The Paramita of Meditation
By Khentin Tai Situ Rinpoche
The first aspect of
meditation is the development of an inner awareness that acquaints one
with the mind as it really is, beneath its superficial layer of
obscuration. When there is no practice of meditation it is impossible
to practice generosity, skilful conduct, forbearance and diligence
fully - they cannot become 'perfections' because their very essence,
this inner awareness is lacking. In order to get to know our mind as it
is, we first practice samatta (Tib. shi-nay) meditation. This makes the
mind more tranquil and lets it rest in its own qualities, free from the
disturbing presence of recent accumulations. Samatta is developed by
cultivating an awareness, a mindfulness of everything that arises. In
the meditation session we relax the body, speech and mind and rest
naturally and simply in the present state which is by nature free from
all the obstacle-delusions of desire, anger, ignorance, jealousy and
pride.
The
second aspect has two stages: the ordinary stage and the extraordinary
stage The ordinary stage concerns the mind that we are developing in
our sitting practice. The state which we are trying to cultivate in our
beginners' samatta practice is not just a blank, blind stillness and
quietude. It is a state wherein there can arise an awareness of the
clarity and qualities of mind - these qualities being recognized by
mind itself. This is called the ordinary second aspect of meditation.
The extraordinary stage of this second aspect covers not only this
naturally-clear mind resting within itself and within an understanding
of its own clarity, but also the presence of Bodhicitta - Bodhicitta
free from the triplistic veil of subject, object and action as separate
entities. 'Who is meditating?' 'Meditating upon what?' 'Meditating in
which way?' and other such notions and biases are transcended.
The
third aspect of meditation concerns practicing the above with
completely proper motivation so that the ordinary and extraordinary
stages of meditation are supported by, guided by, the motivation to
benefit all
beings and accompanied by the great openness of
loving-kindness and compassion. The result of such meditation is a
Mahayana result. It is the motivation that makes the difference between
the meditations of the Hinayana and Mahayana which are otherwise very
similar. Impartial calm meditation, rich in awareness of itself and
beyond triplicity, and based upon an altruistic motivation - that is
full realization. The moment that such realization is achieved there
will be spontaneous activity to benefit beings; effortless and
all-accomplishing.
The realization that emerges through the
Hinayana practice is very similar to that achieved by the Buddha but it
does not have the qualities and activity to benefit others. It is an
incomplete realization of the ultimate truth; a realization which is
very dry-dry of compassion and dry of the full activity of the perfect
Buddhas. It is a realization of the ultimate truth - but not 'just as
it is'. For this reason whenever we do tranquillity meditation, a
visualization or tong.len, we practice it in the following stages:
·
First our mind must be ready to meditate; it must be pacified. (Most of
the Hinayana practitioners want to do this too.) This putting the mind
into a suitable disposition is usually accomplished by concentrating
upon the breathing process, cultivating mindfulness of walking,
developing awareness of body sensations and so on. There are objective
and non-objective techniques.
· As a result of the above the mind
becomes peaceful - a sort of 'blank-peaceful' to which clarity has to
be added. (At this stage, not the innate clarity of mind itself - that
can only emerge through realization. Just lucidity.
· The calmness
and clarity are then to be set within a framework of right motivation -
the wish to help others. Once this is accomplished the meditation is
full meditation. Just blank meditation makes us feel relaxed and
comfortable and will free us temporarily from nervousness. There are no
results beyond this.
If we do Vajrayana practices,
visualizations and so forth, without the enlightening motivation of
Bodhicitta, then we are just going through another trip. There will be
more benefit from visualizing a deity than
from visualizing a
complicated rock but there will never be the full results without
Bodhicitta motivation - even though that deity represents the ultimate
truth.