Tuesday, August 2, 2011

Vipassana - Walking Meditation and the Six Primary Elements

Computer Studies in Buddhism - Meditation
"Vipassana Meditation Course: Series of Eight Talks", by Ven Sayadaw U Janaka
Buddha Dhamma Meditation Association, Sydney, AUSTRALIA



Talk 3
Walking Meditation and the Six Primary Elements



  Today I'll continue my discourse on the practical exercise of mindfulness
  meditation. Yesterday I dealt with how to practice walking meditation
  systematically and methodically. Even though you are treading on the right
  path leading to the cessation of all kinds of suffering, if your practice is
  not systematic and methodical your success will be delayed. So systematic
  practice is vitally needed for a meditator to achieve his goal.
  In the same way sitting also should be systematic and methodical. If you can
  sit systematically then you can concentrate your mind very well in a short
  time. The Buddha prescribed a mode of sitting for meditation: sitting in a
  cross legged position, keeping the body erect, and also the neck and head in
  an upright position. In that way the body is supported. The eyes should be
  closed. The mind should be focussed on the area or the point of the body you
  should be aware of.
  But for Westerners it's difficult to sit cross legged position systematically
  because they are not accustomed to sitting on the floor. They usually sit on
  chairs so they find it difficult to sit in a cross legged position on the
  floor comfortably. That's why they have to use a cushion or something like
  that. So for Westerners the mode of sitting mentioned by the Omniscient Buddha
  in the discourse is not good for their comfortable and diligent mindfulness
  and deep concentration. But if they try to sit in that cross legged position,
  gradually they can become accustomed to it and they can do it very well. Some
  of the meditators sit on their cushion and they bend their legs in a somewhat
  cross legged position. It's good for them to focus their mind on the abdominal
  movement because if they sit on the cushion they can keep their body in an
  upright position. The body rarely bends when they sit say for some ten or
  twenty minutes, because of their cushion.
  But when they get painful sensations then unconsciously or consciously they
  change their position. When they change their position some of them sit with
  their knees upright. It's very awkward for them and also not suitable for
  practice of the Dhamma. They should not sit in a position with their knees
  keeping upright because it doesn't help them to concentrate their mind well on
  the object of meditation. It's not systematic sitting.
  Another aspect of the practice is that when you feel a painful sensation to be
  unbearable you have a tendency to change position. You should be patient with
  the pain and note it as much as possible attentively and methodically, not to
  change instantly but you should proceed with mindfulness of the pain.
  Eventually if the painful sensation becomes unbearable you can change only
  once in a sitting. But for some who can sit an hour without changing position
  it is not good to change the position in a sitting. Such yogis should not
  change their position. If the pain becomes unbearable then you should get up
  and practice walking meditation. That's better because when you have a change
  in the position then your concentration has been broken. Even though you
  continue to sit after changing your position you can't get deep concentration.
  So it's not very beneficial for you to change your position if you can sit an
  hour without changing it.
  And in walking too, you should not walk only at ten minutes or fifteen
  minutes, for a short time. You should walk at least an hour if you can walk
  without any disturbance to your bodily processes. Only after that you should
  sit again for meditation. The most important point in walking is not to look
  round here and there. Naturally you have a tendency or desire to look round
  when you hear the sound of someone's voice, when you feel something is
  happening nearby or someone is coming towards you, and so on. But whenever you
  have a desire or tendency to look round, you should make a mental note of that
  desire or tendency as: desire, desire, desire, tendency, tendency, and so on.
  When that desire has disappeared you won't look round and you can resume your
  walking. Your concentration is still stable to a certain extent. It's not
  broken.
  Yesterday I explained to you how a meditator can observe twelve parts of a
  step, including intention before every action as mentioned in the Commentary
  to the Pali text. But it depends on you how many of the actions you should
  note. You should watch some objects as comfortably as you feel. If you have to
  exert or endeavour your utmost to be aware of any number of objects
  uncomfortably, you should not do that. If you do that you feel tense on your
  neck or your back, and sometimes you feel a headache. Sometimes you feel dizzy
  because you have to strain too much to be aware of each part of the step. So
  it depends on you; you yourself know. Normally for a meditator it should be
  adequate to note four or five objects of a step comfortably without strains
  with your relaxation: intending, lifting, moving, dropping, or touching. If
  you are able to observe these four or five objects precisely and very
  attentively then you can attain a deep concentration on the movement of the
  foot.
  To be aware of these four or five objects very precisely and attentively you
  have to slow down your stepping. Unless your step is slow you cannot catch
  each individual part of the step very well. It's indispensable for you to slow
  down your step so that you can note all these four or five objects very
  precisely and attentively. Now when you are able to note all these four
  objects very well, your concentration gradually becomes better and better. You
  can note intention very concentratedly. Then the lifting movement you can note
  with diligent mindfulness. Then the pushing movement and putting movement and
  touching sensation you can know very well without looking here and there. In
  this way when you practice walking meditation for about three or four days you
  can attain a deep concentration.
  And as to walking meditation the Buddha said there are five benefits of
  walking:
    (1) The first benefit is that you can walk on foot a very long journey,
    because you have practised walking.
    (2) Then the second benefit is you will be perseverant with the strenuous
    effort in your practice. Because you see, it's the nature of a human being
    to stay still and sit idly, enjoying something. He doesn't want to walk or
    stand. He likes sitting better than straining and walking. In other words he
    is naturally lazy to walk so he would like to sit always. So if a person
    trained himself in walking for a very long time then because of his exertion
    he likes to walk. He is not reluctant to walk. That means he has the energy
    or effort to do something actively with alertness. Walking makes him active
    and alert. So whatever he does he puts the utmost effort in the doing of
    that thing. That's why the Buddha said, if you practise walking you become
    industrious, perseverant, with utmost effort.
    (3) You yourself know when you are afraid of cholesterol in your body you do
    jogging every morning or every evening. Jogging is a sort of walking
    practise. When the time comes up you are not lazy to do jogging. That's
    because you have practised that jogging. That's what the Buddha said. One of
    the benefits of walking is the perseverant and diligent effort one can have.

    (4) Then the fourth benefit of walking is healthiness. If a person practises
    walking he is healthier than the person who is lazy. By practising walking
    you can be healthy both mentally and physically. Mental health is much more
    important than physical health. Regarding healthiness, the Buddha said the
    food you have taken is easily digested. Because of the digestion you are
    healthy. That's the benefit of walking. After you have taken a lot of food
    into your stomach, if you lie down or if you sit it's somewhat difficult for
    you to digest it. After you have taken that much food, then if you walk the
    food is easily digested. So healthiness together with digestion is one of
    the benefits of walking.
    If you are lazy you can't meditate. If you are lazy you do not come here for
    meditation. Because you are not lazy you come here to meditate. Yesterday
    when I explained how to practise walking meditation systematically, after
    the talk most of the yogis took an interest in walking and they practised
    it. Then at the time of the interview they told me, 'I enjoy it.' Why do you
    enjoy it? Because you like to be industrious and to be perseverant as the
    result of walking meditation.
    (5) The most important benefit of walking, what the Buddha said in
    accordance with this discourse, is concentration. The Buddha said the
    concentration you have attained in walking meditation lasts very long. You
    can easily concentrate your mind on the movement of the foot in a short time
    when you take an interest in walking, and also do it strenuously, because in
    walking the object of meditation is more pronounced than in sitting.
  In sitting the respiration or abdominal movement is not distinct to your mind.
  In the beginning of sitting you may find it and you may be able to note it
  very well: rising, falling, rising, falling. Sometimes it becomes irregular
  because you make too much effort in your noting of the abdominal movement so
  that it can be more distinct. But in walking you didn't have such a problem.
  In walking naturally the lifting movement, pushing movement, dropping movement
  of the foot is very prominent, very distinct to your mind so that you can
  easily note it.
  When the object of meditation is prominent or predominant then you can easily
  note it. You can easily watch it. Because you can easily watch it your mind
  becomes very quickly concentrated on it. Then that concentration becomes also
  deep so it will last very long. One of the benefits of walking is to attain a
  long lasting concentration of the mind. Naturally some of you practise walking
  meditation systematically and diligently so you have had some concentration of
  the mind which is somewhat deep, better than you have had in sitting
  meditation. You know it through your experience.
  That's what the Buddha said, you can attain long lasting concentration by
  means of walking. So when you are aware of each individual movement of the
  foot, and sometimes the intention too, then the mind becomes gradually
  concentrated on the movement of the foot very well. And the more energetically
  you note the movement the more deep is the concentration of the mind. Then
  when concentration becomes deeper and deeper you feel your feet become light
  as they automatically lift, automatically push forward, automatically drop
  down. You come to realise it. Sometimes you get startled at the experience of
  this automatic lifting and pushing and dropping of the foot. and as soon as
  you feel it you say to yourself, 'Hah, what's that? Am I mad or not?' In this
  way you get startled at the unusual experience of the movement of the foot.
  When I conducted a meditation retreat in England at the Manjusri Tibetan
  Monastery, the Manjusri Institute in northern England near the border of
  Scotland, one of the meditators had put much effort into his practise both
  sitting as well as walking, and awareness of the activities too. So after
  about four days' meditation he came to me and asked a question. 'Venerable
  Sir, my meditation is getting worse and worse,' he said. 'Now what happen to
  your meditation?' I asked him. Then he said, 'When I am walking one day,
  Venerable Sir, then gradually I am not aware of myself. The foot itself had
  lifted, and it itself pushed forward, and then dropped down by itself. There's
  no I or no me, no self, no myself. Sometimes though I control my foot, the
  foot doesn't stay with the ground. It lifted by itself. Sometimes it pushed
  forward very long. I couldn't control it. Then sometimes it's getting down by
  itself. So my meditation is getting worse and worse. What should I do?' Then
  eventually he said, 'I think I have gone mad.' Such an experience was very
  amazing.
  This is a benefit of walking meditation. First of all he said, 'I don't know
  myself. I'm not aware of myself. I don't know my body, my leg.' That means the
  realisation of the movement of the foot. The movement of the foot has
  destroyed the idea of an 'I' or a 'you,' a 'self' or a 'soul,' a 'person' or
  'being.' Here what he was realising was the impersonal nature of our bodily
  process called Anatta. No soul, non-ego, non-self nature of our bodily
  phenomena.
  When he said, 'The foot is automatically lifted up by itself. It's
  automatically pushed forward by itself,' that means there's no person or no
  being, no self who lifted the foot, who pushed it forward, who dropped it
  down. It's the realisation of the impermanent nature of physical processes or
  physical phenomena: Anatta. Before he didn't realise the physical process of
  the rising-falling movement and the other parts of the body in sitting, he
  realised the processes of rising, lifting movement, pushing movement, the
  falling movement of the phenomena as it really is. So he has destroyed the
  false idea of an I or a you, a person or a being, a self or a soul. Anatta.
  It was very interesting. Not only this yogi but also many yogis in Burma
  experienced it in this way. And sometimes before you experience this stage of
  insight knowledge you feel you are walking on waves of the sea. Or you are
  standing on a boat which was floating on the waves of the sea. Sometimes you
  may feel you are walking on a heap of cotton. Sometimes you feel you are
  walking in the air. That is also one of the insight knowledge which penetrates
  into the true nature of material process, material phenomena.
  In accordance with the Buddha's philosophy this so-called person is composed
  of six elements: the four material elements and the one mental element. Of the
  four physical, material elements the first one is the element of hardness and
  softness. We call it pathavi-dhatu. The second is the element of fluidity and
  coalition. We call it apo-dhatu in Pali. The third is the element of heat and
  cold, temperature. We call it tejo-dhatu . The fourth is the element of
  motion, movement, vibration, expansion and contraction. This is called
  vayo-dhatu in Pali.
  These four primary material elements constitute the so-called bodily process.
  When you feel your body then you may have a sensation of hardness or softness.
  That is pathavi-dhatu. You may feel heat or cold. That's tejo-dhatu. You feel
  the nature of fluidity or coalition. That's apo-dhatu. You may feel motion,
  movement, vibration, supporting. This is vayo-dhatu, one element.
  These four primary elements together with the other minor elements are
  composed as a material unit called the indestructible unit - Kalapa. These
  eight elements cannot be divided, cannot be destroyed even with the atomic
  bomb. You can divide the atom into say nucleus and proton and neutron and so
  on. But the tiniest detail of the atom consists of these four primary
  elements. So you can't divide it. You can't destroy it so it is called the
  unit of indestructibility - Avinibhoga-rupa in Pali. So when the innumerable
  number of these material units are composed then they become a body: a finger,
  a nail, a hair, and so on.
  So, in between these units there's a space. That space is known as
  akasa-dhatu,. This is one of the six elements which constitutes the so-called
  bodily process.
  Then the sixth one is the mental element. That is, mind, consciousness, mental
  processes, emotional processes. All these are called vinyana-dhatu, the mental
  element or mind element.
  Normally we are not able to penetrate into these elements and realise them in
  their true nature. That's why we take these compounded elements for a personal
  being, an I or a you, because we can't divide. Our intellectual knowledge is
  not enough to penetrate into these elements, and realise them in their true
  nature. So we think this is a body, this is a mind, this a man, this is a
  woman, this is a leg, this is a nose, this a hair. If we have penetrating
  insight knowledge through our vipassana meditation, insight meditation, then
  we can penetrate into these primary elements and know them and their nature
  and also their appearance and disappearance, and the nature of transitoriness
  of these elements.
  So here when you practise walking meditation you feel that you are walking on
  a boat which is floating on the waves of the sea, or as though you were
  walking on the air, or as though you are walking on a heap of cotton. You are
  realising the specific nature or specific characteristic of the wind element
  vayo-dhatu. Vayo-dhatu, the wind element has movement, motion, supporting,
  vibrating as its specific characteristics, or individual characteristics.
  Normally we do not realise it. But when we watch the movement of the foot
  while we are walking very closely, attentively and precisely, then our
  concentration becomes deeper and deeper. Then, because of deep concentration
  the insight knowledge or experiential knowing becomes penetrating and sharp.
  So that penetrating insight realises the process of movement and its specific
  characteristics of movement, motion, vibrating and supporting. So we feel we
  are walking on the air, or we are standing on the boat, or on the waves of the
  sea. Because the waves of the sea are always moving.
  Then, gradually our concentration becomes deeper. You will feel the specific
  characteristics of the wind element in that way. At that time you very often
  feel you are not yourself. Here 'you are not yourself' means you are not mad.
  You are not aware of your body. You are not aware of yourself. What you are
  here realising is just movement. A great deal of movement which is going on of
  its own accord. So in this way you have destroyed the idea of a personal
  being, a self or a soul by means of the walking meditation.
  But here you should be careful not to expect any unusual experiences when you
  are walking. When you expect anything, the expectation disturbs your
  concentration. Then the concentration becomes weak. Then you can't experience
  anything new. So you mustn't expect anything. But what I have explained to you
  is that your noting of the movement of the foot has such and such a benefit
  you can experience.
  So what you should do is just be mindful of what is happening to your body and
  mind, that's all. Except for mindfulness you mustn't do anything else. You
  mustn't expect anything, you mustn't be curious or inquisitive about anything.
  But what you should do is be mindful of what's happening. If you have
  expectation, that expectation must be aware of expecting. If you have
  curiosity, curiosity must be aware of curiosity, and so on until it has
  disappeared. You mustn't allow them to disturb your concentration and
  mindfulness. So what you should do is just be mindful while you are walking,
  while you are sitting, while you are lined up, while you are eating, while you
  are dressing, while you are showering, whatever you are doing. What you should
  do is just be mindful of it as it is, that's all.
  In the time of the Buddha tbere was a bikkhuni named Patajara. Bikkhuni is a
  woman monk . This Patajara was the daughter of a wealthy person. Say a
  billionaire, not a millionaire. But when she was grown up she married a
  servant, so she had to go to the other village and stay there because she was
  afraid of their parents. Then she had a great deal of trouble because she was
  a human being. Human beings are surrounded by many sufferings, dukkha. Her
  husband died. Her two sons and her parents also died. Her half brothers died.
  The house of Patajara collapsed in a storm due to the heavy rain. So she was
  mad because of her anxiety, sorrow, worry, lamentation, and despair and she
  roamed in the city.
  But one day the Buddha summoned her to the audience in the monastery of
  Jetavana who listened to the Buddha's sermon. The Omniscient Buddha knew that
  she was Patajara and also that her mental faculties were ripe for the
  attainment of enlightenment. So the Buddha said to her, 'Oh beloved sister,
  please be careful, please come round.' When she heard what the Buddha said she
  came round. Her mind became normal. Then the Omniscient Buddha told her to sit
  and listen to the sermon.
  While she was listening to Dhamma the Buddha explained to the audience the
  Four Noble Truths. The first is the truth of suffering, Dukkha. The second is
  the Truth of the Cause of Suffering, Samudaya . The third is the truth of the
  Cessation of Suffering, Nirodha. Then the fourth is the Truth of the Way
  Leading to the Cessation of Suffering. That is Mindfulness and Meditation.
  When the Buddha explained the truth of the way leading to the cessation of
  suffering, and how to practise mindfulness and meditation -- when anyone wants
  to get rid of all kinds of suffering -- then Patajara with a great deal of
  suffering wanted to get rid of it.
  So while listening to Dhamma she tried to be mindful of what is happening to
  her body and mind, and also consciousness, the hearing. In this way she
  gradually concentrated her mind very well. And when she had attained a deep
  concentration her insight knowledge became penetrating and realised all mental
  and physical phenomena in their true nature. And eventually she attained the
  four stages of enlightenment which completely uprooted all mental defilements
  together with their potentialities. Then she lived happily and peacefully
  without any suffering, stress or worries, sorrows and lamentation. She became
  free from all kinds of mental and physical suffering.
  But what I should tell you is this woman attained the first stage of
  enlightenment while she was listening to Dhamma and after that she asked the
  Buddha for ordination as a Bikkhuni. So the Buddha told the other Bikkhunis to
  ordain her. After he ordained her as a Bikkhuni she proceeded with her
  practise of mindfulness and meditation.
  And one day at night she practised walking meditation the whole night. Then
  because of her walking meditation her concentration became deeper and deeper
  and also stable and firm. When she had realised the viability of her
  concentration she went to her room and sat for meditation. When she approached
  her bed she noted all activities: her standing, standing, and bending bending
  , then turning, turning, when you sit down on the bed, sitting down, sitting
  down. Then after she had settled herself on the seat she took a small stick
  and stretching her arm, reached her arm to the lamp which was flaming. Then
  with that stick she noticed stretching, stretching. She then pressed the flame
  with the stick, pressing, pressing, pressing. Then the flame submerged into
  the oil and it was extinguished. As soon as the flame had submerged into the
  oil she attained three other higher stages of enlightenment, and all
  defilement was destroyed by this enlightenment. She became Arahant and lived
  in peace and happiness. Here, because of deep concentration she attained from
  walking meditation, she could be aware of all daily activities, and that
  awareness made her attain to the other higher stages of enlightenment which
  totally destroy all defilements.

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