This
talk was given at Madhymaloka in Birmingham, April 2010
Right Livelihood and the Noble Eightfold Path
A
question that often arises for people when they study the Noble
Eightfold Path is - why did the Buddha, or whoever compiled the list,
include right livelihood. Surely all the considerations of ethics
with regard to livelihood are already covered in the other sections
of the eightfold path -- such as right speech and right action. Why
does livelihood need its own stage? One answer to this is that it
was a particular issue at the time of the Buddha - trade was
expanding and this brought with it particular challenges. Another
answer is that it was the only aspect of social life that needed to
be addressed -- because citizenship was not meaningful then and
domestic life was well regulated. Another possible explanation, one
that I find very plausible indeed, is that the Buddha wanted to
criticise the caste system. One of the things determined by caste is
one's livelihood, but the Buddha is saying no - it is not caste but
ethics that should determine your livelihood.
What
strikes me about Right Livelihood as a stage of the Eightfold Path is
that it is concerned primarily with activity and secondarily with
mental states, whereas all the other seven stages seem to me to be
primarily concerned with mental states and secondarily with activity.
The implication of this for me is that from the beginning there was
an ethics of intention and an ethics of consequences. In other
words, it is important what mental state you are in before you act
and what is skilful or unskillful is determined by that mental state.
Greed, hatred and delusion give rise to unskilfullness and
generosity, love and wisdom give rise to skillfulness. This is the
ethics of intention, the mental state determines whether an action is
skilful or not.
However
there are certain actions which are always unskillful. This is what
the stage of right livelihood is saying. This is ethics determined
by consequences. In other words, some actions have such disastrous
consequences that it doesn't matter what the mental state of the
perpetrator is -- they are just unskillful or to put it another way,
some actions imply negative mental states. Under the heading of
right livelihood the Buddha mentions trading in living beings,
trading in poisons, trading in meat, intoxicants and weapons. These
are to be avoided. And further to that, monks are to refrain from
using divination and fortune-telling as a means of livelihood. So the
implication here is that all of these activities are wrong in
themselves. They are harmful to living beings and there is no way to
perform these activities from a positive mental state. They can
never be an expression of Metta or generosity or wisdom.
This
is important because sometimes Buddhists are in danger of elevating
the subjective and ignoring the objective. Sometimes we can talk and
act as if meditation or mindfulness is the whole of Buddhism. But
this limb of the eightfold path is reminding us that however mindful
we are, however much bliss and rapture we experience in meditation,
there are some things which are just plain wrong and cannot be
purified from the inside out, so to speak.
The
Noble Eightfold Path is a specific application of the more
fundamental principle of pratitya samutpada (variously translated as
dependent arising, conditioned co-production, the law of
conditionality) - everything arises in dependence upon conditions.
The Eightfold Path is pointing to the conditions which give rise to
Insight and the mental states and ways of life which give expression
to Insight, when it has arisen. The mundane Eightfold Path is
indicating the conditions that give rise to knowledge and vision of
things as they really are (yathabhutajnanadarshan) and the
transcendental Eightfold Path gives expression to that Knowledge and
Vision.
Broadening the definition of Right Livelihood
So
right livelihood is part of the conditions for making spiritual
progress. I think we could make the definition of right livelihood
very wide indeed. The division that we take for granted between work
as an activity separate from other activities is an artificial
division that has grown up in money-based economies. We have come to
see some of our activities as concerned with acquiring money and
other activities as concerned with the leisure etc. This division is
not inherent in the nature of reality -- it is socially conditioned.
The
notion that we have an economic life or a work life that is somehow
separate from the rest of our life is a delusion. Just as the notion
that we have a spiritual life is a delusion. Everything we do in our
life has economic implications. When we have a shower in the morning
- the shower gel, the shampoo, the water, the shower hose, all have
economic implications. The toothpaste, the toothbrush, the towel, the
hair dryer, the light bulb, the electricity - all of these are being
consumed by us and produced and delivered by others. This web of
activity has vast implications - economic, as well as environmental,
political, spiritual, domestic and so on. Our livelihood involves us
in earning and consuming.
Work
came to be seen as separate from the rest of life when some members
of a society were able to gather a surplus of requisites for
themselves and force others to work on their behalf. In primitive
societies the main concern was with survival and everything was
geared towards that, including religious ritual, the sculpting of
fertility figures or the painting of animal images in caves.
Interestingly when some of the first European settlers encountered
the Native Americans they thought they were very idle because all
they did was hunt and fish. "While
Indian women generally gathered plants and tilled fields, native men
"for the most part live idly, they do nothing but hunt and
fish," observed one New England minister. William Byrd II, the
scion
of a wealthy
Virginia family, added that Indian men "are quite idle
or at most
employ'd only in the Gentlemanly Diversions of Hunting and Fishing."
As these quotes suggest, in England hunting and fishing were
considered recreational and were generally reserved for members of
the gentry.
They were vital, however, to the subsistence
of native
peoples. (Taken from
Internet article)
The
ancient Hebrews viewed work as a "curse
devised by God explicitly to punish the disobedience and ingratitude
of Adam and Eve" (Rose,
1985, p. 28) The ancient Greeks considered all work with contempt and
saw it as a hindrance to the cultivation of the mind. The Greek word
for work was 'ponos' which comes from the same root as 'pain'. The
Romans carried on the attitudes of the Greeks and this was also an
influence on early Christian monasticism. It wasn't until Martin
Luther and the Reformation that attitudes to work began to change.
Calvinism brought about the greatest change and gave birth to what
has come to be known as the 'Protestant work ethic'. The Calvinists
believed that only a select few - the Elect - were destined to be
saved and one of the few ways of telling who was favoured by God was
to note who was prosperous. If you were prosperous it was because God
favoured you and therefore you were probably one of the Elect. To
become prosperous you had to work hard.
By
the 20th century work had become a commodity under the influence of
industrialisation. There were some, from the 18th century onwards,
who hearkened back to some Golden age when there was no separation
between work and leisure and sought to recreate their fantasy of a
primitive paradise. The majority had to head for the factories, mills
and mines. Nowadays we are likely to hear people talk about the
importance of the work/life balance. Work is one thing, life is
another and the two must be balanced. This is an idea which seems to
undermine itself.
I
think we as Buddhists need to take a more holistic approach than the
ancient Greeks and Romans with their dependence on slaves or the
modern work/life balance gurus with their dependence on a dichotomy
which is strengthened by any attempts to balance it.
Work
is an activity that constitutes part of the economic aspect of life
and no part of life is without an economic aspect. Whether we are
earning or consuming, economics is involved. Economics is basically
about energy. We are either expending our energy, saving our energy
or using other people’s energy and all of that has a value, a
monetary value.
For
instance if I visit an Art Gallery here in Birmingham, it doesn't
cost me anything. No monetary transaction takes place. But it would
be foolish to think that my visit to the gallery somehow falls
outside the economic realm. It all costs a lot of money, a huge
expenditure of energy and it is my presence there that justifies that
expenditure. Or, to take another example, if I sit down to meditate -
the place where I am sitting, the cushions and mats I am sitting on,
the shrine, the candles, the heating and so on, all represent a vast
expenditure of energy. The fact that I am not too hungry or sick to
meditate also has huge economic implications.
Our
life is an economic activity from cradle to grave, from morning to
night and indeed all through the night. And it has always been so.
The Buddha and his followers were not engaged in earning, but they
did consume and were dependent on others for their subsistence. Their
lives were not divorced from economics because economics is about
energy and every life involves the expenditure and consumption of
energy in one form or other.
Coming
back to livelihood and Right livelihood. Livelihood focuses on the
expenditure of energy in the production and delivery of goods and
services. Right Livelihood is a use of energy in this way that causes
no harm to oneself or others. But, of course, the production and
delivery of goods and services cannot be divorced from the
consumption of goods and services. So, I would like to extend the
meaning of Right Livelihood to cover both sides of this equation -
production and delivery on one side and consumption on the other. So
Right Livelihood then becomes the production, delivery and
consumption of goods and services in such a manner that no harm is
caused to oneself or others. The Pali term for Right Livelihood is
Samyak Ajiva. The dictionary translates ajiva as 'livelihood' and
also as 'mode of living'. So Samyak ajiva could be translated as
Right Mode of Living or perhaps even Right Lifestyle. One could take
this further and say that Right Livelihood as a stage of the Noble
Eightfold Path represents all altruistic activity or at least the
attempt to make all activity altruistic and as such it is the
beginnings of the Bodhisattva ideal. This is why I think Right
Livelihood is part of the Eightfold Path. It is there because the
Dharma is inherently compassionate and that compassion extends into
all areas of life. Right Livelihood makes explicit the need for
compassion in all our dealings with others and especially in this
area of life that involves the production, delivery and consumption
of goods and services. This area of life isn't really an area at all.
It permeates into every detail of every moment of our lives. As we
sit here we are consuming and therefore creating a demand for
production. We are affecting the lives of people all over the world -
the people who make our clothes, or the dye in those clothes, the
washing powder we use, people who service buildings, work on oil
platforms, in carpet factories and furniture factories and so on.
I
am saying all this to make it obvious why Livelihood has to be
included in spiritual practice and also to indicate that it is
perhaps not as simple as it could at first seem from a glance at the
Pali canon. A spiritual practice that ignores livelihood is like a
mathematician ignoring equations.
The
Buddha and his followers didn't work in the ordinary sense of the
word. They expended their energy in meditation, Dharma discussion and
teaching and they kept their needs to a minimum. They were valued by
the society around them and given support to meet their basic needs
for food, shelter, clothing and medicine. In 1968 when Bhante
Sangharakshita gave his lectures on the Eightfold Path, he encouraged
his disciples to work as little as possible and to live simple lives
with few needs. This was in keeping with the Buddhist tradition. It
is worth noting that the consumption side of the equation was not
ignored by the Buddha or Bhante. Having few needs or living a simple
life means consuming less and this is an intrinsic part of any
discussion about Right Livelihood.
Team Based Right Livelihood
Fourteen years later in 1982, Bhante Sangharakshita said he would encourage those working in Team Based Right Livelihood situations to ‘work as much as possible or at least ‘as well as possible’. This is because with the development of co-ops, which later became Team Based Right Livelihood businesses, what was being developed was a new way of putting Buddhism into practice very fully, on a daily and hourly basis, in our western context. This was part of a new vision of what it meant to be a full time practitioner of the Dharma, which superseded the traditional Bhikkhu / laity split, which in much of the Buddhist world was no longer of much genuine spiritual benefit to either the Bhikkhus or the laity. It was also a development that gave women an equal opportunity to practice fully and engage in creating the conditions for the spiritual development of as many people as possible.
Team
Based Right Livelihood businesses were to be ‘Right’ in the
traditional sense of avoiding activities that caused harm. They were
to be ‘businesses’ so that they could generate a surplus which
was then used to make the Dharma available. They were to be ‘Team
Based’ in the sense that the people in them would see themselves
co-operating on a common project for the benefit of themselves and
others.
So
in principle a Team Based Right Livelihood venture was seen as a
practice of exemplifying Metta, generosity and spiritual community.
Each of these could be taken further. The ethics of Right Livelihood
could be looked into more thoroughly and updated for our modern age.
The aspect of generosity could be furthered by individuals deciding
to take only enough money to meet their basic needs, leaving the rest
to be given away. The spiritual community aspect, which is
encompassed by the phrase ‘Team Based’, could be taken further
through practices such as spiritual friendship, confession, telling
life stories, taking on personal precepts, rejoicing in each other's
merits and endeavouring to co-operate. In a sense their is no limit
to the practice, because if taken seriously it continuously confronts
egotism and encourages self-transcendence and selfless activity. Team
Based Right Livelihood has the potential to bring about the
transformation of the individual practitioner and, by a process of
exemplification and influence, to contribute to the transformation of
the wider society.
That
is the vision and the theory. What about the practice? What has
happened in our Triratna Community? Team Based Right Livelihood is
referred to as one of the six distinctive emphases of the Triratna.
How have we got on with it? Do we practice it?
Over
the years since the late 1970’s many businesses have come into
existence, but unfortunately most of them have gone out of existence
again so that there are currently not very many team based right
livelihood businesses in our Buddhist Movement. It has certainly not
been a case of steady growth as it has been with urban Buddhist
Centres and Retreat Centres. A lot of money has been raised, which
has enabled a number of institutions to survive and develop.
Windhorse:Evolution alone has given well in excess of £5 million to
Dharma projects and many thousands of pounds to social projects. Many
people who are now Order Members did part of their preparation for
ordination in a team based right livelihood situation. Many people
have had experience of the simple semi-monastic life – living in a
single-sex community, and being supported on a ‘give what you can,
take what you need basis’.
Currently,
only a small percentage of those preparing for ordination and being
ordained are having this experience. Even in Windhorse:Evolution and
at some Buddhist Centres the system of Support is not fully operated,
with more people now wanting a wage or salary. And of those who are
engaged in team-based right livelihood, fewer are living in
single-sex communities than was the case in the past.
What
does all this mean? At first glance it would seem to indicate that we
can only conclude that this ‘distinctive emphasis’ , is being
distinctly under-emphasised! But perhaps the situation is more
complex than that. Perhaps Triratna is going through a phase in it’s
history when the type of right livelihood enterprise that suited an
earlier (younger) generation is going to be gradually replaced by
something more appropriate to the type of people who now make up the
mainstream of our Movement. Or perhaps other kinds of semi-monastic
lifestyle may emerge in other countries. Or perhaps another phase
will emerge when younger people will revive the pioneering spirit and
idealism of earlier (ad)ventures. We are a very young Movement and
it would be a brave prophet who would predict how this aspect of our
practice will unfold.
I
sincerely hope that it does unfold, and grows richer in every sense
as the years pass, because I believe it is of crucial importance to
the embedding of the Dharma in our Western industrialised cultures,
as well as being a very effective context in which individuals can
progress spiritually.
Some
years ago Subhuti gave a talk entitled Bodhisattvas in the Market
Place, in which he takes a very thorough look at the whole topic of
Right Livelihood. That talk was published in 2003 in a booklet
entitled Roads to Freedom. I would recommend it to anyone interested
in this topic. In his talk Subhuti, very skillfully and clearly draws
out six different ways of practising Right Livelihood, from simply
engaging in ethical work at one end of the spectrum to the Team Based
Right Livelihood enterprise at the other end. I think Subhuti’s
approach is very helpful and I hope many more people will read and
study his lecture, which shines a light on this important area of
practice.
Problems that have arisen
I
would like to make a different distinction here, a distinction
between two different kinds of Team Based Right Livelihood. That is
the distinction between a profit making enterprise and a non- profit
making enterprise, or more simply the distinction between a business
and a charity. I think we have sometimes failed to be clear about
this distinction in Triratna – or at least some people have been
unclear about it. I have heard of the twin absurdities of some people
thinking that a business should not be trying to make a profit and
others thinking that a charity should be trying to make a profit.
This kind of unclarity can only be detrimental. It can lead to
confusion about the nature of the practice and how to practice. If
you don’t have a commonly held view of what you are trying to
achieve, then it is not possible to co-operate in achieving it.
This
is just one issue that has been problematic in our attempts to
practice Team Based Right Livelihood. There are I think a number of
other issues which I will just touch on, before finishing with a few
thoughts about what I think will need to happen if the practice of
Team Based Right Livelihood business is to be rescued and developed
in our Movement.
Another
issue that comes to mind is to do with what I consider to be a
certain amount of confusion about what a team is and how it should
function. This confusion may stem from some things Bhante has said
over the years about co-ops and co-operation. Here is an example from
a Question and Answer session in Baker St., Buddhist centre in 1983.
“When
you are working in a co-operative you are working together. As for
‘working’ everybody knows what that is, but ‘together’ is not
me telling you what to do or you telling me what to do: in a
co-operative you are all working together. To do anything together is
very difficult indeed. Usually one person is the ‘leader’,
the other the ‘follower’.
One person takes the initiative and the other person allows them to
take the initiative. One person is ‘active’, the other ‘passive’
– with or without unconscious, or semi-conscious or
semi-unconscious, resentment or resistance. Whether between two
people. Or three, four or a larger number of people, this is the
usual situation. You very rarely get actual co-operation.
Co-operation means you all
put your cards on the table. You consider what is to be done, and
what is the best way of doing it. You consider this person’s
suggestion and that person’s suggestion, and having discussed the
matter in this way and agreed on a certain line of action you all
pool your energies and your ideas, your abilities and your skills
and, because you have a common objective, you all work together.
No-one is trying to order anyone around. No-one is shirking his or
her share of responsibility. No-one is having to take more
responsibility than they really should. This is a co-operative
situation. In such a situation you are very aware of other people.
You make no attempt to impose yourself upon them. There is no
question of ‘power’. A co-operative of any kind functions
entirely in accordance with the love mode – and that isn’t easy.
In a genuine co-op situation you abdicate the power mode absolutely.
Only the love mode is ‘allowed’ to operate, or to have effect. If
you are working in this way, or relating to others in this way, there
is a sort of abnegation of your individualism, your egoism. “
This
seems to me to be a strong statement of the ideal at which we are
aiming, with everybody equally committed and continuously effectively
Going for Refuge to the Three Jewels. It’s a statement about the
self-transcendence that can come from confronting egotism and
co-operating to achieve an objective goal. I don’t take it to be a
statement about business management techniques or the best way to
distribute responsibility and tasks.
However
this kind of statement from Bhante Sangharakshita has sometimes been
taken to mean that everybody must be involved in making every
decision and in discussing every aspect of the business. It has
sometimes been taken to mean that no-one should manage the business.
At it’s worst this can lead to endless discussions about
trivialities and the stultifying of initiative or entrepreneurial
flair. It’s a recipe for failure in the world of business, which is
pretty unforgiving of inefficiency. I have seen some of our
businesses limp from week to week under this kind of levelling
ideology.
Another
misunderstanding that has arisen over the years arises from one of
the aims of Team Based Right Livelihood being described as “ to
provide a situation within which the workers can experience spiritual
friendship in a way that will conduce to their spiritual growth” or
Team Based Right Livelihood being spoken of as a “supportive
context” for spiritual practice. Some people have interpreted this
to mean that they will and should receive a certain amount of
spiritual friendship, in the way that the chick in the nest receives
food from it’s mother. In other words a certain amount of passivity
entered into Team Based right Livelihood businesses with some people
joining in the expectation that something spiritual would be given to
them, provided for them, without them having to do anything. This
often led to the phenomenon of someone not pulling their weight and
being shocked and disappointed when it became clear that others had
expectations of them. I have even heard of cases where people were
surprised that they were expected to turn up on time and do a days
work. If others were really ‘supportive’ how could they possibly
expect so much from them !!
Another
issue that has arisen over the years is that people have been
recruited into Team Based Right Livelihood on the basis that they
identified themselves as Buddhists regardless of whether they had any
aptitude or ability for the work. This was identified as an issue by
Bhante back in 1980. Here is a quote from a seminar he did with some
women on the Ethics and manners section of the Jewel Ornament of
Liberation :
“One
of the biggest lessons of the last year or so is that, in order to
establish the New Society, though you cannot do it without
individuals, you cannot do it simply with individuals who are lacking
in competence in certain areas. That is, in a way, quite a sobering
thought. Individuality is indispensible: that is the foundation of
the whole thing; but, by itself, in certain respects in isn’t
enough. It is enough to take a meditation class. It’s enough for
the sake of your own spiritual practice. But it’s not enough when
it comes to setting up something which must function objectively and
successfully in the world. You have got to have, then, in addition to
individuality, know how, and practical experience, and certain
abilities and capacities. This has become more evident to us than it
was before.” (Mitrata,
The Noble Eightfold Path, Perfect Livelihood, p.32)
However, although this was evident to Bhante and others thirty years
ago, for various reasons it wasn’t possible to fully act on it. I
think it was only around 2005 that this problem was fully recognised
in Windhorse:evolution and I think it probably hasn’t been
recognised yet in some situations. This led to many unfortunate
situations, with some people taking on more responsibility than they
were capable of and becoming very stressed as a result, and some
teams becoming very dysfunctional.
Related
to this is another issue, also probably the result of a
misunderstanding – a misunderstanding of Metta and compassion. This
is the issue of allowing untenable situations to carry on for far too
long. Asking someone to leave a situation would be seen as unkind or
exercising the power mode or risking conflict. I have known of
communities where everybody else left rather than ask the difficult
person to go.
Another
problem that has sometimes arisen in Team Based Right Livelihood is a
tension between work relationships and spiritual relationships. A
Kalyana Mitra might feel the need to say something as Kalyana Mitra
which might have a detrimental effect on a working relationship or
they might feel the need to say something as a work colleague that
might have a bad effect on the friendship. This kind of issue can be
amplified when a management structure is in place.
Another
issue that has dogged Team Based Right Livelihood businesses over the
years is a lack of entrepreneurial spirit or business sense –
sometimes leading to lacklustre businesses or poor decision making
and an inability to look outwards to see trends and opportunities.
Then
there has been the issue of not enough Order Members engaging with
the practice of Team Based right Livelihood, with the result that too
much was expected of relatively new people. The complete practice of
Team Based Right Livelihood and community living – give what you
can take what you need, co-operation, idealism etc., demands high
levels of inspiration and commitment.
Another
drawback has been that people would frequently have a positive
response to working with other Buddhists but no feeling of interest
in the particular business. Allied to this is the perennial
difficulty of staying in touch with the bigger vision and the
spiritual aspirations that are the motivating force.
And
sometimes the semi-monastic lifestyle was given a bad reputation by a
certain harshness and regimentation that crept into some situations.
The
phrase ‘give what you can, take what what you need’, has also
been very problematic at times. The little word ‘need’ can cause
all sorts of difficulties and be interpreted in wide variety of ways.
Given
all these issues and problems ( and there may be others I haven’t
thought of) it is a wonder that we have managed to create any Team
Based Right Livelihood enterprises at all. The reason I have
mentioned all of these difficulties is not because I want to put
anyone off Team Based Right Livelihood. Far from it, I am a champion
of Team Based Right Livelihood and have myself benefited enormously
from the practice. The reason I mention all of these things is to try
to help future generations and keep them from making the same
mistakes as the pioneers.
I
think we have been more successful with the non-profit making
enterprises such as Buddhist Centres and Retreat Centres, than with
businesses. Three reasons for this that come to mind are: In running
a Buddhist Centre it is probably easier to stay in touch with the
spiritual aspiration and spiritual vision that motivates the work.
Secondly, Order Members and especially senior and experienced Order
Members are more likely to be involved in Centres and thirdly, you
can probably get by with less business acumen – indeed, business
acumen might even be a hindrance at times.
What needs to happen
It
could be, then, that the future of Team Based Right Livelihood is
more likely to evolve in non-profit making enterprises; Buddhist
Centres, Retreat Centres and other charities. The main problem that I
see with this is that it would be in danger of perpetuating the
traditional split between full-timers who can’t make a living
without the financial support of a wider community and that wider
community who rely on the full-timers to do too much on their behalf.
Team Based Right Livelihood businesses overcome that split because
Buddhists are both practising together and generating wealth.
If
we are to rescue and develop the practice of Team Based Right
Livelihood businesses, then I think we have a lot of work to do as a
Buddhist Movement. Here is what I think needs
to happen:
Firstly,
Many more Order Members, who are effectively Going for Refuge, would
need to be motivated to practice within the semi-monastic framework
recommended by Bhante, i.e. working in Team Based Right Livelihood on
a ‘give what you can, take what you need’ basis, living a simple
life in terms of comsumption of resources and living in single-sex
communities. This is the bedrock on which the practice of team Based
Right Livelihood rests. There is of course plenty of room for others
to live alone or with partners or families, but the foundation of the
semi-monastic lifestyle is essential.
Secondly,
the practices of semi-monasticism and Team Based Right Livelihood
would need to be valued within the Order and Movement as a valid
Insight practice. They would need to be valued in the same way that
other practices are valued – such as Dharma teaching, going on
retreat, meditating, studying or doing rituals. As Bhante puts it “
Insight
can arise if you are working in the right sort of way. If you
function, patiently and persistently, in accordance with the love
mode, - if you refuse to invoke the power mode- if you are
continually transcending your narrow individualism - if you really
are co-operating, - if you’re sensitive to the other person’s
needs and abilities, - if you really have a common aim, - if you
really see through your individualistic narrowness.” (Mitrata,
The Noble Eightfold Path, Perfect Livelihood, p.31)
Thirdly, I think it needs to be
widely recognised that the quality of our Order is dependent on the
quality of relationships between people. The depth of those
relationships is influenced by how much time people spend together
and how many different situations they experience each other in. If
our knowledge of each other comes from a weekly meeting for a chat
that will lead to a particular experience. If we always meet someone
on retreat that will lead to another very particular experience of
them. If we generally meet someone at an evening event at the
Buddhist Centre that is another very defined experience. If we live
with someone we see much more of them and we see them at their best
and their worst – we get a fuller picture of them and they get a
fuller picture of us.
If we not only live with someone but
also work with them, we get an even more complete view of them. We
experience not only how they relate to us but also how they relate to
others. We experience not only their conversation but also their
actions. My experience is that working with others is a more intense
and demanding practice than community living and consequently, for
those who engage with it fully a very rewarding practice. It is my
view that at least some experience of the semi-monastic life should
be part of everyone’s preparation for ordination and part of
everyone’s Order life, in the same way that going on retreat is.
Even it was only for a few months or a year.
Fourthly,
I believe that the practice of Team Based Right Livelihood business
needs to be elucidated in more detail by those with the ability to
communicate. One issue here is that often those doing it don’t have
the time to talk about it. There is a body of knowledge and practice
that is not being fully shared. In recent years we have had some very
articulate expositions of the practices of meditation and mindfulness
coming out of the Order. We need an equally lucid and attractive
exposition of the semi-monastic life and of team Based Right
Livelihood in particular. Some of the areas that need more detailed
elucidation are: what is meant by a team in this context? What is the
role of leadership? What is the place of consensus decision making?
How does a Team Based Right Livelihood business interact with legal
and commercial requirements? What does ‘give what you can, take
what you need’ really mean in practice? and so on. I tried to
address some of these issues myself in a talk I gave in 1998,
entitled The Spiritual Significance of Team Based Right Livelihood,
which was published in a booklet and which is now available on the
Internet (http://ratnaghosha.blogspot.com/
)
Conclusion
In
his book Living Ethically, Bhante Sangharakshita says Right
Livelihood is “work you would do regardless of how much or how
little you were paid for it”. (p. 56) This is to set a very
high standard. It is a standard that has been seriously challenged as
people in the Order have grown older and become more concerned about
issues of financial security and well-being. It has also been
seriously challenged by the consumerist values of the wider society,
which are so all pervasive and so persuasive. However the Order is
still in it’s infancy, historically speaking, and there will
inevitably be major changes in the wider society over the coming
century, which may make the the practice of semi-monasticism –
communal living and ethical working – seem much more normal and
sensible and obvious than is currently the case.
Our
Movement is unique in it’s teachings on the New Society. As Robert
Bluck says in his book British Buddhism “No
other [British Buddhist] tradition, has developed such a distinctive
social organisation, with its single-sex communities, Right
Livelihood businesses and a new Buddhist Order which is neither
monastic nor lay”.
I
believe the practice of semi-monasticism and Team Based Right
Livelihood is of obvious benefit to individuals and to society. I
believe these practices do constitute a sensible norm and other more
conventional frameworks are deeply flawed. I believe that the
practice of Team Based Right livelihood in the context of a business
is particularly helpful in avoiding any split between full-time and
part-time Buddhists and in embedding the Dharma in industrialised
cultures. It is because I believe this that I have willingly
dedicated my life to this vision.
I
have talked about Right livelihood in a general way and said that
Samyak Ajiva could be seen to include both the production and
consumption of goods and services. This could be supported by the
secondary translation of samyak ajiva as ‘mode of living’. I
outlined what I think have been various issues and problems for Team
Based Right Livelihood businesses and I have mentioned four things I
think will need to be in place if the practice of Team Based Right
Livelihood in business is to be rescued and developed.
I
would like to give the last word to Bhante Sangharakshita whose
teaching I value very highly. This is a section from an interview,
which was published in 2009 under the title “What is the Western
Buddhist Order”:
“Question:
Some people are wondering whether or not you have changed your views
on the value and importance of living in single-sex communities and
working in Team-based Right Livelihood.
Sangharakshita:
No, I definitely have not and I
feel the need to emphasise them more than ever. Team-based Right
Livelihood was a development of the general principle of Right
Livelihood, found in the Buddha's Noble Eightfold Path, and I
continue to see it as essential. It's not enough for us to practise
Right Livelihood as best we can out there in the world. The ideal
work situation is Team-based Right Livelihood, where dana is
generated and spiritual friendship can be developed more intensively.
I
also still believe in the single-sex communities and other single-sex
activities. The fact that they are less popular with some people than
they used to be does not mean there has been any change in my
thinking. In other words, they weren't just an adaptation to the
circumstances of the sixties and seventies. They are of permanent
value.”
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