Path
and Fruit, by Sister Ayya Khema
To
have an ambition seems to be a natural phenomenon in the human make-up.
Some people want to be rich, powerful or famous. Some want to be very
knowledgeable, to get degrees. Some just want to find a little niche
for themselves where they can look out of the window and see the same
scenery every day. Some want to find a perfect partner, or as near
perfect as possible.
Even when we are
not living in the world, but in a nunnery, we have ambitions: to become
excellent meditators, to be perfectly peaceful, that this life-style
should yield results. There's always something to hope for. Why is
that? Because it's in the future, never in the present.
Instead of being
attentive to what is now, we are hoping for something better to come,
maybe tomorrow. Then, when tomorrow arrives, it has to be the next
day again, because it still wasn't perfect enough. If we were to change
this pattern in our thinking habits and rather become attentive to
what is, then we would find something to satisfy us. But when we are
looking at that which doesn't exist yet, more perfect, more wonderful,
more satisfying, then we can't find anything at all, because we are
looking for that which isn't there.
The Buddha spoke
about two kinds of people, the ordinary worldling (puthujjana) and
the noble person (ariya). Obviously it is a worthwhile ambition
to become a noble person, but if we keep looking for it at some future
time, then it will escape us. The difference between a noble one and
a worldling is the experience of "path and fruit" (magga-phala).
The first moment of this supermundane consciousness is termed Stream-entry
(sotapatti) and the person who experiences it is a Stream-winner
(sotapanna).
If we put that
into our mind as a goal in the future, it will not come about, because
we are not using all our energy and strength to recognise each moment.
Only in the recognition of each moment can a path moment occur.
The distinguishing
factor between a worldling and a noble one is the elimination of the
first three fetters binding us to continuous existence. These three,
obstructing the worldling, are: wrong view of self, sceptical doubt
and belief in rites and rituals, (sakkayaditthi, vicikiccha and
silabbatta-paramasa). Anyone who is not a Stream-winner is chained
to these three wrong beliefs and reactions that lead away from freedom
into bondage.
Let's take a look
at sceptical doubt first. It's that niggling thought in the back of
the mind: "There must be an easier way," or "I'm sure
I can find happiness somewhere in this wide world." As long as
there's doubt that the path of liberation leads out of the world,
and the belief is there that satisfaction can be found within the
world, there is no chance of noble attainment, because one is looking
in the wrong direction. Within this world with its people and things,
animals and possessions, scenery and sense contacts, there is nothing
to be found other than that which we already know. If there were more,
why isn't it easily discernible, why haven't we found it? It should
be quite plain to see. What are we looking for then?
Obviously we are
looking for happiness and peace, just like everyone else is doing.
Sceptical doubt, that alarmist, says: "I'm sure if I just handled
it a little cleverer than I did last time I'll be happy. There are
a few things I haven't tried yet." Maybe we haven't flown our
own plane yet, or lived in a cave in the Himalayas or sailed around
the world, or written that best-selling novel. All of these are splendid
things to do in the world except they are a waste of time and energy.
Sceptical doubt
makes itself felt when one isn't quite sure what one's next move should
be. "Where am I going, what am I to do?" One hasn't found
a direction yet. Sceptical doubt is the fetter in the mind when the
clarity which comes from a path moment is absent. The consciousness
arising at that time removes all doubt, because one has experienced
the proof oneself. When we bite into the mango, we know its taste.
The wrong view
of self is the most damaging fetter that besets the ordinary person.
It contains the deeply imbedded "this is me" notion. Maybe
it's not even "my" body, but there is "someone"
who is meditating. This "someone" wants to get enlightened,
wants to become a Stream-winner, wants to be happy. This wrong view
of self is the cause of all problems that could possibly arise.
As long as there's
"somebody" there, that person can have problems. When there's
nobody there, who could have difficulties? Wrong view of self is the
root which generates all subsequent pain, grief and lamentation. With
it also come the fears and worries: "Am I going to be alright,
happy, peaceful, find what I am looking for, get what I want, be healthy,
wealthy and wise?" These worries and fears are well substantiated
from one's own past. One hasn't always been healthy, wealthy and wise,
nor gotten what one wanted, nor felt wonderful. So there's very good
reason to be worried and fearful as long as wrong view of self prevails.
Rites and rituals
in themselves are not harmful, only believing them to be part of the
path to Nibbana is detrimental. They need not even be religious, although
we usually think of them like that. Such as offering flowers and incense
on a shrine, prostrating or celebrating certain festivals and believing
that this will accumulate enough merit to go to the Deva realms. It's
devotion, respect and gratitude to the Triple Gem, [*] which
count. But this belief is not only confined to religious activities.
Everybody lives with rites and rituals, even though we may not be
aware of them. In human relationships there are certain prescribed
ways of acting in respect to one's parents, one's children, one's
partners. How one relates in one's job, to friends and strangers,
how one wants to be confirmed by others, all is connected to preconceived
ideas of what is right and proper in a certain culture and tradition.
None of it has any basic truth in it, all is mind- made. The more
ideas one has, the less one can see reality. The more one believes
in them the harder it is to abandon them. As one imagines oneself
to be a certain kind of person, one relates in that way in all situations.
It doesn't have to be how we put flowers on a shrine, it can also
be how we greet people, if we do it according to a certain stereotyped
ritual and not the way an open heart and mind may dictate.
* [Triple Gem
- Buddha, Dhamma, Sangha.]
These three obstructions
fall away when a path and fruit moment has been experienced. There's
a marked change in such a person, which is - of course - not externally
visible. It would be nice to wear a halo and look blissful. But the
inner change is firstly that the experience leaves absolutely no doubt
what has to be done in this life. The event is totally different from
anything previously known, so much so, that it makes one's former
life, up to that point, immaterial. Nothing can be found in the past
which has fundamental importance. The only significance lies in going
ahead with the practice so that this minimal experience of the first
path moment can be fortified, resurrected and firmly established in
oneself.
The path and fruit
moments recur for the Once-returner (sakadagami), the Non-returner
(anagami) and the Enlightened One (Arahant). Each time
they are not only deepened, but can be lengthened. One could compare
this to having examinations at the university. If one is going through
four years of university study to get a certain degree, one has to
pass examinations at the end of each year. One has to answer questions
each time, based on one's previously absorbed knowledge. But the questions
become deeper, more profound and more difficult with each subsequent
examination. While they are always concerned with the same subject,
they require more depth and profundity of understanding each time.
Until one finally graduates and doesn't have to return to university.
It's the same with our spiritual development. Each path moment is
based on the previous one and is concerned with the same subject,
yet it goes deeper and further. Until one passes one's final test
and need not return again.
The path moment
doesn't have any thinking or feeling in it. It is not comparable to
the meditative absorptions (jhana). Although it is based upon them
because only the concentrated mind can enter into a path moment, it
does not have the same qualities. the meditative absorptions have
-in their initial stages - the ingredients of rapture, happiness and
peacefulness. Later on, the mind experiences expansion, nothingness
and a change of perception. The path moment does not contain any of
these states of mind.
It has a quality
of non-being. This is such a relief and changes one's world view so
totally that it is quite understandable that the Buddha made such
a distinction between a worldling and a Noble One. While the meditative
absorptions bring with them a feeling of oneness, of unity, the path
moment does not even contain that. The moment of fruition, subsequent
to the path moment, is the understood experience and results in a
turned-around vision of existence.
The new understanding
recognises every thought, every feeling as stress (dukkha).
The most elevated thought, the most sublime feeling still has this
quality. Only when there is nothing, is there no stress. There is
nothing internal or external that contains the quality of total satisfactoriness.
Because of such an inner vision, the passion for wanting anything
is discarded. All has been seen for what it really is and nothing
can give the happiness that arises through the practice of the path
and its results.
The Nibbanic element
cannot be truly described as bliss, because bliss has a connotation
of exhilaration. We use the word "bliss" for the meditative
absorption, where it includes a sense of excitement. The Nibbanic
element does not recognise bliss because all that arises is seen as
stress. "The bliss of Nibanna" may give one the impression
that one may find perfect happiness, but the opposite is true. One
finds that there is nothing and therefore no more unhappiness, only
peace.
To look for path
and fruit will not bring them about, because only moment to moment
awareness can do so. This awareness will eventually culminate in real
concentration where one can let go of thinking and be totally absorbed.
We can drop the meditation subject at that time. We need not push
it aside, it falls away of its own accord, and absorption in awareness
occurs. If there has to be an ambition in one's life, this is the
only worthwhile one. All others will not bring fulfilment.
One doesn't have
to force oneself to give up sceptical doubt. What is there to doubt
when one has experienced the truth? If one hits oneself with a hammer,
one feels pain and cannot doubt it. One knows from one's own experience.
Rites and rituals
are brought to an interesting end because the person who has experienced
a path moment will under no circumstance indulge in any role-playing.
All roles are the ingredients of unreality. One may continue religious
rites, because they contain aspects of respect, gratitude and devotion.
But there will not be any rituals in how to relate to people or to
situations or how to invent stories about oneself because the response
is with a spontaneous open heart.
Letting go of
the wrong view of self is -of course - the most profound change, causing
all other changes. For the Stream-winner the wrong view of self can
never intellectually arise again, but feeling-wise it can, because
the path moment has been so fleeting. It hasn't made the complete
impact yet. If it had done so, it would have resulted in Enlightenment.
This is possible and is mentioned in the Buddha's discourses as having
happened during his lifetime. All four stages of holiness were realised
while listening to the Dhamma.
The initial fruit
moment needs to be re-lived, one has to resurrect it over and over
again, until the second path moment can arise. It's like repeating
what one knows and not forgetting so that one can build upon it.
It is very useful
to remind oneself in all waking moments that body, feeling, perception,
mental formations and consciousness are all impermanent and have no
core substance, changing from moment to moment. Whether one has had
a direct vision of non-self (anatta) or just an understanding
of it, either way one has to bring it back into one's mind and re-live
it as often as possible. As we continue to do this, ordinary problems
arise less and less. If we remain aware of the impermanence of all
that exists, our difficulties seem far less important and the view
of self subtly changes.
The view we have
of ourselves is our worst enemy. Everyone has made up a persona, a
mask that one wears and we don't want to see what's behind it. We
don't allow anyone else to look either. After having had a path moment,
that is no longer possible. But the mask, fear and rejection come
to the fore. The best antidote is to remember again and again, that
there's really nobody there, only phenomena, nothing more. Even though
the inner vision may not be concrete enough to substantiate such a
claim, the affirmation helps to loosen the grasping and clinging and
to hang on a little less tightly.
The direction
of the practice is certainly towards Stream-entry. However, there
is nothing to get, there's everything to give up. Unless that is done,
the moment cannot happen, and we will continue to live in the same
way we always have. Beset by dukkha obstructed by dukkha, subject
to praise and blame, loss and gain, fame and ill-fame, happiness and
unhappiness. The usual problems -all caused by "self" -
will arise again and again. The real change comes when there is a
decisive alteration in the way we view ourselves, otherwise the difficulties
remain the same because the same identical person is generating them.
Being mindfully
aware in and out of meditation is the practice which will bring results.
It means doing one thing at a time, attentive to mind and body. When
listening to Dhamma, only listen. When sitting in meditation, only
attending to the meditation subject. When planting a tree, only planting.
No frills, no judgements. That habituates the mind to be in each moment.
Only in such a way can a path moment occur. It's not in the distant
future, it's possible here and now. There's no reason why an intelligent,
healthy, committed person should not be able to attain it with patience
and perseverance.
We have heard
about disenchantment and dispassion as steps on the path to liberation
and freedom. They cannot have meaning and impact unless there is a
vision of a totally different reality, one which does not contain
the world's manifoldness. When one sits in meditation and starts thinking,
that's the temptation of diversification and expansion (papanca).
The Nibbana element is one, not manifold. One could say that it's
empty of all that we know. Until that is seen, the world will keep
calling, but we need not believe it all. It is a difficult task. So
one has to remind oneself often, otherwise one gets caught by temptation.
One should not be surprised when one doesn't find happiness; manifoldness,
diversification cannot create happiness, only distraction.
Certainly one
can experience pleasure from the senses. If one has good karma there
will be many occasions. Good food, beautiful scenery, pleasant people,
good music, interesting books, a comfortable home, not too much physical
discomfort. But do these bring fulfilment? Since it didn't happen
in the past, why should it occur in the future? Path and fruit bring
fulfilment because they are empty of phenomena. Emptiness does not
change nor does it become unpleasant and it cannot lack peace, since
there is nothing to disturb it.
When people hear
or read about Nibbana, they are apt to say: "How can I want nothing?"
When one has seen that everything one can possibly want is meant to
fill an inner void and dissatisfaction, then the time has come to
want nothing. This goes beyond "not wanting" because one
now accepts the reality that there is nothing worthwhile to be had.
Not wanting anything will make it possible to experience that there
is actually nothing only peace and quiet.
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