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By Thanissaro Bhikkhu
Emptiness is a mode of perception, a way of looking
at experience. It adds nothing to and takes nothing away from the raw
data of physical and mental events. You look at events in the mind and
the senses with no thought of whether there's anything lying behind
them.
This mode is called emptiness because it's empty of
the presuppositions
we usually add to experience to make sense of it:
the stories and world-views we fashion to explain who we are and the
world we live in. Although these stories and views have their uses, the
Buddha found that some of the more abstract questions they raise -- of
our true identity and the reality of the world outside -- pull attention
away from a direct experience of how events influence one another in the
immediate present. Thus they get in the way when we try to understand
and solve the problem of suffering.
Say for instance, that you're meditating, and a
feeling of anger toward your mother appears. Immediately, the mind's
reaction is to identify the anger as "my" anger, or to say
that "I'm" angry. It then elaborates on the feeling, either
working it into the story of your relationship to your mother, or to
your general views about when and where anger toward one's mother can be
justified. The problem with all this, from the Buddha's perspective, is
that these stories and views entail a lot of suffering. The more you get
involved in them, the more you get distracted from seeing the actual
cause of the suffering: the labels of "I" and "mine"
that set the whole process in motion. As a result, you can't find the
way to unravel that cause and bring the suffering to an end.
If, however, you can adopt the emptiness mode -- by
not acting on or reacting to the anger, but simply watching it as a
series of events, in and of themselves -- you can see that the anger is
empty of anything worth identifying with or possessing. As you master
the emptiness mode more consistently, you see that this truth holds not
only for such gross emotions as anger, but also for even the most subtle
events in the realm of experience. This is the sense in which all things
are empty. When you see this, you realize that labels of "I"
and "mine" are inappropriate, unnecessary, and cause nothing
but stress and pain. You can then drop them. When you drop them totally,
you discover a mode of experience that lies deeper still, one that's
totally free.
To master the emptiness mode of perception requires
training in firm virtue, concentration, and discernment. Without this
training, the mind tends to stay in the mode that keeps creating stories
and world views. And from the perspective of that mode, the teaching of
emptiness sounds simply like another story or world view with new ground
rules. In terms of the story of your relationship with your mother, it
seems to be saying that there's really no mother, no you. In terms of
your views about the world, it seems to be saying either that the world
doesn't really exist, or else that emptiness is the great
undifferentiated ground of being from which we all came to which someday
we'll all return.
These interpretations not only miss the meaning of
emptiness but also keep the mind from getting into the proper mode. If
the world and the people in the story of your life don't really exist,
then all the actions and reactions in that story seem like a mathematics
of zeros, and you wonder why there's any point in practicing virtue at
all. If, on the other hand, you see emptiness as the ground of being to
which we're all going to return, then what need is there to train the
mind in concentration and discernment, since we're all going to get
there anyway? And even if we need training to get back to our ground of
being, what's to keep us from coming out of it and suffering all over
again? So in all these scenarios, the whole idea of training the mind
seems futile and pointless. By focusing on the question of whether or
not there really is something behind experience, they entangle the mind
in issues that keep it from getting into the present mode.
Now, stories and world views do serve a purpose. The
Buddha employed
them when teaching people, but he never used the word
emptiness when speaking in these modes. He recounted the stories of
people's lives to show how suffering comes from the unskillful
perceptions behind their actions, and how freedom from suffering can
come from being more perceptive. And he described the basic principles
that underlie the round of rebirth to show how bad intentional actions
lead to pain within that round, good ones lead to pleasure, while really
skillful actions can take you beyond the round altogether. In all these
cases, these teachings were aimed at getting people to focus on the
quality of the perceptions and intentions in their minds in the present
-- in other words, to get them into the emptiness mode. Once there, they
can use the teachings on emptiness for their intended purpose: to loosen
all attachments to views, stories, and assumptions, leaving the mind
empty of all greed, anger, and delusion, and thus empty of suffering and
stress. And when you come right down to it, that's the emptiness that
really counts
| Source: Copyright © 1997 Thanissaro
Bhikkhu. The author
gives permission to re-format and redistribute his work for use on
computers and computer networks, provided that you charge no fees for
its distribution or use. Otherwise, all rights reserved. |
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