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Forwarded from Buddha
Finding Sense in Sensation

S. N. Goenka about the crucial role of the body in vipassana practice.
By S. N. Goenka

The Buddha was the foremost scientist of mind and matter (nama and rupa). What makes him a peerless scientist is his discovery that tanha, or craving, and by extension, aversion—arises from vedana, or sensation on the body.

Before the time of the Buddha, little if any importance was given to bodily sensation. In fact, it was the centrality of bodily sensation that was the Buddha’s great discovery in his quest to determine the root cause of suffering and the means to its cessation. Before the Buddha, India’s spiritual masters emphasized teachings that encouraged people to turn away from sensory objects and ignore the sensations that contact with them engenders.

But the Buddha, a real scientist, examined sensation more closely. He discovered that when we come into contact with a sense-object through one of the six sense doors (ears, eyes, nose, tongue, body, mind), we cling to the sensation it creates, giving rise to tanha (wanting it to stay and to increase) and aversion (wanting it to cease). The mind then reacts with thoughts of either “I want” or “I do not want.” Buddha discovered that everything that arises in the mind arises with the sensations on the body and that these sensations are the material we have to work with.

The first step, then, is to train the mind to become so sharp and sensitive that it will learn to detect even the subtlest sensations. That job is done by anapana—the practice of awareness of the breath—on the small area under the nostrils, above the upper lip. If we concentrate on this area, the mind becomes sharper and sharper, subtler and subtler. This is the way we begin to become aware of every sort of sensation on the body.

Next, we feel the sensations but don’t react to them. We can learn to maintain this equanimity towards sensations by understanding their transitory nature.

Whether pleasant, unpleasant, or neutral, gross or subtle, every sensation shares the same characteristic: it arises and passes away, arises and passes away. It is this arising and passing that we have to experience through practice, not just accept as truth because Buddha said so, not just accept because intellectually it seems logical enough to us. We must experience sensation’s nature, understand its flux, and learn not to react to it.

As we reach deeper states of awareness, we will be able to detect subtler and subtler sensations, or vibrations of greater rapidity, arising and passing with greater speed. In these deep states, our mind will become so calm, so tranquil, so pure, that we will immediately recognize any impurity accompanying the agitated state and make the choice to refrain from reacting adversely. It becomes clear to us that we can’t harm anybody without first defiling ourselves with emotions like hate or anger or lust. If we do this, we will come to an experiential understanding of the deep truth of anicca, or impermanence. As we observe sensations without reacting to them, the impurities in our minds lose their strength and cannot overpower us.

The Buddha was not merely giving sermons; he was offering a technique to help people reach a state in which they could feel the harm they do to themselves. Once we see this, sila, or ethics, follows naturally. Just as we pull our hand from a flame, we step back from harming ourselves and others.
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Forwarded from Buddha
It is a wonderful discovery that by observing physical sensations on the body, we can eradicate the roots of the defilements of mind. As we practice more, negative emotions will become far more conspicuous to us much earlier; as soon as they arise, we will become aware of sensations and have the opportunity to make ethical choices. But first we need to begin with what is present to us deeply in our minds at the level of sensation. Otherwise, we will keep ourselves and others miserable for a very long time.
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S. N. Goenka (1924-2013) was born and raised in Myanmar. He was a leading figure of the vipassana movement, taught meditation for 44 years, and established vipassana centers worldwide.
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Buddha dharma teachings channel:

https://news.1rj.ru/str/lorddivinebuddha
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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Satya Narayana Goenka
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Chapter 2

Appamada Vagga
Heedfulness

9. Appamatto pamattesu
suttesu bahujagaro
Abalassam'va sighasso
hitva yati sumedhaso. 29.

THE STRENUOUS AND THE ALERT OVERTAKE THE THOUGHTLESS AND THE INDOLENT

9. Heedful amongst the heedless, wide awake amongst the slumbering, the wise man advances as does a swift horse, leaving a weak jade behind. 29.

Story

Two monks retired to a forest to meditate. One was strenuous, the other was not. The Buddha praised the former.

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Free Buddhism books, teachings, podcasts and videos from Theravada, Mahayana and Vajrayana traditions:

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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Symbolic meanings of a stupa:

Structure and the Path to Enlightenment

Base: Represents the earth and the foundation of mindfulness.

Dome: Symbolizes water and the vastness of the cosmos.

Square Harmika: Represents air and the spiritual focus; it holds the relics of the Buddha or other revered figures.

Spire or Pinnacle: Represents fire and the stages of enlightenment.

Umbrella (Chattras): Represents the highest level of spiritual attainment and protection from evil.

Lotus Throne: Symbolizes purity, enlightenment, and detachment from material existence.
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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Meditation on Vesak day, Dhammakaya temple, Thailand.
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Chapter 2

Appamada Vagga
Heedfulness

10. Appamadena Maghava
devanam seññhatam gato
Appamadam pasamsanti
pamado garahito sada. 30.

EARNESTNESS LEADS TO SOVEREIGNTY

10. By earnestness Maghava 11 rose to the lordship of the gods. 12 Earnestness is ever praised; negligence is ever despised. 30.

Story

By his personal efforts and selfless service an ordinary person became after death the king of the gods.

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Buddha dharma teachings channel:

https://news.1rj.ru/str/lorddivinebuddha
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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Free Buddha Dharma ebook

A Refuge in Awakening
By Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu


Free download here:
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/thai/lee/refawake.pdf

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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Free Buddha Dharma ebook

A Refuge in Awakening
By Ajaan Lee Dhammadharo, translated from the Thai by Thanissaro Bhikkhu

“Those who have gone to the Buddha as refuge will not go to the realms of deprivation. On abandoning the human body, they will fill the company of the gods.”
I will now explain this verse so that you can practice in a way leading to the supreme attainment, capable of eliminating all your suffering and fears, reaching the refuge of peace.
We come into this world without a substantial refuge. Nothing—aside from the Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha—will follow us into the next life. These three are the only things in which we can take refuge both in this life and in lives to come.
There are two levels on which people take refuge in the Triple Gem. Some take refuge only on the level of individuals, while others take refuge on the level of inner qualities, by developing the steps of the practice within themselves.

Free download here:
https://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/thai/lee/refawake.pdf

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Big Buddha Bangkok, Thailand.
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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
Rattanakosin Buddha, Wat Nong Hoi Buddhist temple, Lamphun, Thailand.
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Chapter 2

Appamada Vagga
Heedfulness

11. Appamadarato bhikkhu
pamade bhayadassi va
Samyojanam auum thulam
daham aggi'va gacchati. 31.

THE HEEDFUL ADVANCE

11. The Bhikkhu 13 who delights in heedfulness, and looks with fear on heedlessness, advances like fire, burning all fetters 14 great and small. 31.

Story

A monk, failing in his meditation in the forest, was coming to see the Buddha. On the way he saw a forest fire advancing, burning all things great and small. This sight induced him to think that he too should advance burning all the fetters, great and small, by the fire of the Noble Eightfold Path. The Buddha read his thought and, radiating a ray of light, advised him accordingly.

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Forwarded from Words of the Buddha
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“Mendicants, in some past lives the Realized One was reborn as a human being. ... Due to performing those deeds he was reborn in a heavenly realm. When he came back to this place he obtained this mark: he is golden colored; his skin shines like lustrous gold.

On this it is said:

“Fixated on good will, he gave gifts. In an earlier life he poured forth cloth fine and soft to touch, like a god pouring rain on this broad earth.

So doing he passed from here to heaven, where he enjoyed the fruits of deeds well done. Here he wins a figure shining like honey-yellow gold, like Indra, the finest of gods.

If that man stays in the house, not wishing to go forth, he conquers and rules this vast, broad earth. He obtains abundant excellent cloth, so fine and soft to touch.

He receives robes, cloth, and the finest garments. if he chooses the life gone forth. For he still partakes of past deed’s fruit; what’s been done is never lost.”

Partial excerpts from DN 30 : Pathikavagga
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Free Buddhism Dharma ebook

Small Boat, Great Mountain
Theravadin Reflections On the Natural Great Perfections Dzogchen
By Amaro Bhikkhu


Free download here:

https://ftp.budaedu.org/ebooks/pdf/EN395.pdf
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Free Buddhism Dharma ebook

Small Boat, Great Mountain
Theravadin Reflections On the Natural Great Perfections Dzogchen
By Amaro Bhikkhu

One of the delights of Small Boat, Great Mountain is that Ajahn Amaro has enumerated many of references and provided clear and compelling explanations of the deathless nature of the intrinsic awareness or the mind. In orthodox circles in Burma and Sri Lanka, however, this notion is frankly contradictory, since awareness (or consciousness, vijnana) is considered impermanent.
The issue is of particular interest at the current time. Over decades, many Western vipassana teachers and students have sought teachings from Dzogchen masters. Among the Tibetan teachers who have been especially helpful to vipassana seekers have been the late Tulku Urgyen Rinpoche, his son Tsoknyi Rinpoche, and the late Nyoshul Khen Rinpoche. Having been inspired by the profound view and techniques of this lineage, many vipassana practitioners are grappling to reconcile Dzogchen understandings with their Theravadan backgrounds.
Ajahn Amaro’s talks as recorded in this book are a very important contribution to this dialogue. As such, a few words about the occasion on which they were given may be of interest.

In the lineage of Ajahn Chah, a teacher is not supposed to prepare much for a Dharma talk. Rather the teacher is encouraged to trust in his or her sense of the moment and to intuit from the setting and the audience what words are most appropriate. I believe that Ajahn Amaro followed this guideline during the retreat with Tsoknyi Rinpoche, and that we are most fortunate to have this record of the extraordinary talks that the situation evoked. In their erudition, humor, and profundity, they are a unique and accurate transmission of the atmosphere of that special retreat. May their message lead all those who read them directly to their own Buddha-nature and to the vast freedom of the Natural Great Perfection Dzogchen.

Free download here:

https://ftp.budaedu.org/ebooks/pdf/EN395.pdf
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