back a little
there comes to be this sense of detachment, which allows the mind to begin
to reflect. This allows a clarity to begin to arise in the mind, a sense
of brightness. And within that brightness we can start to understand when
it is appropriate to follow—when a desire is valid and it's going to help
and be something useful to follow—and when it's going to just lead to these
vexations and fevers that are so unsatisfying.
| The impulse "I want"
and the impulse "I'll have" --lose them! That is where most people get stuck. Without those, you can use your eyes to guide you through this suffering state. (Sn 706) |
Just reining in our impulses in an attempt to conform to an ideal is a willful restraint that does not necessarily lead to renunciation. Renunciation is an inner freedom, a sense of ease. There are people who grasp hold of the idea that we should be restrained, we shouldn't have too much fun and we shouldn't do this, and we shouldn't do that. "A proper Buddhist, a real meditator wouldn't do that." People come into the monastery and they say things like "Oh, I know I shouldn't have, but I had fish and chips last night. And I did enjoy it." Well, for goodness sake, if you are going to have them, enjoy them! There is this little voice in us that grabs hold of the idea and is trying to live to an ideal, whereas in fact we still want to do it.
You really have got two choices: you can want to do it and do it, or you can want to do it and not do it. But don't want to do it, do it, and then feel guilty about it. Do one or the other, do it tally, and determine to learn from it. If you are caught by guilt and judgement and self-hatred because you think you shouldn't be doing it, then there's no opportunity for understanding. That's a very contracted mind-state; it can't reflect. We have to be clear enough and compassionate enough to allow ourselves to indulge sometimes--but really watch the effect. Be clear enough to notice how you feel. Does it feel as good as you thought? Was it worth it? What are the consequences to yourself and to others?
The restraint of mindfulness leads to understanding, and understanding
leads to peace. This is the middle way, falling between two extremes: not
constant indulgence, nor on the other side a kind of "shouldn't" accompanied
by the guilt and the clamping down and tightening up that says, "I'm going
to get my act together." This is actually falling into the other extreme
of repression, or self-hatred--which is really a form of self-mortification.
| When he does not think:
"This is mine" or ""That belongs to them;" then, since there is no self there, he cannot grieve with the thought, "I do not have" (Sn 951) |
Reflecting on this, one realizes that something very important is being said here. The problem does not lie in sense experience—in alluring or unattractive sights or sounds or tastes or thoughts or emotions. Nor does it lie within the fact that we have to see and hear and taste and touch and smell and think. If we're not careful, we can start to make some mistaken assumptions. When we start to wake up to the dis-ease inherent in the constant bombardment of sensory experience, we can start to feel that the experience itself is the problem.
Sometimes you see this amongst people who meditate, or are very committed
to a spiritual path, when it seems they want to withdraw more and more
from strong, difficult, or complex experience. And it can become a very
contracted, fearful, un-alive form of living if one is not careful. One
becomes more and more frightened of being stimulated too much by life,
and from a kind of weariness of strong experience one wants to get away
from it. We can do this in meditation, too, except we call it something
nice: we call it 'getting concentrated' or focusing the mind. But sometimes
the attitude behind that, if we are not honest and careful, can be a sense
of wanting to shut things down, to "get away from." Or, alternatively,
sometimes we can start feeling averse to being a sensitive creature which
has eyes that see and ears that hear and a mind that thinks, thinks, thinks.
Sometimes we can wish to not exist, to somehow not have to feel, not have
to think.
| Màra says to a group of young monks:
"Do not abandon what is visible here and now and run off to distant things." And the young Monks reply:
|
| There are two extremes which should not be followed,
bhikkhus, by someone who has gone forth:
Devotion to pursuing sense pleasure, which is low, vulgar, worldly, ignoble and produces no useful result; And devotion to self-denial, which is painful, ignoble and produces no useful result. Avoiding both these extremes, bhikkhus, the Middle Way that a Tathàgatha has Awakened to gives vision and insight knowledge, and leads to peace, profound understanding, full realization and to Nibbàna. (Mv 1.6) |