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Difference between revisions of "Life Isn't Just Suffering"

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[[File:Moggallana_-_paranibbana.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Moggallana_-_paranibbana.jpg‎|thumb|250px|]]
You've probably heard the rumor that Buddhism is pessimistic, that "Life is suffering" is the Buddha's first noble truth. It's a rumor with good credentials, spread by well-respected academics and meditation teachers alike, but a rumor nonetheless. The real truth about the noble truths is far more interesting. The Buddha taught four truths — not one — about life: There is suffering, there is a cause for suffering, there is an end of suffering, and there is a path of practice that puts an end to suffering. These truths, taken as a whole, are far from pessimistic. They're a practical, problem-solving approach — the way a doctor approaches an illness, or a mechanic a faulty engine. You identify a problem and look for its cause. You then put an end to the problem by eliminating the cause.
+
You've probably [[heard]] the rumor that [[Buddhism]] is {{Wiki|pessimistic}}, that "[[Life]] is [[Suffering]]" is The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] first [[Noble]] [[Truth]]. It's a rumor with good credentials, spread by well-respected {{Wiki|academics}} and [[Meditation]] [[teachers]] alike, but a rumor nonetheless. The {{Wiki|real}} [[Truth]] about the [[Noble]] [[truths]] is far more [[interesting]]. The [[Buddha]] [[taught]] [[four truths]] — not one — about [[Life]]: There is [[Suffering]], there is a [[cause]] for [[Suffering]], there is an end of [[Suffering]], and there is a [[path]] of practice that puts an end to [[Suffering]]. These [[truths]], taken as a whole, are far from {{Wiki|pessimistic}}. They're a {{Wiki|practical}}, problem-solving approach — the way a doctor approaches an {{Wiki|illness}}, or a mechanic a faulty engine. You identify a problem and look for its [[cause]]. You then put an end to the problem by eliminating the [[cause]].
  
What's special about the Buddha's approach is that the problem he attacks is the whole of human suffering, and the solution he offers is something human beings can do for themselves. Just as a doctor with a surefire cure for measles isn't afraid of measles, the Buddha isn't afraid of any aspect of human suffering. And, having experienced a happiness that's totally unconditional, he's not afraid to point out the suffering and stress inherent in places where most of us would rather not see it — in the conditioned pleasures we cling to. He teaches us not to deny that suffering and stress, or to run away from it, but to stand still and face up to it. To examine it carefully. That way — by understanding it — we can ferret out its cause and put an end to it. Totally. How confident can you get?
+
What's special about The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] approach is that the problem he attacks is the whole of [[human]] [[Suffering]], and the {{Wiki|solution}} he offers is something [[human beings]] can do for themselves. Just as a doctor with a surefire cure for measles isn't afraid of measles, The [[Buddha]] isn't afraid of any aspect of [[human]] [[Suffering]]. And, having [[experienced]] a [[Happiness]] that's totally unconditional, he's not afraid to point out the [[Suffering]] and [[stress]] [[inherent]] in places where most of us would rather not see it — in the [[conditioned]] [[pleasures]] we [[cling]] to. He teaches us not to deny that [[Suffering]] and [[stress]], or to run away from it, but to stand still and face up to it. To examine it carefully. That way — by [[understanding]] it — we can ferret out its [[cause]] and put an end to it. Totally. How confident can you get?
  
A fair number of writers have pointed out the basic confidence inherent in the four noble truths, and yet the rumor of Buddhism's pessimism persists. I wonder why. One possible explanation is that, in coming to Buddhism, we sub-consciously expect it to address issues that have a long history in our own culture. By starting out with suffering as his first truth, the Buddha seems to be offering his position on a question with a long history in the West: is the world basically good or bad?
+
A fair number of writers have pointed out the basic [[confidence]] [[inherent]] in The [[Four Noble Truths]], and yet the rumor of [[Buddhism]]'[[s]] [[pessimism]] persists. I {{Wiki|wonder}} why. One possible explanation is that, in coming to [[Buddhism]], we sub-consciously expect it to address issues that have a long {{Wiki|history}} in our [[own]] {{Wiki|culture}}. By starting out with [[Suffering]] as his first [[Truth]], The [[Buddha]] seems to be [[Offering]] his position on a question with a long {{Wiki|history}} in the {{Wiki|West}}: is the [[World]] basically good or bad?
  
According to Genesis, this was the first question that occurred to God after he had finished his creation: had he done a good job? So he looked at the world and saw that it was good. Ever since then, people in the West have sided with or against God on his answer, but in doing so they have affirmed that the question was worth asking to begin with. When Theravada — the only form of Buddhism to take on Christianity when Europe colonized Asia — was looking for ways to head off what it saw as the missionary menace, Buddhists who had received their education from the missionaries assumed that the question was valid and pressed the first noble truth into service as a refutation of the Christian God: look at how miserable life is, they said, and it's hard to accept God's verdict on his handiwork.
+
According to Genesis, this was the first question that occurred to [[God]] after he had finished his creation: had he done a good job? So he looked at the [[World]] and saw that it was good. Ever since then, [[people]] in the {{Wiki|West}} have sided with or against [[God]] on his answer, but in doing so they have [[affirmed]] that the question was worth asking to begin with. When [[Theravada]] — the only [[Form]] of [[Buddhism]] to take on {{Wiki|{{Wiki|Christianity}}}} when {{Wiki|Europe}} colonized {{Wiki|Asia}} — was looking for ways to {{Wiki|head}} off what it saw as the {{Wiki|missionary}} menace, [[Buddhists]] who had received their [[education]] from the [[missionaries]] assumed that the question was valid and pressed the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]] into service as a refutation of the {{Wiki|Christian}} [[God]]: look at how [[miserable]] [[Life]] is, they said, and it's hard to accept [[God]]'[[s]] verdict on his handiwork.
  
This debating strategy may have scored a few points at the time, and it's easy to find Buddhist apologists who — still living in the colonial past — keep trying to score the same points. The real issue, though, is whether the Buddha intended for his first noble truth to be an answer to God's question in the first place and — more importantly — whether we're getting the most out of the first noble truth if we see it in that light.
+
This [[debating]] strategy may have scored a few points at the [[time]], and it's easy to find [[Buddhist]] apologists who — still living in the colonial {{Wiki|past}} — keep trying to score the same points. The {{Wiki|real}} issue, though, is whether The [[Buddha]] intended for his first [[Noble]] [[Truth]] to be an answer to [[God]]'[[s]] question in the first place and — more importantly — whether we're getting the most out of the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]] if we see it in that [[Light]].
  
It's hard to imagine what you could accomplish by saying that life is suffering. You'd have to spend your time arguing with people who see more than just suffering in life. The Buddha himself says as much in one of his discourses. A brahman named Long-nails (Dighanakha) comes to him and announces that he doesn't approve of anything. This would have been a perfect time for the Buddha, if he had wanted, to chime in with the truth that life is suffering. Instead, he attacks the whole notion of taking a stand on whether life is worthy of approval. There are three possible answers to this question: (1) nothing is worthy of approval, (2) everything is, and (3) some things are and some things aren't. If you take any of these three positions, you end up arguing with the people who take either of the other two positions. And where does that get you?
+
It's hard to [[imagine]] what you could [[accomplish]] by saying that [[Life]] is [[Suffering]]. You'd have to spend your [[time]] arguing with [[people]] who see more than just [[Suffering]] in [[Life]]. The [[Buddha]] himself says as much in one of his [[discourses]]. A [[Brahman]] named Long-nails ([[Dighanakha]]) comes to him and announces that he doesn't approve of anything. This would have been a {{Wiki|perfect}} [[time]] for The [[Buddha]], if he had wanted, to [[chime]] in with the [[Truth]] that [[Life]] is [[Suffering]]. Instead, he attacks the whole notion of taking a stand on whether [[Life]] is [[worthy]] of approval. There are three possible answers to this question: (1) [[nothing]] is [[worthy]] of approval, (2) everything is, and (3) some things are and some things aren't. If you take any of these three positions, you end up arguing with the [[people]] who take either of the other two positions. And where does that get you?
 
[[File:Ratu-khema.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Ratu-khema.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
The Buddha then teaches Long-nails to look at his body and feelings as instances of the first noble truth: they're stressful, inconstant, and don't deserve to be clung to as self. Long-nails follows the Buddha's instructions and, in letting go of his attachment to body and feelings, gains his first glimpse of the Deathless, of what it's like to be totally free from suffering.
+
The [[Buddha]] then teaches Long-nails to look at his [[Body]] and [[feelings]] as instances of the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]]: they're stressful, inconstant, and don't deserve to be clung to as [[self]]. Long-nails follows The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] instructions and, in [[letting go]] of his [[Attachment]] to [[Body]] and [[feelings]], gains his first glimpse of the {{Wiki|Deathless}}, of what it's like to be totally free from [[Suffering]].
  
The point of this story is that trying to answer God's question, passing judgment on the world, is a waste of time. And it offers a better use for the first noble truth: looking at things, not in terms of "world" or "life," but simply identifying suffering so that you can comprehend it, let it go, and attain release. Rather than asking us to make a blanket judgment — which, in effect, would be asking us to be blind partisans — the first noble truth asks us to look and see precisely where the problem of suffering lies.
+
The point of this story is that trying to answer [[God]]'[[s]] question, passing [[judgment]] on the [[World]], is a waste of [[time]]. And it offers a better use for the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]]: looking at things, not in terms of "[[World]]" or "[[Life]]," but simply identifying [[Suffering]] so that you can comprehend it, let it go, and attain [[release]]. Rather than asking us to make a blanket [[judgment]] — which, in effect, would be asking us to be [[blind]] partisans — the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]] asks us to look and see precisely where the problem of [[Suffering]] lies.
  
Other discourses make the point that the problem isn't with body and feelings in and of themselves. They themselves aren't suffering. The suffering lies in clinging to them. In his definition of the first noble truth, the Buddha summarizes all types of suffering under the phrase, "the five aggregates of clinging": clinging to physical form (including the body), feelings, perceptions, thought constructs, and consciousness. However, when the five aggregates are free from clinging, he tells us, they lead to long-term benefit and happiness. Of course, by "happiness" he isn't here referring to the arts, food, travel, sports, family life, or any of the other sections of the Sunday newspaper. He's talking about the solid well-being that comes when we treat the aggregates as factors in the path to the Deathless. The aggregates in themselves are neutral. The role they play in leading to true happiness or suffering lies in whether or not we cling.
+
Other [[discourses]] make the point that the problem isn't with [[Body]] and [[feelings]] in and of themselves. They themselves aren't [[Suffering]]. The [[Suffering]] lies in [[clinging]] to them. In his [[definition]] of the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]], The [[Buddha]] summarizes all types of [[Suffering]] under the [[phrase]], "[[The five aggregates]] of [[clinging]]": [[clinging]] to [[physical]] [[Form]] (including the [[Body]]), [[feelings]], [[perceptions]], [[Thought]] constructs, and [[Consciousness]]. However, when [[The five aggregates]] are free from [[clinging]], he tells us, they lead to long-term [[benefit]] and [[Happiness]]. Of course, by "[[Happiness]]" he isn't here referring to the [[arts]], [[Food]], travel, sports, family [[Life]], or any of the other [[sections]] of the Sunday newspaper. He's talking about the solid well-being that comes when we treat the [[Aggregates]] as factors in the [[path]] to the {{Wiki|Deathless}}. The [[Aggregates]] in themselves are [[neutral]]. The role they play in leading to true [[Happiness]] or [[Suffering]] lies in whether or not we [[cling]].
  
So the first noble truth, simply put, is that clinging is suffering. It's because of clinging that physical pain becomes mental pain. It's because of clinging that aging, illness, and death cause mental distress. How do we cling? The texts list four ways: the clinging of sensual passion, the clinging of views, the clinging of precepts and practices, and the clinging of doctrines of the self. It's rare that a moment passes in the ordinary mind without some form of clinging. Even when we abandon a particular form of clinging, it's usually because it gets in the way of another form. We may abandon a puritanical view because it interferes with sensual pleasure; or a sensual pleasure because it conflicts with a view about what we should do to stay healthy. Our views of who we are may expand and contract depending on which of our many senses of "I" is feeling the most pain, expanding into a sense of cosmic oneness when we feel confined by the limitations of our small mind-body complex, shrinking into a small shell when we feel wounded from identifying with a cosmos so filled with cruelty, thoughtlessness, and waste. When the insignificance of our finite self becomes oppressive again, we may jump at the idea that we have no self, but then that becomes oppressive.
+
So the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]], simply put, is that [[clinging]] is [[Suffering]]. It's because of [[clinging]] that [[physical]] [[pain]] becomes [[Mental]] [[pain]]. It's because of [[clinging]] that [[aging]], {{Wiki|illness}}, and [[Death]] [[cause]] [[Mental]] {{Wiki|distress}}. How do we [[cling]]? The texts list [[four ways]]: the [[clinging]] of {{Wiki|sensual}} [[passion]], the [[clinging]] of [[views]], the [[clinging]] of [[precepts]] and practices, and the [[clinging]] of [[doctrines]] of the [[self]]. It's rare that a [[moment]] passes in the ordinary [[Mind]] without some [[Form]] of [[clinging]]. Even when we abandon a particular [[Form]] of [[clinging]], it's usually because it gets in the way of another [[Form]]. We may abandon a puritanical [[view]] because it interferes with {{Wiki|sensual}} [[pleasure]]; or a {{Wiki|sensual}} [[pleasure]] because it conflicts with a [[view]] about what we should do to stay healthy. Our [[views]] of who we are may expand and contract depending on which of our many [[senses]] of "I" is [[feeling]] the most [[pain]], expanding into a [[sense]] of [[cosmic]] [[oneness]] when we [[feel]] confined by the limitations of our small [[Mind]]-[[Body]] complex, shrinking into a small shell when we [[feel]] wounded from identifying with a [[cosmos]] so filled with [[cruelty]], thoughtlessness, and waste. When the insignificance of our finite [[self]] becomes oppressive again, we may jump at the [[idea]] that we have no [[self]], but then that becomes oppressive.
 
[[File:Rice2.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
 
[[File:Rice2.jpg|thumb|250px|]]
So our minds jump from clinging to clinging like a bird trapped in a cage. And when we realize we're captive, we naturally search for a way out. This is where it's so important that the first noble truth not say that "Life is suffering," for if life were suffering, where would we look for an end to suffering? We'd be left with nothing but death and annihilation. But when the actual truth is that clinging is suffering, we simply have to look to see precisely where clinging is and learn not to cling.
+
So our [[minds]] jump from [[clinging]] to [[clinging]] like a bird trapped in a cage. And when we realize we're captive, we naturally search for a way out. This is where it's so important that the first [[Noble]] [[Truth]] not say that "[[Life]] is [[Suffering]]," for if [[Life]] were [[Suffering]], where would we look for an end to [[Suffering]]? We'd be left with [[nothing]] but [[Death]] and {{Wiki|annihilation}}. But when the actual [[Truth]] is that [[clinging]] is [[Suffering]], we simply have to look to see precisely where [[clinging]] is and learn not to [[cling]].
  
This is where we encounter the Buddha's great skill as a strategist: He tells us to take the clingings we'll have to abandon and transform them into the path to their abandoning. We'll need a certain amount of sensory pleasure — in terms of adequate food, clothing, and shelter — to find the strength to go beyond sensual passion. We'll need right view — seeing all things, including views, in terms of the four noble truths — to undermine our clinging to views. And we'll need a regimen of the five ethical precepts and the practice of meditation to put the mind in a solid position where it can drop its clinging to precepts and practices. Underlying all this, we'll need a strong sense of self-responsibility and self-discipline to master the practices leading to the insight that cuts through our clinging to doctrines of the self.
+
This is where we encounter The [[Buddha]]'[[s]] great skill as a strategist: He tells us to take the clingings we'll have to abandon and [[transform]] them into the [[path]] to their [[abandoning]]. We'll need a certain amount of sensory [[pleasure]] — in terms of adequate [[Food]], clothing, and [[shelter]] — to find the strength to go beyond {{Wiki|sensual}} [[passion]]. We'll need [[Right View]] [[seeing]] all things, including [[views]], in terms of The [[Four Noble Truths]] — to undermine our [[clinging]] to [[views]]. And we'll need a regimen of the five [[ethical]] [[precepts]] and the practice of [[Meditation]] to put the [[Mind]] in a solid position where it can drop its [[clinging]] to [[precepts]] and practices. Underlying all this, we'll need a strong [[sense]] of self-responsibility and [[self-discipline]] to [[master]] the practices leading to the [[insight]] that cuts through our [[clinging]] to [[doctrines]] of the [[self]].
  
So we start the path to the end of suffering, not by trying to drop our clingings immediately, but by learning to cling more strategically. In other words, we start where we are and make the best use of the habits we've already got. We progress along the path by finding better and better things to cling to, and more skillful ways to cling, in the same way you climb a ladder to the top of a roof: grab hold of a higher rung so that you can let go of a lower rung, and then grab onto a rung still higher. As the rungs get further off the ground, you find that the mind grows clearer and can see precisely where its clingings are. It gets a sharper sense of which parts of experience belong to which noble truth and what should be done with them: the parts that are suffering should be comprehended, the parts that cause of suffering craving and ignorance — should be abandoned; the parts that form the path to the end of suffering should be developed; and the parts that belong to the end of suffering should be verified. This helps you get higher and higher on the ladder until you find yourself securely on the roof. That's when you can finally let go of the ladder and be totally free.
+
So we start the [[path]] to the end of [[Suffering]], not by trying to drop our clingings immediately, but by {{Wiki|learning}} to [[cling]] more strategically. In other words, we start where we are and make the best use of the [[habits]] we've already got. We progress along the [[path]] by finding better and better things to [[cling]] to, and more [[skillful]] ways to [[cling]], in the same way you climb a ladder to the top of a roof: grab hold of a higher rung so that you can let go of a lower rung, and then grab onto a rung still higher. As the rungs get further off the ground, you find that the [[Mind]] grows clearer and can see precisely where its clingings are. It gets a sharper [[sense]] of which parts of [[experience]] belong to which [[Noble]] [[Truth]] and what should be done with them: the parts that are [[Suffering]] should be comprehended, the parts that [[cause]] of [[Suffering]] [[Craving]] and [[Ignorance]] — should be abandoned; the parts that [[Form]] the [[path]] to the end of [[Suffering]] should be developed; and the parts that belong to the end of [[Suffering]] should be verified. This helps you get higher and higher on the ladder until you find yourself securely on the roof. That's when you can finally let go of the ladder and be totally free.
  
So the real question we face isn't God's question, passing judgment on how skillfully he created life or the world. It's our question: how skillfully are we handling the raw stuff of life? Are we clinging in ways that serve only to continue the round of suffering, or are we learning to cling in ways that will reduce suffering so that ultimately we can grow up and won't have to cling. If we negotiate life armed with all four noble truths, realizing that life contains both suffering and an end to suffering, there's hope: hope that we'll be able to sort out which parts of life belong to which truth; hope that someday, in this life, we'll come to the point where we agree with the Buddha, "Oh. Yes. This is the end of suffering and stress."
+
So the {{Wiki|real}} question we face isn't [[God]]'[[s]] question, passing [[judgment]] on how skillfully he created [[Life]] or the [[World]]. It's our question: how skillfully are we handling the raw stuff of [[Life]]? Are we [[clinging]] in ways that serve only to continue the round of [[Suffering]], or are we {{Wiki|learning}} to [[cling]] in ways that will reduce [[Suffering]] so that ultimately we can grow up and won't have to [[cling]]. If we negotiate [[Life]] armed with all [[Four Noble Truths]], [[realizing]] that [[Life]] contains both [[Suffering]] and an end to [[Suffering]], there's {{Wiki|hope}}: {{Wiki|hope}} that we'll be [[able]] to sort out which parts of [[Life]] belong to which [[Truth]]; {{Wiki|hope}} that someday, in this [[Life]], we'll come to the point where we agree with The [[Buddha]], "Oh. Yes. This is the end of [[Suffering]] and [[stress]]."
 
{{R}}
 
{{R}}
 
[http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/thanissaro/refuge.html www.accesstoinsight.org]
 
[http://www.accesstoinsight.org/lib/authors/thanissaro/refuge.html www.accesstoinsight.org]

Latest revision as of 09:30, 7 March 2016

Moggallana - paranibbana.jpg

You've probably heard the rumor that Buddhism is pessimistic, that "Life is Suffering" is The Buddha's first Noble Truth. It's a rumor with good credentials, spread by well-respected academics and Meditation teachers alike, but a rumor nonetheless. The real Truth about the Noble truths is far more interesting. The Buddha taught four truths — not one — about Life: There is Suffering, there is a cause for Suffering, there is an end of Suffering, and there is a path of practice that puts an end to Suffering. These truths, taken as a whole, are far from pessimistic. They're a practical, problem-solving approach — the way a doctor approaches an illness, or a mechanic a faulty engine. You identify a problem and look for its cause. You then put an end to the problem by eliminating the cause.

What's special about The Buddha's approach is that the problem he attacks is the whole of human Suffering, and the solution he offers is something human beings can do for themselves. Just as a doctor with a surefire cure for measles isn't afraid of measles, The Buddha isn't afraid of any aspect of human Suffering. And, having experienced a Happiness that's totally unconditional, he's not afraid to point out the Suffering and stress inherent in places where most of us would rather not see it — in the conditioned pleasures we cling to. He teaches us not to deny that Suffering and stress, or to run away from it, but to stand still and face up to it. To examine it carefully. That way — by understanding it — we can ferret out its cause and put an end to it. Totally. How confident can you get?

A fair number of writers have pointed out the basic confidence inherent in The Four Noble Truths, and yet the rumor of Buddhism's pessimism persists. I wonder why. One possible explanation is that, in coming to Buddhism, we sub-consciously expect it to address issues that have a long history in our own culture. By starting out with Suffering as his first Truth, The Buddha seems to be Offering his position on a question with a long history in the West: is the World basically good or bad?

According to Genesis, this was the first question that occurred to God after he had finished his creation: had he done a good job? So he looked at the World and saw that it was good. Ever since then, people in the West have sided with or against God on his answer, but in doing so they have affirmed that the question was worth asking to begin with. When Theravada — the only Form of Buddhism to take on [[Wikipedia:Christianity|Christianity]] when Europe colonized Asia — was looking for ways to head off what it saw as the missionary menace, Buddhists who had received their education from the missionaries assumed that the question was valid and pressed the first Noble Truth into service as a refutation of the Christian God: look at how miserable Life is, they said, and it's hard to accept God's verdict on his handiwork.

This debating strategy may have scored a few points at the time, and it's easy to find Buddhist apologists who — still living in the colonial past — keep trying to score the same points. The real issue, though, is whether The Buddha intended for his first Noble Truth to be an answer to God's question in the first place and — more importantly — whether we're getting the most out of the first Noble Truth if we see it in that Light.

It's hard to imagine what you could accomplish by saying that Life is Suffering. You'd have to spend your time arguing with people who see more than just Suffering in Life. The Buddha himself says as much in one of his discourses. A Brahman named Long-nails (Dighanakha) comes to him and announces that he doesn't approve of anything. This would have been a perfect time for The Buddha, if he had wanted, to chime in with the Truth that Life is Suffering. Instead, he attacks the whole notion of taking a stand on whether Life is worthy of approval. There are three possible answers to this question: (1) nothing is worthy of approval, (2) everything is, and (3) some things are and some things aren't. If you take any of these three positions, you end up arguing with the people who take either of the other two positions. And where does that get you?

Ratu-khema.jpg

The Buddha then teaches Long-nails to look at his Body and feelings as instances of the first Noble Truth: they're stressful, inconstant, and don't deserve to be clung to as self. Long-nails follows The Buddha's instructions and, in letting go of his Attachment to Body and feelings, gains his first glimpse of the Deathless, of what it's like to be totally free from Suffering.

The point of this story is that trying to answer God's question, passing judgment on the World, is a waste of time. And it offers a better use for the first Noble Truth: looking at things, not in terms of "World" or "Life," but simply identifying Suffering so that you can comprehend it, let it go, and attain release. Rather than asking us to make a blanket judgment — which, in effect, would be asking us to be blind partisans — the first Noble Truth asks us to look and see precisely where the problem of Suffering lies.

Other discourses make the point that the problem isn't with Body and feelings in and of themselves. They themselves aren't Suffering. The Suffering lies in clinging to them. In his definition of the first Noble Truth, The Buddha summarizes all types of Suffering under the phrase, "The five aggregates of clinging": clinging to physical Form (including the Body), feelings, perceptions, Thought constructs, and Consciousness. However, when The five aggregates are free from clinging, he tells us, they lead to long-term benefit and Happiness. Of course, by "Happiness" he isn't here referring to the arts, Food, travel, sports, family Life, or any of the other sections of the Sunday newspaper. He's talking about the solid well-being that comes when we treat the Aggregates as factors in the path to the Deathless. The Aggregates in themselves are neutral. The role they play in leading to true Happiness or Suffering lies in whether or not we cling.

So the first Noble Truth, simply put, is that clinging is Suffering. It's because of clinging that physical pain becomes Mental pain. It's because of clinging that aging, illness, and Death cause Mental distress. How do we cling? The texts list four ways: the clinging of sensual passion, the clinging of views, the clinging of precepts and practices, and the clinging of doctrines of the self. It's rare that a moment passes in the ordinary Mind without some Form of clinging. Even when we abandon a particular Form of clinging, it's usually because it gets in the way of another Form. We may abandon a puritanical view because it interferes with sensual pleasure; or a sensual pleasure because it conflicts with a view about what we should do to stay healthy. Our views of who we are may expand and contract depending on which of our many senses of "I" is feeling the most pain, expanding into a sense of cosmic oneness when we feel confined by the limitations of our small Mind-Body complex, shrinking into a small shell when we feel wounded from identifying with a cosmos so filled with cruelty, thoughtlessness, and waste. When the insignificance of our finite self becomes oppressive again, we may jump at the idea that we have no self, but then that becomes oppressive.

Rice2.jpg

So our minds jump from clinging to clinging like a bird trapped in a cage. And when we realize we're captive, we naturally search for a way out. This is where it's so important that the first Noble Truth not say that "Life is Suffering," for if Life were Suffering, where would we look for an end to Suffering? We'd be left with nothing but Death and annihilation. But when the actual Truth is that clinging is Suffering, we simply have to look to see precisely where clinging is and learn not to cling.

This is where we encounter The Buddha's great skill as a strategist: He tells us to take the clingings we'll have to abandon and transform them into the path to their abandoning. We'll need a certain amount of sensory pleasure — in terms of adequate Food, clothing, and shelter — to find the strength to go beyond sensual passion. We'll need Right Viewseeing all things, including views, in terms of The Four Noble Truths — to undermine our clinging to views. And we'll need a regimen of the five ethical precepts and the practice of Meditation to put the Mind in a solid position where it can drop its clinging to precepts and practices. Underlying all this, we'll need a strong sense of self-responsibility and self-discipline to master the practices leading to the insight that cuts through our clinging to doctrines of the self.

So we start the path to the end of Suffering, not by trying to drop our clingings immediately, but by learning to cling more strategically. In other words, we start where we are and make the best use of the habits we've already got. We progress along the path by finding better and better things to cling to, and more skillful ways to cling, in the same way you climb a ladder to the top of a roof: grab hold of a higher rung so that you can let go of a lower rung, and then grab onto a rung still higher. As the rungs get further off the ground, you find that the Mind grows clearer and can see precisely where its clingings are. It gets a sharper sense of which parts of experience belong to which Noble Truth and what should be done with them: the parts that are Suffering should be comprehended, the parts that cause of SufferingCraving and Ignorance — should be abandoned; the parts that Form the path to the end of Suffering should be developed; and the parts that belong to the end of Suffering should be verified. This helps you get higher and higher on the ladder until you find yourself securely on the roof. That's when you can finally let go of the ladder and be totally free.

So the real question we face isn't God's question, passing judgment on how skillfully he created Life or the World. It's our question: how skillfully are we handling the raw stuff of Life? Are we clinging in ways that serve only to continue the round of Suffering, or are we learning to cling in ways that will reduce Suffering so that ultimately we can grow up and won't have to cling. If we negotiate Life armed with all Four Noble Truths, realizing that Life contains both Suffering and an end to Suffering, there's hope: hope that we'll be able to sort out which parts of Life belong to which Truth; hope that someday, in this Life, we'll come to the point where we agree with The Buddha, "Oh. Yes. This is the end of Suffering and stress."

Source

www.accesstoinsight.org