This talk was
given at the London Buddhist Centre in 1997 as the final talk in a
series on six on the topic of Kshanti
I
began the first talk (The Antidote to Snakebite) in this series of
talks on Kshanti with a quote from the novel Kim, by Rudyard Kipling.
The quote was a description of the Tibetan Wheel of Life. The Tibetan
Wheel of Life is a visual depiction of the cycle of mundane
existence. As the centre of thewheel of life are a cock a snake and
a pig biting each others tails. They represent greed, hatred and
spiritual ignorance, the basic mental poisons which keep the whole
cyclic process going. The second circle of the wheel shows people
descending and ascending, which indicates that within the round of
mundane existence it is possible to go downwards into more negative
mental states or upwards into more positive mental states. The third
circle of the Wheel shows six realms of conditioned existence into
which we can be reborn. They are the god realm, the realm of the
titans, the hungry ghost realm, the hell realm, the animal realm and
the human realm. These can also be seen to represent mental states
that we inhabit from day to day or even from minute to minute. The
outermost circle of the Wheel is a pictorial representation of the
twelve links in the realm of cyclic conditionality which describe how
the whole process of mundane existence goes round and round, lifetime
after lifetime.
In that first talk
I said that Kshanti was the antidote to the snakebite of anger and
hatred. In the second talk (Kneeling in the Snow) on Patience I said
that patience created a gap between feeling and the response to
feeling. This corresponds to the point on the outer circle of the
Wheel of Life between feeling and craving. This is the point where it
is possible to break free of the reactive round of cyclic
conditionality and move on to the creative spiral of accumulative
conditionality. In the third talk (The Helpful Enemy) I said that
forgiveness was the creative response that broke the cycle of
negativity, forgiveness being a letting go of any desire for revenge
or retaliation. Tolerance is a maintaining of the positive emotion
and clarity of mind that assures progress on the spiral path and
Receptivity to the sublime Truth of the Dharma is what eventually
allows us to have knowledge and vision of things as they really are.
This point of Insight is the point of no return. From this point we
are assured of gaining Enlightenment.
The state of
Enlightenment is described in various ways. It is described as
Nirvana, Knowledge of the destruction of the mental poisons, an
unconditioned way of seeing the conditioned, realisation of the One
Mind and so on. None of the concepts is adequate. Language is
necessarily dualistic and therefore incapable of encompassing
experience beyond the dualism of subject and object. The experience
of Enlightenment can be hinted at in poetry and metaphor, but not
really described. Another approach to communicating the experience of
Enlightenment is through the language of images and symbols. One of
the most important sets of images and symbols is what is known as the
Mandala of the Five Jinas or Five Buddhas.
The
mandala is a circle symbol that occurs all over the world and it
indicates a state of wholeness or completeness. The Mandala of the
Five Jinas indicates the richness and abundance of the Enlightened
Mind by depicting five Buddhas, each of which represents
Enlightenment in its totality and each of which emphasises a
particular aspect of Enlightenment. Traditionally, you enter the
Mandala in the East, which, strangely enough is at the bottom of the
picture. The Buddha in the East is Akshobya, the Imperturbable. Then
you move around to the South on the left hand side of the picture and
here you find Ratnasambhava, the Buddha of Generosity. In the West,
at the top of the picture, you meet Amitabha, The Buddha of Love and
Compassion. The Buddha of the North is Amoghasiddhi, the Buddha of
Action and Fearlessness. At the Centre of the Mandala is Vairocana,
the Illuminator.
Each of the Five
Buddhas is associated with a particular colour, hand gesture, animal
and emblem. All of this amounts to an extraordinarily rich symbolism.
Each of the Buddhas is also associated with a particular mental
poison. The five poisons are greed, hatred, spiritual ignorance,
pride and envy. It is as if the Buddhas represent the complete
transformation of a particular poison into something totally
positive. The poison of hatred, anger or ill-will is associated with
Akshobya.
Kshanti is the
method by which hatred and anger is to be transformed and Akshobya is
the end result of the complete transformation of hatred. This is the
main connection between Ksanti-Paramita and the Buddha Akshobya. In
the course of this talk I will draw out some more connections between
the symbolism and attributes of Akshobya and the different aspects of
Kshanti.
The Sanskrit word
'akshobya' means unshakeable. The Buddha Akshobya received the name
because he took a vow in a previous lifetime never to give way to
anger or malice, never to be unethical and many other things. Over
lifetimes he was unshakeable in holding to his vow and thus became
eventually the Buddha Akshobya, the unshakeable or imperturbable.
Unshakeable means unwavering or firm and imperturbable means calm.
This aspect of Akshobya the represents the dedication which is
unwavering and calm, not easily disrupted. What the unshakeability
and imperturbability of Akshobya is teaching us is that we must be
determined and steadfast in our practice of the Dharma and not allow
ourselves to be put off or dispirited by minor setbacks or upsets.
All too often we are lacking in stamina. We don't perhaps have
sufficient motivation or vision to rouse us to heroic effort.
Politicians for
instance seem to have tremendous stamina although they may not put it
to very skilful use. People in theatre or pop stars have stamina. In
the world of business people exert themselves strenuously. It seems
that when people are motivated enough they can perform great feats of
energetic striving. Often the motivation is quite selfish in
character. In the spiritual life we need that kind of stamina too. We
need it in order to make the consistent effort that personal
development demands and we need it if we are to be of help to others.
Sangharakshita commented on this in a study seminar in . He said, “We
are so effete in the spiritual life, more often than not. We cant
stand any sort of strain; after any bit of extra effort we have to go
away and rest, have a little holiday, sit down for a while, play a
record and take things easy. Its pathetic! (Laughter.) Here you are,
aspiring to gain Enlightenment, which is after all the most difficult
thing you can possibly propose to yourself, and look how easily one
usually takes it – what an easy time one gives oneself. And there,
[[on the other hand]] are people aiming at the very inferior,
trivial, easily attained things like the Presidency of the United
States. Just look at the massive effort they are putting in – it
puts us to shame!”( Mitrata,
The Bodhisattva Ideal, 'Masculinity' and 'Femininity' in the
Spiritual Life, p.46)
If you read the
life of Sangharakshita or of other great Buddhists or remarkable
practitioners from other religious traditions, you will find they all
had great stamina and the ability and willingness to make consistent
effort in pursuit of their goals. How can we develop stamina? The
answer is with practice. We touched on this earlier in the talk on
patience when Shantideva was quoted as saying, “There is nothing
which remains difficult if it is practised. So, through practice with
minor discomforts, even major discomfort becomes bearable”
(Bodhicaryavatara, chapter on
Kshanti) If we are to develop stamina we need to learn how to
endure discomfort, whether it is physical discomfort or emotional
discomfort. Endurance is an aspect of Kshanti. In the Dhammapada
there are some verses that use the image of an elephant in connection
with endurance. Verse 320 says: “I will endure words that hurt
in silent peace as the strong elephant endures in battle arrows sent
by the bow, for many people lack self-control.” And verse 327
says: “Find joy in watchfulness: guard well your mind. Uplift
yourself from your lower self, even as an elephant draws himself out
of a muddy swamp.” Verse 325 warns us against too much
comfort-seeking and distraction. “The man who is lazy and a
glutton, who eats large meals and rolls in his sleep, who is like a
pig which is fed in the sty, this fool is reborn to a life of death.”
The elephants who
bear the throne of Akshobya on their back can serve to remind us of
the need for endurance. The elephants, because they are beneath the
lotus, which symbolises the Transcendental, are here to represent the
highest reaches of the mundane. They symbolise the unshakeable,
imperturbable qualities that were perfected by Akshobya before he
gained Enlightenment. They are the steadfast, calm, fearless
foundation for the ego-shattering experience of Insight. They
represent the ability to endure the ultimate discomfort of having no
place to hide from the fierce light of Reality.
The quality of
endurance is probably not very popular these days. Comfort and
instant gratification are the hallmarks of our society. Endurance and
the ability to postpone gratification of desires are hallmarks of the
spiritual life. In his book “The Sibling Society”, Robert Bly
argues that people no longer want to grow up and face the
difficulties of adulthood. Instead we are creating what he calls a
sibling society, a society of adolescents which demands little in the
way of responsibility and difficult work. He says; “When enough
people have slid backward into a sibling state of mind, society can
no longer demand difficult and subtle work from its people –
because the standards are no longer visible. Without the labour of
artists, for example, to incorporate past achievements – in
brushwork, in treatment of light, in depth of emotion, in
mythological intensity – people with some talent can pretend to be
genuine artists. Their choices seem to be to cannibalise ancient art,
or to create absurdly ugly art that “makes a statement”. They
don't ask themselves or each other for depth or intensity, and most
contemporary critics pretend not to miss them.”
Bly goes on to
define an adult as “a person not governed by the demands for
immediate pleasure, comfort and excitement.” And in
confessional tone he says: “The adult quality that has been
hardest for me, as a greedy person, to understand is renunciation.
The older I get, the more beautiful the word renunciation seems to
me.”
If Bly is right and I suspect he has a point, then we have the task of not only counteracting our own tendencies to shy away from everything uncomfortable, but also the task of going against a strong trend in the society around us. We need to be on our mettle. Nothing worthwhile is achieved without dedicated effort and willingness to endure whatever privations occur along the way. If we want to achieve anything worthwhile with our lives we need to learn to endure and thereby build stamina. Sangharakshita touches on this when he says: “Perhaps our daily routine should be such that we are strengthened rather than weakened. Not too many mornings lying in bed; not taking things too easily; not too many holidays; not too many visits to the cinema. Quite apart from the question of distraction, all this can be very weakening. Under modern conditions we can end up rather weak creatures if were not careful. We very rarely have to work hard day after day, week after week, month after month, as many people in the world still have to do just to survive. We very rarely work for the Dharma with that sort of vigour and indifference to hardship and discomfort.” (Complete Works,Vol.16,p.207) The elephant of endurance is not disturbed or perturbed or put off by a few criticisms or by people being difficult. Endurance depends on a higher vision which sustains us through the discomforts of spiritual development.
In the palm of his
left hand Akshobya holds a vajra. The vajra symbolises a union of
opposites. One end of the vajra represents the mental poisons and the
other end the five Wisdoms. The vajra is also a symbol of great
energy directed toward breaking through to Enlightenment. The
negative quality associated with Akshobya is anger or hatred. So the
vajra here is a representation of the transformation of hatred into
wisdom and of the enormous energy that is released by that
transformation. As Vessantara puts it in “Meeting the Buddhas” :
“....hatred can be redirected and used to further our
development. When we are experiencing it there is often a kind of
clear, cold precision to the way in which we see the faults of
things. It is a state completely devoid of sentimentality or
vagueness. We just have to see what the real enemy is. Once we hate
suffering and ignorance, and are hell-bent on destroying them, that
energy leads us to Akshobya's Pure Land rather than into the hells of
violence and despair.” We transform our anger through the
practices of patience and forgiveness, thus releasing energy for
further spiritual development.
Our anger and
hatred is often born out of our fear and insecurity. It is a defence
against all that threatens our egotism. By letting go of anger we
allow ourselves to feel the fear and also paradoxically gain
confidence in ourselves as spiritual beings. We can re-direct the
energy of our anger into taking those small risks that enable us to
go beyond our current limitations. In this way we can become more
confident and secure in our individuality and less prone to taking
offence or holding on to grudges. The vajra is a profoundly
optimistic symbol, indicating not only that all negative emotions can
be transformed in Transcendent Wisdom, but that the seeds of Wisdom
lie in those very negative emotions. A similar idea is expressed by
the fact that the lotus, symbolising transcendental attainment has
its roots in the mud of mundane concerns.
The right hand of
Akshobya touches the earth. We encountered the earth-touching mudra
(bhumisparsa-mudra) in the previous talk on receptivity (Creative
Listening).
There we saw that
at the time of the Buddhas Enlightenment he was challenged by Mara to
produce a witness to testify to his right to sit on the Vajrasana,
the spot where all the Buddhas of the past had gained Enlightenment.
In response, the Buddha touched the earth and the Earth Goddess arose
and testified that he had practised the Perfections in hundreds of
previous lives and was therefore entitled to sit on the Vajrasana. In
more conceptual terms we are told elsewhere that at the time of his
Enlightenment the Buddha was able to remember all his previous lives.
This episode refers to an overcoming of all vestiges of doubt by
referring back to the experience of practising virtuous conduct over
many lifetimes. This is also a reference to the law of Karma which
states that skilful activity has beneficial consequences for us. If
we behave skilfully we can expect to experience the fruits of that
activity at some time. At the time of his Enlightenment the Buddha
was experiencing the fruition of his skilfulness over many lifetimes.
We can be confident that if we want to achieve spiritual progress and
happiness, the law of Karma guarantees our success so long as we make
the effort. If we get into a mood of doubting or despondency, we can
look back at whatever is positive in our lives and feel assured that
it is not lost or wasted. We can use that as a new starting point to
stabilise us. To touch the earth of our skilful actions is to gain
confidence and stability. Perhaps sometimes we should literally touch
the earth in a ritual manner to feel for ourselves the stabilising
effect of the bhumisparsa-mudra and all that it symbolises. Try it
sometime when you're sitting in meditation posture. In terms of
Kshanti, we saw earlier that this is an aspect of receptivity. We
could say it is receptivity to the immutable law of Karma.
The next aspect of
Akshobya I would like to look at is the most important quality of all
– the Mirror-like Wisdom. The essential quality of a Buddha is
Wisdom and when we contemplate or meditate on an archetypal Buddha we
are trying to open up to that Wisdom and allow it to permeate our
whole being to the point where we become the Wisdom. When we
contemplate Akshobya we are trying to make ourselves receptive to his
essence, which is the Mirror-like wisdom. The Mirror-like Wisdom
reflects absolutely faithfully everything that comes into contact
with it. It sees everything just as it is, with no preferences, no
judgments, no ideas added on. The mind which is suffused with the
Mirror-like Wisdom is completely impartial. It feels no need to
choose one thing above another, it is not affected by one thing more
than another, just as a mirror reflects faithfully what ever is put
in front of it and doesn't retain some reflections and reject others.
The mind which has attained to the Mirror-like Wisdom has of course
transcended all duality of subject and object. It has seen through
the illusory nature of conditioned existence and is beyond all
distinctions, even the distinction between Samsara and Nirvana.
Has this any
relevance for us on our comparatively low level of spiritual insight?
Is there any lesson we can take from the Wisdom of Akshobya and apply
it to our lives right now? And how does this relate to Kshanti? There
are two connections I would like to make which I think are relevant
to us here and now. These are to do with the areas of clear thinking
and objectivity. The Mirror-like Wisdom, in particular, puts me in
mind of clarity of thought. It seems to emphasise the absence of
vagueness or confusion.
The opposite of
clear thinking is, of course, vague or woolly thinking, which isn't
really thinking at all. Usually we just let our minds wander around,
like slightly demented characters, picking up pits and pieces here
and there. Then we construct all sorts of views and opinions out of
these bits and pieces and imagine that we've had some ideas. Most of
our ideas are not our own, but simply an amalgam of various things
we've heard or read, put together by our conditioned prejudices, to
create a world view that keeps us reasonably sane. One of the first
things we need to do if we are to develop clear thinking is to become
aware of the extent to which all out thinking is influenced by the
conditions which have surrounded us since birth.
Although we may
like to think of ourselves as independently minded and wise to the
world, we are more likely to be completely immersed in views and
ideas that we simply ingested from the world around us in the same
way that we learnt to speak. In fact the analogy with learning to
speak is not just an analogy, because the very language carries
meaning and ideas in it which we accept unquestioningly until
something erupts in our experience that makes us sit up and take
notice. In Buddhist terms it is not sufficient however for us to
analyse or deconstruct language. What we really need to do is develop
greater mindfulness and try to filter all our thinking through the
purifying insights of Right View. To do that we need to have Right
View or at least know what Right View is.
There can be no
real or fruitful communication in the Sangha if we are starting from
different or even opposing world views. For instance, to give an
absurd example, if your basic world view is that suffering will be
brought to an end by the demise of Capitalism and the dictatorship of
the proletariat and my basic world view is that the extinction of
suffering depends on the individual making the effort to develop
spiritually in co-operation with other like-minded individuals, then
although we may seem to speaking the same language and even in broad
agreement at times, in fact we will be worlds apart and not
communicating at all.
In the Sangha we
want to foster genuine communication and therefore we need to
establish the basis of Right View and carry on our discussions in
terms of Right View. To do this we have to make an attempt to weed
out the wrong views that inevitably could our minds, because the
world we live in is awash with them. There is a direct connection
between reducing input and clear thinking. What we feed into our
minds is what comes out as views and opinions If we feed our minds on
a daily dose of news and media, that is what will have the biggest
influence on our thinking. If we feast our minds on a daily repast of
Buddhist scriptures and commentaries then they will begin to form the
basis for our thinking and as Buddhists that would be an altogether
healthier diet for us. It is not just the content of what we read
that affects our thinking but also the style. If we read books that
are written by people who can think clearly and express themselves
clearly, that will help us to think clearly ourselves.
The topic of clear
thinking is not unrelated to the topic of objectivity. To be
objective we need to be able to distinguish opinions from facts. This
is not necessarily very common. A simple example that is given is the
way people say something like 'its a terrible day' when what they
mean is 'its raining'. The terrible day is a value judgment and a
matter of opinion. The rain is a fact. In order to be objective and
therefore truthful we need to be able to tell what is a value
judgment or opinion and what is a fact. So for instance when we use
terms like always and ever as in “I'm always last to know what's
going on” or “Nobody ever listens to me” we are probably being
poetic rather than factual. But its important for us to realise that,
otherwise we start to believe ourselves on an emotional level and
that can have significant consequences. I'm not suggesting that we
should never use idiomatic speech, but rather that we should try to
be clear about what is subjective and what is objective in our
communication.
Often we hold very
strongly to our views and this is for very subjective, emotional
reasons and one way of beginning to loosen our attachment to views is
to start to see the element of subjectivity and emotionality and try
to distinguish that from what is objective and factual. The basic
wrong view that we all suffer under is the view that we are a
separate self or ego-identity and this conditions most of out other
views. This sense of separate selfhood, as I said in the first talk
in this series (The Antidote to Snakebite), is the fundamental
prejudice from which all others flow. To begin to undermine or
attenuate this view we need to approach it from many angles. We need
to cultivate self-metta, we need to practise generosity, we need to
immerse ourselves in Buddhist study, we need to experience solitude
and we need to make an effort to distinguish what is objective from
what is subjective in our thoughts and words. If we achieve greater
clarity we will be able to practise greater tolerance towards those
who are different from us and those we disagree with, without being
vague or woolly or compromising our real beliefs.
The Mirror-like
Wisdom of Akshobya is neither subjective nor objective. It is
Transcendental and therefore beyond views altogether. Here Reality is
experience, experience is Reality. As Vessantara puts it in Meeting
the Buddhas – when we enter the mandala “we see the deep blue
figure of the Immutable Buddha, holding the thunderbolt sceptre of
Reality which smashes through all our ideas and concepts about it. At
the same time the dark blue fingertips of his right hand touch the
earth, the earth of direct experience, which is the only thing upon
which any of us can finally rely.”
To finish off this series of talks on Kshanti I will just leave on the mountain peak of the Diamond Sutra with its description of the highest level of Kshanti-Paramita. This is what it says, “Moreover, Subhuti, the Tathagatas perfection of patience is really no perfection. And why? Because, Subhuti, when the king of Kalinga cut my flesh from every limb, at that time I had no perception of a self, of a being, of a soul, or a person. And why? If, Subhuti, at that time I had a perception of a self, I would also have had a perception of ill-will at that time. And so, if I had had a perception of a being, of a soul, or of a person. With my superknowledge I recall that in the past I have for five hundred births led the life of a sage devoted to patience. Then also have I had no perception of a self, a being, a soul, or a person.”