SEVENTH ARMY:
DOUBT
Sloth and torpor is only one reason why yogis
may begin to doubt their own capacities. Doubt is the Seventh Army of Mara,
dreadful and fearsome. When a yogi begins to slip in his or her practice, he or
she will probably begin to lose self-confidence. Pondering the situation does
not usually lead to improvement. Instead, doubt arises and slowly spreads:
first as self-doubt, then as doubt of the method of practice. It may even
extend to becoming doubt of the teacher. Is the teacher competent to understand
this situation? Perhaps this yogi is a special case and needs a special new set
of instructions. The experiences narrated by fellow yogis must be imaginary.
Every conceivable aspect of practice becomes dubious.
The Pali word for this Seventh Army is
vicikiccha, which means more than simple doubt. It is the exhaustion of
mind that comes about through conjecture. A yogi attacked by sloth and torpor,
for example, will not be able to muster the continuous attention that fosters
intuitive vipassana insight. If such a yogi were mindful, he or she might
experience mind and matter directly, and see that these two are connected by
cause and effect. If no actual observation is made, however, the true nature of
mind and matter will remain obscure. One simply cannot understand what one
hasn't yet seen. Now this unmindful yogi begins to intellectualize and reason:
"I wonder what mind and matter are composed of, what their relationship
is," Unfortunately, he or she can only interpret experiences based on a
very immature depth of knowledge, mixed up with fantasy. This is an explosive
mixture. Since the mind is unable to penetrate into the truth, agitation
arises, and then perplexity, indecisiveness, which is another aspect of
vicikiccha. Excessive reasoning is exhausting.
Immaturity of insight prevents a yogi from
reaching a firm and convinced position. Instead, his or her mind is condemned
to run about among various options. Remembering all the meditative techniques
he or she has heard of, a yogi might try a bit from here and a bit from there.
This person falls into a great pot of chop suey, perhaps to drown. Vicikiccha
can be a terrible obstacle in practice. The proximate cause of doubting
conjecture is lack of proper attention, an improper adjustment of the mind in
its search for truth. Proper attention, then, is the most direct cure for
doubt. If you look correctly and in the right place, you will see what you are
looking for: the true nature of things. Having seen this for yourself, you will
have no more doubt about it.
To create the proper conditions for wise
attention, it is important to have a teacher who can put you on the path
leading to truth and wisdom. The Buddha himself said that one who is intent on
finding the truth should seek out a reliable and competent teacher. If you
cannot find a good teacher and follow his or her instructions, then you must
turn to the plethora of meditation literature availably today. Please be
cautious, especially if you are an avid reader. If you gain a general knowledge
of many techniques and then try to put them all together, you will probably end
up disappointed, and even more doubtful than when you started. Some of the
techniques may even be good ones, but since you will not have practiced them
with proper thoroughness, they will not work and you will feel skeptical of
them. Thus you will have robed yourself of the opportunity to experience the
very real benefits of meditation practice. If one cannot practice properly, one
cannot gain personal, intuitive, real understanding of the nature of phenomena.
Not only will doubt increase, but the mind will become very hard and stiff,
attacked by kodha, aversion and associated mental status. Frustration
and resistance might he among them.
The Thorny
Mind
Kodha makes the mind hard and rigid as
a thorn. Under its influence, a yogi is said to be pricked by the mind, like a
traveler thrashing through a bramble thicket, suffering at every step. Since
kodha is a great impediment in many yogis' meditation practice, I will
deal with it in some detail in hopes that readers can learn to overcome it. In
general, it results from two kinds of mental states: firstly from doubt, and
secondly from what are known as "the mental fetters."
There are five kinds of doubt which load to
the thorny mind. A yogi is pricked by doubt regarding the Buddha, the great
master who showed the path to enlightenment. One doubts the Dhamma, the path
that leads to liberation; and the sangha, the noble ones who have uprooted some
or all of the kilesas. Next come doubts of oneself, of one's own morality and
method of practice. Last is doubt of fellow yogis, including one's teacher.
When so many doubts are present, the yogi is filled with anger and resistance:
his or her mind becomes thorny indeed, he or she will probably feel quite
unwilling actually to practice this meditation, seeing it as dubious and
unreliable.
All is not lost, however. Wisdom and
knowledge are medicine (or this state of vicikiccha. One form of knowledge is
reasoning. Often persuasive words can coax a doubting yogi from the brambles: a
teacher's reasoning, or an inspiring and well-constructed discourse. Returning
to the clear path of direct observation, such yogis breathe great sighs of
relief and gratitude. Now they have the chance to gain personal insight into
the true nature of reality. If they do attain insight, then a higher level of
wisdom becomes their medicine for the thorny mind.
Failure to return to the path, however, may
allow doubt to reach its incurable stage.
The Five
Mental Fetters
The thorny mind arises not only from doubt,
but also from another set of causes known as the five mental fetters. When
these mental letters are present, the mind suffers from hard and prickling
states of aversion, frustration and resistance. But these fetters can be
overcome. Vipassana meditation clears them automatically from the mind. If they
do manage to intrude upon one's practice, identifying them is the first step
toward recovering a broad and flexible mental state.
The first mental fetter is to be chained to
the various objects of the senses. Desiring only pleasant objects, one will be
dissatisfied with what is really occurring in the present moment. The primary
object, the rising and falling of the abdomen, may seem inadequate and
uninteresting in comparison with one's fantasies. If this dissatisfaction
occurs, one's meditative development will be undermined.
The second fetter is over-attachment to one's
own body, sometimes spoken of as excessive self-love. A variation is the
projection of attachment and possessiveness onto another person and his or her
body. This is the third fetter, and it is such a common situation that I hardly
need elaborate.
Excessive sell-love can be a significant
hindrance in the course of practice. When one sits for extended periods,
unpleasant sensations invariably arise, some of them rather intense. You may
begin to wonder about your poor legs. Will you ever walk again? You may decide
to open your eyes and stretch. At this point, continuity of attention usually
breaks apart; momentum is lost. Tender consideration for one's own body can
sometimes supplant the courage we need to probe into the actual nature of pain.
Personal appearance is another area where
this second fetter can arise. Some human beings depend on stylish clothes and
makeup to feel happy. If ever they lose access to these external supports
(perhaps on a retreat where makeup and flamboyant fashions are inappropriate
distractions), these people feel as if something is missing, and worry can
interfere with their progress. The fourth fetter of mind is to be chained to
food. Some people like to eat large amounts, others have many whims and
preferences. People whose first concern is the satisfaction of their bellies
tend to find greater bliss in snoozing than in practicing mindfulness. A few
yogis have the opposite problem, worrying constantly about gaining weight.
They, too, are chained to what they eat.
The fifth fetter of mind is to practice with
the goal of gaining rebirth in a deva world. Besides effectively basing one's
practice on craving for sensual pleasures, this is also to set one's sights
much too low. For information on the disadvantages of deva life, see the last
chapter of this book, "Chariot to Nibbana."
By diligent practice one overcomes these five
fetters. By the same means, (one overcomes doubt and the anger that follows it.
Relieved from thorny discomfort, the mind be comes crystal clear and bright.
This bright mind is happy to make the preliminary effort that sets your feet on
the path of practice, the steady effort that moves you along into deeper
meditation, and the culminating effort that brings liberation at the higher
stages of practice. This three fold effort — actually directed toward
keeping the mind alert and observant — is the best and most natural
defense strategy against Mara's Seventh Army of doubt. Only when the mind slips
from the object, as it will in times of slackening effort, do the conjectures
and equivocations of doubt have a chance to set in.
Faith
Clarifies the Mind
The quality of faith, or saddha, also
has the power to clarify the mind and clear away clouds of doubt or aversion.
Imagine a pail of murky river water, full of sediment. Some chemical
substances, such as alum, have the power to make suspended particles settle
quickly, leaving clear water behind. Faith works just like this. It settles
impurities, and brings a sparkling clarity to the mind.
A yogi ignorant of the virtues of the Triple
Gem — the Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha — will doubt its value as well
as that of the meditation practice, and will be overcome by the Seventh Army of
Mara. Such a yogi's mind is like a bucket of murky river water. But informed of
these virtues through reading, discussions and Dhamma talks, a yogi can
gradually settle doubts and begin to arouse faith.
With faith comes the desire to meditate, the
willingness to exert energy in order to reach the goal. Strong faith is the
foundation of sincerity and commitment. Sincerity of practice and commitment to
the Dhamma will of course lead to the development of effort, mindfulness and
concentration. Then wisdom will unfold in the form of the various stages of
vipassana insight.
When circumstances and conditions are right
in meditation, wisdom unfolds quite naturally of itself. Wisdom, or insight,
occurs when one sees the specific and common characteristics of mental and
physical phenomena. Individual characteristics mean the specific traits of mind
and matter as experienced directly within you. These are color, shape, taste,
smell, loudness, hardness or softness, temperature, movement, and different
states of mind. Common characteristics are general to all the manifestations of
mind and matter. Objects may differ greatly from one another in terms of
individual essence or individual characteristics, yet all are united by the
universal traits of impermanence, suffering and absence of an abiding self or
essence.
Both these types of characteristics, specific
and common, will be understood clearly and unquestionably through the insight
that arises naturally out of bare awareness. One attribute of this wisdom or
insight is the quality of brightness. It lightens one's field of awareness.
Wisdom is like a floodlight breaking into pitch darkness, revealing what was
invisible up to now — the specific and common qualities of all objects
and mental slates. By wisdom's light, you will see these aspects of any
activity you are involved in, be it seeing, smelling, tasting, touching,
feeling through the body, or thinking.
The behavioral aspect of wisdom is
nonconfusion. When insight is present, the mind is no longer confused by
mistaken concepts about, or delusive perceptions of, mind and matter.
Seeing clearly, bright and unconfused, the
mind begins to fill with a new kind of faith, known as verified faith. Verified
faith is neither blind nor unfounded. It comes directly from personal
experience of reality. One might compare it to the faith that raindrops will
get us wet. The scriptures formally characterize this kind of faith as a
decision based on direct personal experience. Thus, we see a very close
association between faith and wisdom.
Verified faith does not arise because you
hear statements you find plausible. No comparative study, scholastic research
nor abstract reasoning can bring it. Nor is it shoved down your throat by some
sayadaw, roshi, rinpoche, or spiritual group. Your own direct, personal,
intuitive experience brings about this firm and durable kind of faith.
The most important way to develop and realize
verified faith is practice in conformity with instructions from the scriptures.
The satipatthana method of meditation is some times viewed as narrow and
oversimplified. It may appear so from the outside, but when wisdom begins to
unfold during deep practice, personal experience shatters this myth of
narrowness. Vipassana brings a wisdom that is far from narrow. It is panoramic
and expansive.
In the presence of faith one can
spontaneously notice that the mind has become crystal clear and is free from
disturbances and pollution. At this time, too, the mind fills with peace and
clarity. The function of verified faith is to bring together the five
controlling faculties discussed in the last chapter — faith, energy,
mindfulness, concentration and wisdom — and to clarify them. They become
alert and effective, and their active properties will be more efficiently
deployed to bring about a calm, powerful, incisive meditative state — one
which is bound to be successful in overcoming not only the Seventh, but all the
other nine armies of Mara as well.
Four
Powers which Motivate Successful Practice
In practice as much as in worldly endeavors,
a vigorous and strong-minded person is quite sure of accomplishing whatever she
or he desires. Vigor and strength of mind are only two of the four powers which
motivate a successful practice. Chanda is willingness, the first power.
Viriya is energy, or vigor, the second. Strength of mind is third, and
wisdom or knowledge is the fourth. If these four factors provide the driving
force for practice, one's meditation will unfold whether one has any desire to
gain results from it or not. One can even reach nibbana in this way.
The Buddha gave a rather homely example which
illustrates just how the results of meditation are attained. If mother hen lays
an egg with a sincere wish for it to hatch, but then runs off and leaves the
egg exposed to nature's elements, the egg will soon rot. If, on the other hand,
mother hen is conscientious in her duties toward the egg, sitting on it for
long periods every day, the warmth of her body will keep the egg from rotting
and will also permit the chick within to grow. Sitting on the egg is mother
hen's most important duty. She must do this in the proper way, with her wings
slightly spread out to protect the nest from rain. She must also take care not
to sit heavily and crack her egg. If she sits in proper style and for
sufficient time, the egg will naturally receive the warmth it needs to hatch.
Inside the shell, an embryo develops beak and claws. Day by day the shell grows
thinner. During mother hen's brief excursions from the nest, the chick inside
may see a light that slowly brightens. After three weeks or so, a healthy
yellow chick pecks its way out of its claustrophobic space. This result happens
regardless of whether the hen foresaw the outcome. All she did was sit on the
egg with sufficient regularity.
Mother hens are very dedicated and committed
to their task. At times they would rather be hungry and thirsty than get up
from the egg. If they do have to get up, they go about their errands as
efficiently as possible and then return to their sitting practice.
I am not recommending that you skip meals, or
stop drinking liquids, or cease going to the bathroom. I would simply like you
to be inspired by the hen's patience and persistence. Imagine if she became
fickle and restless, sitting for a few minutes and then going out to do
something else for a few minutes. Her egg would quickly rot, and the chick
would lose its chance for life.
So, too, for the yogi. If during sitting
meditation, you are prone to giving in to all those whims to scratch, to shift,
to squirm, then the heat of energy will not be continuous enough to keep the
mind fresh and free from attacks by the rotting influence of mental
obscurations and difficulties such as the five mental fetters mentioned above:
sense desire, attachment to our own bodies and to the bodies of others,
gluttony, and craving for future sensual pleasures as a result of meditation
practice.
A yogi who tries to be mindful in each moment
generates a persistent stream of energy, like the persistent heat of mother
hen's body. This heat aspect of energy prevents the mind from rotting from its
exposure to kilesa attacks, and it also permits insight to grow and mature
through its developmental stages.
All five of the mental fetters arise in the
absence of attention. If one is not careful when there is contact with a
pleasurable sense object, the mind will be filled with craving and clinging
— the first mental fetter. With mindfulness, however, sense desire is
overcome. Similarly, if one can penetrate the true nature of the body,
attachment to it disappears. Our infatuation with the bodies of others
diminishes in turn. Thus the second and third mental fetters are broken. Close
attention to the whole process of eating cuts through gluttony, the fourth
mental fetter. If one carries out this whole practice with the aim of realizing
nibbana, hankering after mundane pleasures one might obtain in the afterlife
will also disappear — wishing for rebirth in subtle realms is the fifth
fetter of mind. Thus, continuous mindfulness and energy overcome all five
fetters. When these fetters are broken, we are no longer bound in a dark,
constricted mental state. Our minds are freed to emerge into the light.
With continued effort, mindfulness and
concentration, the mind slowly fills with the warmth of the Dhamma which keeps
it fresh and scorches the kilesas. The Dhamma's fragrance penetrates
throughout, and the shell of ignorance grows thinner and more translucent.
Yogis begin to understand mind and matter and the conditionality of all things.
Faith based on direct experience arises. They understand directly how mind and
matter are inter related by a process of cause and effect, rather than being
moved by the actions and decisions of an independent self. By inference, they
realize that this same causal process existed in the past and will continue
into the future. As practice deepens, one gains deep confidence, no longer
doubting oneself and one's practice, other yogis or teachers. The mind is
filled with gratitude for the Buddha, the Dhamma and the sangha.
Then one begins to see the appearing and
disappearing of things, and realizes their impermanent nature, their suffering
and lack of a permanent self. Upon the occurrence of such insights, ignorance
of these aspects disappears.
Like the chick about to hatch, at this point
you will see a lot of light coming through the shell. Awareness of objects
moves ahead at a faster and faster pace; you will be filled with a sort of
energy you have never experienced before, and great faith will arise.
If you continue to incubate your wisdom, you
will be led forward to the experience of nibbana — magga phala,
path and fruition consciousness. You will emerge from the shell of
darkness. Just like the chick who, filled with enthusiasm to find itself in the
great world, runs about the sunny farmyard with its mother, so too will you be
filled with happiness and bliss. Yogis who have experienced nibbana feel a
unique, new-found happiness and bliss. Their faith, energy, mindfulness and
concentration become particularly strong.
I hope you will take this analogy of mother
hen into deep consideration. just as she hatches her chicks without hopes or
desire, merely carrying out her duties in a conscientious way, so may you well
incubate and hatch your practice.
May you not become a rotten egg.
Captain of
My Own Ship
I have spent a lot of time here on doubt and
related problems because I know they are quite serious, and I want to help you
avoid them. I know personally how much suffering doubt can cause. When I was
twenty-eight or twenty-nine years old I began to meditate under the Venerable
Mahasi Sayadaw, my predecessor and the head of the lineage of Mahasi Sasana
Yeiktha, the meditation center in Rangoon. After about a week at the meditation
center, I began to feel quite critical of my fellow meditators. Some monks who
were supposed to be meditating were not perfect in their morality; they did not
seem scrupulous or meticulous to me. The lay meditators, too, seemed to
communicate and move about in an uncivilized, impolite manner. Doubt began to
fill my mind. Even my teacher, one of Mahasi Sayadaw's assistants, came under
the fire of my critical mind. This man never smiled and was sometimes abrupt
and harsh. I felt that a meditation teacher should be filled with softness and
solicitude.
A competent meditation teacher can make quite
an educated guess about a yogi's situation, based on experience with many yogis
as well as on scriptural study. The master who was teaching me was no
exception. He saw my practice begin to regress. Guessing that a doubt attack
was responsible, he gave me a very gentle and skillful scolding. Afterwards I
went back to my room and did some soul-searching. I asked myself. "Why did
I come here? To criticize others and test the teacher? No."
I realized that I had come to the center to
get rid of as many as I could of the kilesas I had accumulated through my
journey in samsara. I hoped to accomplish this goal by practicing the Dhamma of
the Buddha in the meditative tradition of the center where I was. This
reflection was a great clarification for me.
A simile popped into my mind. It was as if I
had been on a sailboat. Out at sea I had been caught in a raging storm. Huge
waves rose up and crashed down again on every side. Blown from left to right,
up and down, I rocked helplessly in the mighty ocean. Around me other boats
were in the same predicament. Instead of managing my own boat, I had been
barking orders at the other captains:
"Better put up the sails! Hey, you!
Better take them down." If I had remained a busybody, I might well have
found myself at the bottom of the ocean.
This is what I learned for myself. After that
I worked very hard and entertained no more doubts in my mind. I even became a
favorite of my teacher. I hope you can benefit from this experience of mine.
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