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The Force of Habit
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Those spontaneous reactions which so often stand in the way
of direct vision do not derive only from our passionate
impulses. Very frequently they are the product of habit.
In that form, they generally have an even stronger and more
tenacious hold on us — a hold which may work out either for our
good or for our harm. The influence habit exercises for the
good is seen in the "power of repeated practice." This power
protects our achievements and skills — whether manual or mental,
worldly or spiritual — against loss or forgetfulness, and
converts them from casual, short-lived, imperfect acquisitions
into the more secure possession of a quality thoroughly
mastered. The detrimental effect of habitual spontaneous
reactions is manifest in what is called in a derogative sense
the "force of habit": its deadening, stultifying and narrowing
influence productive of compulsive behavior of various kinds. In
our present context we shall be concerned only with that
negative aspect of habit as impeding and obscuring the
directness of vision.
As remarked earlier, habitual reactions generally have a
stronger influence upon our behavior than impulsive ones. Our
passionate impulses may disappear as suddenly as they have
arisen. Though their consequences may be very grave and extend
far into the future, their influence is in no way as long
lasting and deep reaching as that of habit. Habit spreads its
vast and closely meshed net over wide areas of our life and
thought, trying to drag in more and more. Our passionate
impulses, too, might be caught in that net and thus be
transformed from passing outbursts into lasting traits of
character. A momentary impulse, an occasional indulgence, a
passing whim may by repetition become a habit we find difficult
to uproot, a desire hard to control, and finally an automatic
function we no longer question. Repeated gratification turns a
desire into a habit, and habit left unchecked grows into
compulsion.
It sometimes happens that, at an early time, we regard a
particular activity or mental attitude as without any special
personal importance. The activity or attitude may be morally
indifferent and inconsequential. At the start we might find it
easy to abandon it or even to exchange it for its opposite,
since neither our emotions nor reason bias us towards either
alternative. But by repetition, we come to regard the chosen
course of action or thought as "pleasant, desirable, and
correct," even as "righteous"; and thus we finally identify it
with our character or personality. Consequently, we feel any
break in this routine to be unpleasant or wrong. Any outside
interference with it we greatly resent, even regarding such
interference as a threat to our "vital interests and
principles." In fact at all times primitive minds, whether
"civilized" or not, have looked at a stranger with his "strange
customs" as an enemy, and have felt his mere unagressive
presence as a challenge or threat.
At the beginning, when no great importance was ascribed to
the specific habit, the attachment that gradually formed was
directed not so much to the action proper as to the pleasure we
derive from the undisturbed routine. The strength of that
attachment to routine derives partly from the force of physical
and mental inertia, so powerful a motive in man. We shall
presently refer to another cause for attachment to routine. By
force of habit, the particular concern — whether a material
object, an activity, or a way of thinking — comes to be invested
with such an increase of emotional emphasis, that the attachment
to quite unimportant or banal things may become as tenacious as
that to our more fundamental needs. Thus the lack of conscious
control can turn even the smallest habits into the uncontested
masters of our lives. It bestows upon them the dangerous power
to limit and rigidify our character and to narrow our freedom of
movement — environmental, intellectual and spiritual. Through
our subservience to habit, we forge new fetters for ourselves
and make ourselves vulnerable to new attachments, aversions,
prejudices and predilections; that is, to new suffering. The
danger for spiritual development posed by the dominating
influence of habit is perhaps more serious today than ever
before; for the expansion of habit is particularly noticeable in
our present age when specialization and standardization reach
into so many varied spheres of life and thought.
Therefore, when considering the Satipatthana Sutta's words on
the formation of fetters, we should also think of the important
part played by habit:
"...and what fetter arises dependent on both (i.e., the
sense organs and sense objects), that he knows well. In what
manner the arising of the unarisen fetter comes to be, that
he knows well."
In Buddhist terms, it is preeminently the hindrance of sloth
and torpor (thina-middha nivarana) which is strengthened
by the force of habit, and it is the mental faculties such as
agility and pliancy of mind (kaya and citta-lahuta,
etc.)8
that are weakened.
This tendency of habits to extend their range is anchored in
the very nature of consciousness. It stems not only from the
aforementioned passive force of inertia, but in many cases from
an active will to dominate and conquer. Certain active types of
consciousness, possessing a fair degree of intensity, tend to
repeat themselves. Each one struggles to gain ascendancy, to
become a center around which other weaker mental and physical
states revolve, adapting themselves to and serving that central
disposition. This tendency is never quite undisputed, but still
it prevails, and even peripheral or subordinate types of
consciousness exhibit the same urge for ascendancy. This is a
striking parallel to the self-assertion and domineering tendency
of an egocentric individual in his contact with society. Among
biological analogies, we may mention the tendency toward
expansion shown by cancer and other pathological growths; the
tendency toward repetition we meet in the freak mutations which
loom as a grave danger at the horizon of our atomic age.
Due to that will to dominate inherent in many types of
consciousness, a passing whim may grow into a relatively
constant trait of character. If still not satisfied with its
position, it may break away entirely from the present
combination of life forces until finally, in the process of
rebirths, it becomes the very center of a new personality. There
are within us countless seeds for new lives, for innumerable
potential "beings," all of whom we should vow to liberate from
the wheel of samsara, as the Sixth Zen Patriarch expressed it.9
Detrimental physical or mental habits may grow strong, not
only if fostered deliberately, but also if left unnoticed or
unopposed. Much of what has now strong roots in our nature has
grown from minute seeds planted in a long-forgotten past (see
the Simile of the Creeper, Majjhima 45). This growth of morally
bad or otherwise detrimental habits can be effectively checked
by gradually developing another habit: that of attending to them
mindfully. If we now do deliberately what had become a
mechanical performance, and if prior to doing it we pause a
while for bare attention and reflection — this will give us a
chance to scrutinize the habit and clearly comprehend its
purpose and suitability (satthaka and
sappaya-sampajañña).
It will allow us to make a fresh assessment of the situation, to
see it directly, unobscured by the mental haze that surrounds a
habitual activity with the false assurance: "It is right because
it was done before." Even if a detrimental habit cannot be
broken quickly, the reflective pause will counter its
unquestioned spontaneity of occurrence. It will stamp it with
the seal of repeated scrutiny and resistance, so that on its
recurrence it will be weaker and will prove more amenable to our
attempts to change or abolish it.
It need hardly be mentioned that habit, which has been
rightly called "the wet-nurse of man," cannot and should not
disappear from our life. Let us only remember what a relief it
is, particularly in the crowded day and complex life of a
city-dweller, to be able to do a great number of things fairly
mechanically with, as it were, only "half-powered attention."
Habit brings considerable simplification to our life. It would
be an unbearable strain if all our little humdrum activities had
to be done with deliberate effort and close attention. In fact,
many operations of manual labor, much of the technique in
art, and even standard procedure in complex intellectual work,
generally bring better and more even results through skilled
routine performance. Yet that evenness of habitual performance
will also reach its end point. Unless enlivened by the creation
of new interest, it will show symptoms of fatigue and start to
decline.
Of course it would be absurd to advocate that all our little
habits be abolished, for many are innocuous and even useful. But
we should regularly ask ourselves whether we still have control
over them, whether we can give them up or alter them at will. We
can answer this question for ourselves in two ways: by attending
to our habitual actions mindfully for a certain period of time,
and second, by actually giving them up temporarily in cases
where this will not have any harmful or disturbing effects upon
ourselves or others. If we turn on them the light of direct
vision,
looking at them or performing them as if for the first time,
these little routine activities, and the habitual sights around
us, will assume a new glow of interest and stimulation. This
also holds good for our professional occupation and its
environment, and for our close human relationships if they
should have become stale by habit. The relationship to one's
marriage partner, to friends, to colleagues, may thus receive a
great rejuvenation. A fresh and direct vision will also reveal
that one can relate to people or do things in a different and
more beneficial way than one did before by force of habit.
An acquired capacity to give up minor habits will prove its
worth in the fight against more dangerous proclivities. It will
also come to our aid at times when we are faced with serious
changes in our life which forcefully deprive us of fundamental
habits. Loosening the hardened soil of our routine behavior and
thoughts will have an enlivening effect on our vital energy, our
mental vigor, and our power of imagination. But what is most
important, into that loosened soil we shall be able to plant the
seeds of vigorous spiritual progress.
Associative Thought
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Mental Habituation to standard reactions, to sequences of
activity, to judgments of people or things proceeds by way of
associative thinking. From the objects, ideas, situations and
people that we encounter, we select certain distinctive marks,
and associate these marks with our own response to them. If
these encounters recur, they are associated first with those
marks selected earlier, and then with our original or strongest
response. Thus these marks become a signal for releasing a
standard reaction, which may consist of a long sequence of
connected acts or thoughts familiar through repeated practice or
experience. This way of functioning makes it unnecessary for us
to apply new effort and painstaking scrutiny to each single step
in such a sequence. The result is a great simplification of
life, permitting us to release energy for other tasks. In fact,
in the evolution of the human mind, associative thinking was a
progressive step of decisive importance. It enabled us to learn
from experience, and thus led up to the discovery and
application of causal laws.
Yet along with these benefits, associative thinking can also
bring many grave dangers if it is applied faultily or
thoughtlessly and not carefully controlled. Let us draw up a
partial list of these danger points:
1. Associative thinking, recurring again and
again in similar situations, may easily perpetuate and
strengthen faulty or incomplete initial observations, errors
of judgment, and emotional prejudices such as love, hate and
pride.
2. Incomplete observations and restricted
viewpoints in judgment, sufficient to deal with one
particular situation, may prove quite inadequate and entail
grave consequences if mechanically applied to changed
circumstances.
3. Due to misdirected associative thinking,
a strong instinctive dislike may be felt for things, places
or persons which in some way are merely reminiscent of
unpleasant experiences, but actually have no connection with
them.
These briefly-stated instances show how vital it is for us to
scrutinize from time to time the mental grooves of our
associative thoughts, and to review the various habits and
stereotype reactions deriving from them. In other words, we must
step out of our ruts, regain a direct vision of things, and make
a fresh appraisal of our habits in the light of that vision.
If we look once again over the list of potential dangers
deriving from uncontrolled associative thinking, we shall better
understand the Buddha's insistence upon getting to the bedrock
of experience. In the profound and terse stanzas called "The
Cave," included in the Sutta Nipata, the Buddha says that
the "full penetration of sense impression (phassa) will
make one free from greed" and that "by understanding
perception (sañña),
one will be able to cross the flood of samsara" (stanza 778 f.).10
By placing mindfulness as a guard at the very first gate through
which thoughts enter the mind, we shall be able to control the
incomers much more easily, and shut out unwanted intruders. Thus
the purity of "luminous consciousness" can be maintained against
"adventitious defilements" (Anguttara, 1:51).
The Satipatthana Sutta provides a systematic training for
inducing direct, fresh, and undistorted vision. The training
covers the entire personality in its physical and mental
aspects, and includes the whole world of experience. The
methodical application of the several exercises to oneself
(ajjhatta), to others (bahiddha),
and alternatingly to both, will help uncover erroneous
conceptions due to misdirected associative thinking and
misapplied analogies.
The principal types of false associative thinking are
covered, in the terminology of the Dhamma, by the four kinds of
misapprehension
or perverted views (vipallasa), which wrongly take (1)
what is impermanent for permanent, (2) what is painful, or
conducive to pain, for happiness, (3) what has no self and is
unsubstantial for a self or an abiding substance, and (4) what
is impure for beautiful. These perverted views arise through a
false apprehension of the characteristic marks of things. Under
the influence of our passions and false theories, we perceive
things selectively in a one-sided or erroneous way, and then
associate them wrongly with other ideas. By applying bare
attention to our perceptions and impressions, gradually we can
free them from these misapprehensions, progressing steadily
towards the direct vision of things as they really are.
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