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Buddha's Enlightenment Experience and the First Noble Truth

 

Updated 06 Jun 2003

 

 

Buddha's Enlightenment Experience and the First Noble Truth  

 

 

Last week I was in Austin, Texas, where I have a Buddhist sangha. I gave a

weekend retreat and some evening talks at a church there. One morning, the

Montessori school invited me to come and talk to their kids. There were 75

kids there, between 7 and 11 years old. I wondered exactly what I was going

to do. From the minute the kids started trickling in the door, they came

right up to me, climbed on me and asked me questions. There was no beginning

and no end. It just happened. Near the end, we did the Gong Meditation:

Following the sound of a gong, seeing where it goes, and just being there

for a moment or two.

 

 

 

That weekend, one of the women in the weekend retreat came up to me at lunch

time and asked if she could speak to me. She wanted to tell me a story about

her 8-year-old son who was at my Gong Meditation. She said her son had come

home and told her that something very unusual had happened that day at

school. She said, ³Do you want to tell me about it?² He said, ³Yes. A monk

from Tibet, New York came.² (Sort of like Paris, Texas, I guess.) The boy

said that the monk ‹ me! ‹ taught them about God and Buddha and the Gong

Meditation. She asked what that was.

 

 

 

He said, ³Well. He told us to watch where the sound went, and to listen

carefully. I didn¹t know you could watch and listen to the same thing. It

was very interesting. He said that if you followed and watched where the

sound went, that you might get closer to God. And I did that.²

 

 

 

His mother said, ³Yes, andŠ?²

 

 

 

And the boy said, ³Well, when I watched and listened to where the sound

went, I didn¹t get closer to God. I was God.²

 

 

 

I thought that was pretty cool. ³ŠFrom the mouth of babes,² as the scripture

says. When I finished that Gong Meditation ‹ it only took about 30 seconds;

God realization doesn¹t take very long, at least if you are young enough! ‹

I said, ³So where did the sound go?² And every hand went up! I couldn¹t

believe it. I said, ³Shh. Don¹t say anything.² I didn¹t want to ruin it. But

they all knew. Isn¹t it amazing? Some kids even had both hands raised!

 

 

 

I was very touched by that, the freshness of the youthful experience of just

sensing. Not even wondering ³What is God² or ³Who am I to say I am God.² No

such editing takes place at that age. Just ³Oh yeah, God. I am that.²

 

 

 

Right there actually is the whole teaching of Dzogchen, the innate Great

Perfection: ³I am That.² But who can say that with certainty at this moment,

as that little boy did? So perhaps we have strayed a little bit from home

plate. We were out somewhere in the outfield. We even missed the bases. Or

worse, we¹re in the bleachers just watching the game, not even playing it

any more. Still, we started at home and we can come home again. That child

took only about 10 seconds; for us it takes maybe an hour. As one of my Zen

teachers used to say, ³It¹s good to try to sit hard in zazen, but nobody

gets enlightened after half an hour of zazen.² So we shouldn¹t expect too

much. It is a life¹s journey. Not just an instant high of enlightenment

experience. But I think it is very available to us, this so-called

enlightenment experience. Actually, realization is now; it is now, or never

‹ as always!

 

 

 

I should define terms a little bit. The only way to define enlightenment is

to say that it is not what we think it is. That¹s the safest thing to say.

As Kris Kristofferson wrote, ³Freedom is just another word for nothing left

to lose.² So freedom and enlightenment are not exactly what we think they

are. We have a lot of concepts about these things; they are probably best

left aside. That child didn¹t have so many, so he got right to the point

quickly, which was very gratifying to me. I hope and pray that moment is

like a seed, informing his whole life.

 

 

 

We are not exactly what we think we are, which, I think, is where it starts

to get interesting. Then, what are we? Who are we? We might turn the

searchlight inward and start to find out a little bit, come home, and make

ourselves at home, here in this universe, instead of acting like

disenfranchised aliens, strangers in a strange land.

 

 

 

Tonight I would like to introduce the basic, fundamental teaching of

Buddhism, from the ground up. Let¹s see if we can apply it to our lives,

where it counts. Over the next four or five Monday nights I would like to

talk about the enlightenment experience, the Four Noble Truths taught by the

Buddha 2500 years ago ‹ the basic facts of life according to enlightened

vision ‹ and the Eightfold Path to enlightenment, or, as I have been

thinking about it, the eight principles or steps of enlightened living. This

is so we can understand some of what is going on with us, and how our

spiritual practice relates to our life and to freedom and nirvanic peace,

ultimate fulfillment.

 

 

 

We¹ll also discuss and explore what all this has to do with meditation; how

meditation helps us realize these truths, which are actually self-evident.

Because the Buddhadharma ‹ the teachings of Buddha, or, better than that,

the truth of how things are (meaning the vision according to awakened

enlightenment) ‹ is not something we have to believe, like dogma. In

Buddhism, there is nothing to believe; there is just everything to learn, to

explore, to discover, to recover, to come home to, and to inhabit, at last.

To fully inhabit our lives, our genuine being.

 

 

 

Buddhism is descriptive: it says how things are. It is not prescriptive: It

doesn¹t tell us what to do. It describes how things are, and we get to

choose. And we experience according to those choices. That is both the good

news and the bad news. The Buddha is in the palm of our hands: What we do

with it makes all the difference.

 

 

 

OK. To begin at the beginning. The basic, most fundamental thing about

Buddhism is the so-called enlightenment experience, which is our birthright,

our true nature. It is utterly possible and accessible. It¹s not just

something Buddha experienced; many have realized enlightenment throughout

the ages. That¹s what all of this business is about, whether you call it

Buddhism, the wisdom traditions, or the Perennial Philosophy. Enlightenment,

spiritual awakening, illumination, self-realization, satori ‹ these are all

more or less synonyms. It means recognizing who and what we are. It means

discovering or realizing our true nature. It is coming home; it is not

finding something that we never had before. It is right here, always; we are

usually elsewhere! It is here, even now.

 

 

 

Out of such a breakthrough, peak experience we perceive everything a little

differently, which is very fulfilling, meaningful, and liberating. For

example, we might notice that things are not exactly the way we thought they

were. This can effect a radical transformation in our lives; it depends on

what we do with that insight. We might realize that we are barking up the

wrong tree or chasing our own tailŠwoof, woof, like dogs. We might realize

that we have climbed the ladder of success in some, or even many, ways, but

the ladder is leaning on the wrong wall. We might have an identity crisis,

even if we¹re 40 or 50 years old, and wonder what the hell we are doing, and

why? Why do we die? Why are we suffering? Why are we so rarely satisfied?

What does it all mean?

 

 

 

Buddha, out of his awakening ‹ known as enlightenment ‹ gave his first talk

about this in the Deer Park in Benares. It is called the Fire Teaching,

because he said, when asked why he was shining with nirvanic peace, ³Because

I have realized a truth that is beyond suffering. All created, conditioned

things are unreliable or dissatisfying ultimately; all are burning. I have

realized something that is beyond this conditioning, this unreliable,

impermanent, dissatisfying world. It is right in the midst of it, but it is

not the things.²

 

 

 

So he described this as the First Noble Truth, or the first fact of life:

All created or conditioned things are ultimately dissatisfying. The word in

Pali or Sanskrit is dukkha. Sometimes it is translated as suffering, but

that is a very weak translation. It means dissatisfying,

dissatisfactoriness; what Christianity might state as nothing in this world

can satisfy us, or everything in this side of the world is imperfect. Buddha

meant that all forms of unenlightened life are suffering, dissatisfactory,

in the ultimate analysis.  It means everything that is conditioned falls

apart, is uncertain, unreliable, not satisfying. Can anybody think of any

examples that are not true of that? Anything that is ultimately satisfying?

Anybody? That¹s the thing. When you really look into it, what is satisfying,

really? We have moments of satisfaction, but what is beyond this roller

coaster ride, this yo-yo, up and down, highs and lows? Through enlightened

vision, through awakening, we realize a nirvanic peace, which is not a

created or conditioned thing. It is not a composite, a fabrication. It is

not a state of mind, which can fall apart. It is the natural state, the true

fundamental nature. It is not unreliable and uncertain. It is not

dissatisfying. So that¹s the first fact of life: dukkha, the dissatisfactory

nature of all conditioned things, that everything is off the mark.

 

 

 

On the other hand, our true nature, our luminous core, our ineffable nature,

our Buddha-nature is not a created thing. It is not dissatisfactory. It is

not impermanent. It is not subject to change. It is perfect, luminous, free

and complete from the beginningless beginning. It is not something in this

world that we can shop for and obtain. Practicing meditation is a path to

rediscovering that, to awakening the Buddha within, to recognizing that

which is ultimately fulfilling, satisfying, meaningful, and joyous even.

 

 

 

That¹s what all this is about. It¹s not about religion or belief or dogma or

rituals or joining the newest club. It¹s not the newest fad to get high.

(Well, it might be, but I hope that¹s not the whole story!) It is not about

belonging to a group. It is a very personal and intimate relationship with

one¹s true self, one¹s true nature, in the heart of which we are all

interconnected. It is not selfish; it is transpersonally related to each of

us, yet beyond any one of us.

 

 

 

I think I¹ll cover the first truth tonight, and just mention the other ones

and explore them next week. These noble truths are something we should know.

Then we can see if they are true, if they apply to our own experience, and

how they can actually work for us, to provide the spiritual rewards this

path promises whoever chooses to follow it.

 

 

 

The First Truth is the truth of dukkha or dissatisfactoriness of all

conditioned, created things. How impermanent, hollow, short-lived,

unreliable, and uncertain they are, if carefully scrutinized.

 

 

 

The Second Truth is the cause of that dissatisfactoriness; because, after

all, the Dharma is interested in only one thing: the end of suffering, the

alleviation of dissatisfaction and distress. That¹s what the Buddha said. He

said, ³Don¹t ask me whether God exists. Don¹t ask me where the world came

from. That¹s not my business. My business is solely dissatisfactoriness and

the end of it; suffering, misery, and bondage, and their end, the sure

heart¹s release.²

 

 

 

The second fact of life, which he explained was the cause of dukkha, the

cause of this dissatisfaction, is attachment, resistance, craving, clinging,

fixation, greed, preoccupation, holding on. Because everything is uncertain,

unreliable, impermanent, flowing and passing, how can holding on ever be

ultimately satisfying? Even if we get what we want, how long can we hold

onto it? Even if it stays around, we are gone, since we ‹ each of us ‹ are

just another impermanent thing. The cause of that dissatisfactoriness is our

incessant holding on, resistance, clinging, attachment, greed, and desire ‹

acting out of our ignorance about the true nature of things. Let¹s look and

see if this is not the case, in our own lives.

 

 

 

The Third Truth is the end of this dukkha, the end of suffering, the end of

craving; nonattachment, which is release, nirvana, total openness,

emptiness. That¹s the end of suffering right there, the end of attachment.

In the sutras it is called the heart¹s sure release or relief. Nirvanic

peace is relief from suffering, change, dissatisfaction, confusion,

exhaustion, and so on. Is it not true that when we kiss the joy as it flies,

rather than cling to it, we live in eternal sunrise, as Blake sang? Isn¹t

greed, desire, and clinging dissatisfying, even when we momentarily get what

we want?

 

 

 

The Fourth Truth ‹ perhaps the most important one ‹ is the path to that

release; the path by which we can actually experience that heart¹s sure

relief from suffering, from dissatisfactoriness. That¹s called traditionally

the Eightfold Noble Path. I like to call it the eight principles of

enlightened living or the eight steps to enlightenment. It is divided into

three sections: sila, samadhi, and prajna ‹ ethics, meditation, and wisdom,

as discussed last week.

 

 

 

Those are the Four Noble Truths. It is a complete description of how things

are; how to solve our problem, our suffering; and what the result is. Again,

this is just a description. We get to decide if that¹s the path for us. For

example, let¹s honestly ask ourselves: Is it even our problem? Maybe we

haven¹t noticed that there is any problem. That¹s fine. We shouldn¹t be in

the doctor¹s office if we¹re not sick. We shouldn¹t be in the pharmacy

looking at all the different medicines. We should be out enjoying life. The

Dalai Lama himself has said that happiness is the purpose of life. So let¹s

see seek our highest, most long-lasting happiness, not just cheap thrills.

 

 

 

However, we are all at different stages. This is not a judgment; I don¹t

know who is more evolved. However, why do we each hear the same thing

differently? I go around the world saying we are all Buddhas, and people

come out of the audience and say, ³I love what you said Surya, but why did

you start your talk by saying we are all Buddhists. I¹m a Christian.² I say

Buddha and she heard Buddhists; someone else hears I don¹t know what ‹

voodoo maybe! Let us become Buddhas, rather than Buddhists! America the

Buddhafull!

 

 

 

We are all flowers in a universal garden, in different stages, going in

different directions, having different shapes. We are all dealing with

different things. It¹s like why sometimes we don¹t feel anything, but the

next person feels something. Maybe we¹re not tuned into the feeling level;

each of us has different realities going, different perceptions. Water looks

very different to you and me than to a fish, doesn¹t it?

 

 

 

Since we did come here tonight, we are probably looking for something,

probably we are seeking something deeper. We found out, probably ‹ I¹m

looking around the room; I see that we are mostly upper middle class, white

intellectuals ‹ that we have everything, but that everything is never quite

enough. That¹s the problem, isn¹t it? Never quite enough for us. So we are

seeking something deeper. (Is this the Upper Middle Path?!)

 

 

 

Therefore, let¹s genuinely look into things and see what is wrong, if

anything. Let¹s see what the problems are, what the cause is, and how to

transcend it and be free. That¹s what the Buddha¹s path purports to offer;

but it remains up to us to confirm it for ourselves; otherwise it is just a

rumor. It is up to us to keep it alive. We are the ancestors now; what we do

will affect all coming generations.

 

 

 

I personally have found that it is true, that it is very simple when you get

down to it, that greed, attachment, and resistance is dissatisfying. Haven¹t

you? Look at our relationships. Selfishness, egotism, and clinging don¹t

work very well. On the other hand, letting go and being more spacious and

gracious ‹ open hands, open arms, open heart and mind ‹ actually works. This

kind of more open, generous, collaborative win-win approach goes a long way

towards relieving a lot of the tension; the stress, the friction generating

all of this energy of conflict and confusion, and, for that matter, illness.

Look at your own closest relationships, and see if this is not true. If we

don¹t apply the Dharma teaching to our own lives and our own personal way of

thinking, it¹s not Buddhadharma at all; it¹s just a sham.

 

 

 

Now we have covered the first three truths: suffering; its cause being

attachment; and letting go, nonattachment, which is its solution. This

simply leaves us with how to live that way, which is the path.

 

 

 

I see it as a progression, from unhealthy attachments like addictions onto

attachment to positive things, like health, food, stress-reducing exercises,

meditation, and spirituality. But it has to get more and more subtle, or

else we get stuck at those places. As our enlightened mind grows, it gets

more subtle. A Zen teacher calls it the stink of enlightenment ‹ the last

thing you get attached to is enlightenment. That would be like golden

shackles, rather than rusty, iron ones. Maybe you should just raise your

sights and get attached to higher and deeper things, and trust that this

sort of teaching leads beyond even itself. As Buddha said, ³Dharma is like a

raft, to cross the raging river of suffering.² All rafts may be left behind

when we reach the other shore.

 

 

 

What would be worthy of great attachment? You tell me. If you want to say

God, or something very high and ultimate, then I¹ll say, ³Good. Be totally

attached to that. But what is that? It is not a thing.² So aspirations can

get higher and higher, deeper and deeper. That would be helpful. What

attachment really is a pernicious cycle of demandingness, resistance,

clinging, holding on. It is hard to believe that those are very helpful.

 

 

 

Of course we are attached to our children. Of course we are attached to

sanity. We should be. Let¹s use our common sense. That¹s why when I say the

word ³attachment,² I try to define it so we understand what we are talking

about ‹ greed, rigidity, fixation, resistance, preoccupation, clinging.

Clinging doesn¹t sound great, does it?

 

 

 

We¹ve talked about relinquishing attachment. Let¹s talk about it in the

positive sense: Cultivating openness, spiritual detachment, equanimity.

Those are the positive sides of that. Spiritual detachment doesn¹t mean

being indifferent. It means being more even and equal, and seeing the big

picture, having more perspective. You like some things, you don¹t like

others, but you are not so invested in such preferences so that there is

more room for inner equanimity and balance. You don¹t have a tantrum if

things don¹t always work out as you would have liked. That¹s the positive

side. It doesn¹t mean you are complacent and indifferent, that if you see a

kid running out in the street, you wouldn¹t even bother to stop him. That¹s

insanity. This discussion about nonattachment is not about indifference or

complacency. It¹s about equanimity and balance, a bigger perspective, about

learning to appreciate all things and experiences ‹ good and bad,

pleasurable and painful, light and dark ‹ in their own way.

 

 

 

I will reiterate that the cause of the dissatisfaction is holding on. When

you start to see how that works, then you start to see how letting go,

allowing, being more generous with yourself and others, tolerance, and so on

is very, very satisfying. It is a great relief. It just simply works. Every

day, every moment, it works. This is not some big abstraction, some

theological dogma. It¹s not like at the end of your life you get the jackpot

of enlightenment, you get airlifted up. This way of life works every moment.

Even here in meditation, we are replicating the whole macrocosm of our life

and lifetimes in the microcosm of this moment. When we can relax totally and

just be and allow everything and not have to do or accomplish or put

together anything, isn¹t it a relief? Isn¹t it restful, relaxing,

holistically satisfying? There¹s no force, so it¹s not tiring. There is no

will and no striving. Spontaneous joy and peace naturally bubble up. It is

inconceivable. There is no good reason for it to be so satisfying, but it

is.

 

 

 

Incessant attachment and greed erode our inner peace of mind. Better offer

yourself to everything. Surrender. Dance with life, no matter what tune is

being played. Why be a wallflower? Dance with life; you¹ll love it.

 

 

 

It is really simple, when you come right down to it. That¹s why I feel that

this is really a teaching for our time, a teaching that we can really get

our teeth into, that can really liberate and delight us all and help us be a

positive force in the world, not just a self-satisfied, complacent, couch

potato, or, should I say, meditation cushion potato? It can help us really

be a light in the world, which we are so much in need of in these turbulent

times.

 

 

 

There is a way of being a very peaceful warrior, a warrior for peace. And

out of that heart of compassion can come forceful action, when necessary.

Let us foment a veritable lobby of compassion, a ground swell of responsible

and caring consensus, here in our own country.

 

           

 

            Sometimes saying No is actually Yes, is very affirmative.

Trungpa Rinpoche used to say: ³Don¹t give in to idiot compassion.² For

example, you spoil your kids and they run out into the street and get hit by

a car. You pour honey on everybody¹s head and you are always smiling,

because you want to be a New Age, love and light person. One of my Tibetan

friends said, ³Why does everybody in America say ŒI love you¹ before they

hang up the phone, even if it¹s the first time you ever talked to them? I

thought those words meant something!² So it is not so simple. That¹s why in

tantric iconography there are the terrific, wrathful deities as well as the

peaceful, gentle, lamb-like, Jesus-like deities. Even Jesus did his thing

with the money-changers, driving them out of the holy temple. That is

ruthless compassion.

 

 

 

We all have peaceful energies in us and also wrathful energies, which subdue

or transform what needs to be transformed. In the street at night, for

example, you might have to do something that looks very forceful, but you

should be doing it because it is appropriate and done out of love, not out

of aggression. When one is spacious, then there is space for things to

happen appropriately, impeccably even. Otherwise we just transmit our

compulsions, the children get spoiled, and the entire mandala degenerates.

 

 

 

That¹s where awareness training comes in. Eventually, you don¹t have to

remember it so avidly, it just comes more naturally. That¹s why we have a

little incubator here, our little pressure cooker, our practice center. It¹s

like a hothouse so we can try to train in a special way. You need a

greenhouse, a special environment, to cultivate exotic orchids. But really,

we ourselves are more like the grass and the weeds; we have to exist

everywhere, finally. We can recondition and decondition ourselves

intentionally, through continuous, intentional training. Buddhism is a path

of training the body, speech, and heart/mind. We decondition our

conditioning, which brings freedom, while reconditioning in a more positive

sense like through Bodhicitta practice. It is not that we have to remember;

it¹s not just like having to count to 10 before you hit back. The more we

are aware, the more naturally open is that space of counting; you don¹t have

to count.

 

 

 

You might vividly feel the arising energy of anger or reaction, but it is

just an energy ‹ you don¹t have to act it out or suppress it. There are a

lot of techniques for that, like putting yourself in the other¹s shoes,

exchanging yourself with others, wishing to take the difficulties on

yourself and give them the best part so you start to get out of this

adversarial situation. Using the energy of the opponent to turn the

situation over instead of just fighting back. Transforming negativity into

positivity. There are many skillful methods in Dharma for accomplishing

that. We ought to try them!

 

 

 

Ahimsa means non-aggression, non-harming. Gandhi didn¹t just say, ³Oh, what

the hell² to the British when they exploited his country. He did something

about it in a very powerful way. He didn¹t fight back with arms; he did

something different: He changed consciousness. He created a ground swell of

consensus against the British being there. He walked hundreds of miles to

the sea to collect salt by hand, to break the British stranglehold of the

salt tax. And all of India began to walk with him. They didn¹t have to go to

the barricades and try to fight back with their rusty old muskets and

pitchforks, and all get wiped out. This reminds us that there is another way

to do things. That was a very forceful act, a very effective warrior act,

but a very peaceful warrior action. The British could hardly fight back

against 100,000,000 Indians. If there had been any kind of a demonstration,

they would have wiped them out. But faced with that sort of passive

resistance and consciousness-raising, the British had to back down. They

realized they could imprison Gandhi¹s body, but not his mind.

 

http://www.Dzogchen.org/teachings/talks/ndt05.htm

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