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Naming ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
We said before that bare attention "tidies up" or
regulates the mind by sorting out and identifying the various confused
strands of the mental process. That identifying function, like any
other mental activity, is connected with a verbal formulation. In
other words, "identifying" proceeds by way of expressly
"naming" the respective mental processes.
Primitive man believed that words could exercise a magical power:
"things that could be named had lost their secret power over man,
the horror of the unknown. To know the name of a force, a being or an
object was (to primitive man) identical with the mastery over
it."3
That ancient belief in the magical potency of names appears also in
many fairy tales and myths, where the power of a demon is broken just
by facing him courageously and pronouncing his name.
There is an element of truth in the "word-magic" of
primitive man, and in the practice of bare attention we will find the
power of naming confirmed. The "twilight demons" of the mind
our passionate impulses and obscure thoughts cannot bear the
simple but clarifying questions about their "names," much
less the knowledge of these names. Hence, this is often alone
sufficient to diminish their strength. The calmly observant glance of
mindfulness discovers the demons in their hiding-places. The practice
of calling them by their names drives them out into the open, into the
daylight of consciousness. There they will feel embarrassed and
obliged to justify themselves, although at this stage of bare
attention they have not yet even been subjected to any closer
questioning except about their names, their identity. If forced into
the open while still in an incipient stage, they will be incapable of
withstanding scrutiny and will just dwindle away. Thus a first victory
over them may be won, even at an early stage of the practice.
The appearance in the mind of undesirable and ignoble thoughts,
even if they are very fleeting and only half-articulate, has an
unpleasant effect upon one's self-esteem. Therefore such thoughts are
often shoved aside, unattended to and unopposed. Often they are also
camouflaged by more pleasing and respectable labels which hide their
true nature. Thoughts disposed of in either of these two ways will
strengthen the accumulated power of ignoble tendencies in the
subconscious. Furthermore, these procedures will weaken one's will to
resist the arising and the dominance of mental defilements, and
strengthen the tendency to evade the issues. But by applying the
simple method of clearly and honestly naming or registering any
undesirable thoughts, these two harmful devices, ignorance and
camouflage, are excluded. Thence their detrimental consequences on the
structure of the subconscious and their diversion of mental effort
will be avoided.
When ignoble thoughts or personal shortcomings are called by their
right names, the mind will develop an inner resistance and even
repugnance against them. In time it may well succeed in keeping them
in check and finally eliminating them. Even if these means do not
bring undesirable tendencies fully under control at once, they will
stamp upon them the impact of repeated resistance which will weaken
them whenever they reappear. To continue our personification, we may
say that unwholesome thoughts will no longer be the unopposed masters
of the scene, and this diffidence of theirs will make them
considerably easier to deal with. It is the power of moral shame (hiri-bala)
that has been mustered here as an ally, methodically strengthened by
these simple yet subtle psychological techniques.
The method of naming and registering also extends, of course, to
noble thoughts and impulses which will be encouraged and strengthened.
Without being given deliberate attention, such wholesome tendencies
often pass unnoticed and remain barren. But when clear awareness is
applied to them, it will stimulate their growth.
It is one of the most beneficial features of right mindfulness, and
particularly of bare attention, that it enables us to utilize all
external events and inner mental events for our progress. Even the
unsalutary can be made a starting point for the salutary if, through
the device of naming or registering, it becomes an object of detached
knowledge.
In several passages of the Satipatthana Sutta the function of
naming or "bare registering" seems to be indicated by
formulating the respective statements by way of direct speech. There
are no less than four such instances in the discourse:
(1) "When experiencing a pleasant feeling, he knows 'I
experience a pleasant feeling'," etc.;
(2) "He knows a lustful (state of) mind, 'Mind is
lustful'," etc.;
(3) "If (the hindrance of) sense desire is present in him,
he knows, 'Sense desire is present in me'," etc.;
(4) "If the enlightenment factor mindfulness is present in
him, he knows, 'The enlightenment factor mindfulness is present in
me'," etc.
In concluding this section, we briefly point out that the tidying-up
and naming of mental processes is the indispensable preparation
for fully understanding them in their true nature, the task of insight
(vipassana). These functions, exercised by bare attention, will
help dispel the illusion that the mental processes are compact. They
will also help us to discern their specific nature or characteristics,
and to notice their momentary rise and fall.
The Non-coercive Procedure ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
Obstacles to Meditation ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
Both the world surrounding us and the world of our own minds are
full of hostile and conflicting forces causing us pain and
frustration. We know from our own bitter experience that we are not
strong enough to meet and conquer all these antagonistic forces in
open combat. In the external world we cannot have everything exactly
as we want it, while in the inner world of the mind, our passions,
impulses, and whims often override the demands of duty, reason and our
higher aspirations.
We further learn that often an undesirable situation will only
worsen if excessive pressure is used against it. Passionate desires
may grow in intensity if one tries to silence them by sheer force of
will. Disputes and quarrels will go on endlessly and grow fiercer if
they are fanned again and again by angry retorts or by vain attempts
to crush the other man's position. A disturbance during work, rest or
meditation will be felt more strongly and will have a longer-lasting
impact if one reacts to it by resentment and anger and attempts to
suppress it.
Thus, again and again, we meet with situations in life where we
cannot force issues. But there are ways of mastering the
vicissitudes of life and conflicts of mind without applications of
force. Non-violent means may often succeed where attempts at coercion,
internal or external, fail. Such a non-violent way of mastering life
and mind is satipatthana. By the methodical application of bare
attention, the basic practice in the development of right mindfulness,
all the latent powers of a non-coercive approach will gradually
unfold, with the beneficial results and their wide and unexpected
implications. In this context we are mainly concerned with the
benefits of Satipatthana for the mastery of mind, and for the progress
in meditation that may result from a non-coercive procedure. But we
shall also cast occasional side glances at its repercussions on
everyday life. It will not be difficult for a thoughtful reader to
make more detailed application to his own problems.
The antagonistic forces that appear in meditation and that are
liable to upset its smooth course are of three kinds:
1. external disturbances, such as noise;
2. mental defilements (kilesa), such as lust, anger,
restlessness, dissatisfaction, or sloth, which may arise at any time
during meditation; and
3. various incidental stray thoughts, or surrender to
day-dreaming.
These distractions are the great stumbling blocks for a beginner in
meditation who has not yet acquired sufficient dexterity to deal with
them effectively. To give thought to those disturbing factors only
when they actually arise at the time of meditation is insufficient. If
caught unprepared in one's defence, one will struggle with them in a
more or less haphazard and ineffective way, and with a feeling of
irritation which will itself be an additional impediment. If
disturbances of any kind and unskillful reactions to them occur
several times during one session, one may come to feel utterly
frustrated and irritated and give up further attempts to meditate, at
least for the present occasion.
In fact, even meditators who are quite well informed by books or a
teacher about all the details concerning their subject of meditation
often lack instruction on how to deal skillfully with the disturbances
they may meet. The feeling of helplessness in facing them is the most
formidable difficulty for a beginning meditator. At that point many
accept defeat, abandoning prematurely any further effort at methodical
practice. As in worldly affairs, so in meditation, one's way of
dealing with the "initial difficulties" will often be
decisive for success or failure.
When faced by inner and outer disturbances, the inexperienced or
uninstructed beginner will generally react in two ways. He will first
try to shove them away lightly, and if he fails in that, he will try
to suppress them by sheer force of will. But these disturbances are
like insolent flies: by whisking first lightly and then with
increasing vigor and anger one may perhaps succeed in driving them
away for a while, but usually they will return with an exasperating
constancy, and the effort and vexation of whisking will have produced
only an additional disturbance of one's composure.
Satipatthana, through its method of bare attention, offers a
non-violent alternative to those futile and even harmful attempts at
suppression by force. A successful non-violent procedure in
mind-control has to start with the right attitude. There must be first
the full cognizance and sober acceptance of the fact that those three
disturbing factors are co-inhabitants of the world we live in, whether
we like it or not. Our disapproval of them will not alter the fact.
With some we shall have to come to terms, and concerning the others
the mental defilements we shall have to learn how to deal with
them effectively until they are finally conquered.
1. Since we are not the sole inhabitants of this densely populated
world, there are bound to be external disturbances of various
kinds, such as noise and interruptions by visitors. We cannot always
live in "splendid isolation," "from the noise of men
and dogs untroubled," or "ivory towers" high above the
crowd. Right meditation is not escapism; it is not meant to provide
hiding-places for temporary oblivion. Realistic meditation has the
purpose of training the mind to face, to understand and to conquer
this very world in which we live. And this world inevitably includes
numerous obstacles to the life of meditation.
2. The Burmese meditation master, the Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw
said: "In an unliberated worldling mental defilements are
sure to arise again and again. He has to face that fact and know these
defilements well in order to apply again and again the appropriate
remedy of Satipatthana. Then they will grow weaker, more short-lived,
and will finally disappear." To know the occurrence and nature of
defilements is therefore as important for a meditator as to know the
occurrence of his noble thoughts.
By facing one's own defilements one will be stirred to increase the
effort to eliminate them. On the other hand, if out of a false shame
or pride one tries to avert one's glance when they arise, one will
never truly join issue with them, and will always evade the final and
decisive encounter. By hitting blindly at them, one will only exhaust
or even hurt oneself. But by observing carefully their nature and
behavior when they arise in one's own mind, one will be able to meet
them well prepared, to forestall them often, and finally to banish
them fully. Therefore meet your defilements with a free and open
glance! Be not ashamed, afraid or discouraged!
3. The third group of intruders disturbing the meditator's mind are
stray thoughts and daydreams. These may consist of
various memories and images of the past, recent or remote, including
those emerging from subconscious depths; thoughts of the future
planning, imagining, fearing, hoping; and the casual sense-perceptions
that may occur at the very time of meditation, often dragging after
them a long trail of associated ideas. Whenever concentration and
mindfulness slacken, stray thoughts or daydreams appear and fill the
vacuum. Though they seem insignificant in themselves, through their
frequent occurrence they form a most formidable obstacle, not only for
the beginner, but in all cases when the mind is restless or
distracted. However, when these invaders can be kept at bay, even long
continuous periods of meditation can be achieved. As in the case of
the mental defilements, stray thoughts will be entirely excluded only
at the stage of Arahatship, when the perfect mindfulness thereby
obtained keeps unfailing watch at the door of the mind.
If they are to shape our attitude, all these facts about the three
kinds of disturbing factors must be given full weight and be fully
absorbed by our mind. Then, in these three disturbing factors, the
noble truth of suffering will manifest itself to the meditator very
incisively through his own personal experience: "Not to obtain
what one wants is suffering." The three other noble truths should
also be exemplified by reference to the same situation. In such a way,
even when dealing with impediments, the meditator will be within the
domain of Satipatthana. He will be engaged in the mindful awareness of
the Four Noble Truths a part of the contemplation of mental
objects (dhammanupassana).4
It is characteristic of right mindfulness, and one of its tasks, to
relate the actual experiences of life to the truth of the Dhamma, and
to use them as opportunities for its practical realization. Already at
the preliminary stage devoted to the shaping of a correct and helpful
attitude, we have the first successful test of our peaceful weapons:
by understanding our adversaries better, we have consolidated our
position which was formerly weakened by an emotional approach; and by
transforming these adversaries into teachers of the truths, we have
won the first advantage over them.
Three Countermeasures ![[go to toc]](../../images/scrollup.gif)
If we are mentally prepared by a realistic view of these three
factors antagonistic to meditation, we shall be less inclined to react
at once by irritation when they actually arise. We shall be
emotionally in a better position to meet them with the non-violent
weapons of which we shall now speak.
There are three devices for countering disturbances that arise in
meditation. The three should be applied in succession whenever the
preceding device has failed to dispose of the disturbance. All three
are applications of bare attention; they differ in the degree and
duration of attention given to the disturbance. The guiding rule here
is: to give no more mental emphasis to the respective disturbance than
is actually required by circumstances.
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