The
Place of Vipassana in Buddhist Practice
by Thanissaro Bhikkhu |
What exactly is vipassana?
Almost any book on early Buddhist meditation will tell you that
the Buddha
taught two types of meditation: samatha and vipassana. Samatha,
which means tranquillity, is said to be a method fostering strong
states of mental absorption, called jhana. Vipassana
literally "clear-seeing," but more often translated as
insight meditation is said to be a method using a modicum of
tranquillity to foster moment-to-moment mindfulness of the
inconstancy of events as they are directly experienced in the
present. This mindfulness creates a sense of dispassion toward all
events, thus leading the mind to release from suffering. These two
methods are quite separate, we're told, and of the two, vipassana is
the distinctive Buddhist contribution to meditative science. Other
systems of practice pre-dating the Buddha also taught samatha, but
the Buddha was the first to discover and teach vipassana. Although
some Buddhist meditators may practice samatha meditation before
turning to vipassana, samatha practice is not really necessary for
the pursuit of Awakening. As a meditative tool, the vipassana method
is sufficient for attaining the goal. Or so we're told.
But if you look directly at the Pali discourses the earliest
extant sources for our knowledge of the Buddha's teachings you'll
find that although they do use the word samatha to mean tranquillity,
and vipassana to mean clear-seeing, they otherwise confirm none of
the received wisdom about these terms. Only rarely do they make use
of the word vipassana a sharp contrast to their frequent use of
the word jhana. When they depict the Buddha telling his disciples to
go meditate, they never quote him as saying "go do vipassana,"
but always "go do jhana." And they never equate the word
vipassana with any mindfulness techniques. In the few instances where
they do mention vipassana, they almost always pair it with samatha
not as two alternative methods, but as two qualities of mind that
a person may "gain" or "be endowed with," and
that should be developed together. One simile, for instance (SN
XXXV.204), compares samatha and vipassana to a swift pair of
messengers who enter the citadel of the body via the noble eightfold
path and present their accurate report Unbinding, or nibbana
to the consciousness acting as the citadel's commander. Another
passage (AN X.71) recommends that anyone who wishes to put an end to
mental defilement should in addition to perfecting the principles
of moral behavior and cultivating seclusion be committed to
samatha and endowed with vipassana. This last statement is
unremarkable in itself, but the same discourse also gives the same
advice to anyone who wants to master the jhanas: be committed to
samatha and endowed with vipassana. This suggests that, in the eyes
of those who assembled the Pali discourses, samatha, jhana, and
vipassana were all part of a single path. Samatha and vipassana were
used together to master jhana and then based on jhana were
developed even further to give rise to the end of mental defilement
and to bring release from suffering. This is a reading that finds
support in other discourses as well.
There's a passage, for instance, describing three ways in which
samatha and vipassana can work together to lead to the knowledge of
Awakening: either samatha precedes vipassana, vipassana precedes
samatha, or they develop in tandem (AN IV.170). The wording suggests
an image of two oxen pulling a cart: one is placed before the other
or they are yoked side-by-side. Another passage (AN IV.94) indicates
that if samatha precedes vipassana or vipassana, samatha
one's practice is in a state of imbalance and needs to be rectified.
A meditator who has attained a measure of samatha, but no "vipassana
into events based on heightened discernment (adhipaρρa-dhamma-vipassana),"
should question a fellow meditator who has attained vipassana:
"How should fabrications (sankhara) be regarded? How should they
be investigated? How should they be viewed with insight?" and
then develop vipassana in line with that person's instructions. The
verbs in these questions "regarding,"
"investigating," "seeing" indicate that
there's more to the process of developing vipassana than a simple
mindfulness technique. In fact, as we will see below, these verbs
apply instead to a process of skillful questioning called
"appropriate attention."
The opposite case a meditator endowed with a measure of
vipassana into events based on heightened discernment, but no samatha
should question someone who has attained samatha: "How
should the mind be steadied? How should it be made to settle down?
How should it be unified? How should it be concentrated?" and
then follow that person's instructions so as to develop samatha. The
verbs used here give the impression that "samatha" in this
context means jhana, for they correspond to the verbal formula
"the mind becomes steady, settles down, grows unified and
concentrated" that the Pali discourses use repeatedly to
describe the attainment of jhana. This impression is reinforced when
we note that in every case where the discourses are explicit about
the levels of concentration needed for insight to be liberating,
those levels are the jhanas.
Once the meditator is endowed with both samatha and vipassana,
he/she should "make an effort to establish those very same
skillful qualities to a higher degree for the ending of the mental
fermentations (asava sensual passion, states of being, views, and
ignorance)." This corresponds to the path of samatha and
vipassana developing in tandem. A passage in MN 149 describes how
this can happen. One knows and sees, as they actually are, the six
sense media (the five senses plus the intellect), their objects,
consciousness at each medium, contact at each medium, and whatever is
experienced as pleasure, pain, or neither-pleasure-nor-pain based on
that contact. One maintains this awareness in such a way as to stay
uninfatuated by any of these things, unattached, unconfused, focused
on their drawbacks, abandoning any craving for them: this would count
as vipassana. At the same time abandoning physical and mental
disturbances, torments, and distresses one experiences ease in
body and mind: this would count as samatha. This practice not only
develops samatha and vipassana in tandem, but also brings the 37
Wings to Awakening which include the attainment of jhana to
the culmination of their development.
So the proper path is one in which vipassana and samatha are
brought into balance, each supporting and acting as a check on the
other. Vipassana helps keep tranquillity from becoming stagnant and
dull. Samatha helps prevent the manifestations of aversion such
as nausea, dizziness, disorientation, and even total blanking out
that can occur when the mind is trapped against its will in the
present moment.
From this description it's obvious that samatha and vipassana are
not separate paths of practice, but instead are complementary ways of
relating to the present moment: samatha provides a sense of ease in
the present; vipassana, a clear-eyed view of events as they actually
occur, in and of themselves. It's also obvious why the two qualities
need to function together in mastering jhana. As the standard
instructions on breath meditation indicate (MN 118), such a mastery
involves three things: gladdening, concentrating, and liberating the
mind. Gladdening means finding a sense of refreshment and
satisfaction in the present. Concentrating means keeping the mind
focused on its object, while liberating means freeing the mind from
the grosser factors making up a lower stage of concentration so as to
attain a higher stage. The first two activities are functions of
samatha, while the last is a function of vipassana. All three must
function together. If, for example, there is concentration and
gladdening, with no letting go, the mind wouldn't be able to refine
its concentration at all. The factors that have to be abandoned in
raising the mind from stage x to stage y belong to the set of factors
that got the mind to x in the first place (AN IX.34). Without the
ability clearly to see mental events in the present, there would be
no way skillfully to release the mind from precisely the right
factors that tie it to a lower state of concentration and act as
disturbances to a higher one. If, on the other hand, there is simply
a letting go of those factors, without an appreciation of or
steadiness in the stillness that remains, the mind would drop out of
jhana altogether. Thus samatha and vipassana must work together to
bring the mind to right concentration in a masterful way.
The question arises: if vipassana functions in the mastery of
jhana, and jhana is not exclusive to Buddhists, then what is Buddhist
about vipassana? The answer is that vipassana per se is not
exclusively Buddhist. What is distinctly Buddhist is (1) the extent
to which both samatha and vipassana are developed; and (2) the way
they are developed i.e., the line of questioning used to foster
them; and (3) the way they are combined with an arsenal of meditative
tools to bring the mind to total release.
In MN 73, the Buddha advises a monk who has mastered jhana to
further develop samatha and vipassana so as to master six cognitive
skills, the most important of them being that "through the
ending of the mental fermentations, one remains in the
fermentation-free awareness-release and discernment-release, having
known and made them manifest for oneself right in the here and
now." This is a description of the Buddhist goal. Some
commentators have asserted that this release is totally a function of
vipassana, but there are discourses that indicate otherwise.
Note that release is twofold: awareness-release and
discernment-release. awareness-release occurs when a meditator
becomes totally dispassionate toward passion: this is the ultimate
function of samatha. Discernment-release occurs when there is
dispassion for ignorance: this is the ultimate function of vipassana
(AN II.30). Thus both samatha and vipassana are involved in the
twofold nature of this release.
The Sabbasava Sutta (MN 2) states that one's release can be
"fermentation-free" only if one knows and sees in terms of
"appropriate attention" (yoniso manasikara). As the
discourse shows, appropriate attention means asking the proper
questions about phenomena, regarding them not in terms of self/other
or being/non-being, but in terms of the four noble truths. In other
words, instead of asking "Do I exist? Don't I exist? What am
I?" one asks about an experience, "Is this stress? The
origination of stress? The cessation of stress? The path leading to
the cessation of stress?" Because each of these categories
entails a duty, the answer to these questions determines a course of
action: stress should be comprehended, its origination abandoned, its
cessation realized, and the path to its cessation developed.
Samatha and vipassana belong to the category of the path and so
should be developed. To develop them, one must apply appropriate
attention to the task of comprehending stress, which is comprised of
the five clinging-aggregates clinging to physical form, feeling,
perception, mental fabrications, and consciousness. Applying
appropriate attention to these aggregates means viewing them in terms
of their drawbacks, as "inconstant, stressful, a disease, a
cancer, an arrow, painful, an affliction, alien, a dissolution, an
emptiness, not-self" (SN XXII.122). A list of questions,
distinctive to the Buddha, aids in this approach: "Is this
aggregate constant or inconstant?" "And is anything
inconstant easeful or stressful?" "And is it fitting to
regard what is inconstant, stressful, subject to change as: 'This is
mine. This is my self. This is what I am'?" (SN XXII.59). These
questions are applied to every instance of the five aggregates,
whether "past, future, or present; internal or external; blatant
or subtle, common or sublime, far or near." In other words, the
meditator asks these questions of all experiences in the cosmos of
the six sense media.
This line of questioning is part of a strategy leading to a level
of knowledge called "knowing and seeing things as they actually
are (yatha-bhuta-ρana-dassana)," where things are
understood in terms of a fivefold perspective: their arising, their
passing away, their drawbacks, their allure, and the escape from them
the escape, here, lying in dispassion.
Some commentators have suggested that, in practice, this fivefold
perspective can be gained simply by focusing on the arising and
passing away of these aggregates in the present moment; if one's
focus is relentless enough, it will lead naturally to a knowledge of
drawbacks, allure, and escape, sufficient for total release. The
texts, however, don't support this reading, and practical experience
would seem to back them up. As MN 101 points out, individual
meditators will discover that, in some cases, they can develop
dispassion for a particular cause of stress simply by watching it
with equanimity; but in other cases, they will need to make a
conscious exertion to develop the dispassion that will provide an
escape. The discourse is vague perhaps deliberately so as to
which approach will work where. This is something each meditator must
test for him or herself in practice.
The Sabbasava Sutta expands on this point by listing seven
approaches to take in developing dispassion. Vipassana, as a quality
of mind, is related to all seven, but most directly with the first:
"seeing," i.e., seeing events in terms of the four noble
truths and the duties appropriate to them. The remaining six
approaches cover ways of carrying out those duties: restraining the
mind from focusing on sense data that would provoke unskillful states
of mind; reflecting on the appropriate reasons for using the
requisites of food, clothing, shelter, and medicine; tolerating
painful sensations; avoiding obvious dangers and inappropriate
companions; destroying thoughts of sensual desire, ill will,
harmfulness, and other unskillful states; and developing the seven
factors for Awakening: mindfulness, analysis of qualities,
persistence, rapture, serenity, concentration, and equanimity.
Each of these approaches covers a wide subset of approaches. Under
"destroying," for instance, one may eliminate an unskillful
mental state by replacing it with a skillful one, focusing on its
drawbacks, turning one's attention away from it, relaxing the process
of thought-fabrication that formed it, or suppressing it with the
brute power of one's will (MN 20). Many similar examples could be
drawn from other discourses as well. The overall point is that the
ways of the mind are varied and complex. Different fermentations can
come bubbling up in different guises and respond to different
approaches. One's skill as a meditator lies in mastering a variety of
approaches and developing the sensitivity to know which approach will
work best in which situation.
On a more basic level, however, one needs strong motivation to
master these skills in the first place. Because appropriate attention
requires abandoning dichotomies that are so basic to the thought
patterns of all people "being/not being" and
"me/not me" meditators need strong reasons for adopting
it. This is why the Sabbasava Sutta insists that anyone developing
appropriate attention must first must hold the noble ones (here
meaning the Buddha and his awakened disciples) in high regard. In
other words, one must see that those who have followed the path are
truly exemplary. One must also be well-versed in their teaching and
discipline. According to MN 117, "being well-versed in their
teaching" begins with having conviction in their teachings about
karma and rebirth, which provide intellectual and emotional context
for adopting the four noble truths as the basic categories of
experience. Being well-versed in the discipline of the noble ones
would include, in addition to observing the precepts, having some
skill in the seven approaches mentioned above for abandoning the
fermentations.
Without this sort of background, meditators might bring the wrong
attitudes and questions to the practice of watching arising and
passing away in the present moment. For instance, they might be
looking for a "true self" and end up identifying
consciously or unconsciously with the vast, open sense of
awareness that embraces all change, from which it all seems to come
and to which it all seems to return. Or they might long for a sense
of connectedness with the vast interplay of the universe, convinced
that as all things are changing any desire for changelessness
is neurotic and life-denying. For people with agendas like these, the
simple experience of events arising and passing away in the present
won't lead to fivefold knowledge of things as they are. They'll
resist recognizing that the ideas they hold to are a fermentation of
views, or that the experiences of calm that seem to verify those
ideas are simply a fermentation in the form of a state of being. As a
result, they won't be willing to apply the four noble truths to those
ideas and experiences. Only a person willing to see those
fermentations as such, and convinced of the need to transcend them,
will be in a position to apply the principles of appropriate
attention to them and thus get beyond them.
So, to answer the question with which we began: Vipassana is not a
meditation
technique. It's a quality of mind the ability to see
events clearly in the present moment. Although mindfulness is helpful
in fostering vipassana, it's not enough for developing vipassana to
the point of total release. Other techniques and approaches are
needed as well. In particular, vipassana needs to be teamed with
samatha the ability to settle the mind comfortably in the present
so as to master the attainment of strong states of absorption, or
jhana. Based on this mastery, samatha and vipassana are then applied
to a skillful program of questioning, called appropriate attention,
directed at all experience: exploring events not in terms of me/not
me, or being/not being, but in terms of the four noble truths. The
meditator pursues this program until it leads to a fivefold
understanding of all events: in terms of their arising, their passing
away, their drawbacks, their allure, and the escape from them. Only
then can the mind taste release.
This program for developing vipassana and samatha, in turn, needs
the support of many other attitudes, mental qualities, and techniques
of practice. This was why the Buddha taught it as part of a still
larger program, including respect for the noble ones, mastery of all
seven approaches for abandoning the mental fermentations, and all
eight factors of the noble path. To take a reductionist approach to
the practice can produce only reduced results, for meditation is a
skill like carpentry, requiring a mastery of many tools in response
to many different needs. To limit oneself to only one approach in
meditation would be like trying to build a house when one's
motivation is uncertain and one's tool box contains nothing but
hammers.
| Source: Copyright
© 1997 Thanissaro Bhikkhu. Reproduced and reformatted from
Access to Insight edition © 1997 For free distribution. This
work may be republished, reformatted, reprinted, and
redistributed in any medium. It is the author's wish, however,
that any such republication and redistribution be made available
to the public on a free and unrestricted basis and that
translations and other derivative works be clearly marked as
such. |
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