Thursday, June 12, 2014

Epitome of First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma

Lord Buddha set in motion the Wheel of Dharma with his First Sermon.  In his First Sermon Lord Buddha proclaimed the Dharma, the doctrine of the Buddha and laid the foundation of Buddha Dharma. 
The First Sermon is the First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma. 
In First Sermon, Lord Buddha revealed Four Noble Truths of existence concerning the meaning of life, and the Noble Eightfold Noble concerning the right way to live. 
In First Sermon, the First Turning of the Wheel of Dharma, recorded in the Dhammacakkhapavathana Sutta, the first ever recorded Sutta, Lord Buddha reveals:

Four Noble Truths

There are Four Noble Truths:
1…Suffering: life is permeated by suffering,
2…Cause of Suffering: the cause of suffering is attachment, craving and dissatisfaction,  
3…Cessation of Suffering: the cessation of suffering is possible by eliminating all forms of attachment, craving, and dissatisfaction, and
4…Annihilation of Suffering: the way to annihilate suffering is the Noble Eightfold Path. 

1...Suffering

There are eight kinds of suffering common to all: (1) birth, (2) old age, (3) disease, (4) death, (5) loss of loved ones or being separated from pleasant, (6) encounter with the detestable or being united with unpleasant, (7) frustrating ambitions or not having received what was desired, and (8) ills related to five Skandhas, with which we are made.
The five Skandhas are:
(i) Rupa –form, is the object of five senses.  In physical form the objects are made up of five great elements: (i) earth, (ii) water, (iii) air, (iv) fire, and (v) space.

(ii) Vedana -feeling and sensation.  We experience feeling and sensation through contact of six faculties: sight, sound, taste, smell, bodily sensation, and mental feeling or sensation, with corresponding objects. 
The feeling and sensation could be pleasant, unpleasant or neutral.  Because Vedana is the experience of pleasure or pain, it conditions craving, either to acquire something pleasurable or avoid something painful.

(iii) Sanjna -idea or perception.  Sanjna arises with recognising things.  Sanjna is the faculty that recognises.  It conceptualises and recognises things by drawing inference from the interaction of subject and object. 
Sanjna is what we call cognition, reasoning, conceptualisation, a thought or an idea.
 
(iv) Sankhara -volitional mental formation.  Sankhara directs the mind to do good, bad or neutral activities. 
Vedana and Sanjna, are not volitional actions and they do not produce Karma but Sankhara produces good or bad Karma.
 
(v) Vijnana -consciousness.  It refers to awareness of something without recognition or before recognition. 
Vijnana is being aware of something is there or happening.  It is awareness but not recognition.  Recognition is a function of Sanjna, which determines what is there or happening. 
Being Conscious is simply being aware.  Once there is awareness, Sanjna recognises the object and assign a value to it and Sankhara reacts with desire or revulsion or some other mental formation. 
The aggregation of five Skandhas brings about our thoughts, feelings, ideas, evaluations and attitudes that filter and create our experience.  They interdependently co-exist and create the illusion of self, the being of I. 
Clinging to illusory self, the being of I existing independently, means suffering.  Believing on self, the being of I in us, creates Ahangkar -Ego, which bring about suffering. 
Anything that is compounded is impermanent and clinging onto impermanence brings about suffering.
Suffering occurs at three levels:
1...Suffering due to being alive and embodied
Body is potentially subject to physical suffering due to affliction, hardship, hunger, sickness, adverse environmental conditions, ageing and death.  These kinds of sufferings are inherent to physical body.  These are ordinary built-in suffering inherent to living beings.
2...Suffering due to state of mind 
Suffering due to state of mind, called Sankhara, results from:
i...Not been able to tolerate disrespect, loss of loved ones, not been able achieve ambitions, encounter with detestable, and so. 
ii...Association with unpleasant persons and conditions, separation from loved ones and pleasant conditions, not getting what was desired, and so on.
iii...Harsh speech, anger, doubt, worry, fear, jealousy, anxiety, and so on.
iv...Delusion, illusion, craving, clinging, and attachment resulting in ignorance.
3...Suffering due to impermanence and change
The suffering arises from not being able to hold onto what we like.  The pleasant and happy feelings or conditions in life are not permanent.  Sooner or later they change.  When they change with time, they produce unhappiness, disappointment, pain and suffering. 
Time is eternally changing and with time everything changes and resultant of change could be happiness or suffering depending upon Karma.

2...Causes of Suffering

The principal cause of suffering is attachment. 
The sources of suffering are: (1) Kama-Tanha -desire for sense pleasure, (2) Bhava-Tanha -desire to become, and (3) Vibhava-Tanha -desire to get rid of, aversion. 
The desire to have, the desire not to have, the aversion, and the dissatisfaction with the results of our action are primary causes of suffering.
Suffering does not arise by itself but by its causes, and the causal action is Karma. 
The three Karma generating sources are body, speech, and mind. 
Our mind generates thought that directs our action.  Our mind manifests in both negative and positive forms.  In negative form, our mind drives us with desire, anger, hatred, pride, doubt, fear, worry and all other perverted or deluded views.  The same mind in positive form realises Buddha Nature in our being embodying love and compassion.  Mind is all powerful and it creates entire experiences.
All the causes and conditions for unwholesome action are rooted in deluded views and misleading thoughts that generate untold suffering.  The deluded views steer the nascent thought being generated by our mind in the wrong direction, which give rise to the misinterpreted and misdirected feelings. 
If we dwell on negative thought and feeling, we will have negative experiences and feel unhappy. 
Thinking and acting in a wholesome way results in happiness.  If we cultivate wholesome thought and feeling, it results in wholesome experiences in our life and we feel happy. 
Grasping and aversion are the two main driving forces behind how we think and act that taint our actions and lead to the experiences of suffering. 
The lead cause for grasping and aversion is ignorance giving rise to misleading thought.
The source of ignorance that gives rise to grasping and aversion leading to suffering is the sense of I, me and mine.
We have instinctive sense of I and me.  We think that there is an ‘inner me’ that experiences our life, the thinker behind our thought.  We think that ‘I am' is a singular entity, one person, who is separate from other people.  So we try to protect our sense of I.  We try to get what we want and push away what we do not want; and this is where grasping and aversion come from.
We make assumption of permanence.  We think the I in me is permanent, but in reality nothing is permanent.  We think we are separate, but everything is interconnected.  This mistaken perception is called ignorance. 
The current life is merely one link in a chain of lives that extends far into the past and projects far into the future.  The point of origin of this chain cannot be determined. 
We suffer as a result of unfulfilled desires of our material self, the 'I' in us, we continue to re-born in Samsara, the continuum of birth, death and rebirth, to resume our pursuit for material happiness.
It is the manifestation of our mind; our action and the belief on I in us are the primary causes of suffering.

3...Annihilation of Sufferings

Suffering can be annihilated.  We can end suffering by removing the cause of suffering.  We can erase the cause of suffering by knowing our true nature. 
To be liberated from suffering, the deluded views and misleading thoughts should be abandoned, and we should be mindful and involve in virtuous actions. 
We should do our rightful duty with full devotion, and we should not attach ourselves to the result of our Karma, may it bad or good. 
The time we attach ourselves to the results of our Karma, dissatisfaction arises.  We should renounce the results of our Karma and exercise total detachment from all forms of attachments.
Suffering arises from dissatisfaction.  We can be free from dissatisfaction with containment.  
We should exercise containment and we must accept and respect the results of our Karma with humility, accept as it comes and continue to do our karma with devotion, dedication and determination, with full of loving kindness and compassion, and void of any sense of expectations. 
The virtuous actions result in a state of happiness, and un-virtuous actions result in suffering. 
There are three kinds of actions: mental, emotional, and physical.  If we abandon all un-virtuous mental, emotional and physical actions, then our actions are automatically virtuous.
It is a wrong view to believe on self, the being of I in us having an independent existence.  What we consider I is Ahankar –Ego.  The Ego give rise to illusion and out of illusion come craving and clinging and all other negative attitudes. 
Ego has no permanent independent entity and whatever is not independent and permanent is not true.  Ego comes in existence as a result of aggregation of five Skandhas at birth and it disappears when the five Skandhas are disaggregated at death.  The Ego is Anatta -not-self, and it must be destroyed to come out of illusion, the main cause of suffering.
Only the absolute is permanent, and that is truth.  That is Dharma Kaya.  Anything besides Dharma Kaya is Anicca -impermanence and has Dependent Origination. 
We come out of suffering with the knowledge of what is impermanent is illusion, and what is permanent is truth.
Every individual existence is in the process of infinite change.  It includes our body, emotion, mind, and the environment.  To consider what is ever changing and impermanent is not wisdom.  But to know it and realise this truth is wisdom. 
When we do not know what wisdom is, there arise illusion and illusion is the cause of suffering.  When we know what wisdom is and realise the truth, the illusion disappear and so is the suffering.
Look at what is going on in mind and in our life and the experience of pain and happiness with same state of mind, face it and accept it.  Acceptance means taking responsibility for our experience and working in a positive and creative way.

4...Way to Annihilate Suffering

The cycle of birth and death to which suffering is inbuilt continues to add-infinity and it will continue until Nirvana is attained.
The root cause of suffering lies in ignorance in seeking permanence in impermanence.
The way to annihilate suffering is to walk the Eightfold Noble Path.
When one adopts the Noble Eightfold Path, the deluded views giving rise to misleading thought are eradicated, and the right attitude, thought and action are cultivated.

Noble Eightfold Path

Noble Eightfold Path has three pillars: (1) Sila -self discipline, the ethical conduct, (2) Samadhi -mental discipline, and (3) Prajna -wisdom.  These are the three essentials of Dharma.
Self discipline is indispensable for the development of mental discipline which in turn enables us to cultivate wisdom to eradicate ignorance being free from Ego that creates illusion and binds us to Samsara. 
Noble Eightfold Path liberates people from illusion, attachment and ignorance through ethical and mental development.  When one follows Noble Eightfold Path earnestly there will be gradual development of spiritual way of life.
Noble Eightfold Path provides a spiritual road map that shows us the way to live a life with universal human values.
The Noble Eightfold Path put emphasis on practice.  It is only through practice one can attain a higher level of existence. 
The Noble Eightfold Path consists of:
1...Right Understanding                       Samma-Drsti
2...Right Thought                               Samma-Sankalpa
3...Right Speech                                 Samma-Vaca
4...Right Action                                  Samma-Karmanta
5...Right Livelihood                            Samma-Ajiva
6...Right Effort                                   Samma-Vayama
7...Right Mindfulness                          Samma-Smrti
8...Right Concentration                        Samma-Samadhi
The Noble Eightfold Path is not to be understood in sequence of eight single independent steps.  They are highly interdependent principles that have to be seen in relation to each other.  They have to be embraced simultaneously and successively. 
Before going into detail, one needs to understand the original meaning of Samma.  Samma is a Pali word which in Sanskrit it is Samyak, and it denotes perfection, completeness and wholeness.  When we say Samma Sam Buddha, we mean Perfectly, Fully and Completely Enlightened One.  The literary translation of Samma into Right should be understood in this context.
Three pillars of Noble Eightfold Path:
Three pillars of Noble Eightfold Path
Noble Eightfold Path
1...Prajna:      Wisdom
1...Right Understanding
2...Right Intention
2...Sila:          Ethical Conduct
3...Right Speech
4...Right Action
5...Right Livelihood
3...Samadhi:            Mental Discipline
6...Right Effort
7...Right Mindfulness
8...Right Concentration

1...Prajna: Wisdom

Prajna -the wisdom purifies our mind by enabling it to gain spiritual insight on the true nature of all that exist. 
Prajna has two aspects:
I... Samma-Drsti:           Right Understanding
Right Understanding means to have right view, right assumption and right perception. 
Right Understanding gives us right direction and motivation.  With Right Understanding we will have Vipassana Panna -perfect insight wisdom and we see things as they really are and not as they appear to be.  
Right Understanding is the cognitive aspect of wisdom that enables us to see things through, know the impermanent and imperfect nature of worldly existence, objects and ideas, and understand the law of Karma. 
The world is bondage to attachment and biases.  One who is free from intellectual and emotional attachment, fixation of awareness, biasness and obsession, and not resolved on self, see things as they are with right view.  Such person understands the Four Noble Truths, see Dukkha arising and passing away, and never get disturbed. 
To have Right Understanding, we need to train our mind by practicing Samatha and Vipassana meditation supported by undeterred will power.
Right Understanding is not an intellectual capacity which only few posses naturally nor intelligence is wisdom.  The Right Understanding is attained, sustained and enhanced by and through all capacities of mind. 
Right Understanding begins with intuitive insight that all beings are subject to suffering and suffering ends.
Right Understanding implies to Right Understanding of Buddha Pitaka primarily the Four Noble Truths and the Noble Eightfold Path.
II... Samma Sankalpa:             Right Thought
Right Understanding leads to Right Thought.

The Right Thought is clear thinking, right intention and right resolve.  It is the intention of renunciation, goodwill and freedom.
 
Right Thought implies to divine vow with pure heart and mind.  It is the commitment to ethical and mental purification.  It eliminates evil thoughts and develops pure thoughts.
 
Right Thought has three folds: 
1...Nekkhamma: Renunciation of worldly pleasure and adoption of the virtue of selflessness, and renunciation of attachment, selfishness, and possessiveness.  
     Nekkhamma is the intention of renunciation, the resistance to the pull of desire.

2...Avyapada: Loving-kindness, goodwill, or benevolence, which are opposed to hatred, ill-will, or aversion. 
     Avyapada is the intention of good will, and the resistance to feeling of anger and aversion.

3...Avihimsa: Harmlessness and compassion, which are opposed to cruelty and callousness. 
     Avihimsa is the intention of harmlessness, not to think or act cruelly, violently, or aggressively, but to develop compassion instead.
One arrives at pure thought through repeated reflection on whether the thought that has emerged is free from ill-will and it is harmlessness, both to oneself and to others. 
If a thought is afflicting oneself, or others or both, one should abandon it.  One should act on thoughts only if it has happy consequences and happiness results on both, to oneself and others. 
Lord Buddha once advised Rahula; “...therefore, Rahula, you should train yourself by reflecting ‘I will purify my bodily acts through repeated reflection.  I will purify my verbal acts through repeated reflection.  I will purify my mental acts through repeated reflection.’  This is how you should train yourself.”
Right Thought is volitional aspect of wisdom.  Right Thought is the energy that regulates our actions. 

2...Sila:       Ethical Conducts

Sila means morality, the ethical conduct that enables us to abstain from unwholesome action.  
Prajna and Sila go hand in hand.  They complement each other.  Sila being simple and practicable by all, everyone should start practicing Dharma with Sila. 
Sila has three aspects:
I...Right Speech:           Samma Vaca
The Right Thought leads to Right Speech.
Right Speech means speaking truth with humility.  It means abstinence from lying, slandering, abusive, divisive, and harsh words, indecency, and frivolous or idle talk.
Five fundamentals of Right Speech are: (1) spoken at right time; (2) the truth is spoken; (3) spoken affectionately; (4) spoken beneficially, and (5) spoken with good-will.
A well spoken speech should neither harm oneself nor others.  One should establish within oneself; “Am I one who practice purity in speech, flawless and untainted?” 
One should always investigate five conditions within oneself: (1) do I speak at right time, or not? (2) do I speak truth, or not? (3) do I speak gently or harshly? (4) do I speak beneficial words or not? and (5) do I speak from kind heart with goodwill or inwardly malicious?
Right Speech is the first principle of ethical conduct.
II...Right Action: -        Samma Karmanta
Right Action follows Right Speech.  Right Action refers to action that involve bodily action, which should benefit others and in no way harm others. 
All sentient beings, nature and environment should be respected.  Selfless help should be extended voluntarily to needy poor and distressed sentient beings with right attitude. 
Every action we should demonstrate right attitude, manner and discipline. 
The unwholesome action leads to unsound state of mind, while wholesome action leads to sound state of mind.
Right Action means one should execute action with dedication, right attitude, integrity, confidence and will power.  The action should be void of intent and Ego-led motivation and one should renunciation of results on one's action.
One should revere and adhere to Panch Sila -the five moralities of Buddha Dharma with highest integrity.
III...Right Livelihood:             Samma Ajiva
The Right Speech and Right Action leads to Right Livelihood. 
Right Livelihood means one should earn one’s living in a righteous manner, with integrity and free from corruption, and without harming others.  One's action should not cause destruction of nature and pollution of environment. 
Wealth should be gained legally and peacefully in a mutually beneficial manner. 
The spiritual pilgrims should endeavour to purify their livelihood by refraining from five kinds of trade: (i) animals for slaughter, (ii) intoxicating drinks and drugs, (iii) poisons, (iv) arms, and (v) human trafficking.  These are forbidden actions.
Right Livelihood means living a virtuous life.  It means extending love and compassion without harming or causing injustice to others, and without compromising with any of the Panch Sila, being aware of Karma -the consequences of one’s action on others and reciprocal impact on oneself. 

3...Samadhi:        Mental Discipline

Samadhi is mental discipline.  Samadhi delivers mental purification and it is inevitable to calm fleeting mind.  
Samadhi is the culminating state of meditative process resulting in complete absorption, a state of bliss. 
Samadhi has three aspects:
I...Right Effort:             Samma Vayama
Right Effort refers to mental development, cultivating right attitudes.  It is an act of will without which nothing can be achieved. 
The mental energy is the force behind Right Effort that propels both negative and positive action. 
On positive aspect the mental energy fuels self discipline, benevolence, loving kindness and compassion while on negative aspect, the same mental energy fuels desire, jealousy, anger, aversion and violence. 
Right Effort implies to four types of endeavours in ascending order of perfection:
i...  discard evil thought that has already arisen
ii... prevent the arising of un-arise evil thought
iii...develop un-arise good thought
iv...promote the good thought that has already arisen.
Mind creates thought and emotion, which determines attitude and determines action. 
It is the mind that creates either happiness or sorrow. 
Both Samsara and Nirvana exist in our mind.  Samsara is a state of mind turned outward and lost in illusion and ignorance.  Conversely, Nirvana is the state of mind turned inward into itself recognising the true nature of mind. 
It is the endeavour for mental development to create good thoughts, and mindfulness on thoughts and emotions makes a man happy. 
It is from good thoughts and emotions comes patience and endurance that enables us to live in harmony and exercise tolerance in unpleasant circumstances. 
The skilful thought creates positive attitude while unskilful thought creates negative attitude.  The skilful thoughts are destined to bring about happiness to oneself and others equally, while unskilful thoughts bring about suffering for everyone.
II...Right Mindfulness:            Samma Smrti
Right Mindfulness means being mindful at all time, with regard to body, feeling, thought, and mental objects. 
Right Mindfulness is a state of being aware of the realities within oneself, without any craving, clinging or aversion.
Being mindful, means being aware of things as what they are with clear conscience. 
Four foundations of mindfulness are the contemplation of the: (1) body, (2) feeling, including repulsive, attractive, or neutral, (3) state of mind, and (4) phenomena.
Right Mindfulness means having controlled and perfected faculty of cognition. 
Right Mindfulness means to be aware and ensure the motif and intent of thought and action are right. 
Practicing Right Mindfulness, one should:
i...  abandon wrong views, and enter and remain in right view
ii... abandon wrong resolve, and enter and remain in right resolve
iii...abandon wrong speech, and enter and remain in right speech
iv...abandon wrong action, and enter and remain in right action
v... abandon wrong livelihood, and enter and remain in right livelihood.
If one has personal sensual desire, one should be aware of it that there is sensual desire.  One should be aware of how the arising sensual desire not yet arisen comes about, how it is abandoned when it has arisen, and how in the future there is no arising of sensual desire.
If one has personal malevolence, one should be aware of it that there is malevolence.  One should be aware of the arising....and the abandoning thereof, and how in future there is no recurrence of malevolence.
If one has personal sloth and torpor; excitement and furry; and if in one has personal doubt and wavering; one should be aware of them.  One should be aware as how each of these arises, is abandoned and reoccurs not again in future.
For Right Mindfulness one should know the relationship between Nama and Rupa. 
Nama is mind.  Mind is comprised of 1) consciousness, and 2) mental factors; both positive and negative.  
Rupa is form.  Rupa refers to sight, sounds, odours, touches and tastes, and the attachment to these sense objects. 
Mind is the knower but it is impersonal.  It does not have independent existence and it is mortal.
Rupa is object.  It is body but it is not knower.  Rupa is not conscious.  Rupa must be informed by Nama in order to be experienced.  When mind is aware of sight, seeing happens, and so on.
Both Nama and Rupa are impermanent and are in continuous flux. 
Nama and Rupa are the two faculties to which we should remain mindful. 
When one rightly understands the interplay of Nama and Rupa, three things become evident: (i) Anicca -impermanence, (ii) Anatta -impersonality of phenomenal existence, and (ii) Dukkha -un-satisfactoriness. 
With the knowledge of Nama and Rupa, one becomes convinced of impermanence, impersonality, and un-satisfactoriness. 
When Nama and Rupa are transcended, the third element, the inner consciousness is elevated. 
At the highest state of consciousness, one attains the highest state of awareness at which the Ahangkar -Ego, is fully destroyed and one becomes enlightened. 
At the highest level of awareness, when Nama and Rupa are transcended, the Buddha Nature, inherently present within, is realised. 
III...Right Concentration:      Samma Samadhi
The Right Effort and Right Mindfulness lead to Right Concentration.
Right Concentration is a state of profound stillness and bliss.  It is the culminating stage of meditative absorption.
Right concentration enables to develop mental force to which all mental faculties are unified and directed onto one particular object which is wholesome.
At Right Concentration one loses one’s own identity and become one with the object of concentration with undisturbed mind.  The wondering mind completely controlled. 
Right Concentration attunes mind to think positive that motivates to do wholesome deed.  It trains mind to stay in one object and remain un-distracted. 
At Right Concentration, the I-consciousness, the Ahangkara -Ego is completely dissolved and there is complete withdrawal from attachment and aversion, and perfect harmony between oneself and others is established. 
One may realize Right Concentration yet one may not be enlightened.  For being enlightened one needs to transcend Right Concentration into divine world realizing Buddha Nature irreversibly. 

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