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About
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Our
Practice: Going Forth a Moment at a Time
The
spiritual practice in a forest monastery is a process that pervades the
entirety of the bodily, psychological and emotional aspects of a
practitioner. It is meditation in a very full sense, including
contemplation of relationship, of illness, of responsibility, and of
sexuality –
to name but a few. Basically anything that one might take a stand
on as having or being (or not being) is up for examination and
overhaul. This is because a mature practitioner seeks to liberate themselves
from depending on, or identifying with, any aspect of body or mind.
All modes and experiences are questioned in terms of their
reliability, their satisfactoriness and their ownership.
How
long-lasting is the satisfaction obtained through getting one's
own way or through being gratified by sensory input? Can these
prevent us
from loss, stress, misunderstanding, sickness, and death? And, if
a thought, an emotion or a sensation is subject to change, and comes
and goes –
how can we say it belongs to us or constitutes our
selfhood? Wise consideration of experience spurs the inquiry of a
practitioner, enabling them to ‘let go,’ and without
rejecting the human experience, broadens and
deepens it with an awareness that is not attached, but liberated and
Awake. In silence and in speech, in action and in stillness,
this is the practice of a forest monastery.
Why a monastery? Well, a monastery can provide many supportive
conditions. Firstly, it is an environment based on harmlessness,
honesty, and moral strength: that makes it safe to let down some of the
defences that we create around our personal stuff. Furthermore,
it provides a situation where the people around one are going through
the same process themselves, thus facilitating mutual understanding and sympathy. Then again it's a place where there's not
a lot going on, particularly in terms of entertainment: you can't
distract, or avoid, yourself so easily. Lastly it is a place removed
from domestic concerns, so there's much less of your personal story in
it. Because of this, and because it is shared and part of a
tradition, it never follows any one individual's particular style or
wishes. And in a ‘Going Forth’ situation, trying to
firm life up as ‘me’ and ‘my way’ can't get
very far. Accordingly personal choices and resistances; moments when we
get stubborn or defensive, or feel awkward and hurt; occasions when we
feel uncertain with others or alone, or restless when there's nothing
much to do –
all these patterns, that in normal life we develop
strategies to screen off, get highlighted for ongoing
contemplation.
At Cittaviveka, our 'holding on' –
in a life process that essentially
can't be held –
is thrown into relief against a backdrop of green
rolling hills, birdsong, and the generosity of people bringing offerings. 'Where is the
suffering?' is the penetrative question. And –
'Where does that
suffering cease?' The ‘answer’ is in letting go of
self. But this answer occurs in a non-conceptual sense. It
requires not just a philosophical stance, but a shift of centre, and it
brings around release. This is the fruit of the training: the
experience of ‘unsatisfactoriness’ (dukkha), its origin, its ceasing and the
Path to that ceasing –
the Four Noble Truths, the heart of the
Buddha's teachings.
And as the Buddha said: if you have to suffer a hundred years in the
process of discovering these truths, it's still well worth while; the
realisation of release is one of joy like no other. This is why
we practise –
when
we're meditating in silence, or working, or meeting; whether we're
tired, or worried, or full of energy, or whatever. It's a Going
Forth from our habits, assumptions and difficult places. It sounds like
a big job, but actually it's only for a moment at a time –
for a
lifetime.
About
Buddha, Dhamma and Sangha: The Triple Gem
A Living Transmission
The Tradition Spreads – India to West Sussex
Chithurst House And Dhamma Hall
Facilities for Women: Rocana And Aloka
Hammer Wood
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