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Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 1
a manual
of peace:
38 Steps towards
Enlightened Living
2 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
A Dhammakaya Foundation
Paperback
First Edition 2005
Published by the Dhammakaya
Foundation
EFTA01160176
Department of International
Relations
23/2 Moo 7., Khlong Sam,
Khlong Luang
Patumthani 12120 Thailand
Tel. (+66 02) 524 0257-63
Copyright © 2005 by the
Dhammakaya Foundation
All Rights Reserved. No portion
of this book may be reproduced,
stored in a retrieval system or
transmitted, in any form or by any
means, electronic, mechanical,
photocopying, recording or
otherwise,
without the prior and express
EFTA01160177
written consent of the publisher
National Library of Thailand
Cataloging in Publication Data
Dhammakaya Foundation
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Bangkok: Dhammakaya
Foundation, 2005
466p.
1. Buddhism
I. Title
294.315
ISBN 974-93135-5-0
Printed in Thailand by :
Craftsman Press Co.,Ltd
487/42 Soi Wattanasilp,
EFTA01160178
Rajprarop Road,
Makkasan, Rajthevee, Bangkok,
Thailand
Tel: +66-2-2533009, 2533298
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 3
May the meritorious fruits
accruing
from the study of this book
be dedicated for the benefit of
George, Annie, Alice, Lilian,
Richard, Harry, Alfred George,
Arthur, Norman, Ivan (nee
Lee) & Evelyn Ayre, Ellen Mary
Stokell, Hannah Carr, George
EFTA01160179
& Charles F. Lee, Elizabeth,
John & Margaret Curry, Anne
Fenwick, Annie Jarman, Dennis
George, Dennis Arthur &
Malcolm Woods, Emily Mary
Casbon, William Jabez & Ethel
Dawes, Moses Edmund, Gladys,
Hilda, Cecil, Reginald and
Marie Heaton wherever they
have been reborn.
4 Contents
Contents 5
Preface to the First Edition
7
EFTA01160180
The Manual of Peace in Action
10
Abbreviations
18
Orientation
19
UNWHOLESOMENESS
25
1. Not Associating with Fools
EFTA01160181
2
7
2. Associating with the Wise
37
3. Expressing Respect to those
worth of respect
51
TURNING TOWARDS
WHOLESOMENESS
65
4. Living in an Amenable Location
EFTA01160182
67
5. Having done Good Deeds in
one's
past
77
6. Setting Oneself up properly in
life
91
LIFE
101
7. Artfulness in Knowledge
1
EFTA01160183
03
8. Artfulness in Application
113
9. Artfulness in Usage
119
10. Artfulness in Speech
131
LIFE
EFTA01160184
139
11. Cherishing our parents
..141
12. Raising our children
153
13. Cherishing our husband or wife
165
14. Not Leaving one's work
undone
177
EFTA01160185
SOCIETY
183
15. Generosity
185
16. Dhamma Practice
197
17. Looking after one's extended
family
205
18. Blameless Work
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213
Contents
6 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
223
19. Abstaining from
Unwholesomeness
225
20. Restraint from Drinking
Intoxicants
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233
21. Non-recklessness in the
Dhamma
2
43
BASIC
VIRTUES
251
22. Respect
253
23. Humility
EFTA01160188
261
24. Contentment
269
25.
Gratitude
281
26. Listening Regularly to
Dhamma Teachings
291
HIGHER
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VIRTUES
301
27. Patience
303
28. Openness to Criticism
.... 311
29. The Sight of a True Monk
3
21
30. Regular Discussion of the
Dhamma
331
EFTA01160190
ERADICATION OF
DEFILEMENTS
34
5
31. The Practice of Austerities
34
7
32. Practising the Brahma-Faring
357
33. Seeing the Four Noble Truths
371
34. The Attainment of Nirvana
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38
5
PRACTISED UNTIL
DEFILEMENTS
393
35. A Mind Invulnerable to
Worldly Vicissitudes
395
36. Sorrowlessness
403
37. Freedom from Subtle
Defilements
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411
38. The Blissful Mind
421
INDICES
I. General Index
425
II. Pali Index
449
III. Index of Similes
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454
IV. Index of Illustrated Examples
456
Preface 7
Preface to the First
Edition
How this book should be used
Most problems in the world can be
traced back to the
habits of the people inhabiting the
world
the things
we do, say and think until having
become used to it.
These habits can either be good or
EFTA01160194
bad. Supposing
you have good habits, the sort of
things which you
do, say and think again and again
will be the things
that bring you happiness in life —
especially the habit
of being responsible for human
dignity on a personal
level, human dignity of others in
society and
responsibility for fair economics.
All the thirty-eight
virtues discussed in this Manual of
Peace need to
become our habits if they are to be
of any use to us —
EFTA01160195
simply to know `about' the virtues
is of no use to us.
The aim in studying this Manual
for students of all
levels should be to incorporate the
virtues as their
habits following the following four
stage plan:
1. in the short term to learn rules
and regulations that
protect us from behaviours
contrary to the virtues
of the blessings;
2. in the medium term to educate
ourselves
according to the information on
each blessing in
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the text to get answers to three
questions about
the virtue, namely:
• `what' they are (concept and
definition);
• `why' the Buddha taught them
(why a
particular behaviour was either
prohibited or
advocated) and;
• `how' they can be put into
practice in everyday
life.
3. Doing that virtue so regularly
that it becomes
our habit
4. train up the people around you
EFTA01160197
to practise the
thirty-eight blessings as their
habits.
The important conclusion we get
from this threestage
process of acquiring the
thirty-eight blessings
of life is that we need to look
deeply at ourselves to
see how many of the virtues we
have accrued for
ourselves first. We should regard
ourselves as still
in our infancy as far as the spiritual
teachings go,
and make the appropriate
adjustments. Only when
EFTA01160198
we've mastered ourselves can we
have something
to offer to the world, to reach out
to others as a good
friend to build up a network of
virtue in society.
Sources used for this book
This book draws primarily on
translated transcripts
of eighty hours of lectures entitled
Monkol Jivit given
by the Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun (Luang
Phaw Dattajeevo), acting abbot of
Dhammakaya
Temple in Thailand in the
mid-seventies to those
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of undergraduate age. The beauty
of this lecture
series was abundant use of
examples from the Buddhist
scriptures and also from his own
life experiences.
A second major source used for
this book,
which was supposed to summarize
materials from
the first source into a short book
designated for
schoolchildren to do revision for
their Path of
Progress Ethics Quiz Contest was
Ven. Maha Dr.
Somchai Thanavuddho's Monkol
EFTA01160200
Jivit: Path of
Progress edition (1982). This latter
gives no exam8
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
pies, but offers a more structured
version of the
Mangala Sutta materials,
simplified in a way Asian
people can understand.
This text misses nothing of the
core content of either
these two sources. However, after
teaching these
materials to a group of western
Buddhist newcomers
in Belgium, there were still many
EFTA01160201
questions in
the audience's minds left
unresolved. Things like
respect and gratitude don't come
as second nature
to westerners. Not drinking alcohol
requires more
than a fleeting explanation in a
western culture. The
long lists of meritorious fruits of
various virtues had
to be replaced as far as possible by
`why' rationale
and where possible examples of
the damage which
can happen when certain virtues
are neglected. The
EFTA01160202
Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun's Kainphi
Gu
Wikrit Chart (2000) helped to
illustrate many social
ills from the neglect of the Six
Directions in this respect.
Ven. Maha Dr. Somchai
Thanavuddho's
Nippan ben atta reu anatta (1999)
almost completely
replaces the explanation of
Nirvana originally given
in Blessing Thirty-four. Also some
of the illustrative
examples have been replaced if
repeated. Some have
EFTA01160203
been supplemented by western
anecdotes. Where
sets of Dhamma headings are
repeated, they are usually
described in full at the first
appearance and crossreferenced
in subsequent appearances.
Finally, wherever
possible, illustrative examples and
Dhamma
headings have been traced back to
their scriptural
reference in the PTS Pali Buddhist
Scriptures to allow
students to cross-reference to other
mainstream
and academic Buddhist works. In
EFTA01160204
finding the references
and fuller illustrative examples,
heavy use was
made of Ven. Paiboon
Dhammavipulo's Dachanee
Thamm Chabab Monkola Soot
(1997, 2000, 2002). The
resulting version of the Manual of
Peace, dubbed the
Theatsheet version' in its
homepage form has been
better received by western
audiences, has had a good
web readership and is currently
being translated into
other western languages
Who should use this book
EFTA01160205
This book discusses key practical
virtues in a sequential
path of Buddhist practice. As such
it offers
more than just a dry, theoretical
approach to
Buddhist study, but can actually
form the basis of
subjective practice by students.
The level of difficulty
of this book is designed for:
• students of Buddhist studies in
the upper secondary.
In the U.K. curriculum this book
would
be suitable for students studying at
Key Stages 4
EFTA01160206
+ 5. In Scotland, for Scottish
Levels SG + HS. Although
study of Buddhism at Key Stage 4
is timelimited,
use of the index can help students
to look
in depth on selected aspects of the
agreed syllabus.
At Key Stage 5, the text can be
used for research
on project work.
• students of Buddhist Studies or
Comparative
Religion at Bachelors' or Masters'
level of
university.
• This book is useful
EFTA01160207
supplementary reading for
the GB102 course of the
Dhammakaya Open
University.
• overseas students of the Path of
Progress Ethics
Quiz Contest
• Buddhists or those interested in
Buddhism
wishing to supplement or
consolidate their
knowledge of lifestyle-related
Buddhist
teachings
What does it offer to lecturers
teaching these courses?
Lecturers will find this book has a
EFTA01160208
good range of
illustrative examples and
metaphors to support
their teachings or assemblies.
Scriptural references
are given for nearly every
example.
Student learning features
In each chapter:
• Definitions
• Links to other chapters
• References
At the end of each chapter:
• Metaphors
• Illustrative Examples
At the end of the book:
• general index
EFTA01160209
• Pali index
• index of similes
• index of illustrative examples
Preface 9
Acknowledgements
The publication of this book was
made possible
only by the special efforts of many
staff and volunteers
at the Dhammakaya Foundation in
Thailand.
This includes most importantly the
source
works in the Thai language already
mentioned by
the Most Ven.
Phrabhavanaviriyakhun, Phra
EFTA01160210
Maha
Dr. Somchai Thanavuddho and
Phra Paiboon
Dhammavipulo. Thanks also to
Phra Nicholas
Thanissaro who has translated,
compiled and field
tested this version of the text in
English. Thanks
to Phra Jessadah Kittithano for
help in tracking
down references, to Lalita
Prasertnopakhun,
Peungpit Poopornanake & Chalom
Srij arus (administrative
assistance), Anant Kittitawesin
(cover
EFTA01160211
design), the Dhammakaya
Foundation's still photography
volunteers (colour photography),
Tassin-
Sipang-Pangbaramee-Pangboon
Boontang,
Manop-Vararat-Dhitinand
Kawmark, Suwachara
S.-Thanachaporn Nishiyama &
Sukultra-Sabrina
Catts (cover shoot).
10 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Education on inner peace in the
style laid before us
in this Manual of Peace, is a must
for humanity today.
EFTA01160212
Modern day education has many
shortcomings as
illustrated ironically by the fact
that the majority
of today's disasters, come from
supposedly the best
educated being on this planet —
namely the human
being. The trouble with much of
the curriculum
materials taught in schools
nowadays is that they
ignore the concept of peace
completely. The higher
one goes in education, the
narrower one's
knowledge becomes and the
EFTA01160213
further it becomes
estranged from the concepts
fundemental to peace.
Many of the violent acts
committed in the world
are perpetrated by highly educated
persons and
often the victims are those who
have received little
education.
Education for peace needs to start
by imparting
awareness of the consequences of
one's own actions
to young people — because every
action, whether
good or bad, has an effect on the
EFTA01160214
doer's life and
others' lives as well. One cannot
afford to be
complacent or irresponsible about
one's actions.
This is why any form of education
which advocates
certain actions by a student has to
have
considerations of the peacefulness
of those actions
built into it, in order to prevent the
sort of misdeeds
done intentionally or
unintentionally that upset
society.
The sort of education that provides
EFTA01160215
awareness of
peace issues is known as `Inner
Peace Education'
(IPE). It is a form of education that
helps us know
ourselves better and know how to
manage life
properly. As a result, it is the key
success factor
behind the world peace that we are
striving for.
Provision of IPE is not as
straightforward as
conventional curriculum content.
However, as
compared with usual spiritual
provisions in school,
EFTA01160216
it has the advantage of not being
based on belief or
faith — but rather experience and
evidence. It is
based on practical knowledge. It's
applied
knowledge that offers each person
an individual
approach to true happiness
regardless of race,
nationality, religion, culture or
occupation. It is
knowledge that can form a firm
foundation to any
other form of academic knowledge
to guarantee
that the applications of that
EFTA01160217
knowledge are for
peace. It is self-education that you
can start upon
anytime, anywhere (for as long as
you are still a
human being!) — and can be
practised throughout
the day alongside our regular daily
activities in
order to increase our efficiency
and effectiveness.
It maximises the efficiency of our
time management,
rather than being a burden on our
time — if a certain
period of time each day is
allocated to it. It needs
EFTA01160218
no formal classroom, and demands
no tuition fees
either!
However, more than conventional
education, it
demands time, concentration,
perseverance,
tolerance and goodwill. These are
qualities which
are too easily eroded away by
materialism. It is only
students who are determined and
motivated who
can succeed in their studies of IPE.
IPE is not yet
The Manual of Peace
EFTA01160219
in Action
The Manual of Peace in Action 11
widespread because the value and
benefits of it are
not yet widely known.
Furthermore, because it is
evaluated on the basis of inner
experience, it is
difficult to measure success in
empirical terms.
Nonetheless, great opportunities
exist for
pioneering work in IPE. There's
already a great deal
of expertise in this field, with an
emerging group
EFTA01160220
of people who realize their lack of
knowledge
concerning peace and who are
willing to learn. If
we can overcome the obstacles that
prevent us from
realizing the real nature of peace
and avoid the
influences of segregation and bias
which are so
easily instilled by race, nationality
and religion —
through interactive communication
we can really
start to understand peace from the
inside out. Thus
although IPE is derived from
EFTA01160221
Buddhist values, it
emphasizes key human qualities
that transcend
cultural differences. It is
something that should be
a part of every child's education
from their earliest
years.The idea of IPE is that the
attitudes it instils,
will not be erased by
circumstances. It will remain
in a child's character, shaping him
to be reasonable
rather than emotional when
making decisions,
instilling a sense of responsibility
toward himself,
EFTA01160222
his nearest and dearest, his
economy, society and
the environment. To be studied,
IPE concepts need
to be translated into learning
activities by teachers
or parents. By intensive study of
advanced IPE,
young people can understand
themselves better
and have a clearer sense of purpose
in life.
Youngsters, parents and teachers
alike like to
participate actively in peace
education projects as
participants and organizers and
EFTA01160223
also form an active
network of peace volunteers
throughout Thailand
down to the present day,
generation by generation
through word-of-mouth. It is
important that before
becoming organizers and teachers
of such programs
that they first understand peace
and means of nonviolent
conflict resolution themselves —
under this
proviso, the organizers can even be
older children
organizing activities for their
younger fellows.
EFTA01160224
During the history of the `Path of
Progress' Ethics
Quiz Contest, the scale of
participation has grown
from one person to a small team
then a larger and
larger one. Over the last thirty
years, the lives of
total of over twenty million young
people in
Thailand have been touched by the
IPE curriculum
— and this can have made no
small contribution to
peace in the world community —
helping children
to open up their hearts to listen to
EFTA01160225
the teacher inside
and understand the reality of life
and the world —
healing differences, celebrating
similarities and
promoting world peace through
inner peace.
QUIZ CONTEST
The main learning activity for
implementing IPE
amongst young people is the
so-called `Path of
Progress' Ethics Quiz Contest
which has been held
nationwide every year in Thailand
since 1982. The
EFTA01160226
aim of the project is to bring
children's ethical
development to higher levels
resulting in positive
behavioral changes in a way that is
relevant to those
Teachers' round of the `Path of
Progress'. Teachers must
become familiar with IPE materials
& issues before being
able to communicate peace values
before being able to
communicate them effectively to
their students.
12 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
of all nationalities, races and
EFTA01160227
religions. The `Path of
Progress' shares the same
curriculum of the Thirty-
Eight Blessings of Life described
in this Manual of
Peace. The number of participants
started with 382
in 1982 and rose in 2002 to four
million from 13,000
educational institutes — ranging
from
kindergartens, universities, police
and military
colleges — students and teachers
alike from all over
Thailand. The winners of the
contest receive plaques
EFTA01160228
of distinction from H.M. the King
of Thailand and
representatives of many
international organizations.
Besides honorary plaques, winners
are
granted scholarships and
certificates for their
success in each category.
Case Histories of Schools
Participating in the Path
of Progress IPE Scheme
Suteetorn Kindergarten, Nakorn
Prathom, Thailand.
"We find that the teachings of the
`Path of
Progress' programme eminently
EFTA01160229
suitable to the
curriculum at our school. The
`Path of Progress'
program helps students realize the
value of
morality. Students can also adapt
these morals
to practice in their daily lives. The
Home of Peace
program (see p.16) focuses more
on the practices
of the learners, so students can
really practice
what they have learned. This is the
reason why
both programs are so beneficial for
our school.
EFTA01160230
At the beginning, we taught the
Manual of Peace
to small groups of students. As
years went by,
more students got interested, so we
had to
change the workshop format into
assemblies.
We had such an assembly each day
for the
students from first to sixth grade.
Furthermore,
our school has many activities that
are involved
with morals and ethics. For
example, the school
will let the students meditate along
EFTA01160231
to an audio
cassette of meditation instruction.
The students
usually attend Buddhist services
and practise
meditation afterwards. Later, the
students have
their own group discussions to
analyze and
comment about how they can
improve their
virtues.
Kindergarten infants, do not join
the assembly,
but they will have a homeroom
teacher. Most of
the time, the teacher focuses on
EFTA01160232
meditation
practice. The teaching for them
makes heavier
use of illustrations to overcome
their reading
difficulties. Also, they seem to
enjoy looking at
the pictures too.
We once had a boy named
Pruchya. He had
received an `Olympic' gold medal
for winning a
math contest. In all his interviews,
Pruchya said
that he always wishes to be a
virtuous person
rather than being merely a smart
EFTA01160233
one. From
listening to his interview, it made
us really proud
to see that he had lived up to our
ideals of a good
student.
In my opinion too, to be a virtuous
child is
more important than to be an
intelligent one
because at least virtuous people
can co-exist
peacefully in the world. If a person
is endowed
with self-discipline, they have the
potential to
develop intelligence and have a
EFTA01160234
successful
future. When the youth have
morality in their
hearts, they can differentiate what
is right or
wrong. They have awareness of the
consequences of every action they
do. Therefore
they perform good deeds for the
benefit of
themselves, society and the
world."
Headmistress
Interreligious participation in the
`Path of Progress'.
Christians, Buddhists & Moslems
take the teachers' round of
EFTA01160235
the `Path of Progress' so that they
can accurately pass on the
IPE concepts to their
schoolchildren.
The Manual of Peace in Action 13
School Track Record:
• 2,600 students from kindergarten
to Grade 6 have
joined the `Path of Progress'
Ethics Quiz Contest
every year from 1990 to present;
• first prize winner in the primary
school category
for 1998;
• first prize in the primary school
team category
for 2000, 2001 and 2002;
EFTA01160236
• recognized by the Thai Ministry
of Education as
`best school for cultivation of
virtue in students'
Singha Samutra High School,
Chonburi, Thailand
"The intention of our school in
joining the
`Path of Progress' scheme was
originally only
to evaluate the level of knowledge
of our
students concerning the Buddha's
teachings
and also to see where our students
stood as
compared to other schools.
EFTA01160237
However, when I saw the students'
enthusiasm in joining the
competition, I too
started to read the book, the
Manual of Peace. I
started to be involved gradually
with tutoring
the students for competitions.
After teaching
for a while, I became fascinated by
the
Buddha's teachings. I felt that I
had become a
better person morally as well as
spiritually. '
I think one of the reasons has to do
with the
EFTA01160238
fact that I am teaching Manual of
Peace to the
students. I mean, can you imagine
a person
managing to teach Manual of
Peace without
understanding moral or ethics
themselves? I
couldn't be like that.
So I felt like my attitude towards
life has
completely changed because of
this book. The
most rewarding thing I have
witnessed is to
be able to transfer my knowledge
about how
EFTA01160239
to conduct good deeds to my
students. I try to
put the basic teaching from
Manual of Peace into
all of my mainstream lessons."
One single teacher's effort,
inspired senior
students to organize a tutorial
activity of peace
for their juniors. Finally it became
the most
popular club amongst our
students."
Sompong Hunsadee: Coordinating
Teacher
School Track Record:
• 3,800 high school students from
EFTA01160240
Grade 7-12
joining the `Path of Progress'
Ethics Quiz Contest
every year from 1983 to present;
• first prize in the team category
for seven years
running from 1993-9;
• first prize in the individual and
team categories
for the 19th contest.
• first prize in the secondary
school team category
in 2002.
Recovery of a former drug-addict
"Ever since I was born, the person
I
remembered seeing the most is my
EFTA01160241
mother. She
always taught me to be a good
person and to
do good things to others as well.
Well, you may
think I would probably turn out to
be just like
Qualified teachers instruct their
students. Teachers need
to be role models of IPE and
knowledgable of its concepts to
instil virtuous habits in their
students.
14 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
other kids but it's not so.
It started when I was in high
EFTA01160242
school. I had a
big argument with my teacher and
therefore, I
decided to drop-out. I thought
school was not
necessary any more. Instead of
helping my
mother, I started to go out every
night with my
friends. I knew my mother worried
about me
but I thought I could take care of
myself.
One night when I went to a friend
's house,
one night, he showed me a small
pill that looked
EFTA01160243
like a painkiller. Curious and
ignorant as I was,
I decided to have my first contact
with drugs.
After that, I became addicted to
drugs and had
to steal money in order to buy
them daily. At
last, I became the drug dealer
myself. At that
time, I had no choice.
However, I was caught by police
and was sent
to a juvenile court. My mother
then bailed me
out from the juvenile prison. The
first thing I
EFTA01160244
asked her was, "Why did you help
me, Mom?"
My mother did not say much. Just
the sight of
tears in her eyes had already killed
me. All she
said was, "I love you. I can forgive
and will
always do so, son." After that day,
I decided to
stop doing all the bad things and
avoided
getting back into the vicious circle
again.
I decided to go back to school in
order to
avoid probation. Though I knew
EFTA01160245
that I didn't
want to hurt my mother's feelings
any more,
my subconscious still tempted me
to sell drugs
to my classmates. There was a big
fight in my
mind between the good and bad
sides. I did
not know what to do.
Fortunately, when I was at the
point of
relapse, my teacher persuaded me
to join ethics
quiz contest called `The Path of
Progress'. At
first, I saw no point in participating
EFTA01160246
in such a
program. Then she gave me a
reference book
Student `Path of Progress'
Examinations take place
throughout Thailand. Each year
more than four million students
throughout Thailand participate in
the qualifying round of the `Path of
Progress' Ethics Quiz Contest at
countless provincial
centres supervised by IBS
volunteers.
The Manual of Peace in Action 15
called A Manual of Peace to
prepare myself for a
contest. I did not know why I went
EFTA01160247
through it.
Surprisingly, I was very touched
by the
content the book offered. This
book was the
turning point of my life. I learned
to love myself,
my parents, my teachers, my
friends and others
in a more productive way. I was
taught to think
wisely before acting, to choose
eloquent and
useful words to express myself in
and to do
good deeds towards myself and
other people.
EFTA01160248
From then on, I avoided people
who
attempted to poison me with drugs
or any other
bad things. I stopped coming home
late. I tried
to help my mother in every way I
could. Right
now, my mother and I understand
each other
more. I do well at school and my
friends now
welcome me to join class activities
with them.
All I would like to say is a big
`thank you' to
the Path of Progress. They have
EFTA01160249
changed my
life. They helped me find the way
out of the
dark. I will try to help spread the
project to more
people in my community. There
are many
young people who are still stuck in
vicious
circles. They do not know how to
go out of
them. Please show them the light
at the end of
the tunnel. And please try to reach
us before
the mistakes we make in our lives
are too grave.
EFTA01160250
Mr. Visarut Komkaew
Bang Luang Vithaya High School
Nakorn Pathom, Thailand
This is the true testimony written
by one participant
of the Path of Progress Ethics Quiz
Contest. After
receiving this letter in 2000, the
IBS interviewed him
when he was in Grade 12 and had
been elected as
president of the student committee.
The main coordinator of IPE in
Thailand is the
International Buddhist Society
EFTA01160251
(IBS). IBS was
established by a 1960 Alumni of
Kasetsart
University, Bangkok. After
graduation, he took
ordination as a Buddhist monk. At
present, he is
the Most Venerable
Phrarajabhavanavisudh
(Chaiboon Dhammajayo),
President of the
Dhammakaya Foundation — a
United Nationsaccredited
Non-Governmental Organization
(NGO) associated with the
Department of Public
Information (DPI). The founder's
EFTA01160252
compassionate
mission in setting up the IBS was
to further public
awareness of ethical issues,
particularly in the
youth.
In the present day, the IBS is an
umbrella
organization of university students
all over
Thailand who sacrifice their time
to organize ethical
activities primarily for youth.
Their success is a
result of the dedication, hard work
and devotion
of an all-volunteer staff, many of
EFTA01160253
whom are former
participants in IBS activities. This
is a new wave of
student activity boasting nearly
5,000 active
members in 2003. Most IBS
activities are based on
the concept of promoting peace
through education.
Interreligious participation in the
`Path of Progress'.
Christians, Buddhists & Moslems
take the teachers' round of
the `Path of Progress' so that they
can accurately pass on the
IPE concepts to their
schoolchildren.
EFTA01160254
16 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
IBS has become a major player in
Thai youth
development an active role in
promoting peace
through a variety of peace
education programs in
Thai society.
IBS ACTIVITIES
IBS activities are divided into two
major levels —
the elementary and the advanced.
On the elementary level, it aims to
instill the
normal inner peace core values in a
child's mind.
EFTA01160255
In order to prepare them for more
advanced levels
of study when they grow up. Such
standards will
translate into a child's behaviours
and become his
own second nature. It's a self-
generated rather than
an imposed discipline. That's why
IPE has long
term beneficial effects on its
students. On the
advanced level, meditation by
students
consolidates the process of IPE in
the long run.
Meditation is a good catalyst,
EFTA01160256
because it helps youth
see and understand themselves
better, know their
own needs and serve those needs
in a more
productive way. The IBS see IPE
as lifelong
education.
The main learning activities at the
elementary
level, used by the IBS is the `Path
of Progress' Ethics
Quiz Contest' and `the Home of
Peace' (HOP).
These two projects have about 4
million students
participating annually throughout
EFTA01160257
Thailand and
receive cooperation from 13,000
schools and
educational institutions.
The `Path of Progress' provides
students with a
peace manual for students to study
as an extracurricular
activity and an annual contest to
compete in. Winners in each
category receive
honorific plaques, certificates and
scholarships to
motivate and stimulate their
interest. By reading
the Manual of Peace different
topics will capture
EFTA01160258
each student's imagination
according to their
disposition. It will guide them to
see the good and
bad sides of their own character
and motivate
them to want to improve
themselves become more
productive. They transform by
means of internally
derived discipline, rather than
discipline needing
to be imposed from outside. They
change by their
own willingness to become a more
responsible
person.
EFTA01160259
The `Path of Progress' is
complemented by a
second project called the `Home of
Peace' —
especially to supplement younger
childrens'
understanding of peace — to see if
they
differentiate peace and non-peace
in their daily
lives. The project provides a `diary
of peace' for
the children to write down their
own good deeds
and good deeds done toward their
parents,
teachers and extended family.
EFTA01160260
Since any deeds
done every day can become habits,
the IBS seeks
to value to overlook a child's
seemingly
insignificant good deeds because
these might be
the root cause of their success in
the future. Every
child tends to have his or her own
hero. If their
hero is a worthy role model, it will
inspire them to
become a virtuous global citizen.
On the contrary,
with a negative role model, they
can become public
EFTA01160261
enemy no.1. In this respect, adults
play an
important role in presenting a
model of peace to
the young people around them. By
reading,
writing and practising peace every
day, with the
co-operation of parents and school,
IPE will
eventually become a child's
second nature
allowing them to respond to every
situation by
peaceful means.
For young people who show their
readiness to
EFTA01160262
Thai royalty & international
organizations award
plaques. Winners of `Path of
Progress' championships in
the various categories receive
plaques and scholarships from
H.M. the King of Thailand and
numerous international
organizations.
The Manual of Peace in Action 17
learn at the advanced level, there
are a futher three
projects:
• Leadership Training Program:
this scheme
attracts young people by providing
advanced
EFTA01160263
IPE training in personality
enhancement,
public speaking, meditation and
social
affirmation — and it is these
young people
who go on to become `supervisor'
volunteers
who organize the `Path of
Progress'
throughout Thailand annually.
• Dhammadayada Ordination
Scheme: During
the Ordination Scheme, the IPE
used includes
Buddhist teachings made relevant
to the
EFTA01160264
needs of young men in Thai
society. This
activity is rooted in the Thai
tradition that
when a man reaches the age of
twenty he
should take temporary ordination
as a
Buddhist monk for a period to
learn spiritual
values first hand. This course
comprises two
months of intense study of IPE.
Participants
study and practice spiritual values
incorporated into their daily
routine to make
EFTA01160265
sure that improved habits are
properly
instilled and that those habits will
survive the
transfer back to daily life when
they return to
their everyday life.
• Ladies' Dhammadayada
Training Scheme: the
Ladies version of the
Dhammadayada
training is as intensive in IPE
concepts as that
of the gentlement, but participants
are not
required to ordain as nuns.
At the advanced level, IPE projects
EFTA01160266
seek to train
university students who can act as
organizers
of IPE project managers
themselves. It is because
of the trainees of these sort of
courses that the
IBS has managed to run activities
such as the
`Path of Progress' continuously
now for more
than twenty years. The unifying
feature of the
advanced projects for IPE is an
increased
emphasis on meditation.
18 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
EFTA01160267
towards Enlightened Living
A. Aiguttara NikAya (PTS
Edition)
AA. ManorathapEraAE - AIguttara
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
Ap. ApadAna (PTS Edition)
D. DEgha NikAya (PTS Edition)
DA. SumaIgala VilAsinE - DEgha
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
Dh. Dhammapada (PTS Edition)
DhA. Dhammapada Commentary
(PTS Edition)
DhSA. AtthasAlinE -
DhammasaigaAE Commentary
(PTS Edition)
EFTA01160268
It. Itivuttaka (PTS Edition)
J. JAtaka (PTS Edition)
KhpA. KhuddakapAEha
Commentary (PTS Edition)
M. Majjhima NikAya (PTS
Edition)
MA. Paparica SEdanE - Majjhima
NikAya Commentary (PTS
Edition)
MT. MahAvaOsa-TEkA
Mil. Milindapariha (PTS Edition)
MNidA. MahA Niddesa
Commentary (PTS Edition)
Ndl MahA Niddesa (PTS Edition)
Nd2 CEla Niddesa (PTS Edition)
Nd2A. CEla Niddesa Commentary
(PTS Edition)
EFTA01160269
PsA. PaEisambhidAmagga
Commentary (PTS Edition)
PTS Pali Text Society of London
S. SaOyutta NikAya (PTS Edition)
SA. SAratthappakAsinE -
SaOyutta NikAya Commentary
(PTS Edition)
SadS. SaddhammasaIgaha (P.T.S.
Journal 1890)
SN. Sutta NipAta (PTS Edition)
SNA. Sutta NipAta Commentary
(PTS Edition)
ThagA. TherAgathA Commentary
(PTS Edition)
Ud. UdAna (PTS Edition)
Vbh. Vibhanga (PTS Edition)
Vin. Vinaya (PTS Edition)
EFTA01160270
Vism. Visuddhimagga (PTS
Edition)
Vv. VimAnavatthu (PTS Edition)
VvA. VimAriavatthu Commentary
(PTS Edition)
Abbreviations
Orientation 19
A. INTRODUCTION
Welcome to the Manual of Peace.
This orientation
deals with the principles of ethical
study and the
value of the Thirty-Eight Blessings
contained in this
manual. The Manual of Peace
EFTA01160271
contains subject matter
which is not difficult
indeed it
is very popular
in Thailand especially amongst
school children
where over 4,000,000 annually
take examinations
in it. In schools where vocational
subjects rob the
curriculum of more and more time
previously dedicated
for spiritual studies, the
Thirty-Eight Blessings
have been forming an
extra-curricular recompense
in spiritual studies for children in
Thailand
EFTA01160272
since 1982.
A.1 Why study spiritual
knowledge ?
The first question that comes to
mind for many people
studying this book is to ask why
academic or
material knowledge is not
sufficient to get by in the
world. If a full stomach and a place
to sleep were
enough to keep the human happy
then we wouldn't
have to go to the trouble of
studying about ethics
or about spirituality. However, for
every human
EFTA01160273
being, there is something deeper
inside us which is
always searching for the answers
to questions on a
deeper level — something which
seeks for purpose
and meaning in the life we live and
the world
around us. If supporting yourself
were all there was
to life then certainly millionnaires
would be the happiest
people on earth. Unfortunately
wealth can
only buy physical comfort —
money cannot buy
the means to nurtur e or nourish
EFTA01160274
the mind. For all
our qualifications and diplomas we
might have,
none of them can guarantee us
against hunger of
the mind. On the contrary, the
irresponsible people
may use their cunning to do more
heinous crimes
than they would do if they weren't
educated. Thus
worldly education cannot
guarantee us a happy life
or guarantee that we will not end
up in jail. This is
why we make the distinction
between worldly and
EFTA01160275
spiritual knowledge
because
spiritual knowledge
properly studied can guarantee that
we will
not be put in jail — it is not only
something to fill
up our brains — it has
transformative power to
upgrade the way we think, speak
and act.
In the ideal world, our system of
education would
give us the answers we need to the
questions inside
ourselves, but in practice, the
secular education
doesn't manage to fill this gap —
EFTA01160276
and maybe,
even if it were to try, it could not
— because in some
way the personal quest is part of
the process of acquiring
knowledge.Thus we are forced to
look for
the answers from alternative
sources.
A.2 Fashion and Universal
Values
Many things can affect our
spiritual progress. Sometimes
it can be people, objects, attitudes,
situations
or experiences we come across in
the world. However,
EFTA01160277
for most things, the worth or
uselessness of
an experience is just a matter of
opinion. Are there
things then that have a universally
uplifting effect
on people's lives
that are more
than just a mat-
Orientation
20 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
ter of opinion?
Take present day trademarks
which are accepted
as status symbols by everyone as
an example —
EFTA01160278
Mercedes, Adidas — really such
companies should
pay us to advertise their products,
but on the contrary
we pay more for a T-shirt with the
trademark
for the privilege of associating
ourselves with the
trademark. Why should this be?
We feel that associating
ourselves with such a symbol
somehow
improves our own worth.
Sometimes we feel that
the worth of these things is
unchanging, but in fact
from age to age these values
EFTA01160279
change according to
fashion. In times gone by, people
thought in the
same way, but they didn't call
these things `brand
marketing', or `trademarks', they
called them `lucky
charms' — but again they liked to
associate with
them as a way of improving their
worth or fostering
progress in their lives. We still
have lucky
charms in the present day — things
like lucky horseshoes
or four-leaf clovers, but their role
is diminished
EFTA01160280
if compared to olden times. In
olden times
the role of charms was much more
significant.
Systems of spiritual knowledge are
attempts by
men to model the values of the
world in a way according
to unchanging universal values —
ways to
recognize the things that improve
our worth in
ways that are eternal and don't
differ from person
to person. Many bodies of
knowledge exist in the
world to help us in this respect.
EFTA01160281
They differ in their
degree of comprehensiveness. The
ideal body of
knowledge for us to learn from
would perhaps be
one with the following
characteristics:
• Progressive & Sequential
something which leads
you step by step from simple to
more complex;
• Self-Catalysing creating its own
motivation and
enthusiasm to pursue it as you go
along;
• Exhaustive being applicable to
all aspects of life;
EFTA01160282
• Holistic perhaps dealing with
problems not just
by symptoms but in their entirety;
• Multi-level working on personal,
interpersonal,
family, social and global levels
equally well;
• Non-discriminatory being
equally applicable to
those of all cultures;
• Multi-Factorial being able to
deal not just with
simple problems but with those
with many contributing
factors;
• Facilitating Practical Outlook
giving a clear
EFTA01160283
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EFTA01160284
longer suitable
for an age of globalization and
tolerance. Some systems
lead their practitioner to shut
themselves away
from the world and to ignore social
problems. Some
systems confine themselves to
their own culture or
language.
B.1 Historical Origins of the
Manual of Peace
The Blessings of Life which make
up the Manual of
Peace are interesting because they
seem to answer
EFTA01160285
to all the characteristics specified
above. They grew
up in response to just the same
type of debate over
universal values mentioned in the
introduction. In
fact, even from ancient times, men
had values —
but at a certain time in the past
2,500 years ago in
India a group of people started to
wonder whether
there was anything deeper behind
the fashions —
were there symbols of worth that
transcended fashion?
What sort of charms could
EFTA01160286
possibly allow one
to live without obstacles'.
Supposing one wanted
wealth, honour, praise and
happiness, how could
one ensure that one received just
that? There was
such a debate ensuing from this
question, over
which everybody seemed to have a
different point
of view. To generalize the debators
divided themselves
into three main camps:
1. The first group believed that the
thing to make
one's life a blessing was to see
EFTA01160287
something that
was `pleasing'.
2. The second group believed that
the thing to make
one's life a blessing was to hear
something that
was `pleasing'.
3. The third group believed that the
thing to make
one's life a blessing was the mood
in the mind
Orientation 21
which arose whenever you saw or
heard something
that was `pleasing'.
Each group disagreed with the
others because it
EFTA01160288
was obvious that an image pleasant
to one person
may not be pleasant to another. A
sound pleasant
to one person might not be
pleasant to another.
Something that creates a pleasant
mood today
might cause an unpleasant mood
tomorrow. Thus
there is nothing to make anything
discussed a
`blessing' without doubt. The
debate went on and
on without any sign of coming to
an end. It is just
like people in the present day can
EFTA01160289
still not agree
as to what is truly a `lucky charm'.
Eventually the problem was only
resolved by
taking audience with the Buddha.
A representative
asked the Buddha the nature of
blessings and
his reply is what is now know as
the Mangala Sutta
— thirty-eight blessings divided
into ten groupings.
B.2 Definitions: The Word
`Blessings'
Some may still wonder about the
meaning of the
word `blessing' [maIgala]. Some
EFTA01160290
people think a
blessing must be an object or an
action — but by
our technical understanding of the
word, we translate
it as `a cause of prosperity,
progress and happiness'.
If you want to know the definition,
you could
say that the progress towards
happiness that a
`maIgala' will bring is four-fold:
1. progress through acquired
wealth (worldly treasure,
heavenly treasure and the treasure
of Nirvana).
2. progress through wisdom, which
EFTA01160291
is the means
by which obstacles in life and evil
are abated.
3. progress through virtue through
the channels of
body, speech and mind, at the
basic, intermediate
and advanced levels
4. progress through the three
benefits: benefit in this
lifetime, the next lifetime and in
the hereafter.
A blessing is a sign that positive
development is
about to take place (to a person,
society or the
world). Unlike such principles as
EFTA01160292
that of deserved
fate, the logic of blessings is
forward looking, signifying
that something good is about to
happen.
B.3 Principles of Ethical
Learning
A working computer has two
important parts: hardware
and software. The hardware of the
computer
is the wiring and the circuitry. The
software is the
programming that we install on the
computer. The
hardware of a computer is neutral,
but what makes
EFTA01160293
the difference between a beneficial
and a degrading
computer is the type of software
installed. If
you install working programs, the
computer can
be useful. However if you install
violent games, viruses
or pornography then the computer
becomes
a source of degradation. The worth
of the computer
thus depends on the software.
A drinking glass is also neutral.
What makes the
difference between a beneficial
and a degrading
EFTA01160294
glass is the sort of drink you put in
it. If you put a
nourishing drink in the glass such
as milk then the
glass will be an uplifting one
welcomed by everyone.
However, if you put alcohol or
poison in the
glass, then the glass is immediately
eyed with suspicion.
The worth of a drinking glass thus
depends
on its content.
In the same way, a human being
has two important
parts: body and mind. By body we
mean all
EFTA01160295
22 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
the blood, bones, muscles and
organs associated
with the physical body — even the
brain, which is
a physical organ. By mind, we
mean the knowledge
and attitudes that constitute our
consciousness. The
mind is like "the ghost in the
machine". The physical
components of the human being
are also neutral.
The difference between a human
who is uplifting
and one who is degrading depends
EFTA01160296
not on
the body, but on the mental
component. Unfortunately,
the software of the human mind is
not preinstalled
from the factory! When we are
born we
are born along with an ignorance
about all aspects
of life. From the time we are
children, we spend
our life learning in order to fill the
gap in our knowledge
— to provide ourselves with the
knowledge
we need for life. The path of our
subsequent destiny
EFTA01160297
depends on the sort of knowledge
we fill ourselves
with. We can fill ourselves with
either:
• accurate knowledge: positive
knowledge which
is creative and uplifting for
ourselves and others,
or;
• inaccurate knowledge: negative
knowledge (comparable
to lies to the soul) which is
harmful to
ourselves and others.
Our knowledge increases as a
result of influences in
our surroundings. The first and
EFTA01160298
most fundamental
influence on our learning is the
sort of people that
make up our environment. The
second most important
influence is the environment in
general. Together,
these two influences have the
potential to instil us with
Right View about the world
(effectively our core values
and assumptions about the world
and our attitude
to it).
The first group (see p.25) which
concerns the acquisition
of discretion concerns our
EFTA01160299
understanding of
what is wrong and what is right.
Even if someone is
knowledgable,if their discretion is
faulty, their future
is unlikely to be bright. On the
contrary those with
good discretion but who lack
education, at least they
will not become a burden on
society. It is the basis of
Right View [samrnA diEEhi].
Simply avoiding associating
with fools will bring us wealth,
because we have
no risk of spoiling our reputation,
our wisdom is also
EFTA01160300
not at risk and may be improved
— virtue of all sorts
will start to flow in our direction.
This is the result
even of following the first blessing
— what more will
be the benefit of practising all of
the blessings in their
entirety. The benefits will be not
only to ourself, but
to society and to the world as well.
The second group (see p.65)
concerns consolidating
upon the goodness of the
discretion you already have
through the environment which we
inhabit, from the
EFTA01160301
habits we have built up for
ourselves in the past and
by setting a proper aim in life. This
style of teaching is
characteristic of the Buddha who
taught virtue in a
way that becomes successively
more complex.
The third group (p.139) concerns
how we can make
a contribution to society by our
skilfulness, so that
we ourself do not become a burden
on society and
can at the same time be a refuge to
ourself in terms of
earning our living.
EFTA01160302
The fourth group (p.139)
progresses from being able
to help ourselves to being able to
help other people as
well. The first people who we must
help are those to
whom we are indebted: our
parents. If we have new
people to whom we owe our
efforts towards virtue,
such as our children and our
spouse. Furthermore,
we have to be able to divide our
time so that neither
our responsibilities in the work and
in the home are
neglected.
EFTA01160303
The fifth group (p.183) builds on
the strength of virtue
we have built up for ourselves in
the home, expanding
the scope of our virtue wider into
societywith
generosity, public works. If you
have already got your
life under control, you will be able
to do something
for the benefit of society with
some sort of efficiency.
Those who try to help social works
when they have
not yet got their own personal
affairs under control,
may create disasters rather than
EFTA01160304
helping others. Those
who want to give advice to others
but who are unable
to speak politely, may make
enemies instead of
improving the quality of society.
Higher groups of blessings deal
with the more
subtle aspects of training the
qualities of the mind
in purity.
B.4 38 Blessings as an ethical
system
We find that the Manual of Peace
lives up to the demands
of an ethical system as follows:
1 Progressive & Sequential: The
EFTA01160305
thirty-eight blessings
are arranged according to the
degree of difOrientation
23
ficulty in practice: the easier ones
come before
the harder ones. The sequence of
blessings begins
with external practices, i.e.,
dealing with
gross social behaviours but
gradually leading up
to the more internal and subtle
ones. Following
these sets of virtues gives one an
impression of
climbing up a flight of stairs
EFTA01160306
leading to salvation.
If you don't associate with the
society of
the fools, then you enhance the
process of associating
with the wise. When you are
dealing with
the first Blessing, you are creating
conditions to
fulfill the second one. One can say
that at the
same time you respect those who
are worthy of
respect. It starts with number one.
While you are
working to develop number one, it
is already
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doing the groundwork for number
two and
number three — it's progressive.
One blessing
conditions the next progressively.
By doing the
first Blessing, you are committing
yourself to
many subsequent Blessings
thereby. By associating
with the wise, it is opening you up
to many
good things; you learn from the
wise, you
progress — all good things come
from associating
with other people. So, by
EFTA01160308
practicing one
Blessing, it will eventually lead to
practicing all
of the Blessings. And by doing
one, you prepare
for the other; they are inter-related.
This logic is
very beautiful, it leads you
ownwards step-bystep.
It allows you to improve, socially
and spiritually,
hand in hand with each other. It is
like a
self-catalysing process in
chemistry or a positive
feedback process in physics. This
makes salvation
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via the thirty-eight blessings a kind
of upward
spiral, where you move upwards to
Nirvana,
the highest goal in Buddhist
spiritual cultivation,
starting from the simplest
blessings, and
gradually perfecting yourself.
2 Self-Catalysing: When one kind
of living blessing
comes into existence or is
practiced, it will
support other kinds of virtues to
manifest themselves,
and the manifestation of any one
blessing
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will lead to development of the
next higher
blessing in the sequence.
3 Exhaustive: Other mechanisms
of spiritual values
can easily be accommodated
within it.
4 Holistic: Blessings assume the
presence of a
deeper unseen network of causes
and effects
which interact together in cycles of
positive feedback
for the ethical development of
society. Blessings
can be used as a non-subjective
socio-ethical
EFTA01160311
checklist, that cuts through
self-centred ness
that might otherwise lead to
superficial social
changes (an individual's
prosperity, for example,
being misunderstood as a sign of
social development)
because social development that is
unethical is by this philosophy, a
contradiction
in terms. It also provides a holistic
mirror to view
one's own personality and
development.
5 Multi-level: It covers the full
spectrum of human
EFTA01160312
relations from the interpersonal,
through the familial,
occupational and communal levels
to the
social. It offers a holistic
perspective of a world
governed by interrelating
conditions.
6 Non-discriminatory: This
philosophy makes no
distinction between men and
women, lay practice
and monastic practice. The set of
virtues is
not restricted to a particular sort of
person or society,
but it can be treated as the common
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good
that is shared in a particular
community or even
by the whole of mankind.
7 Multi-Factorial: The
Thirty-Eight blessings are
a means-ends model of ethics. The
ethics of the
Blessings escapes the rigid linear
dimension of
`means' and 'ends' in favour of a
multi-factorial
causality model. The weakness of
consideration
in terms of `means' and ends' is
seen when trying
to establish definitions in a
EFTA01160314
complex multifactorial
situation. With the lighting of a
match,
for example, can we say that the
match is the
means to the production of fire?
Are not oxygen,
friction and a striking surface also
means to the
production of fire? If the friction is
not sufficient
to cause ignition, can it still be
considered a
means? Is a match struck in a
vacuum still a
means? Is not Oxygen also an end
for the process
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of photosynthesis too? . . . but
simultaneously
the means for ignition? How
would linear ethics
tackle the problem of
`auto-catalytic' phenomena
(better known as vicious circles). If
definitions
of means and end are so difficult to
pindown
in such a simple scientific
situation, it is
hardly surprising that ethics based
on `means'
24 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
and `ends' are virtually impossible
EFTA01160316
to apply in
multi-factorial social scenarios.
Unfortunately,
the problems found in society are
almost always
the vicious circles that make
application of ethics
so difficult. To the question of
whether blessings
are `means' or `ends', it must be
answered
that they are both. Putting any one
of the thirtyeight
blessings into action will
contribute towards
social development. At the same
time, the
EFTA01160317
existence (or coming into
existence) of any of the
thirty-eight blessings is itself an
indicator of social
progress. Blessings also help to
avoid the
dilemma of justifying
unwholesome means by
wholesome ends.
8 Facilitating Practical Outlook:
The practice of
blessings are effective through
reversal of positive
feedback loops of decay through
the setting
in motion of positive feedback
loops of development:
EFTA01160318
firstly, to check the downward
spiral and,
secondly, to turn the spiral
upwards. Action for
social problem solving can start by
the effort to
replace any one of the thirty-eight
counterparts
of the blessings by a blessing.
Problem solving
can start with the local application
of any blessing.
The blessings encourage personal
commitment
instead of passing the buck. Once
the first
blessing comes into being, then it
EFTA01160319
will cause an
upturn in society, which will ease
the accumulation
of the next blessing in the
sequence. The
end-point, said to be the biggest
blessing of them
all, is to bring all thirty-eight
blessings into being
in society.
9 Transcending Values: The
Manual of Peace does
not focus merely on the values of
action based on
moral principles or intention for
the actions, but
rather on the modes of our
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relationships in society,
environment, family relations,
education,
communication and spirituality.
Yet, the scope of
application of blessings can even
expand to cover
the whole of the human race, with
all lives sharing
their part in the single
commonwealth of
morality—the Global Community.
10 Highlighting Opposites:
Blessings also reveal the
flipside of blessings — the `Bad
Omen' or `social
curse', which are the sign that
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something bad is
about to happen (omens of
forthcoming decay).
Where there is no development,
there must be
decay, and to this end the
opposites of the thirtyeight
blessings are representedby a set of
thirtyeight
identifiers, like tips-of-the-iceberg,
which
signal thepresence of a nest of
much deeperrooted
but invisible social problems. The
nature
of such problems is, again, that of
negative feedback
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loops or `vicious cycles' which
lead toward
decay. Unsolved, such curse will
spread, into ever
broadening circles of repercussions
with their own
vicious cycles. A comparable
example in science
might be the thermodynamic
model of loss of
entropy through the dissipation of
heat.
These are characteristics of the
Manual of Peace. In
the chapters that follow, each of
the thirty-eight
Blessings of Life will be explained
EFTA01160323
in turn.
Orientation 25
The First
Group of Blessings
"Turning your back on
unwholesomeness"
Goodness doesn't come
unpackaged. It comes as part
and parcel of
the person who does good deeds
and and who exemplifies those
good deeds. Goodness is
transmitted between people by
the example
EFTA01160324
a good person sets for others
and by a good person's teaching
and criticism of the behaviour
of a person whose level of
goodness
is lesser. Goodness is like the
food which we eat. It strongly
influences
of our view and understanding
of life and the world.To begin
with we have no idea what
goodness is. Some people tell us
that
such and such a thing is good.
Others tell us that something
EFTA01160325
completely
different is good. Who should
we believe? And when we
ask them why they consider
such and such a thing to be
good, noone
seems to know the answer. Thus
if we want to learn how to do
good deeds, we have to start
making decisions about our
lives even
from the time we are still unable
to tell the difference between
good
and evil. Although we cannot
EFTA01160326
tell the difference between good
and
evil, there are certain indicators
that allow us to tell the
difference
between people who habitually
do good and people who
habitually
do evil. The first step on this
path is the identification of the
people who habitually do evil
and we make our first step
towards
goodness by avoiding such
people. Our next step towards
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goodness
is to associate with people who
are habitually good. The third
step is to honour those who are
habitually good so that we can
start
to observe the faults in
ourselves, by comparison with
the higher
virtue of those who are worthy
of respect. Thus, the first group
of
blessings is thus almost entirely
concerned with being selective
about our friends.
EFTA01160328
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 27
A. INTRODUCTION
A.1 First Step on Journey the
Most Important
For the Manual of Peace, although
all of the blessings
are important, all of the latter
thirty-seven
hinge on the first. Thus you could
say that of all the
blessings the first is the most
important. It is like
the first tread of the steps leading
into a house. If
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you cannot climb this first step,
you will spend the
rest of your life at the foot of the
staircase with no
way of getting into the house. You
can also think of
this blessing "Not Associating with
Fools" as being
like the first step on a long
journey, without
which the voyage can never begin.
IMPORTANCE &
FORMATION
B.1 The importance of calibrating
discretion
No-one wants to make a mess of
EFTA01160330
their lives. Everyone
wants to feel that they are profiting
from the
years that pass them by
to give
them a sense of
success and achievement in their
lives. However,
the way each person defines
"success", "profit" or
achievement in their life will
dictate what they channel
their efforts into. A businessman
defines profit
in life in monetary terms so he
devotes his time and
effort into earning as much as he
can. A criminal
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might define achievement in life
by "cracking the
most impenetrable safe in the
world" or "cutting
the most corners possible" to
maximise the amount
of stolen goods he can a mass —
so he spends all
his waking hours planning his next
robbery. A
criminal doesn't particularly want
to live his life
dishonestly, but he thinks that
being a criminal is
good enough. Although everyone
seeks success (in
their various ways), in the long run
EFTA01160332
they may be
left with regrets in their mind. If
you ask why a
difference of definition of success
in life can make
such a difference to one's destiny,
it is because this
"common sense" about the world
dictates the decisions
we make about the world — and
these decisions
drive all that we say and do. In the
Manual
of Peace we call such common
sense "discretion" —
it is the basic understanding by
which we judge
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each experience and situation in
the world to know
whether it is likely to be beneficial
for us or harmful.
B.2 Discretion doesn't come
unpackaged
Discretion is a personal quality we
acquire, test and
calibrate as a result of the
experiences we meet in
life. It is not a quality we can get
by reading about
it, buying it, downloading it or
memorizing it. It
can only come as the result of our
transactions with
real people. It is a quality often
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unspoken, but easily
learned by example. Thus
discretion doesn't
come loose, but is part and parcel
of the exemplary
people who possess it.
B.3 Two Formative Influences on
our discretion
There are two major influences on
the formation of
discretion in a person. The first
major influence is
Blessing One:
Not Associating with
Fools
EFTA01160335
28 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
the example of those people we are
closest to, such
as our family and friends. The
second major influence
on our formation of discretion is
ourselves.
Sometimes we call it the ability to
be a good teacher
to ourselves [yonisomanasikAra].
Even if you have
been listening to advice for good
or bad friends,
you always have to consider
advice and justify it to
yourself before getting down to
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following the advice.
If you have accurate discretion
when you consider
things, even given faulty data, you
will have
the common sense to see through
the discrepancies
and come out with the right
decision required
by the situation — unlike the man
with unreliable
discretion, who even when given
reliable data, will
come to the wrong conclusion.
Usually we have to learn discretion
from the example
of other people by transactions
EFTA01160337
with them
first, before we can calibrate our
"auto-didactic"
discretion and come to accurate
conclusions independently
— because in the beginning we
have no
idea what constitutes a sensible
decision and what
constitutes neglect. Thus when we
are learning discretion,
at first we are very vulnerable to
the example
set by others. The example they set
us may calibrate
the way we think for the rest of our
life. Thus
EFTA01160338
a correct example has the power to
correctly calibrate
our thinking for the rest of our
lives — but
conversely, a faulty example may
damage the way
we think for the rest of our life.
DISCRETION
C.1 Benefitting from others
without catching
their bad habits
Every time we have a transaction
with a person
it is like a negotiation or
tug-of-war between us
to see whose discretion will brush
EFTA01160339
off who. In a
situation where people are unable
to recognize
good or bad examples of
discretion, then the exchange
of "discretion" will be like osmosis
flowing from a point of high
concentration to a
point of low concentration. If
Person A has a lot
of good discretion and Person B
less, then Person
A's good discretion will tend to
brush off on Person
B. If Person C has a lot of bad
discretion and
EFTA01160340
Person D less, then Person C's bad
discretion will
tend to brush off on Person D. In
practice though,
as adults with a degree of life
experience, we don't
passively let others' habits brush
off on us. If we
are able to recognize good habits
and good discretion
then we will open ourselves up
especially
to absorb them. However, if we
recognize bad
habits and bad discretion, then we
will try to protect
ourselves from picking those
EFTA01160341
habits up. Thus,
normally we are selective— and
try (to the best
of our ability and discretion) to
pick up good habits
while avoiding the bad ones. In
this way, we
can have transactions with others
without losing
our own virtues under their
influence. You can
compare it to visiting someone in
hospital who
has a fever. You can visit them,
talk to them and
console them — you can do all
these things without
EFTA01160342
catching their fever, but you would
try to
avoid having them sneeze over
you.
There are some sorts of patients
and some sorts
of illness, however, that are so
dangerous that
we cannot afford to have any
transaction with
that person. Such diseases like the
plague are so
contagious, that it is not safe for
healthy people
to transact (specifically come into
physical contact)
with them. Such patients, by the
EFTA01160343
nature of
their disease need to be nursed in
an isolation
ward with no visitors. If they were
animals, they
would be put in quarantine. When
considering
the transmission of discretion,
there are some
cases of those so contagiously
infected with
faulty discretion that despite our
immunity or
our efforts to be selective, we will
nonetheless
be infected by their faulty
discretion. Even if we
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started with healthy discretion, it
would be undermined
by the strength of negative
discretion
of those people — what more the
danger if we
are still inexperienced and
impressionable (perhaps
still children or lacking world
experience)
and don't even know what it
means to be selective?
These quarantine victims of faulty
discretion,
whether intentionally so or not, are
the first
and most fundemental obstacle we
EFTA01160345
will meet as
we try to acquire blessings
in
the Manual of
Peace we call such people by the
technical name
of "fools".
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 29
CONTAGIOUS
MISAPPREHENSION
D.1 Definition of a Fool
A fool is someone wicked, or
weak, or feeble. They
are made feeble by the fact they
habitually think, say
and do things that are
EFTA01160346
unwholesome. The root of the
lack in common sense by which
they can justify
such unwholesome behaviour is
the fact that they
don't have their mind centred or
under their control.
To call such a dangerous person a
"fool" might
seem like an understatement —
because some fools
might look like a proverbial giant
punching sandbags,
a frightening prospect for a
rhinocerii, let
alone a fragile human being. Thus,
how come we
EFTA01160347
use the term "feeble" for a fool? A
fool is made
weak like a person made weak by
a serious disease
— we do not fear him on the basis
of his strength
or knowledge or ability to think
but because his
disease is dangerous.
D.2 Four Human Strengths
Human beings have four different
sources of power:
I. Physical Strength: different
people are endowed
with different degrees of physical
strength. Anyone
with plenty of muscles and no
EFTA01160348
disabilities is
endowed with the first storehouse
of power.
2. Strength of Knowledge: derived
from one's background
of education and the experience of
passing
years. Having the ability to apply
educated
reasoning in useful subjects is the
second storehouse
of power.
3. Strength of Thought: Some
people go through
the same number of classes
together. They have
an equal amount of knowledge, but
EFTA01160349
their ability
to think through things using their
knowledge
may not be equal. Some people
know so much,
but it is of no use to them when
they come to
think things through. Someone
may know how
to mend an engine but sits idle all
day long. Why
don't they offer their services as a
mechanic? Or
earn their living in the engine
business? Sitting
around all day long, waiting for
someone to come
EFTA01160350
along and find work for them...?
We can blame
this on their having knowledge but
not using the
knowledge as part of their
thinking. Thus, if anyone
uses both their strength of
knowledge and
their strength of thought, they are
at great advantage
because they are endowed with the
third
storehouse of power.
4. Strength of virtue: When one
has both the
strength of thought and
mindfulness of what one
EFTA01160351
is doing, when one is using one's
knowledge and
thought to perform good service to
oneself and
others, one is endowed with the
fourth storehouse
of power: strength of virtue.
The human being has the potential
to be endowed
with all four storehouses of power:
physical
strength, strength of knowledge,
strength of
thought and strength of virtue.
Even if someone is endowed with
(some of) these
storehouses of power, if their
EFTA01160352
judgment is faulty,
they will not be able to put their
power to full use.
If, for example, a foolish guy is
physically strong,
and may be qualified as a professor
with a Ph.D.,
with plenty of knowledge, but
without the ability
to think properly, he will be want
to apply his mastery
of chemistry for dishonest
purposes (e.g. distilling
heroine). Thus even if you are
endowed with
only some of the four powers, you
can still be classified
EFTA01160353
with the fools
and those powers
are not
used to their full potential. At the
most a fool can
use only three of the storehouses of
power. They
can use only three of the four. Like
a four-cylinder
car in which only three of the
spark plugs fire — it
is of no use to anybody. If you
have a four-cylinder
car, all four need to work in order
to get benefit
from any one of the four. Thus, if
you know
your `cylinders' are damaged, you
EFTA01160354
don't need to
wait until none of them are left
firing before you
go for mending!
In conclusion, when we define the
meaning of a
fool as someone weak or feeble,
we can see more
clearly now that it means that they
are weak or
feeble in doing good deeds. Now
that we know
about the risk they present to our
discretion and
know a little about the reason for a
fool's weakness,
the next challenge that faces us is
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how to protect
ourselves from them. As we shall
see, we first
need to be able to recognize fools
- if we can recognize
them, we can more easily protect
ourselves
from their influence.
30 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
E.1 You cannot tell a fool by
external appearances
When identifying whether
someone is a fool or not,
we cannot base our judgement on
external appearances
EFTA01160356
we must base our judgement on
internal
features. The things we should
avoid basing our
judgement on include gender, age,
lineage, nationality,
connections, knowledge, job or
wealth. Although
fools are characterized by their
habitually
evil actions of their body, speech
and mind, because
all of these three come from within
they might not
be obvious to us, especially if we
are still at a stage
in our spiritual maturation when
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our discretion is
still inaccurate. Appearances,
gender, age, lineage,
nationality, connections,
knowledge, job and wealth
are only indirectly connected with
the quality of
the mind. When we want to
identify a fool, we need
to look for behaviours that betray
their underlying
quality of mind. The sort of
behaviours that are most
clearly identifiable are those that
come out in the
context of our interaction and
friendship with them.
EFTA01160358
E.2 How to Tell a Fool
We are not mind readers who can
observe how others
think. All we can observe are the
things which
others express openly — that is
others' words and
actions. Even fools have chinks in
their armour
which will be revealed as we
interact with them —
in fact there are five in all:
I. They like to persuade others to
do evil things:
Not only does a fool persuade
others to do evil.
He will also exemplify those evil
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deeds for others
to follow. He might skip work on
the slightest
trivial pretext and persuade his
colleagues to
do the same.
2. They like to inteifere with
things that are none
of their business: A cleaner has
the duty simply
to keep the office clean, but if
instead of doing
her duty, she leaves her work
undone and spends
her time rummaging in the
wastepaper baskets
for trade secrets, already you
EFTA01160360
should be suspicious
that she is a fool. A student has the
duty to
study, but if instead of studying
their subject they
waste their time on protests against
the government
— then again they might be a fool
masquerading
as intelligentia.
3. They like anything that is
improper: Fools have
a dislike for anything that is right
and proper.
They like playing with fire. They
like taking
drugs. They like gambling. They
EFTA01160361
like fighting
fish. They like the opportunity to
put a spanner
in the works. You can be sure that
anything they
like has someone on the receiving
end of their
suffering. Even if they take the
chance to ordain
as a monk, they will end up being
the one to
cause a schism in the order. Their
predicament
is the same as the one illustrated in
the ancient
tale of the angel and the worm.
(See §G.1 below)
EFTA01160362
4. They get angry even when
spoken to decently:
Suppose a mother warns her
daughter to dress
modestly before leaving the house
in case the
neighbours gossip. The daughter
might reply angrily
that this is how modern people
dress. Her
mother gave her a perfectly
reasonable piece of
advice but her own daughter
answers back with
the verbal equivalent of a slap in
the face. Suppose
a father advises his son that he
EFTA01160363
should be
revising instead of going on
outings so close to
his examinations. "How can you
say that?"
might shouts the boy. "Didn't you
go for outings
when you were younger?" Often
the other
person knows that they are in the
wrong, but
when they are found out and their
fault is discovered,
they lose their temper — the mark
of a
fool. A fool is like a person
covered in open
EFTA01160364
wounds. If he bumps into
something even only
lightly, it hurts. For a fool, his
mind is covered in
wounds, and when confronted with
the truth, it
hurts. Sometimes even just a
glance is enough to
provoke him to aggression.
5. They refuse to comply with
rules and regulations:
Fools heeds neither the laws of the
country
nor the local customs. If you meet
someone
who refuses to comply with the
regulations, you
EFTA01160365
can be 99% sure that you are
dealing with a fool.
If it wasn't for the law, there
would be a lot more
opportunity for fools to express
themselves
through the performing of evil
deeds. The law
forces fools to have to express
themselves less
freely or in secret. The law will
thus obscure from
the public eye the real nature of a
fool's mind. It
is for this reason that we have to
notice the marks
Blessing One: Not Associating
EFTA01160366
with Fools 31
of a fool from the first four sorts of
behaviour
mentioned above.
If you come across any of these
five features, then
it should already be ringing
warning bells in your
head.
E.3 The sixteen ways a fool might
treat you
Some people who may appear on
the surface to be
friendly, might be fools
masqueradingas friends.
The Lord Buddha called such
people false friends
EFTA01160367
[mittapatirEpaka] and categorized
them into four
types each with four characteristics
— giving a total
of sixteen forms of behavioural
characteristics
to look for. With friends like these,
who needs enemies?
1. The Mercenary [afilladatthuhara]
2. The Man of Empty Promises
[vacEparama]
3. The Flatterer [anuppiyabhAAE]
4. The One who Leads you down
the Road to
Ruin [apAyasahAya]
1. a mercenary is one who:
1. tries to appropriate your
EFTA01160368
possessions;
2. sacrifices little in the hope of
gaining much;
3. helps others only when
threatened by the
same danger;
4. only makes friends to serve his
own interest;
2. a man of empty promises who:
1. tells you how sad he is not to
have been able
to share with you something that
has already
run out;
2. promises to share with you
things they don't
yet have;
EFTA01160369
3. tries to win your favour with
empty promises;
4. has excuses every time called
upon to help;
3. a flatterer who:
1. toadies to your evil-doing,
2. toadies to your doing of good;
3. sings praises to your face;
4. gossips about you behind your
back.
4. leads you down the road to ruin
by:
1. being your loyal drinking
companion;
2. being at your side when you
roam the streets
at unseemly hours;
EFTA01160370
3. frequenting games and shows
with you;
4. joining you at the gambling
table.
Such behaviours illustrate sixteen
ways in which a
fool will unwittingly reveal his
lack of responsibility.
Besides leading us to ruin, such
people lead society
unfalteringly in the direction of
deterioration
in a way which is hard to remedy.
If you come across
any of these sixteen features, then
it should already
be ringing warning bells in your
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head.
F. AVOIDING THE
F.1 Putting fools in quarantine
In the words of the old Thai
proverb:
"Always keep a safe distance
give a hound
an armslength, give a monkey six
feet but for a
fool a hundred thousand miles may
not be
enough."
Just as mentioned earlier, when a
person has such
a dangerously contagious disease
as faulty discretion,
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we have no alternative but to
isolate them.
However, as we shall see it is not
physical distance
which we use to isolate a fool — it
is more on the
level of interaction. We have to be
careful getting
to familiar with them — that is
effectively how we
keep "psychological distance".
F.2 Association Defined
When we talk of associating with
others, what are
the limits of our definition? In fact
there are seven
different ways in which it is
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possible to associate
with others:
I. Meeting up with fools. This can
be called associating
with fools but it is only association
in its
most rudimentary form. Of course
such association
might not lead to anything. After
all it is just
our visiting them and their visiting
us. We may
not even particularly enjoy each
others company.
2. Getting closer. This is once you
start getting more
familiar with the fools you meet up
EFTA01160374
with, start
lending things to one another,
talking on subjects
of common interest, and following
common
pastimes.
3. Feeling a liking for one
another. This is once you
32 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
start to get more familiar, you start
to believe that
you have common tastes. You start
to believe that
you yourself like anything that
they like.
4. Respecting them. After a while,
EFTA01160375
you start to find
that you respect that fool for his
particular skills:
(e.g. his skill in gambling) and you
start to think
what good luck it is to have this
fool as your acquaintance
and an example to follow.
5. Moral Support. After having
admired the fool
for a long time from a distance,
you start to believe
anything they think.
6. Joining in. After sharing the
same opinions for a
long time, you start to join in with
their activities
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and follow the same way of life.
7. Influencing and instilling
behaviour to one another.
In the final stages of association, it
is impossible
to tell the difference between the
fool
and his associates. It has also come
to the stage
when it is impossible to reverse the
effects of the
fool on his associate.
Thus for any reader who realizes
that they are under
the influence of a fool they should
realize too
the danger of even casual contact
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with the personality
of someone who is a fool. There
will be an
unavoidable escalation of intimacy
even without
realizing it.
F.3 Practising non-association in
everyday life
If you want to avoid associating
with fools in your
everyday life, apart from avoiding
social contact
with fools as already mentioned, it
will be necessary
to give special attention to the
following issues:
I. Prohibit yourself from every
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sort of evil and from
all of the roads to ruin: Don't go
thinking that
the odd game of poker amongst
close friends, or
just to keep your hand in, can
surely be of no
harm to anybody. Prohibit yourself
right from
the start. This way you will save
yourself from
tears in the long run. Even if you
are someone
with weak tendencies in the
direction of being a
fool, such as liking to get up late
and ignoring
EFTA01160379
the alarm clock you have set for
yourself, you
should get tough with yourself
right from the
start. Prohibit yourself from doing
even the most
minor unwholesome deeds.
2. Make the break from any evils
you may have
committed in the past: It doesn't
matter what
sort of bad habits you might have
had in the past
— don't give yourself even the
smallest chance
to relapse. Don't even speak of
those things any
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more.
3. Make Your performance of
good deeds continuous.
There is no need to think over your
past failures
or entangle ourselves in the guilt of
your
past bad deeds. Starting from
today, you must
practise generosity, keep the
Precepts, meditate
and do the daily chanting —
continuously. In this
way the scars left by our old way
of life will
gradually heal leaving only good
behavior in its
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place.
4. In the case you have to
associate with a fool be
especially careful. Sometimes we
are put in the
situation where we have to
associate with fools,
even though we don't want to
Sometimes, for
example, we find out that even our
own boss is
involved in corruption. If we
refuse to have any
part in his dealings, we might get
sacked. What
should we do in such a situation?
If we do everything
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he orders, in the end we will pick
up his
bad habits. Our ancestors had a
simile for warning
us in such a situation. They said
you should
be as careful `as if you were
warming yourself
before the fire. If you stay too
close to the fire for
too long, you will get burned. If
you keep too
much distance, then you will be
left shivering in
the cold'. Thus, just as with the
fire, you need to
keep the appropriate distance from
EFTA01160383
the fool —
not too near and not too far.
5. You can associate with a fool
only in the case
that you are sure you have the
capability and
steadfastness to help them.
Jumping into the
water to save a drowning person is
only sensible
if you are able to swim —
otherwise you get
two drowning people! Whether
you can really
help a fool or not depends whether
your own
virtue is sufficiently steadfast to
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allow you to
help them unscathed. If you are not
yet sufficiently
steadfast then keep your distance
— even
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 33
if they are your own relatives! If
you come across
a friend who takes no heed of your
warnings,
however many times you might
tell him, you
have to resign yourself to helping
him out instead
when the suffering from their own
mistakes
EFTA01160385
starts to sink in
when the
circumstances
make him a little more ready to
listen. However,
if he is not such a bad guy, and you
are able to
make some impression on him,
then try to help
him — try to keep him from going
under. It's
not that you should be hard
hearted, but you
have to know our own limits and if
helping a
fool is beyond your capability, you
have to withdraw
our help and keep our distance in
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order to
survive.
F.4 Interaction without
Transaction
Some texts summarize the
functions of association
as two fold. Others summarize
association as a pathway
as follows: joining, receiving, and
giving.
• Joining means eating, sleeping
and investing together.
• Receiving means taking
someone on as one's
spouse, one's child, one's
employee or as one's
extended family. The point where
EFTA01160387
we start to
associate with them is the point
when we take
them on.
• Giving means that after joining
them and taking
them on, we give something to
them. Such giving
includes giving them
consideration, praise,
encouragement, lodging, food or
payment. All
of these are included in the
definition of association.
If you are associating with fools on
any of these
three levels you should be warned
EFTA01160388
to withdraw
yourself before sustaining any
further damage.
F.5 The Varieties of Fools
Some people think that they
already have enough
discretion to choose their friends
and thus overlook
the importance ofthe first blessing.
In fact, even
though we may be experienced and
adult there is a
fool with whom we have to
associate cautiously
throughout our life — that is our
"inner fool". In
conclusion, there are two different
EFTA01160389
types of fool in
the world
the fool in the outside
world and the
inner fool. The inner fool is the
little"devil" that
seems all too ready to justify your
doing the things
for which you should know better.
They are the erroneous
discretion that creep into our
heads, and it
is our task to put an end to the
arising of such fools
in the mind.
Further to the temptation to be
complacent about
our ability to recognize fools, it
EFTA01160390
should be added
that parents have a special
responsibility to their
exemplar-sensitive children to be
cautious about the
sort of friends they associate with
— and even to
choose a school and teacher for
their children to
help them to avoid associating
with fools. This subject
is dealt with in more detail in
Blessing Thirteen
— nevertheless a little extra
attention on this front
right from the beginning of our
study of the blessings
EFTA01160391
can help to ensure a bright future
for them —
preventing tears when it's too late
to reverse the
problems (like drug-addiction).
G.ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
G.1 The Angel and the Worm
(traditional)
Once upon a time there were two
young men who
were friends. How they came to be
friends no-one
knew, because one was found of
doing meritorious
deeds, while the other did only evil
deeds all his
EFTA01160392
life — like cockfighting, fish
fighting, taking drugs
and alcohol.
When he was working as a
merchant, he would
sell only fake goods and stolen
goods.When he was
a teacher, he wouldn't teach
normal subjects to his
pupils — he would teach all the
shortcuts and loopholes
in the law.
Even with such different tastes, the
two friends
managed to maintain both their
identity and their
friendship until they both passed
EFTA01160393
away. When the
good guy died, he was reborn as an
angel in heaven.
The bad guy was reborn as a worm
in a lavatory.
One day the angel was wondering
what had become
of his friend. The angel checked
every level
of heaven but could not find his
friend. He checked
the human realm, but again his
friend was no where
to be found.The angel made a
further check and
was surprised to see that his friend
had been born
EFTA01160394
as a worm in a lavatory. The angel
wondered what
34 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
he could do to help his friend, and
tolerated the
revolting smell of the lavatory out
of compassion
in order to stand at the edge of the
toilet bowl and
make himself known to his friend.
Standing at the
rim of the toilet bowl, he changed
himself into his
old human form.
"Old friend do you remember
me?"asked the
EFTA01160395
angel.
"Of course," said the worm."We
used to be
friends a long time ago."
"0! Worm! Now I am an angel.
Today I have come
to do you the biggest favour of
your life. I have come
to invite you to join the heavenly
host. However,
there is one condition. If you want
to be an angel
you have to keep all the precepts
without breaking
any of them from this day
onwards. You must think
only meritorious thoughts and do
EFTA01160396
meritorious
deeds and before long we'll be
able to abide in the
same heavenly host."
"What's so great about being an
angel?" asked
the worm.
"You can get whatever you wish
instantly simply
by thinking of it. As soon as you
think of angelic
sustenance, ambrosia manifests
itself. If you
think of clothing then instantly you
are clothed in
angelic apparel. If you think of a
heavenly mansion,
EFTA01160397
then a heavenly mansion arises
instantaneously.
All you have to do is have the
intention and
hundreds of good things will come
your way.
"In that case I don't want to be an
angel. I'm better
off as a worm thank you."
"What do you mean?" asked the
angel.
"If you are an angel you have to
make the wish
before you get what you want. As
a worm I don't
even have to make the effort to
think. Excrement in
EFTA01160398
the toilet just keeps on flowing into
my mouth. Just
leave me alone because I'm better
off as a worm."
In such a case it is obvious that he
is so used to his
foolish ways that in the end he is
beyond help.
G.2 Metaphor: Leaves wrapping a
stinking fish
Another parable used by the Lord
Buddha is that
of the leaves wrapping a putrid fish
taking on the
same putrescant smell of the fish
itself.
G.3 Metaphor: Burning hovel
EFTA01160399
next to a palace
Our ancestors had a parable. They
said that to associate
with a fool, no matter how good
we might
originally be, is like building a
palace next door to
a hovel. Whenever the hovel
catches fire, no matter
how safe the palace is from fire, as
soon as the hovel
goes up in flames the palace burns
down as well,
just like the virtuous person
destroyed by association
with fools.
G.4 MahAkassapa's Kuti Burned
EFTA01160400
Down by
Foolish Student (KuEidEssaka
JAtaka J.iiL71)
In the time of the Lord Buddha,
there was an elder
monk of unblemished virtue
named Kassapa. He
was respected by all of the
enlightened monks and
other members of the monastic
community. Even
the Lord Buddha's closest disciple
/nanda, had
great respect for Ven. Kassapa.
It was the norm for the elder
monks of the community
to accept newly-ordained monks as
EFTA01160401
their
disciples, in order that those new
monks could receive
training. Some of the elders
accepted more
than others in keeping with their
ability as teachers.
Ven. Kassapa accepted three or
four disciples
but it turned out that among their
number was a
stubborn monk, UluIkasaddaka
who would listen
tono-one's advice. On winter
evenings it was
the duty of the disciples to boil
water for the elder
EFTA01160402
monks for them to take a bath in
comfort. The stubborn
disciple would never boil water for
Ven.
Kassapa in accordance with his
duty. He would always
leave the chore of boiling the water
to his fellows
while going himself to invite Ven.
Kassapa to
wash as if he had boiled the water
himself.
Everything else the stubborn
disciple did was in
the same vain. Instead of going on
alms round, if
he fancied something special to eat
EFTA01160403
the stubborn
monk would claim to temple
supporters that Ven.
Kassapa wanted such-and-such to
eat and when
they brought such-and-such a food
to offer, he
would eat it himself.
Ven. Kassapa knew what was
going on and
warned the stubborn monk,"to be
so lacking in respect
is not in keeping with having
ordained as a
monk. You must train yourself
better than this in
Blessing One: Not Associating
EFTA01160404
with Fools 35
future."Kassapa warned the
stubborn monk continuously,
but the only effect of the criticism
was to
make him feel as if his master was
singling him out
unfairly for criticism.The more
advice he received
from his master, the more
victimized he felt. Instead
of feeling grateful for all the
special attention his
master had given him, he planned
on getting his
revenge. He planned the following
day instead of
EFTA01160405
going out on almsround with the
rest of the disciples
for the master's breakfast, he'd
stay behind,
let the master go for almsround
himself and burn
down the master's kuti while he
was gone. In this
case it is clear to see the behaviour
of a fool who
repays a master's advice given
with the best of intentions,
by burning down his master's
house. Ven.
Kassapa came back from his
almsround to find only
ashes where his kuti had stood.
EFTA01160406
The disciple had
run away.
The Lord Buddha heard the story
and disclosed
to Ven. Kassapa that the stubborn
disciple had been
a fool causing damage not only in
this lifetime, but
in previous lifetimes as well:
In that previous lifetime, Kassapa
had been born
as an oriole while the stubborn
monk had been born
as a monkey. The two inhabited
the same tree. The
oriole wanted to waste no time in
building a nest
EFTA01160407
to protect itself from sun, rain and
dust
but at
the same time the oriole warned
the monkey, he
ought to build himself a nest
against wind and rain,
sun and dust, because he had
perfect gripping
hands like a man, and could build a
nest even more
easily than the bird with her beak.
The oriole told
the monkey to build its own nest
again and again.
but the monkey never took any
notice. When it
came to the monsoon, the oriole
EFTA01160408
ducked into the
shelter of its nest whenever it
rained, while the
monkey sat out in the rain sobbing.
The oriole felt
sorry for the monkey and thought
the time had
come to tell the monkey to build a
nest. Perhaps
now that he'd had a good soaking
he'd see the value
of the advice. Thus the oriole
poked its head out of
its nest and told the monkey ,"you
ought to build
yourself a nest against wind and
rain, sun and dust,
EFTA01160409
because you have perfect gripping
hands like a
man, you can build a nest even
more easily than I
can with my beak. As soon as the
rain stops build
yourself a nest !"
The monkey replied,"If I wanted to
build a nest I
could build one easily
but even
though my body
is like that of a man, my
intelligence is the lesser."
"You're a strange case," said the
oriole. "Some
days you go around destroying the
nests of others
EFTA01160410
but when it comes to the monsoon,
you're the
only one without a roof over your
head. This is
the destiny of one ungrateful for
the generosity
of others. You had better start
improving yourself!"
The monkey was stirred to anger
by the criticism.
Soaked to the skin by rain and only
insulted
further by a bird from inside the
comfort of a dry
nest, the monkey climbed up the
tree to the oriole's
nest and pulled the nest to pieces.
EFTA01160411
As a monkey he had pulled the
oriole's nest to
pieces. As a human, he put his own
master's kuti
to the flame, even though his
master had spoken
only kind words.These are the
identifying features
of a fool and are the reason why
we have to beware
of this type of person.
36 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 37
A. INTRODUCTION
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The second Blessing of the
Thirty-Eight, concerns
how in our self-cultivation we can
successfully close
the door on unwholesomeness in
our lives, to prevent
ourselves from slipping any further
back on
the slippery slope of spiritual
entropy. At this point,
when our discretion and sense of
conscience is still
not very accurate, we are not yet
sufficiently versed
in spiritual ways to become a Wise
One ourselves.
However, what we can start by
EFTA01160413
doing is to learn
how to recognize others who are,
and to associate
with them so that some of their
discretion may
brush off on us.
A.1 Difference between
knowledge and wisdom
A wise one is distinguished by his
or her wisdom.
Before starting this blessing it is
important to define
this wisdom clearly because being
`wise' is not the
same as being `educated'.
`Wisdom' as intended in
this blessing is the discretion as to
EFTA01160414
what is real
`profit' in our lives as outlined by
omission in our
description of fools in Blessing
One. In fact, being
educated is also a blessing, but its
details can be
found in Blessing Seven. The word
"wise one" of
this Blessing comes from the Pali
word "paAlita"
better known in our language as
"pundit". Some
people believe that you can
become a "pundit" simply
by getting yourself a graduation
certificate from
EFTA01160415
a reputable university. In fact if
you get yourself a
good degree and set yourself up in
business and
make a success of it, you will earn
praise and respect
from many other people. However,
there are
no small number of the more
unscrupulous
amongst these who find
themselves behind prison
bars inspite of all their academic
knowledge. Thus
in spite of all their good intentions
it is reasonable
to assume that such graduates are
EFTA01160416
not truly wise
but are only wise in the ways of the
world. The sort of
wisdom we are interested in, in
this section, is the
sort of wisdom that will, at the
very least, keep you
out of jail and ensure wholesome
profit for the
owner both this lifetime and in the
here after. This
sort of wisdom is called spiritual
wisdom. The best
example of the wise man in the
present day must
have both wisdom of the ways of
the world and
EFTA01160417
spiritual wisdom to a true example
of a wise man.
A WISE ONE
We are all people alike, equipped
with a body and
a mind, so what can be blamed for
the different
amounts of success people meet
with as they go
through their lives? Why is it
advantageous to associate
with one sort of person and not
another? If
you look at people just on the
surface, the reason is
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not obvious. You have to look
deeper.
B.1 People distinguished by
quality of mind
In these days of human rights, we
do all we can to
make people equal, but it is not
always so easy.
Blessing Two:
Associating with the
Wise
38 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
When it comes to differences of
wealth or access to
EFTA01160419
education, it makes sense to give
people the maximum
of opportunities to help
themselves. But
where the system of rights breaks
down is when
people no longer want to help
themselves any more
— or when people don't even want
to live their lives
by the rules of decency that bind
society together.
Of course there are some people
who claim that
even criminals should be given full
human rights
and who spend their time feeling
EFTA01160420
sorry for sentenced
murderers. However, for the most
part we
accept that when a person's
behaviour deviates into
violence or vengefulness or cruelty
so far as that of
a wrong-doer, no matter whether
the police catch
him or not, that they are no longer
dealing with a
person like you or me any more.
There is a "screw
loose" somewhere in the thinking
of such people.
Even though they might have two
arms, two legs
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and a head just like you or me, but
there is a difference
of mind so great that it makes that
person dangerous.
Whats more the deviation of
thinking of
such people is (as discussed in
Blessing One) so contagious
that it brushes off on the people
who associate
with them.
B.2 Effect of differences in the
quality of mind
It is differences of mindi that
distinguish such people
from the rest of the world whose
lives are governed
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by discretion.To pinpoint why a
fool suffers
from faulty discretion, is hard to
explain to a person
who has never tried meditation.
The difference between
the mind of a fool and the mind of
a wise one
is a difference of quality. The mind
of a fool is one
where the thoughts are confused
— a mind which is
unyielding and blind. Such a mind
is dull and cannot
think constructively about any
subject. Such a
mind is blind to reality. If you
EFTA01160423
were to compare such
a mind to glass, you could
compare it to opaque or
frosted glass.Whatever you look at
through glass of
this type will appear distorted, dark
and formless.
By contrast, the mind of a wise
man is like crystal
clear glass. Everything viewed
through the glass is
crystal clear. Like a clear mirror,
you can even see
yourself as you really are.
You might doubt that the mind, as
an abstract phenomenon,
could have such a powerful
EFTA01160424
influence on
our destiny — but the mind is in
fact of utmost importance
because every dealing we have
with the
world must pass through the
channel of our mind.
Consider looking at the world in
the mirror. What
ever is situated in front of the
mirror will show its
reflection instantly. Furthermore, a
mirror only the
size of the palm of your hand is
large enough to show
the reflection of an entire
mountain! All it needs is
EFTA01160425
for the mirror to be really clear,
that's all, in order to
be able to show instantly the
reflection of any object,
indiscriminable from the real
object itself. In the same
way, all it takes is for the mind to
be really clear and
it too can instantly hold, examine
and understand
anything and everything as it really
is. All of this is
by contrast with the man who has a
clouded mind
(who we have compared to a dull
or frosted mirror)
which can do nothing to facilitate
EFTA01160426
clear understanding,
who cannot comprehend clearly
because his own
mind is clouded. Because the mind
of a fool is distorted,
he sees the world in a distorted
way. When
everything he sees is distorted,
how does he interact
with the world? The answer to this
question is, "in
the way he thinks is appropriate"
— namely, according
to thought, speech and action
which are distorted
from the norm. On the contrary,
because a wise man
EFTA01160427
has a mind that is crystal clear like
a diamond he
sees the world clearly
as it
really is. Thus, he can
deal with the world in a way that is
appropriate on a
more cosmic level than the fool
who is locked up in
his own selfish view of the world.
Meditation is the main means by
which we can
upgrade the quality of our mind.
Once we realize
the peril of having a mind which is
dull, clouded
and of generally low quality, we
can start to appreciate
EFTA01160428
why meditation is so important in
the prevention
and cure of problems in our lives.
B.3 The Ups and Downs of the
Mind from Day-to-Day
Very few people are out and out
murderers and
plunderers. At the same time very
few people are
completely pure in mind. The ones
who are already
"arahants" have no need to waste
time reading a
book like this. 1. The terms `mind'
or `mental' are used in the Asian
sense
meaning the abstract phenomena of
EFTA01160429
`spirit' or `awareness' rather
than the western concept of `brain' or
`nervous system'.
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 39
An example of ups and downs in
the quality of
mind of someone like you or me,
who lies between
the extremes, is the man who gets
up in the morning
with the best of intentions and
enthusiastically
prepares almsfood to offer to the
monks. At the time
he is preparing the food his mind is
as clear as that
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of a wise man. However, even
before the monks
have arrived on almsround, he has
lost his temper,
shouting at his children and his
state of mind has
been reduced to that of a fool.
When the monks arrive,
his mind is back to a state of
clarity as he gives
the alms and pours water from the
vessel to transfer
the merit — he has recovered for
himself the
clear mind of a wise man. But as
he is leaving for
work he spoils his state of mind
EFTA01160431
again, shouting at
his kids for being late for school.
As soon as he
leaves the house, he gets his
temper back. In the
best of moods he makes the
intention to do the very
best he can at work that day — to
make every penny
of the wage he receives from his
employer worthwhile.
The black clouds in his mind go
over the
horizon and he's back in the frame
of mind fitting
for a wise man. But alas, another
car cuts in in front
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of him, someone overtakes him on
the inside and
thoughts of revenge stir up a storm
of road rage in
his mind spoiling his quality of his
mind and the
rest of his day. Don't worry this
man is not something
special. When talking about such
imperfection
of mind it is not the same as
mental illness —
merely inefficiency in our quality
of mind. Most of
us have the same ups and downs in
the course of
making our way through life in the
EFTA01160433
real world.
B.4 Varieties of people
If we were to divide people
according to the quality
of their minds, being very
simplistic we can divide
people into a minimum of three
different types:
1. Those whose mind is usually
clouded — the
fools;
2. Those whose mind is usually
clear — the
wise;
3. Those half way in between
whose mind is not
entirely clear, but at the same time
EFTA01160434
their mind
is not completely obscured by
clouds.
This third category represents the
majority of good
intentioned people in the world.
We're not yet free
of mental defilements and for this
reason we earn
the special name of kalyAAabAla.
"KalyAAa" means
beautiful or good. "BAla" means
the fool. Together
the two words mean the
good-intentioned fool.
Sometimes a fool, sometimes a
wise man — but not
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a 100% accomplished example of
either of the two.
Another term often used in
Buddhism for this sort
of person is puthujana'. The root
meaning of
"puthu " is `thick'. The root of
"jana" means person.
Such a thick person doesn't mean
that he lacks
intelligence, but conveys instead
that he has a thick
rind or peel — and the thing that
makes it thick is
the defilements in the mind. In the
case of those
whose layer of defilements is not
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so thick that they
can still listen to reason, they can
be referred to as
kalyAAaputhujana, because they
still have some
hope of scrubbing through those
defilements to
reach the innate wisdom that lies
within. The first
step for a kalyAAaputhujana in
working his way
towards his own inner wisdom is
to be able to recognize
the wise men amongst his
acquaintances so
that he can pick up on the good
character possessed
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by a wise man as his standard in
elevating the quality
of his own mind.
We can define the Wise One in
any one of four ways.
In effect, the definitions overlap
they differ only
in emphasis:
C.1 Defined in terms of discretion
A Wise One is one who has the
discretion to discriminate
what behaviour is wholesome and
what
behaviour is unwholesome,
specifically:
• knowing what constitutes good
EFTA01160438
and what constitutes
evil;
• knowing what constitutes right
and what constitutes
wrong;
• knowing what constitutes merit
[puilfia] and
what constitutes demerit [pApa]
C.2 Defined in terms of behaviour
A Wise One is someone who
habitually thinks,
speaks and acts in a good way. All
of the features of
40 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
a wise man discussed so far have
all been his external
EFTA01160439
characteristics
but on closer
inspection it
turns out that the wise man has
several spiritual
features that distinguish him from
the ordinary fool:
1. The wise one is wont to think
habitually in a good
way: His habitual way of thinking
comprises at
minimum: non-greed, non-hatred
and right view.
Going beyond this, his thoughts
are downright
wholesome and include loving
kindness (in place
of non-hatred), generosity (in place
EFTA01160440
of non-greed)
and right view (in place of wrong
view).
2. The wise one is wont to speak
habitually in a
good way: The wise man is apt to
be well spoken
in diametric opposition to the fool
who has
only a babble of insults to decorate
his intelligence.
There are four ways in which the
wise
speak good words:
1. He avoids telling lies. The wise
one will always
speak the truth. He is always a man
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of
his word.
2. He avoids divisive speech. The
wise man by
contrast will always be the one to
mend the
differences between others by his
words. He
will be the one to forge harmony
within a
group.
3. He avoids the use of swear
words and harsh
words. No matter how angry the
wise man
is, he will not even consider
insulting others.
EFTA01160442
The wise man gives careful
thought to the
every word that escape his lips.
4. He avoids idle chatter. If the
wise man knows
what he has to say is without use,
he will keep
it to himself— he will maintain
`noble silence'.
3. The Wise One is wont to do
only good deeds:
The wise one likes to perform
physical good
deeds with an emphasis on being
compassionate
[mettA/karunA], getting down to
earning an
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honest living [sammA AjEva] and
marital fidelity.
The fool by contrast is continually
killing,
stealing and committing adultery.
C.3 Defined in terms of virtues
A Wise One is wont to
demonstrate the following
four virtues:
1. Gratitude [katalifiE]: He
recognizes the debt of
gratitude he may have to others
2. Self-Purifying [attasuddhi]: He
purifies himself
of all evil
3. Purity [parisuddhi]: He purifies
others of all evil
EFTA01160444
4. Endearing [saigaha]: makes
himself useful to
society
C.4 Defined in terms of the profit
sought from
life
In Blessing One we have already
seen that the discretion
concerning the nature of profit in
life for a
fool is different from that of a
Wise One. In Buddhism
we have two definitions of profit in
life: profit
in the short-term and profit in the
hereafter.
C.4.1 Material profit defined
EFTA01160445
(A.iv.281)
The Lord Buddha taught four ways
in which the
wise one accrues benefits in the
present lifetime (in
Pali the
ditthadhammikatthapayojana). In
Thai
culture they are colloquially
referred to as the `four
chambers of the millionaire's
heart' or more simply,
the way to set yourself up in life.
As we have
said, sitting idle will do nothing to
ensure your comfort
in life. Comfort doesn't come
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unearned.Thus
comfort in one's old age must
come from hard work
in one's youth, when one is still
physically strong
enough to be productive in one's
work. The wise
will, while they are young, store up
the means to
live comfortably in their old age
when they are no
longer able to earn. There are four
virtues for accruing
benefit in the present life. These
are:
1. Diligent Acquisition
[uEEAnasampadA] i.e. not
EFTA01160447
being too lazy to go out and earn a
living. Wise
is the man who applies himself to
the task in
hand (not sitting around all day
and waiting for
money to appear magically)
2. Stewardship
[ArakkhasampadA] means both
saving and protecting what you
have earned
3. Associating with Good Friends
[kalyAAamittatA]
means the same as associating with
the
wise — that is the title of this
Blessing
and to
EFTA01160448
avoid associating with the evil
especially the
sort that are always trying to
persuade you to
go and gamble or go down to the
pub.
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 41
4. Appropriate Spending:
[samajEvittA]. This means
being thrifty in spending your
earnings. Anyone
who has already expended so
much effort in
earning a day's wage should get
full benefit from
their own earnings without being
EFTA01160449
extravagant
and also without being so stingy
they don't allow
themselves to use their money for
any material
comfort.
C.4.2 Spiritual profit defined
(A.iv.284)
The wise man recognizes that he
cannot live by bread
alone and that for all the material
wealth he might
earn, it cannot buy him spiritual
fulfilment. Thus a
second important form of profit in
life is spiritual
profit
better known as profit in
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life for the hereafter.
This again consists of four virtues
to be cultivated
during one's lifetime
[sampAyikattha-payojana].
I. Faith or Confidence means
faith that doing good
deeds will lead to good outcomes
(for the doer)
and that doing evil will lead to bad
retribution
and giving rise to the commitment
to perform
the maximum of good deeds
throughout one's
life. Faith is the first step upon the
road to striving
EFTA01160451
to do so many good deeds.
Sometimes the
clarity of peoples' minds is
insufficient for their
mind to be faithful continuously.
They may be
faithful when they wake up but
later on in the
morning the inspiration fades
away. The Lord
Buddha referred to such faith as
`turtle-head
faith' because sometimes the faith
shows itself
like the head of a turtle, but just as
often it will
disappear out of sight inside its
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shell! This is not
the nature of the faith of a wise
man whose faith
is steadfast and commitment
continuous. 'Turtle-
head faith' is not so hard to find
like the
man who takes the Precept in the
morning not
to kill any living being but as soon
as the tiniest
of mosquitos tries to bite him he is
slapping it as
if his good intentions are all
forgotten — but the
mosquito disposed of he thinks,
"Oh! I'm taking
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the Precepts today, all you
mosquitos had better
get out of my way before I change
my mind!"
Such `turtle-head faith' is no use to
a wise man.
With a mind that is crystal clear, a
promise even
to oneself, is a promise to be kept.
2. The Precepts. You must keep
the minimum of
Five Precepts as the baseline of
one's virtue because
the Precepts measure the degree to
which
you are a person as opposed to
being a savage.
EFTA01160454
Any time you want to find out to
what extent
you are human, you can use the
Five Precepts as
your benchmark. If all five of the
Precepts have
been perfectly kept, you can
conclude that you
are 100% human that day. If only
four of your
Precepts remain intact, you can
conclude that
you are only 80% human. If only
three remain
you are only 60% human, your
fangs are beginning
to show. If only two remain you
EFTA01160455
are only
40% human, your fangs are longer
and traces of
a tail are visible. If only one
remains you are only
20% human and the remainder of
you is 80%
savage. If none of your Precepts
remain intact,
nothing human remains about you.
Try swapping
yourself for a dog in anyone's
house but
no-one will accept the trade in.
The dog is worth
more than you are. You can fairly
say that keeping
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the Five Precepts is the thing that
closes the
doors of hell. Because Five
Precepts are the only
thing that underpin our status in
the human
realm. Thus for the wise man,
there is no doubt
as to maintaining the Five Precepts
and his humanness
for the whole time, throughout his
life.
3. Generosity: That we are still
alive and well today
on the long path since our birth is
only because
we have relied upon the generosity
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of others
all along the way. If on the day we
were born,
our mother had refused us her
milk, our first day
of our life would have been our
last. If all
throughout our childhood, our
mother, father
and relatives had refused us their
care and attention,
where would we be today? The
fact that
we have managed to learn to read
and write and
master knowledge of the world is
only because
EFTA01160458
our teachers have given their time
and energy
to educate us all through our
schooldays
[vidhayadAnaJ. Whenever we
have made mistakes,
in our childhood and maybe only
been
punished for it and then forgiven
(rather than
being put to death for our errors) is
because others
have been prepared to forgive us
our tres42
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
passes [abhayadAna]. When you
EFTA01160459
grow up and
marry, again you can only get by
as a result of
the time and energy your spouse
gives to support
you, sharing mutual earnings.
Without such
giving the marriage would
certainly be on the
rocks within the space of seven
days. Ultimately,
even the pavilion where you go to
listen to sermons
and the chairs you sit on to listen
to it, all
originate from the charity of others
and that there
EFTA01160460
is a monk with the time and energy
to give you
the sermon is another sort of
giving
[dhammadAna]. Thus, in addition
to faith and
keeping the Precepts, it is
necessary to be generous
too if you are to number amongst
the wise.
4. Wisdom [pafifiA]: To be
specific, anyone who is
diligent in studying the teachings
of the Lord
Buddha will attain wisdom — the
mark of a wise
man. Anyone who lies around in
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bed all day has
no chance of accruing wisdom. For
the wise man,
simply developing the four
chambers of the millionaires'
heart is not enough. He must seek
out
wisdom too. When it comes to a
holiday instead
of lying around in front of the TV
or going to the
cinema, he is already on his way to
the temple in
the early morning to study what
the Buddha
taught. This is what we call
seeking out wisdom.
EFTA01160462
The fool is one whose
understanding of profit in
life conforms neither to material
nor spiritual profit
in life. Thus we can say that the
wise man is one
who understands and works
towards profit both
in this lifetime and the here after
— i.e. both material
and spiritual profit in life.
C.5 Defined in terms of quality of
mind
The wise man is one whose mind
is habitually pure.
A person could be completely
unqualified. He could
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even be completely illiterate
but
if his mind is
habitually pure, he is a wise man.
The reason for
this is that just the fact that the
mind is pure has a
snowball effect because it sets his
standards of
judgement and discretion and this
alone will ensure
that wisdom is invested in
everything he does
— whether it may be thought,
speech or action.
ONE
D.1 Tell-tale Behaviours (5)
EFTA01160464
Many of the characteristics of a
Wise One mentioned
above may not be immediately
apparent to
us because they are not external
features. Thus we
may have to look at the following
five characteristics
which will betray the wholesome
inward qualities
of someone who is wise:
1. The wise like to shepherd
others to live their lives
in a proper way. Asked where one
can go on a
Sunday, he will reply, "to the
temple of course
EFTA01160465
— don't waste your time going to
the cinema."
Or passing him in the street, "it
looks like rain,
you ought to get the harvest in
before it spoils."
If you were to meet a fool in the
same circumstances,
he'd give you altogether different
advice
"it looks like rain, if you're
feeling aches
& pains you'd be better off down
at the bar with
a stiff whisky down your throat!"
Both the fool
and the wise man are persuaders
EFTA01160466
but their persuasion
leads to different results indeed.
2. The wise take full responsibility
for the things
that are their own business. Apart
from being
responsible, they will influence
those around
them to be responsible in the same
way. What
the wise won't do is interfere with
other peoples'
business. They know where to
draw the line
in order to avoid nosing into
others' affairs. The
fool by contrast is often more
EFTA01160467
interested in interfering
in other peoples' business than he
is about
taking responsibility for what he's
meant to be
doing.
3. The wise favour the honest and
the decent. Its
no use trying to persuade him to be
dishonest or
unscrupulous, because he is above
those sort of
things. The fool by contrast is
proud of the fact
that he can get away with
anything. Nothing is
too low for him.
EFTA01160468
4. The wise man is not easily
angered. He is grateful
for criticism from others. The fool,
by contrast,
even if criticized in the politest of
ways will
lose his temper. Even if someone
offers him criticism
with the best of possible intentions,
he'll
turn round with a scowl and
answer back,
"you've been constantly picking
on my faults".
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 43
If you smile at him, he'll interpret
EFTA01160469
your smile as
teasing and turn his back on you.
Even just
speaking to a fool can make him
lose his temper.
Sometimes you don't even need to
say anything.
Just seeing you look at him can
upset him —
"What are you looking at me like
that for?" The
fool is constantly on the lookout
for a fight. The
wise man by contrast is hard to stir
to anger. Thus
if you recognize yourself as
hot-tempered, you
EFTA01160470
ought to associate with the wise
and this will
gradually cool down your fiery
temper. However,
you shouldn't confuse the
cool-tempered
wise man with the inert and
irresponsive character
of the sort of guy who sleeps all
day and
seems to do everything in
slow-motion. These
dopey sorts are irresponsive to
nearly everything
around them, but don't think
they're free of all
defilements. They are another
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breed of person
altogether from the wise men we
aim to associate
with.
5. The wise favour self discipline
and orderliness.
When we live together in society
with a huge
number of other people, if we
don't comply with
the laws laid down in society, we
end up as misanthropes.
The regulations say that when you
are at the temple, at the appropriate
time you
must come to sit in the main
pavilion and sit in
EFTA01160472
neat lines, without encroaching on
the people
sitting next to you, that way there
is enough
space for everyone and everyone
has an equal
area to sit in. The fool, however,
doesn't respect
the rules. He doesn't like obeying
anyone or anything.
He'll be the only one to sit out of
line, sticking
out like a sore thumb. He's like a
spanner in
the works. For temples in general,
people go to
the temple with the best of
EFTA01160473
intention to accrue as
much merit as possible but when it
comes to
mealtimes, they end up fighting to
get to the front
of the queue like vultures. In the
morning they
are like angels walking on the
Earth, but when
lunchtime comes, they are like
hungry ghosts!
In conclusion, the good thing about
associating with
the wise is that it will develop our
discretion to be
that of the wise with whom we
associate — or to
EFTA01160474
come to the real point — it will
allow our mind to
become bright and clear like that
of the wise man.
D.2 Qualities of a Wise One's
Friendship
Alternatively, the Wise One can
also be noticed by
his characteristics of being a true
friend who exhibits
all three sorts of responsibility:
• responsibility for his own
personal dignity
• responsibility for the human
dignity of others
• responsibility for a fair
economic system
EFTA01160475
In our association with such Wise
Ones, we will be
able to recognize their level of
responsibility from
the quality of their friendship. If
we are a good
friend to them, then we should see
the following
characteristics in the friendship
which is returned.
However, even amongst True
Friends, the responsibility
can be manifested in different
ways. The
Buddha subdivided True Friends
into four groups.
He identified each group by four
EFTA01160476
examples of behaviours
— giving a total of sixteen
characteristics
to look for in a good friend.
1. The Helpful Friend [upakaraka]
2. The Constant Friend
[samanasukhadukkha]
3. The Friend of Wise Counsel
[atthakkhayi]
4. The Sympathetic Friend
[anukampaka]
1. a helpful friend is one who:
1. protects you even when you are
off your
guard;
2. helps protect your property even
when you
EFTA01160477
neglect it;
3. is your refuge in times of
danger;
4. always provides you with twice
as much as
you asked for;
2. a constant friend is constant in
bad times and
good:
1. they confide in you;
2. they don't go spreading your
secrets around;
3. they don't abandon you when
you fall on hard
times;
4. they would even die in your
place;
EFTA01160478
3. they give you good counsel:
1. they warn you against
unwholesome behaviour
2. encourage you towards
wholesome behaviour;
3. save up new things to tell you;
44 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
4. point you in the direction of
heaven.
4. they empathize with you:
1. they don't laugh at your
misfortunes;
2. they congratulate you on your
good fortune,
3. they speak out against anyone
who maligns
EFTA01160479
you,
4. they stand up for those who
speak well of you
As you can see, all sixteen
characteristics of the True
Friend are characteristics that lead
to the creation
of positivity.
E. ASSOCIATION
E.1 How to associate with the
wise (7)
The Lord Buddha taught seven
features of behaviour
which counts as association with
the wise. If
your association misses out on any
of these seven
EFTA01160480
factors, it cannot be counted as
fruitful association.
The seven features are as follows:
I. Frequently meeting up with
them. If you know
that someone has the
characteristics of a wise
man, you ought to seek him out
and visit him
regularly. If you hear that such and
such a temple
has wise people going to it, then
that should
be the temple you are visiting
regularly. This is
the first step to true association.
Without it no
EFTA01160481
association can come about.
2. Make yourself known to them.
What this means
is that when you have gone out of
your way to
seek out a wise man, you should
make yourself
known to them, not sit just out of
their line of
vision round the corner. Whenever
they go to
the boxing or the fashion show
they are right at
the ringside or up against the
catwalk, but when
they go to the temple and see one
of the monks
EFTA01160482
coming, they will disappear to the
back row of
the pavilion. In such a case, even
though they
have come as far as the temple
where the wise
are to be found, they cannot be
said to have associated
with the wise.
3. Sincerety towards them. If there
is any affection
in your association, you must be
sincere to one
another — with nothing behind
your back. There
is no secret which your other half
can't ask about
EFTA01160483
and get a straight answer. Loyalty
means that
there is no hidden agenda
concerning your association.
But even this is not enough.
4. Loyalty towards them. Where in
sincerety, your
association is bound through
affection, in loyalty
the association is bound through
respect.
Thus to make for the best of
possible associations
you should do nothing to diminish
either the
love or respect that bonds the
relationship. Also
EFTA01160484
you should do nothing to interrupt
the train of
thought of the wise man with
whom you have
chosen to associate whether it be
through careless
speech or otherwise. This is what
we call
loyalty.
5. Help them in times of need.
Whenever we notice
that our associate (the wise one) is
busy with
something we could help with, we
should offer
our help without reluctance.
However, if we
EFTA01160485
know that our associate has
something that we
could help with and we keep our
silence instead
of offering our assistance, we can
hardly call our
association a friendship. Just
imagine if a group
of so-called friends all come
together at meal time
but cannot be found when it comes
to time for
work. Such a group could hardly
be called
friends.
6. When free joining up to talk
and eat together.
EFTA01160486
When the wise have free time they
come together
to discuss the Dhamma and to
clear up their
doubts (not to gossip about the
neighbours).
7. Reflection on Dhamma and
Getting Down to
Earnest Practice. This is one of
the most important
headings. Even if you have
diligently followed
the previous six steps but omit this
seventh
step, you cannot call it true
association. Also,
if you do none of the first six but
EFTA01160487
do the seventh
one, it is as good as true
association, because
Dhamma always has the same
flavour — it always
gives rise to self discipline [stla]:
it always
gives rise to concentration
[samAdhi]: and it always
gives rise to wisdom [pafifiA].
Thus even
if you have never met your wise
associate before,
even on your first meeting you will
feel as
if you have been friends for a
thousand years, or
EFTA01160488
for many lifetimes
because both
of you have
Dhamma in your hearts — it is
Dhamma that
binds your association.
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 45
The behaviour that we refer to as
association means
that that whatever happens you
will do things in
togetherness. If there is work you
will work together.
Accept each others' help, accept
the same
identity, accept the same place of
abode, accept
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work in the same place. If you
possess anything,
you will be willing to lend it to
them or give it to
them, giving them possessions or
respect. In conclusion
the operant parts of the process of
association
with the wise are sharing,
accepting and giving.
If you expand upon these three
then you arrive
at the seven steps described at the
beginning
of this section.
E.2 Principles of Association
Like all the groups of people
EFTA01160490
closest to us in the
world, the best way we can get the
virtues of the
wise to brush off on us is associate
with them as
`good friends'. The Buddhist
teaching most relevant
to the cultivation of a fruitful
friendship is the
`northern quarter' of the
SilgalovAda Sutta which
gives us the following practical
advice about how
good friends should treat each
other:
The Buddha laid down five
examples of duties
EFTA01160491
we ought to practice in order to
express our responsibility
towards our friends:
1. generosity: anyone possessed of
Right View
[sammA diEEhi] is bound to
moved to compassion
when seeing others experiencing
hardship
or suffering — and generosity is
the way in which
he can ameliorate the lot of friends
caught in such
a situation, while at the same time
strengthening
his bond of friendship to that
person;
EFTA01160492
2. kind words: if a person is able
to relinquish the
Four Defilements of Action, and
has the altruism
of a Good Friend [kalyAAamitta]
he will be
of the habit of speaking only words
that are polite
and true;
3. helping and acting for their
welfare: endowed
with the characteristics of a True
Friend, one will
have the altruism to want to do
things for the
benefit of one's friends;
4. being consistent: however well
EFTA01160493
one has treated
one's friends in the past, one will
not suddenly
change to treat them better or
worse because of
force of circumstances. Just
because one gets a
promotion in rank which is better
than that of
one's old friend, one will not
subsequently look
down on him;
5. never telling them lies: as good
friend what one
says will never deviate from the
truth.
It is only possible to fulfil the
EFTA01160494
demands of these five
duties if one has already had the
qualities of a true
friend instilled by effective
upbringing at the hands
of one's parents, teachers and
employers.
In turn those wise friends should
practice the following
five duties towards us in order to
express
their sense of responsibility
towards us:
I. protect us when we are off our
guard: learning
that we are in the midst of
problems as a result
EFTA01160495
of our own recklessness, if it
happens that such
recklessness is not in our nature, if
a friend is
true, they will intervene and help
— if they leave
us to our recklessness you can
know that they
are an enemy in a friend's guise;
2. help protect our property even
when we neglect
it: such is the behaviour of a true
friend;
3. be our refuge in times of
danger: willingness to
let us rely on them is the sign of a
true friend;
EFTA01160496
4. not abandoning us in times of
trouble: this is the
sign of a Good Friend
[kalyAAamitta];
5. show due respect to other
members of our family:
friends who not only show us
respect, but
also respect those to whom we
have debts of
gratitude, our children and
grandchildren as if
they were part of their own family
— are indeed
true friends.
All five duties of a friend are
identifying features
EFTA01160497
of a truly Good Friend — if we
ever have the luck
to come across such a genuine
friend, we must take
care to associate closely with them,
treating them
with respect, in keeping with the
Buddha's advice:
"associate with them respectfully,
like a mother to
her sons"
It is pertinent to observe that such
a genuine
friend could only arise in the world
as the result of
an amenable environment (see
forthcoming Blessing
EFTA01160498
Four), especially those in whose
company they grew
up, in order for the good habits of
those people to
46 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
have brushed off on him and been
preserved in his
own personality. It is such people
that society and
nation alike are crying out for —
because such a
person has tremendous power of
virtue stored up
inside them — sufficient power to
channel the tide
of society and economics around
EFTA01160499
him down the
same virtuous path.
E.3 What are the consequences
when there are
no Wise Ones to be found?
If there are no genuinely wise ones
to be found in
society or if those posing as 'wise'
fail to cherish
others according to the advice of
the Buddha, many
sorts of harm arise on individual,
interpersonal and
social levels. Many of the potential
problems can
be extrapolated to the relationship
between government
EFTA01160500
and the citizens it is supposed to be
a refuge
too. If the government fails to be a
Wise Friend
toits citizens, it the false friendship
brings serious
problems on a national level. In
conclusion, the
harm that arises when there is lack
of association
with the wise manifests itself on
three levels:
I. Losing a sense of responsibility
for their own
human dignity: If friends lack
self-discipline and
don't fulfil their duties towards
EFTA01160501
one another as
prescribed by the Lord Buddha, the
first level of
disaster which will happen to them
is that they
will lose their sense of
responsibility for their
own human dignity — this loss
giving rise (at
the minimum) to the following
three undesirable
symptoms:
1. Breaking the Five Precepts:
Because there is an
atmosphere of mutual suspicion,
former
friends will deceive and lie to each
EFTA01160502
other. The
pledges of allegiance they formerly
kept to
one another will be nullified in the
way often
seen in political circles;
2. Chronic False View: Lacking
discretion as to
right and wrong, virtue and
misdeed, appropriate
and inappropriate and the Law of
Karma, there is nothing they will
not do as a
means to procure power, money
and personal
profit;
3. Mistreats Friends: They might
EFTA01160503
resort to back
stabbing of former friends in order
to procure
personal ends;
2. Losing a sense of responsibility
for the human
dignity of others: If friends lack
self-discipline
and don't fulfil the duties towards
one another
prescribed by the Lord Buddha, the
second level
of disaster which will happen to
them is that they
will lose their sense of
responsibility for the human
dignity of others
this loss giving
EFTA01160504
rise (at
the minimum) to the following
three undesirable
symptoms:
1. Harbours bias: They will lose
their sense of fairness
and will be continually biased in
favour
of their own cronies — not with
altruistic
thoughts for even their own
people, but in
order to pave the way to personal
profit;
2. Disloyalty to homeland: Out of
selfishness and
False View, they will become
EFTA01160505
narrow-minded
and unrefined in their thinking. All
they will
think about is how to maximize the
profits
they can procure for themselves
and their cronies
— to the point they will no longer
have
any sense of loyalty to their own
country, religion
or nationality — they wouldn't
feel any
scruples about making a profit,
even if they
have to destroy the national
heritage to do so;
EFTA01160506
3. Misuse of rank or position:
When they lack any
accurate sense of justice, they will
attempt to
make illegal dealings look legal or
outlaw legal
things, if it suits them to do so.
3. Losing a sense of responsibility
for economic
fairness in society at large: If
friends lack selfdiscipline
and don't fulfil the duties towards
one
another prescribed by the Lord
Buddha, the third
level of disaster which will happen
to them is
EFTA01160507
that they will lose their sense of
responsibility
for economic fairness in society at
large — this
loss giving rise (at the minimum)
to the following
three undesirable symptoms:
1. Corruption: When false view
and selfishness
get the better of their thinking,
they will worship
money alone — because they
understand
that the more money they have, the
more
power they can gain. Money will
be the means
EFTA01160508
that they can secure the any
position of authority
they hold (through bribery).
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 47
2. Implicated in dealings with the
Six Roads to Ruin:
When money becomes important
above all
else, they will have no scruples
about taking
shortcuts to find it. Of course the
most profitable
forms of trading are dealing in
drugs, forgeries,
arms smuggling or casinos — the
fact
EFTA01160509
that they are illegal or exploit the
poorest sectors
of society — considerations which
mean
nothing to those so far alienated
from
thoughts of fairness in economics;
3. Betrays homeland: if such
people find themselves
in positions of legislation, because
of
selfishness and False View, if they
can make a
`quick buck' from foreign
investors, they will
not think twice about waiving laws
which formerly
EFTA01160510
protected their country from
foreign
exploitation.
The problems of lack of
association with the Wise
can be summarized down to two
main points:
I. Obvious social problems: In
countries such as
Thailand, social problems which
are out of hand
are high-level corruption, partiality
of the legal
system, degeneration into vice and
widespread
prostitution;
2. Covert social problems: The
EFTA01160511
covert social problems
exist in the form of False Friends
in positions
of influence — whether it be
positions in
politics, the civil service,
government utilities
who have less than scrupulous
behaviour. Unfortunately
what the people see of such public
figures — an image of
respectability and chivalry
— often belies illicit dealings
behind the
scenes. Such false friendship has
its origins in
undisciplined parental upbringing,
EFTA01160512
undisciplined
schooling and eventually, having
become
a fool, seeking the company of
other fools is the
final nail in the coffin of true
friendship.
Possible solutions to these
problems are:
1. In the short term are to avoid
voting those with
the character traits of `false
friends' into positions
of authority;
2. In the long term are to use the
nets of `sixteen
characteristics of true friends' and
EFTA01160513
`sixteen characteristics
of false friends' to identify and
replacing
the weaknesses in yourself with
virtues starting
with yourself
associating with
the wise so
that their good virtues can brush
off on you too.
F.1 Inner teacher, outer teacher
Broadly speaking, there are two
categories of the
wise — the outer wise ones and
the inner wise ones.
The outer wise ones can be
subdivided into the wise
EFTA01160514
who are truly wise and those who
are not truly wise.
The truly wise are start with the
Lord Buddha, the
arahants and those who have
attained the various
levels of Buddhist sainthood. The
wise who are not
truly wise are those who are as
wise as or wiser
than us. Examples of these are
monks who truly
train themselves in meditation.
Even though such
monks may not be arahants, they
come up to the
standard of a wise man. You
EFTA01160515
should seek him out
for association and familiarize
yourself with his virtues.
You can only gain from such
association. As
for your own parents, given that
we are their children,
we ought to do our best to
associate with
them. Sometimes we encounter
difficulties however.
Sometimes our parents have the
character of
fools. If this should be the case
then we have the
duty to live in the same household,
but with the
EFTA01160516
utmost care not to let those foolish
habits rub off
on ourselves. If your parents drink
alcohol, don't
go prohibiting them from such
behaviour. It is not
your place to do so. However, at
the same time you
shouldn't go joining them in their
drinking. If your
mother loves playing poker, it's no
good telling her
to give up. Let her carry on with
her gambling —
but don't go joining in with her.
Even though we
know these are the habits of a fool,
EFTA01160517
they are our
own mother and father. We can't
just ditch them.
We must carry on living in the
same household
while taking care not to be infected
by their foolish
habits.
The wise also extend to our friends
and relatives
who are a good example to us by
their behaviour.
Even if they might not be right all
the time, or they
may not be as wise as an arahant,
to associate with
them is still to our benefit.
EFTA01160518
In the case of associating with the
wise who are
not yet perfect, the Buddha taught
that we should
48 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
concentrate on observing only their
good points and
mimic only these good behaviours.
If that person
has his faults, don't waste your
time criticising them
for these, because for as long as
one hasn't come to
an end of all defilements, faults
and weaknesses
will always remain. Don't go
EFTA01160519
looking for peoples'
faults. Look for their strengths and
make the effort
to instil these strengths in ourself.
In the end we
will be like an ocean full of all
types of virtue. Don't
go letting someone's minor fault
blind you to all
their virtues. If you are only
interested in peoples'
faults, by the time you have picked
out everyone's
weaknesses, there will be only one
good person left
in the world — yourself.
Thus the wise in the outside world
EFTA01160520
are of two
types: the permanently wise who
have rid themselves
of all defilements and the
sporadically wise
who still have defilements
remaining. Both types
of wise ones are beneficial to
associate with.
You may have noticed that
sometimes when we
think of doing something evil there
will be a little
voice inside that warns us not to do
it. Have you
wondered where that little voice
inside comes from?
EFTA01160521
Usually we cannot see whose
voice it is, but if we
meditate until our mind is much
clearer, we will be
able to see the wise one inside who
is the owner of
the voice. Information, whether it
be in the form of
knowledge as a voice or the
content of a dream or
sixth sense, is transferred down the
line from deep
inside ourselves, like a baton
between the runners
of a relay race.
CULTIVATING
EFTA01160522
WISE
It is for this reason that we must do
two things—
try to find the wise in the outside
world and find
the best ways to associate with
them. If we know
that anyone is a good example then
we should make
sure we get to know that person.
That way the good
character that makes that person a
wise one will
begin to brush of on us as well.
Secondly, once we
have seen the nature of those who
EFTA01160523
are a good example
to follow, we should start to
cultivate an inner
self which has the same good
qualities so that
the self which is wise will manifest
itself inside
ourselves. If we already have an
inner self that is
wise, even if we don't meet any
more wise people
ever again, it will not matter to us,
because we have
our inner source of wisdom from
which we can
draw the knowledge of our inner
teacher.
EFTA01160524
H. ILLUSTRATIVE
MATERIALS
H.1 Metaphor: Leaves wrapping a
perfumed
fish
A parable used by the Lord
Buddha is that of the
leaves wrapping a perfumed fish
taking on the same
perfume as the fish itself
H.2 Red-Bearded Executioner
saved by
Association with the Wise
(DhA.11.203)
TambadAEhika who was a former
thief had served
the king as the public executioner
EFTA01160525
for fifty-five
years; and had just retired from
that post. One day,
he went to the river for a bath,
intending to take
some specially prepared food on
his return home.
As he was about to take the food,
Venerable
SAriputta, who had just arisen
from sustained absorption
in concentration [jhAna
samApatti], stood
at his door for almsfood. Seeing
the monk,
TambadAEhika thought to himself,
"Throughout
EFTA01160526
my life, I have been executing
thieves; now I should
offer this food to the monk." So,
he invited
SAriputta to come in and
respectfully offered the
food.
After the meal, SAriputta taught
him the
Dhamma, but TambadAEhika
could not pay attention,
because he was extremely
disturbed as he recollected
his past career as an executioner.
This mental
disturbance did not allow him to
concentrate
EFTA01160527
properly. SAriputta knew this, and
in order to put
him in a proper frame of mind, he
asked
TambadAEhika tactfully whether
he killed the
thieves because he wished to kill
them out of anger
or hate, or simply because he was
ordered to do so.
TambadAEhika answered that he
was ordered to
kill them by the king and that he
had no ill will or
wish to kill. `If that is the case,'
SAriputta asked,
`What wrong did you do?' Thus
EFTA01160528
re-assured, his
mind became calmer and he
requested SAriputta
to continue his sermon. As he
listened to the
Blessing Two: Associating with the
Wise 49
Dhamma attentively, his mind
became tranquil
and he developed the virtues of
patience and understanding.
After the discourse,
TambadAEhika
accompanied SAriputta for some
distance and
then returned home. On his way
home he died due
EFTA01160529
to an accident.
When the Buddha came to the
congregation of
the bhikkhus in the evening, they
informed him
about the death of TambadAEhika.
When asked
where TambadAEhika was reborn,
the Buddha
told them that although
TambadAEhika had committed
evil deeds throughout his life,
because he
comprehended the Dhamma, he
was reborn in the
Tusita deva world. The bhikkhus
wondered how
EFTA01160530
such an evil-doer could have such
great benefit
after listening to the Dhamma just
once. To them
the Buddha said that the length of
a discourse is
of no consequence, for one single
sentence of the
Dhamma, correctly understood can
produce much
benefit.
50 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 51
EFTA01160531
A. INTRODUCTION
A.1 People Differentiated by their
discretion
As seen in the previous blessings,
the brightness of
a person's future relies on his
ability to judge the
difference between good and evil.
If his judgement
is faulty, there is no way he can
make a success out
of his life. Even though people
may look superficially
similar, their standards of
judgement can be
so different. As human beings we
are born equal —
EFTA01160532
we all have a pair of hands and ten
fingers — but
some people use their hands to
perform works that
are useful to society while others
think that their
hands will become more famous as
fists and go
around punching up the neighbours
for a living. In
this Blessing we look at the third
of three major influences
on our development of sound
discretion
— having the right sort of "role
model" in our
hearts. This blessing doesn't imply
EFTA01160533
that we model
ourselves on anyone or anything at
all —but if we
want to develop sound discretion
we need to model
ourselves (recognize and pay
respect to) only those
worthy of our respect.
A.2 Effect of one's "hero" on
one's discretion
Hearing such terms as "paying
respect", "expressing
respect" or "people worthy of
respect", the
casual reader might come to the
premature conclusion
that this blessing is irrelevant to
EFTA01160534
our day and
age. However, if we rephrase what
we mean in
modern terms, asking "Who is the
hero of your
heart — which celebrity do you
model yourself on
or dream of emulating?", the
pertinence of this
blessing will become much more
immediate.
When we are children and the
horizons of our
experience do not extend beyond
the walls of our
house, maybe our own parents
represent all that
EFTA01160535
we want to achieve in our lives.
We try to play at
being "grown-up" like our parents,
imitating them
in our play. If we are exposed to a
good parental
example, our idea of what we
perceive as normal
or ethical will develop quite
accurately from an
early age. However, if, for
example, parents lie to
their children often or beat them
out of anger, then
that comes to be what the child
perceives to be the
standard of "justice" in life.
EFTA01160536
During one's teen years, when
one's horizons
extend beyond the home, the
influence of constructive
or destructive role models becomes
stronger
and stronger. These role models
are over and above
the influence of good or bad
friends as studied in
the previous two blessings.
Look at some of the role models
celebrities set for
the youth of today and you can
imagine some of
the problems facing our
impressionable youth of
EFTA01160537
today. Supposing you plan to
model yourself on
Vincent Van Gogh, Kurt Cobain,
Marilyn Monroe,
Janis Joplin, Dylan Thomas, Jimi
Hendrix, Elvis
Presley, Jim Morrison, Keith
Moon, F. Scott
Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway or
Brian Jones all of
whom killed themselves at an early
age, you might
come to the conclusion that truly
creative people
are "too beautiful for this world".
You might come
EFTA01160538
Blessing Three:
Expressing Respect
to Those Worthy of
Respect
52 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
to the conclusion that creative
writers drank because
they had to
or it was the
"pressure of
fame". Or that killing yourself is
how to earn fame
or emotionally blackmail others.
We can overlook
the insecure, grotesquely boring
EFTA01160539
reality of these
peoples' lives. We can rationalize
away the brutal
and banal nature of their
addictions. We can forgive
our heroes and we come to be able
to forgive
ourselves as well. It gives us an
instant excuse to
be irresponsible and indecent. We
can say we're too
beautiful for this world too. We
can act like drugged
children, crash our lives and drop
out.
The truth about someone like
Vincent Van Gogh
EFTA01160540
is that when he painted he was
beautiful, but in
other matters he was not. He was
always encouraging
his emotions to work their dark
magic. It's
true that he ought to be admired
while he had his
paintbrush in his hand, but to be
admired for his
whole sorrowful life and to make a
legend out of it
is to confuse oneself. The problem
for us as beginners
on the initial steps of the Manual
of Peace, as
debutants only just beginning to
EFTA01160541
pick up an inkling
of what is good for our spiritual
development
and what is not, we don't yet have
the ability to
distinguish between the creative
and destructive aspects
of someone's behaviour —
therefore, when
you are starting out on your
sojourn of spiritual discovery,
it's better to choose a role model
who you
can rely upon as an exemplar in all
aspects of life.
If you can choose a reliable role
model for yourself:
EFTA01160542
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EFTA01160543
mindfulness that is the precursor of
wisdom.
• it will add to your enthusiasm
for self-development
AND ITS PURPOSE
If you ask yourself what you
automatically do,
when you have a "hero" in your
heart, on analysis,
you find that you devote all your
waking thoughts
to them. We put their picture on
the wall. When we
speak about them, we only speak
praise of them.
we take every opportunity to learn
EFTA01160544
their opinions
and share them. Given the
opportunity we try to
meet with them and imitate what
they do in their
lives. Some people even go to the
lengths of dress
like them. All these are random
components of an
attitude we call "respect". Many of
the behaviours
are ways of "paying respect" or
"expressing respect".
B.1 What do we mean by
"respect"?
Respect means the attitude of
looking for the positive
EFTA01160545
aspects of a person or an object
and the effort to
instill oneself with those same
virtues. Such respect,
in context of the Manual of Peace
is for the aim of
furthering one's spiritual
development — it must
not have any ulterior motive. It
mustn't be like a
judo player who raises someone up
(in his own self
esteem by flattering them) only to
drop him onto
the floor more easily. Some bosses
blindly believe
their subordinates' flattery is
EFTA01160546
respect to the extent
that they overlook the real state of
affairs and end
up getting fired. This latter case of
expressing respect
does not come from a mind of pure
innocence
which expects or demands nothing
material in return.
True respect arises in response to
someone's virtues.
Something else which may look
like respect
but which is in fact an imposter is
the intention to
help someone in the expectation of
gaining something
EFTA01160547
material in return. First comes the
flattery,
then comes the unrefusable request
for this or that
favour. Boyfriend praises
girlfriend, saying how
pretty she is, because he wants her
to love him. He
has an ulterior motive to get
something in return.
He's not interested per se in either
her goodness or
her prettiness.
B.2 What do we mean by
"expressing respect"?
Expressing Respect means any
polite and intenBlessing
EFTA01160548
Three: Expressing Respect to
Those Worthy of Respect 53
tional action towards someone or
something, both
in their presence or behind their
back, that is the device
that demonstrates that one is really
recollecting the
virtues of that person or thing.
B.3 Purpose of Respect
The reason behind paying homage
to those worthy
of homage is an extension of the
reason for associating
with the wise. We have already
said that we
associate with the wise in the hope
EFTA01160549
that they will
help us to develop accurate
discretion in things concerning
virtue. It is to help us overcome the
weakness
in our make-up, that we tend too
easily to forget
all the good and valuable things
taught to us by
our teachers and masters and
parents or the monastic
community, the Lord Buddha, or
from books
we read. When you are taught how
to meditate for
half-an-hour per day (or to do any
other good
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deeds), however, your memory
doesn't seem to be
so reliable. The first day, you sit
for meditation for
exactly half-an-hour — no more,
no less. On the
second day, you sit for only fifteen
minutes — well,
that's better than nothing. On the
third day, you
think that while you are chanting is
actually a sort
of meditation, so five minutes of
true meditation is
enough. On the fourth day it is
especially humid,
so you think that chanting is
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enough, no meditation
today — after all, thousands of
other people
don't meditate, and they seem no
worse off for it.
By the fifth day you have entirely
forgotten how to
meditate for half an hour. It is for
the reason that
doing good deeds is so easy to
forget that is the
real reason for the need to pay
homage.
On the contrary, when it comes to
being devious,
or doing mischievous things, we
remember the
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from the first time we're taught
and never need to
be taught again for the rest of our
lives! We never
forget how to play poker. We
never forget how to
shuffle a deck of cards.
The real reasons behind paying
homage areas follows:
1. To give us a firm connection
with the virtues of
that person. Connecting up our
thoughts with a
person of virtue will elevate our
own minds to
the higher level of virtue of that
person.
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2. To practice expressing virtues so
that in the future
we might have the chance to gain a
real appreciation
of the virtues of that person.
Whether
we are an adult or a child, if our
appreciation of
the real depth of virtue of a does
not really do
justice to the depth of their virtue,
expressing
homage can help us to appreciate
it. When we
were only five or six years old and
our parents
took us to the temple they would
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make sure that
we paid respect to the Buddha
images. For the
child, he cannot see beyond the
clay or the brass
of the image and might wonder
what all the fuss
is about. A child that is so young
can have no
appreciation of the real depth of
the virtues of
the Lord Buddha. Taken to the
home of their old
uncle, they are told to pay respect
to their uncle.
The child cannot distinguish the
goodness of
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their uncle's character, but pays
respect because
he has been told to. At school, the
child is told to
pay respect to their teachers. The
child might not
be able to tell the real virtue of the
teacher, because
the child's ability to comprehend is
only
limited. However, sometime in the
future when
we become so used to expressing
our respect that
we become used to it, the thought
will eventually
occur to us to look for the reason.
EFTA01160556
B.4 Three Types of Bowing
Sometimes people confuse respect
with expressing
respect. However, if you express
respect when your
attitude is wrong you will not
succeed in furthering
your spiritual progress. Consider
the following
examples:
1. Bowing out of obsequiousness:
Some people bow
just because everyone else does.
Usually they
bow reluctantly. They have no
attitude of respect
in their mind. Therefore, all they
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get for their efforts
is a stiff feeling in their muscles.
2. Bowing out of peer pressure:
Some people only
show respect in order to please the
person they
pay respect to, so that they can ask
favours from
that person, often for things which
are not entirely
honest or noble.
3. Bowing in search of wisdom:
This refers to those
who have an attitude of respect and
who also
54 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
EFTA01160558
express their respect with the
determination to
practice themselves all the virtues
exemplified
by the object of their respect. An
example of the
sort of attitude in mind of someone
who benefits
from expressing respect is —
supposing we
bow three times to express respect
towards the
Buddha:
I. When we bow the first time: to
reflect on the
supreme wisdom of the Buddha
which allowed
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him to see the existence of
suffering, know the
origin and the cessation of
suffering and find
a Path to the Cessation of
Suffering — wisdom
arising from the Buddha's
extended
meditation mind until his mind had
become
sufficiently clear and bright to
eradicate all defilements
of the mind. Following his
example,
we should also determinedly
meditate
until we can achieve the same
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wisdom as that
of the Buddha.
2. When we bow the second time:
to reflect on
the supreme compassion of the
Lord Buddha
that instead of just keeping his
wisdom to
himself, he spent all his life
teaching Dhamma
to others so that they could become
enlightened
in his footsteps. Following his
example,
we should also find ways of being
generous
as a way of expressing our
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compassion to others.
3. When we bow the third time: to
reflect on the
supreme purity of the body, speech
and mind
of the Lord Buddha cultivated
through his extended
practice of self-discipline.
Following
his example, we should also find
ways of finding
better ways to extend our own
self-discipline
so that we too can attain full purity
of
mind.
B.5 Two sorts of Respect
EFTA01160562
However, all four of these can be
summarized under
just two headings, that is:
I. Homage through gifts:
[AmisapEjA]: this refers
to all material forms of paying
homage —
whether it be putting your palms
together in a
gesture of respect or even speaking
words of
praise about a person.
2. Homage through practice:
[paEipatipEjA] this
means paying homage by doing as
one is taught
— for example, we pay respect to
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the Lord Buddha
by doing as he taught.
Thus, in practice, expressing
respect has two major
components.
B.5.1 Relative importance
When we pay respect to the Lord
Buddha, we
should emphasise homage through
practice, while
homage through gifts should play
only a supporting
role. As for paying respect to
teachers who are
still concerned with worldly
matters (ie. king, parents,
teachers, elders and boss, we have
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to emphasise
homage through gifts) while
homage though
practice plays only a supporting
role.
To give an example, if we are to
meet up with our
teacher and when we meet up with
them all we
have for them is the words,"I have
put into practice
everything you have taught me".
This would
hardly impress the teacher. It
would have been appropriate
to have some sort of gift to give
the teacher
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as well.
Others go abroad and on the way
back thinkof
their teacher. They don't know
what to get as a
present for the teacher and so they
get a bottle of
liquor. In the end the result is that
the teacher and
the pupil sit down and drink liquor
together. The
more they drink, the more irritated
they feel and
end up fighting one another. When
it gets to this
point, that gift can hardly be
counted as a token of
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respect any more. It is an
unwelcome gift resulting
from false view.
OF RESPECT
The person worthy of respect, in
its simplest terms
is the wise one (as defined in the
previous Blessing).
The wise one in this context is
someone whose status
or position or level of existence is
so high that it
would be completely inappropriate
for us to associate
with them on equal terms or as
peers. Examples
EFTA01160567
of such people include:
C.1 Buddha
The Lord Buddha (who is truly
wise),
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 55
C.1.1 Three worthy qualities of
the Buddha
For example, why we consider the
Lord Buddha to
be worthy of respect, and we find
that it is because:
1. His wisdom is so great that he
could singlehandedly
attain enlightenment.
2. His Compassion is so great that
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He sacrificed the
rest of his life to teach the way for
others to reach
enlightenment as he had done.
3. His body, speech and mind were
so pure (because
of the immaculateness with which
he had
kept the Precepts) that no one else
in the world
can compare
and for that reason
we hold him
in the highest of respect.
To begin with we might not be
able to appreciate
the degree of his virtue, but after
paying respect
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more and more, it makes our own
mind more refined,
gives us the ability to consider
things in a
constructive way and in the end,
opening to us the
innate wisdom that will allow us to
appreciate that
virtue. In any place, there are many
things that are
worthy of respect and many more
things that are
not worthy of respect. Thus, when
deciding about
the type of people who are worthy
of respect, the
subject of this Blessing, it is
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important to be able to
distinguish one thing from the
other.
C.2 The monastic community and
other clergy
The monastic community [Salgha]
(who can be
divided into those who are devoid
of all defilement
[ariyasaIgha] such as the arahants,
the
non-returners [anagAmi], the
once-returners
[sakatagAmi] and the
stream-enterers
[sotApana]; and the general
monastic community
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who are striving to train
themselves towards
an end of all defilements
[sammutisaigha].
Although the latter may not yet
have
purged themselves of all
defilements, they are
abundant in virtue to a degree that
it is
innappropriate to associate with
them as if they
were our equals. If we associate
with them, we
should treat them as our superiors
— i.e. with
respect -
at all times. Monks or
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clergy worthy
of respect are those who
exemplify, teach and
discern virtue for us by fulfilling
the following
six duties:
1. restrain their congregation
from evil;
2. encourage them to establish
themselves in virtue:
these two responsibilities are also
the domain
of parents and teachers;
3. minister to them in kindness:
this means spreading
loving-kindness towards the
congregation
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without exception for their
happiness. They
might also visit their supporters,
together with
their monastic fellows, in order to
give those congregation
members the chance to hear
Dhamma
teachings and have the opportunity
to practice
to practice generosity;
4. teach them new or beneficial
things: One of the
most important functions of the
clergy is to encourage
study of the spiritual teachings
amongst
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their congregation. Monks should
have a large
repertoire of teachings to give to
the congregation,
teaching without repeating
themselves, so
that the congregation can have a
broad knowledge
of Dhamma knowledge,
reinforcing their
Right View and ability to be a
teacher to themselves
[yonisomanasikAra] in relation to
finding
the highest happiness in their lives;
5. clarify things they already
know: if monks give
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Dhamma teachings they have
already give to a
particular group from the
congregation, they
should enlarge the subject in more
detail than
before, giving additional meaning
to materials
or explaining in further detail how
the Dhamma
can be applied for problem solving
in everyday
life;
6. show them the way to heaven:
this monastic duty
is particularly special in the system
of the `Six
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Directions' because no-one in any
of the other
social groups can do it in the
monks' place. Those
who are able to enter heaven must
be those who
live their lives in accordance with
the noble code
of Self-Discipline.
This group consists of all forms of
clergy who have
an exclusively spiritual (rather than
material) aim
in life — namely monks in
Buddhism, or priests,
pastors or ministers for other
religions. We hold
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them in respect, because they
maintain their status
through their high level of virtue.
In conclusion, the
responsibility of the clergy consists
of training the
56 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
lay congregation to become Wise
Ones or virtuous
people
a noble duty indeed!
Monks who are able
to practice all six of these duties to
their completion
are of inestimable value to society
and the
world
they are worthy of
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respect both by men
and angels alike.
C.3 Virtuous monarchs
Monarchs worthy of respect are
those established
in the Tenfold Virtues of a
Monarch;
C.4 Our Parents
Our Parents and upstanding
members of society.
Our parents are wise ones. We
should treat them
with respect. Anything less would
be inappropriate.
C.5 Our Teachers
Teachers and masters established
in right view. In
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this context we should mention the
two identifying
features of a teacher's duties, both
of which he
needs to fulfil in order to qualify
for the respect of
his students. These two duties are:
1. The duty to explain (i.e. teach a
subject in theory)
2. The duty to exemplify
(especially the moral usage
of the subject he teaches)
If he fails to perform either of
these duties his teaching
is no more than daylight robbery of
his pupils.
If he gives good explanations but
EFTA01160580
his personal behaviour
is no example for his students to
follow
(for example he teaches `do as I
say not what I do'
and tells the class that liquor is evil
while spending
all his spare time inebriated at the
bar, he is nothing
more than a mercenery teacher.
If he both explains the theory well
and is a good
example to his students, he is a
person worthy of
respect.
C.6 Virtuous employer
Virtuous employers are also
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worthy of respect. It is
hard to find bosses with virtue, so
when we find
one, we should not hesitate to pay
them respect.
We may still be unable to be as
virtuous as them, so
we ought to pay them respect, in
order that their
virtues might never be far from our
minds — instead
of being tempted to do something
devious,
we will be less tempted because
we feel ashamed
after the seeing the good example
set by our boss.
EFTA01160582
Also we will be more ashamed that
anything we
do wrong might reflect badly on
our boss's good
reputation. This is the value of
having a virtuous
boss. It keeps us on the straight
and narrow until
such time that we have reliable
discretion for ourselves.
RESPECT
There are certain classes of objects
identified by the
Lord Buddha as worthy of respect,
and these are
objects associated with people
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worthy of respect i.e.
the Lord Buddha, the SaIgha,
monarchs, parents,
teachers and bosses. There are two
categories of
such objects, pagodas (and their
contents) and
teachings:
D.1 Pagodas
D.1.1 Four Types of Pagoda
The Buddha enumerated four types
of pagoda
worthy of respect:
I. A relic pagoda: this is a pagoda
containing the
relics of a Buddha, a
paccekabuddha, an arahant
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or a universal monarch. After the
cremation of a
truly virtuous person there are
pearl-like relics
left behind in the ashes. In keeping
with the
teaching of the Buddha, these are
collected by
the faithful and are paid homage
to, by Buddhists,
not only with candles and incense,
but
by enshrining them in small
pagodas.
2. Paribhoga Cetiya: These
include the Four Holy
Sites connected with the life of the
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Lord Buddha:
the place where He was born,
enlightened,
where He gave His first sermon
and where He
passed away into Parinirvana. The
Lord Buddha
called these four places His
Paribhoga Cetiya and
taught that all Buddhists of
following generations
should visit these holy sites if they
had the
chance because it would awaken
them to the
urgent need to get down to
practice. Many people
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who have been to visit the Holy
Sites have
discovered that their inspiration to
practice has
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 57
is strengthened from the feeling of
going back to
a time when they were in the
presence of the Lord
Buddha himself. This is the reason
why these
four sites are worthy of worship.
3. Dhamma Cetiya: This is a
Cetiya that contains
Dhamma teachings such as books
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of the Tipitaka
or other Scriptures.
4. Uddesika Cetiya: This is a
Cetiya that contains
Buddha Images or images of His
Noble Disciples.
Objects worthy of respect in this
category
also include the requisites
belonging to monks
— whether it be robes or bowl, all
of the monks'
requisites are worthy of respect.
D.2 Dhamma Teachings
A fifth sort of object worthy of
respect are spiritual
teachings and their sources. These
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may include the
Teachings of the Lord Buddha, of
members of the
monastic community, of kings, of
our parents and
elders, of our teachers and masters,
of our boss and
the teachings of the wise with
whom we associate.
The teachings of all six categories
of the wise mentioned
above are the manifestation of the
virtue of
those people and should never be
taken in vain.
Making a mockery of such
teachings will undermine
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our earnestness in putting those
teachings into
practice. If we lack earnestness in
putting the teachings
into practice, we reduce our chance
of ever understanding
those teachings. In the absence of
understanding,
there remains only ignorance and
false
view.
Thus any of the objects mentioned
above should
not be used for mockery or for fun.
To treat these
things without reverence robs them
of their sanctity
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and when we come to study them
we will overlook
their depth or subtlety. An example
of this
might be the man who goes to
receive Five Precepts
from the monk at the temple and
keeps the Precepts
so well for the first few days. Later
he joins in
with one of his friends makes fun
of the Precepts
and says,"Oh the Precepts? Aren't
they for keeping
one for each day of the week and
weekends
off?" Even if he still keeps his
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Precepts, the effect of
these words is to gradually
undermine the man's
inspiration to keep them.
The same principle goes for
photographs or pictures
of the Buddha, of monks, of the
king, of our parents
or teachers. Such photographs
should not be left lying
about or used without reverence.
Chanting books
shouldn't be left lying about either
or folded up and
shoved in the back pocket of one's
trousers. They
shouldn't be put down on a dusty
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surface and other
things should not be placed on top
of them.
In conclusion, those worthy of
respect are the wise
who are established in virtue, or
those who by their
social standing are too high up for
us to be able to
associate with personally or as
peers. Apart from
these six categories of person,
objects which should
be treated with respect include the
requisites they
use as a way of recollecting the
virtues of that person.
EFTA01160593
Even though that person may
already have
passed away, treating their
belongings with respect
will help us to maintain
high-mindedness and Right
View concerning that person.
D.3 Educational Objects
Also we shouldn't forget that all
books which contain
Dhamma should be treated with
respect. The
ancients would be very particular
even about the
notebooks in which we have taken
note of Dhamma
sermons. They forbade us from
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throwing such notebooks,
stepping over them, putting them
in low
down places or tearing out pages
— because all of
these things would constitute
disrespect to the
teachings themselves. If we were
to lack respect
towards the Dhamma, then when
we come to consider
Dhamma Teachings for which the
meaning is
very subtle, we will be unable to
fathom the meaning
and our understanding of the
Dhamma will be
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destroyed and we will be left with
nothing more
than our own ignorance.
D.4 Objects not worthy of respect
Correspondingly, we must be
careful not to pay respect
to things not worthy of respect. In
brief, there
are four categories of things we
should avoid idolising
or paying respect to:
I. People not worthy of Respect:
This means not
idolizing fools, and not supporting
them or praising
them — no matter how high in
rank they
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might be.
58 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
2. Objects not worthy of respect:
This means not
idolizing pictures, sculptures,
works, possessions
or tools of fools.
3. Objects which lead to
foolishness: This means
not idolizing things like pictures of
models, singers
or sportsmen who lack virtue or
advertising
for "roads to ruin" such as alcohol.
We shouldn't
use these sort of things to decorate
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our homes.
4. Objects which lead to
gullability: This means
not idolizing things which promote
superstition
such as "holy trees", "holy
mountains", "spirit
houses" etc.
PAYING RESPECT
E.1 Expressing respect with body,
speech and mind
Respect can be paid through the
channels of body,
speech or mind.
1. Physical Respect: Physically
paying respect
EFTA01160598
means the various polite manners
that we demonstrate
towards someone in their presence,
such
as standing up when they come
into the room,
or sitting politely when in front of
them. Even if
you are not in their presence, you
should still
show physical respect towards
those worthy of
virtue even if you are not in their
presence but
are in the presence of their
photograph, their
sculpted image — such as a
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Buddha Image or a
photograph of your teaching
master. We should
show our respect by not pointing
our feet towards
such an image, and even if we are
lying
down to sleep — pointing our head
towards the
image instead of our feet;
2. Verbal Respect: Homage
through the channel of
speech includes the speaking,
chanting or singing
of praises of one worthy of
homage, rather
than gossipping maliciously about
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them;
3. Mental Respect: Homage
through the channel
of the mind means recollecting the
teachings of
one worthy of homage to the
degree that they
inspire us. We might recollect
what that person
has taught us in the way of good
deeds. We might
also consider the good character
and virtues exemplified
(but not taught) by that person.
Both
of these are homage through the
channel of the
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mind;
E.2 How to Express Respect
Many people misunderstand
paying respect as bundling
together a lotus, candles and
incense, laying
it before the object of respect and
bowing down
three times. Paying respect in this
way is not incorrect,
but it is not the whole story.
Paying respect
that is complete in all respects
must exhibit four
factors:
I. Physical token of respect
[sakkAra]: This refers
EFTA01160602
to a gift which is an expression of
respect. It is
something we must prepare in
advance and
which is presented during the act
of paying respect.
Such a token of respect differs for
different
situations and different categories
of persons
worthy of respect — for example,
flowers, incense
and candles are worthy tokens of
respect
for paying respect to the Buddha,
monks or
teachers. Clothes or bedclothes
EFTA01160603
might be more
worthy tokens of respect for your
parents. Neither
of these tokens of respect are
suitable as the
sort of gift you might take with
you when visiting
distinguished persons of social
standing. Nor
would they be suitable as the sort
of gift you
bring back with you for your
friends when you
have been away on holiday. Even
money can be
a token of respect. If your teacher
has been
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putting in extra hours out of the
kindness of his
heart, giving up his time to give
you tutorials at
home, giving him money as a gift
would not be
out of place, and in this respect
would be considered
a token of respect, not a payment.
Another
consideration for tokens of respect
is that
they should be prepared in
advance. To leave a
bucket of cut flowers, no matter
how big the
bucket is, in the middle of the main
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temple
pavillion would hardly be
considered an act of
respect. Any token of respect
should be prepared
with care and precision and be
both clean and
well organized.
2. Gesture of respect [vandanA]:
this refers to gestures
which express respect such as
bowing or
prostration or praise or chanting
praise. Morning
and evening chanting can be
counted as
vandanA. Even recollection of
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what one has been
taught by the wise or one's teacher
can be
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 59
counted as vandanA.
3. Attitude of respect [mAnanA]:
This refers to an
attitude of respect. Respect
consists of the stems
`re' which means again and `spece
which means
to re-examine a person (for their
good points).
Given that all people except the
Buddha are
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made up of a mixture of both good
and bad then
we have to look for the good
points in people.
Taking these good points, apart
from noticing
these good points, part of respect is
to praise
them for these good points and use
them as a
good example to model ourselves
upon.
4. Concern for the object of
respect [garulcAra]: this
refers to an attitude of concern
about the wellbeing
of the person who is worthy of
EFTA01160608
respect and
recollection of the good deeds and
virtues of that
person.
All of these four components
comprise the way of
paying respect.
E.3 Consequences of Not Paying
Respect to
those worthy of homage
If those held in high respect do not
behave in a fitting
way, many sorts of harm are
brought on the
individual, interpersonal and social
levels. To take
the clergy as an example, if
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members of the monastic
community are undisciplined and
do not cherish
their congregation according to the
advice of
the Buddha, the harm that will
come to the congregation
can be concluded on three levels:
I. Losing a sense of responsibility
for their own
human dignity: If clergy lack
self-discipline and
don't fulfil their duties towards
their congregation
as prescribed by the Lord Buddha,
the first
level of disaster which will happen
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to them is
that the congregation will lose
their sense of responsibility
for their own human dignity —
this
loss giving rise (at the minimum)
to the following
three undesirable symptoms:
1. Breakdown of self-discipline:
Society will degenerate
to the point where the majority of
people
do not keep the Five Precepts and
do not
even understand what keeping the
Precepts
means. This will increase the
EFTA01160611
incidence of society
of people taking advantage of each
other.
When taking advantage of each
other becomes
the the norm, especially for those
in positions
of authority, the effects will have
repurcussions on a national scale
— therefore,
citizens must unite in preventing
those who
don't respect the Five Precepts
from being put
in positions of power;
2. Those seeking ordination are of
low quality: Lowquality
EFTA01160612
ordinands burden their preceptors
with problems — it is hard to train
them at
all. If clergy are unable to develop
purity of
body, speech and mind, they will
undermine
the existing faith of the
congregation — ultimately
destroying the religion;
3. Transcendental attainment
becomes becomes increasingly
inaccessible: The highest aim of
those
who ordain is to attain Nirvana.
However, if
those who ordain are of low
EFTA01160613
quality and are
difficult to train, there will be a
continuous
deterioration in the capability of
the monastic
community to the point where they
will
no longer be able to reach any sort
of transcendental
attainment. When there are no
religious
exemplars to look up to, the
congregation
will become more and more firmly
entrenched in False View — more
and more
ignorant of Dhamma teachings,
EFTA01160614
self-discipline
— with some of the most serious
repurcussions for social chaos;
2. Losing a sense of responsibility
for the human
dignity of others: If clergy lack
self-discipline and
don't fulfil the duties towards their
congregation
as prescribed by the Lord Buddha,
the second
level of disaster which will happen
to them
is that the congregation will lose
their sense of
responsibility for the human
dignity of others
EFTA01160615
- this loss giving rise (at the
minimum) to the
following three undesirable
symptoms:
1. Verbal abuse of clergy and
monks: Once the congregation
no longer realize the value to
society
of clergy and monks,
misunderstanding
the duty and lifestyle of the clergy,
the public
will abuse the clergy shamelessly
(as is happening
currently in Thailand);
60 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
EFTA01160616
2. Lack of financial support for
clergy and monks:
Swayed by the often unjustified
abuse of
clergy in the media, the faith of the
public deteriorates,
and with it the support with which
they should provide the clergy —
religions
such as Buddhism can only survive
through
the voluntary support of the
congregation,
and without it, there will soon be
no clergy
left, and consequently no-one to
perpetuate
EFTA01160617
the religion;
3. Congregation is left without any
true refuge: Having
dismantled their religion by their
own neglect,
when the public find themselves in
dire
straits, they will be without a
refuge, lacking
the ability to be a teacher to
themselves, they
will resort to superstition or
animism.
3. Losing a sense of responsibility
for economic
fairness in society at large: If
clergy lack selfdiscipline
EFTA01160618
and don't fulfil the duties towards
their congregation as prescribed by
the Lord
Buddha, the third level of disaster
which will
happen to them is that the
congregation will lose
their sense of responsibility for
economic fairness
in society at large — this loss
giving rise (at
the minimum) to the following
three undesirable
symptoms:
1. Total enfatuation with the Six
Roads to Ruin: In a
society of deteriorating morals, it
EFTA01160619
will become
more and more common for people
either to
eke out their living via, or be
enslaved by the
consequences (such as debt and
disease) of
Roads to Ruin such as drugs,
gambling, prostitution,
entertainment and underground
lotteries.
2. Desecration of religious
property and establishments:
The Roads to Ruin are part of the
vicious
circle of poverty. Some people try
to alleviate
EFTA01160620
their poverty by theft
and
religious
property is an easy target of
plunder. Some
encroach on temple grounds in
pursuit of their
livelihood. In Thailand this
practice is becoming
more and more widespread,
especially
because it has been legally
condoned by biased
legislators;
3. Embezzlement of religious
donations: Some people
like to extract some sort of
`commission'
EFTA01160621
from the funds they manage to
raise for the
temple (in accordance with the
phrase "half
for the temple, half for the temple
committee' !)
In the present day, however, some
legislators
try to go further than this by giving
the
government the right to control
temple funds
directly!
Problems concerning not paying
respect to those
worthy of respect can be
summarized down to two
EFTA01160622
main points:
I. Obvious social problems: Easily
seen is public
deterioration in morality as a result
of ignorance
of virtue. Such people like to say
they have lost
interest in virtue because they see
so many examples
of hypocrisy. For the same reasons
they
withhold financial support for
spiritual causes
and some go further, overtly
making legislative
changes necessary for the
dismantling of the religious
EFTA01160623
establishment;
2. Covert social problems: The
covert social problems
mostly originate from the
hypocrisy
amongst those who should be
behaving as exemplars
of virtue. Considered with wise
reflection,
the problems might be analyzed as
such:
1. Good exemplars are sometimes
unable to pass
on their knowledge to others
because
1. the public are not interested to
learn from
EFTA01160624
the clergy— all they want are the
material
trappings of spirituality and virtue
such as
holy water and amulets;
2. the public undervalue the
teachings on virtue
they receive because they think
they are
already highly qualified in
academic subjects
- so thinking, they consider their
ability
in vocational subjects makes
earning
money more important than
knowing spiritual
EFTA01160625
teachings.
F. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
In order to illustrate the results of
paying respect to
those worthy of respect here are
five examples, the
second of which is an example of
homage through
gifts:
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 61
F.1 Metaphor: Small sapling with
supporting stake
When a new-grown tree is still a
flimsy sapling, it
EFTA01160626
needs a supporting stake to protect
it against strong
winds — otherwise it will be
blown down or torn
up by its roots. Similarly, one who
hopes for spiritual
progress in one's life needs to
express respect
to those worthy of respect — to
keep a place for
those people in one's heart
so
that those people
can be a guiding light and an
example, and a protection
against False View and
unwholesomeness
which might otherwise reappear in
EFTA01160627
one's life.
F.2 Ex. Sumana the
Garland-Maker
In the time of the Lord Buddha,
within the walls of
the palace the workers divided
themselves up into
different sections and one of the
sections was specifically
for flower arranging. The section
head was
called Sumana and his duty was to
arrange flowers
to decorate the palace, to decorate
the throne
and even decorate the royal bed
chamber of the
EFTA01160628
king, to give all of these places a
delightful fragrance.
Sumana fulfilled his duty to the
satisfaction
of all in the palace every day, year
in year out
without ever slipping up.
One day, in the season where
flowers were the
hardest to find, Sumana travelled
to every part of
the city and wherever there were
flowers to be
bought, he would buy them all.
No-one else in the
city had any flowers left to use for
themselves.
EFTA01160629
Every last flower in the city had to
be used for the
decoration of the palace.
Even though Sumana had
exclusive rights to all
the flowers in the city, because the
dry season had
caused a drought, he could hardly
find any flower
— even food was scarce let alone
flowers. One day
the flowers were so scarce that in
the whole of the
city all Sumana could find were
eight (coconut shell)
measures of jasmine flowers.
Really, this wasn't
EFTA01160630
enough to decorate the palace, but
it was better than
nothing.
That day, as Sumana was bringing
the eight measures
of jasmine flowers to the palace,
he met with
the Lord Buddha along the way.
The Lord Buddha
was on almsround. Sumana
regularly attended the
Buddha's sermons but he had
never really had the
chance to make a decent offering
to the Buddha,
partly because of his poverty and
partly because
EFTA01160631
his faith was not very profound.
That day, as Sumana saw the Lord
Buddha he felt
that the Buddha looked particularly
resplendent
and worthy of faith. The
deportment of the Buddha
seemed so perfect in every respect
that he felt
that it was only fitting to bow
down before Him.
Sumana's next thought was that all
he had was eight
measures of flowers. If he used
them to honour the
king, all the king could give him
was income, food
EFTA01160632
and clothing to see him through the
present lifetime.
However, that day he was going to
pay respect
to the Lord Buddha to create for
himself the
positive karma that would bring
him benefits not
just in this lifetime but in many
lifetimes to come.
Even if the king were to execute
him, it wouldn't
affect the good results of these
deeds.
Sumana raised the flowers to his
forehead and
when he had made his resolution,
EFTA01160633
sprinkled the jasmine
flowers on the path ahead of the
Lord Buddha
with the intention that the Buddha
would walk
upon his fragrant offering.
The Lord Buddha saw the strength
of Sumana' s
faith — to the degree that he was
prepared to lay
down his life in order to make this
offering. Thus
the Lord Buddha created a miracle
in order to bring
Sumana real joy, to allow him to
gain the full merit
of his generous deed and lead him
EFTA01160634
to attain enlightenment
in the future.
Thus as soon as the flowers were
released from
Sumana's hand, the flowers floated
up as a net of
flowers above where the Lord
Buddha stood and
this net would follow the Lord
Buddha wherever
He went. At both sides of the path
all of the householders
came out of their houses to see the
miraculous
sight and were inspired by the
sight of the flowers
which seemed to have a life of
EFTA01160635
their own in honour
of the Lord Buddha.
Through Sumana's faith together
with the power
of the perfections of the Lord
Buddha, the jasmine
flowers sent their scent throughout
the whole of
the city. The scent followed the
Lord Buddha wherever
he went and this attracted everyone
out of their
houses to see the sight of the Lord
Buddha.
62 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Many of the householders had seen
EFTA01160636
the Lord Buddha
before, but they had never been
inspired by
Him. But that day the sight of the
Lord Buddha was
so impressive that many of the
householders were
inspired to faith. Those who were
only slightly faithful
put their hands together in a
gesture of prayer.
Those who were more inspired
raised their hands
in a gesture of prayer and offered
words in praise
of the Lord Buddha. Those whose
faith was even
EFTA01160637
greater prepared food to offer into
the Buddha's
bowl and followed him around to
see what would
happen to the flowers.
The Buddha's almsround took him
all over the
city and eventually brought Him to
the front of the
palace. The king heard the news
and came to give
alms himself. Then the king
invited the Buddha to
take his breakfast in the palace.
As the Buddha was taking his
meal, the ceiling
of flowers remained above Him
EFTA01160638
while the Buddha
gave His blessing and until he
returned to
Jetavana Temple. As He entered
the temple the
flowers fell down in a pile at the
temple gate. This
only added to the faith of the
followers and even
Sumana thought,"If the king is to
execute me for
failing in my duty, it has certainly
been worth it!"
By contrast, Sumana's wife
thought the opposite.
She wondered how her husband
could have been
EFTA01160639
so incredibly stupid. If he had
given the flowers to
the king at least he would have got
money in return.
By giving the flowers to the
Buddha, he got
no money in return. All he got was
faith and how
was that going to feed his hungry
children? And if
the king were disatisfied about not
getting his flowers
and decides to execute Sumana
and decide to
execute his wife and children too,
they'd all suffer
because of his stupidity. And if the
EFTA01160640
king seized
Sumana's belongings, he would
just take Sumana's
possessions — he would take the
possessions of
everybody in the household. She
didn't want that
to happen. The wife went straight
to the king and
disowned all responsibility for her
husband's actions.
She demanded divorce from her
husband
there and then, and swore before
the king that if
her husband was to suffer for his
actions let him
EFTA01160641
suffer alone. The king asked her if
she was sure of
what she was doing. The wife
asserted that she was
quite sure of her actions.
Instead of being angry with
Sumana, the king felt
intrigued and inspired by the
flower-man's example
and decided to give Sumana a
prize for his virtues.
In the end Sumana received the
prize alone
because his former wife had
already disowned him.
When the story reached the ears of
the Lord Buddha,
EFTA01160642
the Venerable/nanda asked the
Lord Buddha
about the fruits of Sumana's faith
on that occasion.
The Lord Buddha taught that with
a strength
of faith that someone is prepared to
lay down his
life, such as that of Sumana, faith
is very deeply
rooted in someone's mind, making
the mind of
Sumana very radiant and that for at
least a hundred-
thousand aeons [kappa]. However
many
rebirths Sumana took, he would be
EFTA01160643
born in only
the human and the heaven realms.
He would never
be born in the neither realms of
hell, animals, hungry-
ghosts or asEras. After the
appropriate length
of time, Sumana would become
enlightened as a
paccekabuddha.
Thus from the power of faith in the
Buddha,the
resulting brightness and clarity of
mind will stay
with one throughout the course of
many lifetimes.
One's discretion will be
EFTA01160644
impeccable and because
one's judgement is sound, one will
be a wise one in
every lifetime. This is the fruit of
paying respect to
those worthy of respect —
radiance of mind, which
ultimately will lead to Right View
in every lifetime.
DhA.ii.40ff.
F.3 Ex. SudhApiAIaya helps build
pagoda
Another illustratory tale is that of
Ven. SudApiAliya
Thera. When he became
enlightened as an arahant
he recollected his previous lives to
EFTA01160645
see how he had
come to attain arahantship and
meditating to recollect
his previous lives he discovered
that he had
made an offering of only a handful
of lime.
SudApiAliya Thera was born in
the era of one of
the previous Buddhas, at the time
when that Buddha
had already entered Parinirvana.
The people
of the country were building a
cetiya in which to
inter the relics of that Buddha.
SudApiAliya Thera
EFTA01160646
was a man of faith despite his
poverty, he thought,
Blessing Three: Expressing
Respect to Those Worthy of
Respect 63
"I have relied on the Teachings
and virtue of the
Lord Buddha all along. Now that
the people are all
building a cetiya as a memorial to
the generations
of the future to take the same
opportunity as the
Lord Buddha to do good deeds all
their life. It is
only fitting that I should make
some contribution
EFTA01160647
to the building of the cetiya on this
occasion."
With this thought in mind,
SudApiAIiyaThera felt
strong faith in the Buddha and
wanted to take a
part in paying homage to the Lord
Buddha along
with the other people. As a pauper,
he had no possessions
to give as an offering. He went and
bought
a handful of lime and took this
lime as his contribution
to the building of the cetiya. But
on this occasion,
although the contribution was
EFTA01160648
small, but his
faith profound.
The fruit of SudApiAliya Thera's
faith made his
mind so radiant that from that
lifetime onwards to
his final rebirth, he was born only
in the human
and the heaven realms. He never
descended into
hell throughout 94 aeons and
attained arahantship
in his final lifetime.
In the opposite respect if we
cultivate anger or
vengefulness for 94 aeons this will
lead us to do no
EFTA01160649
end of hateful acts and the
resulting extra interest
of bad karma will ensure that you
never get born
in the human realm again.
Ap.i.133
F.4 Ex. KosAtakE pays homage at
pagoda
Another example is that of
KosAtakE. Her name
means `loofah'. There are many
species of loofah.
Some can be eaten. Some are
inedible and have to
be thrown away. At the time when
the Lord Buddha
had already passed away and his
EFTA01160650
disciples were
organizing a grand cremation,
King AjAtasattu enshrined
the relics of the Lord Buddha in a
cetiya and
when the ceremony was over, there
was a festival.
At that time there was a woman
who was pitifully
poor who had had faith in the Lord
Buddha since
the time when he was alive. When
the people of
the country were holding their
festival to celebrate
the completion of the new cetiya,
this woman
EFTA01160651
wanted to join in the celebration by
honouring the
cetiya with flowers.The woman
wasn't discerning
enough to buy beautiful flowers
like the rest of the
people. She went and collected
four loofahs from
the edge of the forest — golden
yellow in colour.
These loofahs were priceless
because no-one
would pay good money for
something inedible. She
took the four such fruits and set off
in the direction
of the cetiya with the full intention
EFTA01160652
to offer them in
homage to the Lord Buddha.
She was in such a rush that she
didn't look where
she was going, so fixed was her
mind on making
her offering at the cetiya. In her
path were a cow
and calf. The cow saw the
determination of the
woman and misunderstood that she
wanted to
harm her calf and responded by
goring the woman
to death, before she could reach
the cetiya. Even so,
even though the woman never
EFTA01160653
reached the cetiya,
her mind had such a determination
to accomplish
her good deed that with the
collected potential of a
mind with shame and fear of evil,
virtue and the
wisdom to appreciate the good
deeds of the Lord
Buddha, meant that as she was
gored to death she
was reborn immediately as an
angel — her clothes
became immediately refined as
angelic raiment of
the same golden colour as the
loofah and the angelic
EFTA01160654
mansion that arose as the result of
her merit
was also the colour of the loofah.
Indra, the king of heaven saw the
new arrival in
heaven and asked what merit she
had performed
to cause the arising of a golden
coloured mansion.
The angel smiled shyly and replied
that she had
done only something very
insignificant — just taking
four loofahs to pay respect to the
cetiya containing
the relics of the Lord Buddha but
she had been
EFTA01160655
gored to death by a cow on the
way and regretted
not having reached her goal or else
the golden colour
of her raiment and the mansion
would surely
have been even more striking than
this!
On hearing this, Indra
exclaimed,"Paying respect
to the Lord Buddha with a mind of
faith, even
though He has already entered
parinibbAna in no
way lessens the fruits of good
karma. Whether the
Lord Buddha is alive or passed
EFTA01160656
away gives fruits
of merits equally."
For this reason, even though we
have been born
in a time after the Lord Buddha
has already passed
64 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
away, it should in no way lessen
our diligence in
paying respect to the Lord Buddha.
PEtavimAnavatthu, Vv.iv.9,
VvA.200ff.
F.5 Ex. ParicapApA pays homage
with resentment
There is one more illustratory
example — that of
EFTA01160657
ParicapApA. This name means
`five types of evil' and
is the name give to this particular
woman by her father.
The reason for such an
inauspicious name was
that the child was born defective
with knarled hands,
lame feet, a squint mouth, squint
eyes and a crooked
nose. None of her bodily organs
were in symettry.
Her hands went one way and her
feet went another.
Although the child was repulsively
ugly, she had one
attractive point
her skin was
EFTA01160658
soft like that of an
angel. Because of her one good
point, ParicapApA
was to become the queen of the
country late life.
When she was in the royal palace
as one of the royal
consorts, her skin was so soft that
the king forgot all
the other women the palace. The
other consorts were
so jealous that they framed her so
that the king had
to float her away on a raft
downstream. But as soon
as she reached the next kingdom,
all it took was one
EFTA01160659
touch for the king there to take her
as his queen. Everybody
was so astonished that a woman so
physically
deformed could come to be the
queen of two
kingdoms that someone asked the
Lord Buddha how
this could come to be.
The Lord Buddha looked back at
her previous lifetimes
and discovered that the woman had
made
an offering to a paccekabuddha
but the offering was
made out of anger. On that day, the
woman was
EFTA01160660
shoring up the wall of her house
with mud. A
paccekabuddha also needed mud
to build his kuti and
seeing that the woman had more
than enough mud
came bowl in hand to ask for some
of the mud. The
woman was reluctant to give away
any of her mud,
but gave the paccekabuddha some
anyway. Out of
anger, she threw a clod of mud into
the
paccekabuddha's bowl. At the
time she was scowling,
with her eyebrows knitted
EFTA01160661
together, her feet
stamping the ground and shaking a
fist at the
paccekabuddha. The result of her
reluctant gooddeed
in future rebirths was that her
stamping feet were
lame, the hand which threw the
mud was knarled
and her scowling face was
deformed beyond recognition.
The good part of her deed, the
generosity,
still gave its fruit — because the
mud which built
the kuti which helped shelter the
paccekabuddha from
EFTA01160662
the rain gave her angelic
complexion. But this could
not diminish the bad part of the
deed that was not
being polite to those worthy of
respect.
J.v.440ff., KuAala JAtaka (J.536)
Thus in conclusion, not paying
respect to those worthy
of respect, or not having faith in
those who ought
to inspire faith clouds the mind and
the extension of
this ultimately to become a fool.
Blessing One: Not Associating
with Fools 65
EFTA01160663
The Second
Group of Blessings
"Turning towards
wholesomeness"
It is rare to find a system of
spiritual wisdom that has
environmental
considerations built into its
metaphysics. The possible
exception is the Chinese "Feng
Shui" system which probably
has its
roots in Buddhism anyway. In
science by contrast, there is
EFTA01160664
always a
great debate in developmental
biology about the relative
influence
of the genetic component and
the formative experience — the
socalled
`nature v. nurture' debate. For
science, of course it is mostly
considerations of the
development of physical
features like a colour,
or a size which might have an
influence in the `survival of the
fittest', but for spiritual wisdom,
EFTA01160665
we are more interested in the
development
of spiritual maturity. However,
no less than with science
the Blessings of Life recognize
that there is influence both by
our internal dispositions
(nature) and our environmental
influences
(nurture). The fourth blessing
on "amenable location" is the
first
blessing of the second grouping
of blessings which deals with
"turning
EFTA01160666
towards wholesome discretion".
If we have practised the first
three blessings successfully, we
will already have" turned our
back
on negative discretion". In this
set of three blessings, the first
(Blessing
Four) deals with "nurture"
influences of the environment
on
the development of our
discretion. The second
(Blessing Five) deals
with the "nature" influences on
EFTA01160667
the development of our
discretion
and the sixth deals with having
a clear aim or purpose in one's
life.
All three together are necessary
if we want to set ourselves on
the
path of development of spiritual
maturity. Thus, in Buddhism, it
iS
acknowledged that the
environment must be good if
people are to
become good. If the
EFTA01160668
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EFTA01160669
Dhamma Teachings
Unextreme Climate,
not too rugged,
accessible
from other countries
Self-sufficient in
food
Righteous monarch
or government,
population
honest, no terrorists
or anarchists
who threaten solidarity
Just law and customs
Ease of earning an
honest living, good
social infrastructure,
EFTA01160670
no infectious
diseases.
Supply of good all
year round
Lack of criminals,
outlaws and mafia
Good educational
system in worldly
and spiritual matters
Good water &
electricity supplies,
good roads,
no traffic jams,
good communications,
no natural
disasters
Proximity of market
EFTA01160671
Access to doctors,
patrons/benefactors,
wise men, no
dens of vice
nearby
Monks pass on
almsround, temples
and schools in
area
Well planned house,
sufficient spaces,
good ventilation,
trees for shade, parks
nearby, no disturbance
from noise
A cottage garden, a
good cook in the
EFTA01160672
house
Heads of the household
must be virtuous
and not engage
in roads to ruin
Atmosphere of
learning and teaching
Dhamma in the
home, having at least
one communal meal
daily
TABLE 4.1
DESCRIPTION
Blessing Four: Living in an
EFTA01160673
Amenable Location 67
A. INTRODUCTION
A.1 Amenability of Location in
general
Generally speaking, an appropriate
or amenable
location is one which facilitates
success in what we
set out to do. If we are a fisherman
then it might be
a place on the coast closest to the
fish breeding
grounds. If we are in business then
it might be a
place with all the hustle and bustle
of the crowds
where our business will prosper.
EFTA01160674
And what if we
are monks? Monks need a place
with special characteristics
— a place that is both peaceful and
quiet
but not too far from the
homesteads of the village.
For soldiers, an amenable location
is a strategic one.
In conclusion, each and every
profession and activity
has its own appropriate location
for facilitating
success. The word `location' can
equally well
be applied to the microcosm the
setting of a particular
EFTA01160675
activity as it can to the macrocosm.
Even if
you are sitting at a dining table,
sitting at one side
of the table might be more or less
amenable than
sitting at the other. The location
that most concerns
a person or his activities is his
immediate environment
or neighbourhood- but the more
distant environments
of his locality or country also have
a
part to play.
A.2 Amenability in Dhamma
practice
EFTA01160676
The sort of location to be
examined in this Blessing
is the location amenable to refining
the mind or put
another way, the location that
facilitates the depth
by which we can understand the
Teachings of the
Lord Buddha. In such an amenable
location, even
though a person may initially lack
wisdom, he can
make a success of his life. On the
contrary, in an
unamenable location, even though
he may have a
high IQ and be capable, given no
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support, there is
no way for him to achieve his full
potential. Even
though someone might get a Ph.D.,
if he is marooned
on a desert island, all his
knowledge goes
to waste. You might be the world's
greatest tactician,
but if you are forced to live in the
forest with
primitive tribal people, all you
knowledge will go
to waste.
The factors that mark an amenable
location also
apply to appropriate areas to live.
EFTA01160678
The Lord Buddha
highlighted four factors which
make a location
amenable — these are:
1. Amenable location
2. Amenable food
3. Amenable neighbours
4. Amenable Dhamma teachings
A.3 Amenable is not the same as
materially
prosperous
In many materially prosperous
countries, life can
be physically convenient. Often
the infrastructure
is well developed. Employment is
easy to find and
EFTA01160679
it is easy for residents to save up
their wealth. On
the surface, such a country might
look attractive to
live in, but one is wont to forget
that although ma-
Blessing Four:
Living in an
Amenable Location
68 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
terial poverty might be hard to
find, spiritual poverty
might be rife (see §.B.4 below). In
such a country,
EFTA01160680
the opportunity and the means to
develop spiritual
maturity might be very hard to
find. The
chance to accrue merit might be
almost nonexistant.
Residents in such countries think
only of
work from the time they get up in
the morning to
the time they go to sleep at night.
Thoughts of generosity,
self-discipline or meditation might
be the
last thing on their minds. Even for
those who have
some spiritual calling, often they
EFTA01160681
can find no-one
to give them useful advice. To live
in such a country
might be life wasted from the point
of view of
spiritual development. It would be
better to make
some sacrifices of material
convenience in choosing
the place you want to live, in order
to live in an
environment of spiritual richness
— which is truly
an amenable environment for one's
spiritual
progress.
B. Components
EFTA01160682
The components of amenable
location cannot be
defined globally because they
mean different things
at different levels of explanation
(see diagram p.66):
B.1 Amenable Location
B.1.1 National Level
At the geographical level, it may
mean an amenable
climate that is not too hot and not
too cold. It
might mean that the landscape is
not too rugged or
liable to flooding — but at the
same time with convenient
communications towards the rest
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of the
world.
B.1.2 Local Level
At a more local level, an amenable
climate means
ease for the populace in earning a
decent living,
good communications, proper
social infrastructure
and a plentiful supply of clean
drinking water.
B.1.3 Neighbourhood Level
On the level of the neighbourhood,
the things that
make the environment amenable
are a proper water
and electricity supply, a good road
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system to
avoid traffic jams, good
communications and no
flooding in the wet season.
B.1.4 Household Level
On the level of the household, the
things that count
for making the environment
amenable are a properly
planned house with sufficient
space, good ventilation,
enough trees round and about to
give
shade, nearby open areas or parks
and no disturbance
from noise. Applying the same
principles to
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a temple, amenable temple
grounds is sufficiently
spacious for the number of
templegoers, with
enough shade to allow the
congregation to meditate
in comfort and without disturbance
from the
hustle and bustle of urban life.
B.2 Amenable Food
B.2.1 National Level
On a national level, amenable food
means being
self-sufficient in one's food
supply, not having to
rely on neighbouring countries for
one's food supply,
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or drinking water.
B.2.2 Local Level
On local level, amenable food
might mean the proximity
of a market for foodstuffs. It might
also mean
being able to grow home-produce.
In any case, anyone
who lives in an area liable to
flooding should
try to be self sufficient with their
own cottage garden.
It doesn't matter how you go about
growing
the vegetables. For some villages,
when the floods
come, if the government doesn't
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send in supplies
by helicopter for two or three days,
the whole village
will starve. These are always the
villages which
are too lazy to grow their own
vegetables. If they
had grown their own vegetables,
even though the
floods come, it doesn't particularly
bother them. By
contrast, those places that plant
only cash crops like
maize, lose everything they have
as soon as the
floods arrive. Just having a few
vegetables like onions
EFTA01160688
in the garden allows one to survive
for over a
month even when the floods come.
B.2.3 Neighbourhood Level
Amenability of food at the
neighbour hood level
might mean the proximity of the
market.
B.2.4 Household Level
An amenable food supply at the
household level
Blessing Four: Living in an
Amenable Location 69
can be summarized with just a few
brief hints:
1. You should have a supply of
vegetables used
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around the kitchen in reserve in
your cottage
garden in case of times of need.
2. Your house should be located
close to the market.
If it is too far from the market, this
will become
an obstacle to obtaining food.
3. Your house ought to have a
good cook. A good
cook is the heart of a successful
kitchen. There
was once an army general who
commented in
front of his wife (whether he meant
to praise
her or criticize her is uncertain)
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saying, "the
only reason that I've been able to
put up with
her all these years, is her only
single good point
— apart from this point there is
nothing good
about her. She neglects the
children. She is useless
at receiving guests. She takes little
care of
the household finances — I have to
do the accounts
myself. The only reason that I've
been
able to put up with her all these
years, is that she
EFTA01160691
makes a tasty meal. If it wasn't for
her being a
good cook, we would have gone
our separate
ways years ago." Anybody who
thinks they can
rely on instant foods, convenience
foods and
take-aways should think again.
Everybody
should attempt to learn how to
cook. If ever you
have to take care of someone who
is ill or lonely
or anxious, who have lost their
appetite, and you
can't get out to the market
that
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will be the
time when your ability to make a
proper meal
will really make a difference.
For as long as we still have
defilements in the mind,
we still have an appetite and we
still have our favourite
foods. Were not all like crocodiles
which
can survive on gravel. For as long
as we're still human,
we are still choosy about the food
we eat. Too
sweet or sour, salty or oily and the
food loses its
attraction. Thus if the food we eat
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is to be amenable
there is no harm in food being
tasty.
B.3 Amenable Neighbours
B.3.1 Definitions
The various characteristics of a
location or a neighbourhood,
whether good or bad, are only
general
characteristics. Even if the general
characteristics
of a location are abysmal, but the
place is inhabited
by virtuous people, then the
drawbacks of the location
can be overcome. On the other
hand, in a
EFTA01160694
good location with good housing
and employment
prospects, if the inhabitants are
dishonest, however
beautiful the buildings, it can be no
better than a
den of thieves. If the inhabitants
are peaceful and
well mannered, like monks, then
the buildings are
a refuge as good as a temple.
B.3.2 National Level
At the national level, amenable
personnel means a
population who eke out their
existence by honest
means. It means a population that
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lacks criminals,
terrorists or anarchists who
threaten the solidarity
of the country.
B.3.3 Local Level
At the local level, if the populace
are interested in
nothing more than earning their
living, society will
not be a happy one.
B.3.4 Neighbourhood Level
At the neighbourhood level, in
addition to a
hardworking populace there must
be those who
make a direct contribution to the
well-being of the
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society.
I. Doctors are necessary in any
society. Without
them, every illness will entail
death. Even if a
location is the most profitable of
marketplaces,
without doctors in the background,
it can never
become an amenable society.
2. Patrons and benefactors.
Patrons and benefactors
arise in a society where there is
trading.
Those who live in a mercantile
society reap the
benefits of having capital and such
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a society
breeds rich benefactors and
millionaires. Compare
a society of people where there are
only
paupers and beggars and you will
see how hard
it is for such a society to become
amenable to the
study of Dhamma. In the time of
the Lord Buddha,
if a king decided to establish a new
city, even
if he had sufficient labour,
craftsmen, without
being granted a benefactor or
patron from a
EFTA01160698
neighbouring city, to be the patron
of the new
city, the king wouldn't dare to
build a new town.
70 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
(see §.D.2 below) The reason that
having a patron
was so important, apart from being
a capitalist
who would stimulate trade and
growth, he
would act as the economist who
would help the
king with his financial
policy-making so that the
new city would be able to keep its
EFTA01160699
financial head
above water.
3. Wise men. Many of the reasons
for the importance
of the wise have already been
covered in
Blessing Two. In brief, the wise
have a special
discretion which allows them to
distinguish between
what is right and what is wrong,
what's
appropriate and what's
inappropriate, what is
meritorious and what is downright
evil. Even if
you're illiterate, but you can tell
EFTA01160700
the difference
between right and wrong, you can
still be considered
a wise one. Thus if you are
choosing a
place to live, avoid choosing a
place where no
wise ones live, because in such a
place society is
not amenable to the study of
Dhamma.
4. Righteous Monarch who is
established in the Ten
Virtues of a Monarch. Without
going into detail,
it can be said that a qualifying
monarch must be
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just and moral. Of course the
country's leader
doesn't have to be a king to make
it an amenable
place to live. The same virtues in a
president will
make his country as amenable as a
country governed
by a virtuous king.
B.3.5 Household Level
Amenable personnel at the level of
the household
means the leader of the household
must be virtuous.
The husband should abstain from
drinking alcohol,
the wife from gambling. Both
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should be earnest
in earning an honest living. Their
children
should be earnest in their studies
and should be
obedient to their parents'
command. In this way
the household will be united as the
smallest unit of
an amenable society.
B.4 Amenable Dhamma
B.4.1 Definitions
Dhamma is the culture or
principles which governs
the lifestyle of a society that lives
in an amenable
location. At the most basic level
EFTA01160703
amenable Dhamma
in a society means the governing
principles of law
and order that the society abides
by. Amenable
Dhamma is lacking from countries
where outlaws
run amok. At a deeper level,
amenable Dhamma
equates with culture and tradition
that is one of virtue.
The law protects society only from
acts of violation
through the channels of body and
speech, but
has no effect on the quality of
peoples' minds.The
EFTA01160704
minds of a nation can be shaped
for the better only
by culture or traditions that raise
the quality of
mind. Examples of this might be
the attitude of respect
that a child should have towards
his parents
or a student towards his master.
For as long as such
traditions are still perpetuated and
passed down
from one generation to the next in
a particular society,
that society is still an amenable
place to live.
By contrast, you should avoid
EFTA01160705
going to live in a
barbaric society where man has no
respect for his
fellow man. An example of this
would be the primitive
society which idolize the man who
is able to
kill his own father — seeing him
as the epitomy of
hard-heartedness and fit to be the
leader of the
tribe.
At a yet deeper level, amenable
Dhamma in a society
means a good educational system
which allows
the citizens to make a thorough
EFTA01160706
study of both
worldly and spiritual matters —
where both schools
and temples form the educational
infrastructure of
society
and all citizens are
equipped with sufficient
rationale not to be credulous.
Deeper still, Buddhism should be
well rooted in
that country. The Lord Buddha
taught that some
people are born empty-handed and
die empty
handed — because they cannot
distinguish between
good and bad deeds. They just do
EFTA01160707
whatever they
feel like doing. When they are
young, their parents
bring them up. When they are
full-grown, they get
married and have a family — and
their children
get married and have their own
children and the
family name is perpetuated for
another generation.
In the end they pass away and they
have no merit
or demerit to take with them when
they go. It is
this sort of person that Buddhism
recognizes as
EFTA01160708
being born empty-handed and
dying emptyhanded.
Put another way, life has been
fruitless for
them.
Blessing Four: Living in an
Amenable Location 71
Even though some people are born
on the doorstep
of Buddhism, they still leave the
world emptyhanded
— so what chance do people who
have
never even come across Buddhism
stand? The Lord
Buddha thus laid down guidelines
for life, teaching
EFTA01160709
that having taken human birth, you
must seek
benefit both for this lifetime and
the next. Benefit
can only accrue if you use your
body and mind for
positive good deeds that will give
worthwhile returns
on our having been born human.
The Lord
Buddha taught that at the very
least, you ought to
be able to set yourself up in life. If
you are in debt
or still have to rely on others for
the roof over your
head, you have not yet suceeded in
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even the most
rudimentary of human duties. If
you are a man (and
not a mouse) you must be able to
stand on your
own two feet. This is what we call
benefit for the
present lifetime.
From our description so far of the
features of an
amenable location, whether the
inhabitants know
Buddhism or not, they will manage
to succeed in
fulfilling benefit for the present
lifetime. Where
those who don't know Buddhism
EFTA01160711
miss out, is
through not knowing how to fulfil
benefits for the
next lifetime. Without a
knowledge of Buddhism,
you can do no better than use up
the merits accrued
from previous lifetimes. No
additional merits are
accrued this lifetime and at the end
of this life, your
after-life destination will be one of
suffering.
Those who accrue benefit for
future lifetimes, when
they die will not go to hell or be
born as animals.
EFTA01160712
Whatever the proportion of good
and bad deeds
they may have done, at the very
least they will take
human birth again — even though
they may be
handicapped in one way or
another.
B.4.2 National Level
Amenable Dhamma Teachings at
National Level
means having just laws and
customs as the national
identity.
B.4.3 Local Level
Dhamma for the children means
having a good
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school. If our children have the
chance to study at a
decent school, it will give them a
head start in life
because there is such a great
variety of quality in
the teaching given at different
schools. Dhamma
for the adults means having a good
temple near at
hand. At the very least, if there is a
temple near to
our house there will be monks who
pass near to
our house on their almsround and
we will have the
opportunity to make merit every
EFTA01160714
morning. If we
want to listen to a sermon, we
won't have to go far.
If a site is close to both the school
and the temple it
will earn plenty of points for
amenable Dhamma.
B.4.4 Neighbourhood Level
Amenable Dhamma Teachings at
the Neighbourhood
Level means that monks pass on
almsround
and having temples and schools in
the vicinity.
B.4.5 Household Level
This means an atmosphere of
enthusiasm for
EFTA01160715
Dhamma learning and teaching in
the home.
B.4.6 Profit in for next life
(A.iv.284)
The special characteristic of
Dhamma teaching that
prevents a person from "leaving
the world emptyhanded"
are the sort of teachings that lead
to "profit
in the hereafter". The Lord Buddha
taught that the
minimum of virtue required is the
four virtues for
benefit in the hereafter as follows
[sampAyikatthapayoj anal
(see detail from B1.2 §C4.2).
EFTA01160716
I. Faith [saddha]: means
confidence in things you ought
to have faith in — being a person
of discretion especially
in the operation of the laws of
karma — that doing good
deeds will lead to good outcomes
and that doing evil
will lead to bad retribution.
Without such well-founded
faith you have little chance of
well-being in your future.
2. The Precepts [stla]: You must
keep the minimum
of Five Precepts as the baseline of
one's virtue
because the Precepts measure the
EFTA01160717
degree to
which you are a person as opposed
to being a
savage.
3. Self-sacrifice [cAga]:
Self-sacrifice has many levels
of meaning from the superficial to
the deep.
At its simplest, it means avoiding
being so stingy
that you cannot bear to see anyone
else sharing
your possessions or getting any
benefit from
them. It means the habit of liking
to share with
72 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
EFTA01160718
towards Enlightened Living
others. At its deepest level it
means giving up
even the destructive feelings we
might feel towards
other people or more generally,
letting go
of anything that encroaches on our
quality of
mind — i.e. all thoughts of evil
and unseemly
habits until none remain.
4. Wisdom [pain A]. To be
specific, diligence in
studying both worldly and spiritual
knowledge
— so that we can earn a decent
EFTA01160719
living efficiently
and at the same time know the
difference between
good and evil — in order to win
the path
to heaven. Once people are able to
identify what
is merit and what is demerit, they
will gain the
inspiration to do only good deeds.
Thus knowledge
paves the pathway to heaven.
C. PRACTICAL
CONSIDERATIONS
C.1 Choosing the location of a
new home
Having studied the four main
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principles of a location
which is amenable to the spreading
of the
Dhamma, we have at the same
time discovered a
recipe for success in choosing the
location of a new
house. In the olden days, no-one
would dare to
build a new house without first
seeking the advice
of a teaching monk or at the very
least of a fortune
teller. They would always advise
the oracle in question
to look at the lie of the land. In
fact, the most
EFTA01160721
successful oracles were not
interested in the lie of
the land at all, but were interested
in how many of
the four principles of amenable
location were
present at the proposed site of the
new house. If
you want to tell as much about the
potential site of
a new house as the oracles of old
did, start by drawing
up a grid with five rows as
follows:
Site 1 Site 2 Site 3 Site 4
Once you have drawn up the grid,
supposing you
EFTA01160722
wanted to build a house and you
have a choice of
four or five locations, but cannot
decide which to
choose, then award points to each
of the different
locations according to the four
principles of an
amenable location: location, food,
neigbours and
Dhamma. Give each principle
points out of twentyfive.
When we add up the total points
for each different
location, we will be able to choose
the most
amenable location by choosing the
EFTA01160723
site with the
highest point rating. Use the
following guidelines
for giving points:
I. Amenable location: We should
look at the neighbourhood
and give points if the place has
good
facilities including access, running
water, electricity
and a telephone line. If there is
already a
house on the site, the more
spacious the better.
The quality of the construction
work will also
guide you as to your awarding of
EFTA01160724
points. Look
at the subdivision of rooms to see
whether it is
habitable or not. Give the location
points accordingly.
2. Amenable food supply:
Consider that if you
should choose a particular site for
your home,
you will be living there for a long
time and therefore
should give adequate thought to
the availability
of food. Make sure that the
location isn't
too far from the market or from a
shop selling
EFTA01160725
food and various other
`perishables'. If any of
these sources of food are close at
hand, you can
award that site plenty of points for
the food supply.
3. Amenable neighbours: Inspect
the location to see
whether it is near to or part of a
slum. Do people
gamble there or nearby? Is it close
to a liquor
factory? Is it a den of thieves? If it
is any of these
things, then keep your distance.
Choose somewhere
else. If on the contrary, all the
EFTA01160726
neighbours
are respectable, socially
distinguished and of
Right View (such as doctors or
teachers) of good
social standing and of good
conduct, then this
should attract us to live nearby. At
the very least,
those good neighbours will give us
peaceful surroundings
and in times of need they will be
able
to help us. Give the neighbours the
appropriate
point rating.
4. Amenable Dhamma: In order to
EFTA01160727
give points for
this particular factor, it is
necessary to divide the
1. Location
2. Food
3. Neighbours
4.Dhamma
Blessing Four: Living in an
Amenable Location 73
factor into two contributing parts:
Dhamma for
the children and Dhamma for the
adults.
When you add up the total points
for each site, you
should choose the location with the
maximum
EFTA01160728
points as the site for your new
house. Next time
you move house there is no need to
call in the fortune
teller — or a monk either, because
armed with
an understanding of the factors that
make a site
amenable for habitation, you can
choose the site for
new house without anyone else's
help. This is certainly
a good example of Dhamma that is
immediately
applicable to everyday life.
C.2 Making your present home
amenable
EFTA01160729
For those who do not ordain and
leave the home
life, usually, the home and family
form the hub of
life. In this connection, what
should be done to the
home to make it amenable to the
prospering of the
Dhamma? According to Thai
tradition, even though
we might have three meals a day,
there should be
at least one of those meals when
the whole of the
family is together (See Blessing 12,
§B.3.1 heading 3.2).
Some people claim that they are
EFTA01160730
overburdened
with work. However if you
consider that the only
reason that you spend so much
time at work is to
be a breadwinner for your family
to send your child
to a private school — then think
again. If you are
left with no time to bring up your
children properly
and your child gets addicted to
heroin because
of your negligence, a million
dollars would be insufficient
to rectify the problem. If on the
contrary,
EFTA01160731
you can get by while still finding
sufficient time to
give full attention to your child's
upbringing, then
you will be rewarded when your
child grows up
into a virtuous example of a human
being.
Many parents have been reduced
to tears by disappointment.
They're upset that their child
cannot
go to university because of
becoming a junkie. They
cry about their awful child — but
it would be more
fitting to cry about having been
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such an awful parent
who didn't take the trouble to
bring up their
own child properly!
Therefore, remember that bringing
up a child
means more than just seeing that
there is food on
their plate. You need to instil your
child with virtue
and to this end, both children and
parents
should see each others' faces
across the dining table
at least once a day, and discuss
Dhamma, instruct
one another and comment on the
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habits
which each should be improving
upon. If you can't
manage to meet at mealtimes, you
should make
sure that the family come together
before bedtime,
perhaps for Evening Chanting —
but even bedtime
cannot beat mealtimes. A child
will never miss a
meal, and a good telling off before
dinner will stay
in his mind for a long time.
Thus if you are to give a good
example of
Dhamma which is amenable to the
EFTA01160734
household, then
a family being together at
mealtimes will certainly
fit the bill.
C.3 Relative importance of the
Four Amenable
Location Factors
In conclusion, an amenable
location has four characteristics:
an amenable location, amenable
food
supply, amenable personnel and
amenable
Dhamma. If you put these four
characteristics in
order of importance, you will find
the following:
EFTA01160735
Amenable Dhamma is the most
important, followed
by amenable personnel, followed
by amenable
food supply and an amenable
location is the
least important of the four.
Even though the location may not
be ideal, but
the food is plentiful or neither the
location or the
food supply are ideal, but the
inhabitants are amenable,
they can soon improve the quality
of the location
and the food. However, the thing
that makes
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the inhabitants amenable is having
Amenable
Dhamma it that location. This is
the reason why
Amenable Dhamma is the most
important attribute
of the four.
C.4 Amenable Location outside,
Amenable Location inside
There are two different types of
amenable location:
I. Amenable Surroundings: the
quality of location
which is determined by the four
factors already
discussed.
2. Amenable Location within:
EFTA01160737
This is the most important
influence on the quality of our well
being
— i.e. a healthy body and mind —
a body
74 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
and mind that are in no way
disabled or infected
by disease.
Some people are born with a silver
spoon in their
mouths. They are brought up
properly by their parents,
but when they grow up, instead of
feeling
grateful for all the efforts made by
EFTA01160738
their parents,
they inflict illness upon themselves
by turning
alcaholic. There are a myriad
diseases that come as
a result of drinking alcohol. Even
lying can be the
source of disease (see Blessing
Nine, §C.1.4) causing
your memory to become blurred
and eventually
leading to senile dementure as the
result of the bad
karma you have accumulated
throughout the
course of your life.
Thus as we have seen from the
EFTA01160739
examples of breaking
the Precepts of lying or drinking
alcahol, all of
the Precepts, if broken, will be the
source of illness.
Thus you need to protect your
internal environment.
If you pollute the quality of your
internal environment,
success will elude you for the rest
of
your life and your future lifetimes
will be even
worse. Take care of your Precepts
and they will take
care of you.
Now that you know the four
EFTA01160740
factors of an amenable
location if you are still a child you
should look
for a location that is going to be
amenable to your
own education. If you are an adult
then you should
try to make your location into an
amenable location,
wherever you go. As an adult, it
isn't good enough
simply to go looking for amenable
locations, you
should be working actively to
improve the quality
of the environment.
D. ILLUSTRATIVE
EFTA01160741
EXAMPLES
D.1 Metaphor: Bonsai Bodhi Tree
It is said that if you plant a tree in
fertile soil, it will
grow until it is many metres in
diameter. If you take
the same tree and plant it in a
flower pot or a barrel,
it will end up as a root-bound
bonsai tree instead.
Even if it is watered and carefully
tended for
several generations it will never
grow higher than
a few inches. Asked why a
thousand-year old tree
reaches only a few inches in
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height, we come back
to the conclusion that it has been
planted in an
unamenable location. Even though
it doesn't grow
tall, it doesn't die.
D.2 Ex. Establishing Saketu
(DhA.i.386)
When King Pasenadi built the new
city of Saketu
in the time of the Lord Buddha, he
sent a letter to
King BimbAsara to ask for
permission to move one
of the patrons from that kingdom
to live in the new
city. King BimbasAra sent
EFTA01160743
VisAkhA's father as patron
to the new city. Before long, the
patron got all
the finances of the city properly
organized and
Saketu became one of the most
prosperous citystates
in India at that time. This goes to
show that
an amenable city doesn't just
consist of buildings
but it needs the presence of
amenable neighbours
such as benefactors and patrons.
D.3 Ex. Ariya the fisherman
(DhA.iii.396ff)
Even though some people in the
EFTA01160744
time of the Lord
Buddha had no worldly knowledge
— they were
completely illiterate and were of
the lowest trades
but they had the good fortune to
be born in an
amenable location (i.e. in the same
time and place
as the Buddha) and because of this
fact alone, were
able to attain enlightenment to
level of a stream
enterer [sotApana].
There was a fisherman
called"Ariya" (lit. "noble
one") who lived during the time of
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the Buddha. As
a fisherman, he caught and killed
fish every day.
One day in meditation, the Buddha
saw Ariya's
potential to attain the fruit of
stream-entry
[sotApattiphala] and went, with a
number of other
monks to where Ariya was fishing.
Seeing the Buddha
approaching, Ariya became
ashamed of his action
and hid his fishing line. When the
Buddha arrived,
while standing in front of the man,
he asked
EFTA01160746
SAriputta his name. "SAriputta",
replied
SAriputta. The Buddha then
proceeded to ask the
name of each of the monks and
overhearing, the
man wondered whether after
asking all the monks'
names, the Buddha would ask his.
The Buddha
knew what he was thinking and
asked the man his
name. "Ariya" replied the man. In
fact, the Buddha
didn't need to be told the man's
name. The Buddha
gave Ariya a teaching that anyone
EFTA01160747
who still
harmed other living beings could
not be called `noble'
on account of his actions. He said
that one's
nobility comes from not harming
other living beBlessing
Four: Living in an Amenable
Location 75
ings. Hearing the Buddha's
teaching, Ariya attained
stream-entry and from that day
onwards never
killed a living being again, having
transcended the
very intention to kill — in spite of
the fact that he
EFTA01160748
was illiterate. He lived in the
depths of poverty, but
he had one auspicious advantage in
his life, and
that was to live in a time and place
where there was
the opportunity to come
face-to-face with the Lord
Buddha — and this alone allowed
him to become
enlightened to the level of a
stream-enterer.
D.4 Ex. Ghosaka's lifetime as a
dog
(DhA.i.169, PsA.504ff)
Another example of a similar
phenomenon happened
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in a time before the Lord Buddha.
At that
time, the only Buddhas in
existence were
paccekabuddhas who although
enlightened, were
unable to teach for the benefit of
the manyfolk.
These paccekabuddhas came on
almsround in the city.
Having collected alms, they would
return to the
forest to take their meal. This
would be his normal
daily routine. Seeing that the
paccekabuddha had to
walk such a long way each day,
EFTA01160750
one of the more
faithful supporters invited the
paccekabuddha to
dwell nearby his own house and
would bring food
for the paccekabuddha every for
every morning and
midday meal.
Any day when the householder
was not free to
make the offering himself, he
would send his welltrained
dog to carry a tiffin set of food to
offer to
the paccekabuddha at his place. As
the dog grew more
familiar with the paccekabuddha it
EFTA01160751
took a liking to
Him because the deportment and
manner of the
paccekabuddha was so gentle. If
the dog was at home
and failed to mind firewood for its
master it would
be beaten. However, in the
dwelling of the
paccekabuddha it was a different
story. When the dog
came close he could listen to the
chanting of the
paccekabuddha. There was no risk
of being beaten
and the paccekabuddha would
even divide part of
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the food to give to the dog as well.
The dog became
more and more familiar with the
gentle manner of
the paccekabuddha.
At the end of the rainy season, the
paccekabuddha
bid the householder farewell and
returned to the
forest. The paccekabuddha made
his journey by floating
through the air. The dog watched
the
paccekabuddha go with regret and
howled as loudly
as it could because there was
nothing else for it to
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do. It was a sad farewell for the
dog who still had
the paccekabuddha on its mind.
The dog was so sad
that as it came to the end of its
howling, it dropped
dead. However, as the result of the
faith of this dog
in the paccekabuddha and from
howling at the departure
of the paccekabuddha, the dog was
reborn
immediately as an angel called
Ghosaka — whose
duty was to be a spokesman for the
rest of the angels.
In the time of the Lord Buddha,
EFTA01160754
Ghosaka was reborn
in the human realm as Ghosaka the
Millionnaire and was one of the
greatest patrons of
Buddhism. The result of living in
an amenable location
and taking the chance to be an
attendant to a
paccekabuddha led him to become
an angel on dying
from rebirth as a dog and from his
rebirth as an
angel to be reborn as an important
patron of Buddhism.
D.5 Ex. Monk and Five-Hundred
Bats (Vagguli
Vatthu SadS. 81ff.)
EFTA01160755
Another example comes from the
time of a previous
Buddha. There was a monk who
had retired to
a cave in order to train himself.
The monk would
rise early each morning and chant
the Abhidhamma.
The monk shared the cave with
five-hundred
bats. During the day the bats
would return to
the cave but at night they would
fly outside to feed.
Thus the bats would hear the
chanting of the
Abhidhamma every day. Even
EFTA01160756
though the bats had
no way of knowing the meaning of
the chanting,
they became familiar with the
sound of the monk's
chanting and became inspired with
faith.
When it came to time for the bats
to pass away,
they died with faith in their hearts
and were all reborn
as angels. Passing away from their
existence
as angels, they were reborn as men
in the time of
the present Buddha. All five
hundred men became
EFTA01160757
ordained as monks and hearing the
chanting of the
Abhidhamma only once, unlike
normal people who
might remain indifferent to the
chanting, could re76
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
member the words of the
Abhidhamma which were
still impressed in their minds from
that previous
lifetime, and recollecting the
words of the
Abhidhamma were soon able to
become enlightened
as arahants.
EFTA01160758
Thus, it is easy to see that simply
living in an amenable
location is not just advantageous
for people
— even lowly animals can
experience the benefits!
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
Deeds in One's Past 77
A. INTRODUCTION
With Blessing Five we are still
exploring the virtues
which comprise "turning towards
wholesomeness"
as exemplified by the second
grouping. Last
blessing we have already
mentioned the "naturenurture"
EFTA01160759
dichotomy of scientifically
understood development.
Last blessing already covered the
"nurture"aspect of the environment
— and so this
Blessing we come to the factor of
"nature" — the
aspects of our character and
personality which we
bring with us into the world. In this
Blessing we
attempt to explain the variety of
material and spiritual
success between different people
in the world
— differences which are not
accountable in terms
EFTA01160760
of the Blessings we have already
studied up to this
point. How for example can we
explain the differences
in disposition and life success of
identical
twins (with the same genetic
components), brought
up by the same parents in the same
environment?
How about newborn children, who
far from being
a clean slate have different
personalities, different
potentials and different speeds of
learning. Science
would attribute these things to
EFTA01160761
genetic differences
between their grandparents. This
might work
out for some things such as how
people look or their
physical strength, but I think you
would agree that
there are many other things that
genetics cannot
explain. No scientist has ever
found a gene for intelligence
for example. All that are found are
the
abberations that make people
handicapped — and
these are in spite of the fact that
neither their parents
EFTA01160762
or their grandparents were
handicapped in
such away. Thus it must be
something about the
child himself brings with him into
the world.
This Blessing attempts to account
for the disparity
in terms of the residue of life
experience picked
up by individuals in their past
particularly the
positive life experiences.
In order to understand the rather
lengthy matter
of having done good deeds in
one's past, it is necessary
EFTA01160763
to study the subject of merit in
general and
to touch also upon the subjects of
retribution and
mind quality. Some people study
the Manual of Peace
from Blessing One (Not
Associating with Fools)
through Blessing Two
(Associating with the Wise),
Blessing Three (Paying Respect to
those worthy of
Respect). They are able to accept
all the reasoning
of these first three Blessings, and
are able to follow
them in their everyday life. They
EFTA01160764
even find that
Blessing Four (Living in an
Amenable Location),
makes sense in their everyday lives
— because in
any case they have to choose the
location for their
home and the place where they go
to school, college
and university. However, they may
have difficulty
with the claim that the sort of
deeds we have
done in the past can affect our
quality of life and
even the quality of society. It is
obvious that with
EFTA01160765
with this Blessing we are starting
to deal with more
subtle phenomena than before.
Al. Success and Failure in Life
Success and failure might appear
on many different
levels — on the level of society,
the level of lifestyle,
the level of personality or the level
of the mind
itself — but basically it comes
down to quality of
mind on four levels
A person blessed with success on
the level of the
mind will have a quality mind —
that is a mind that
EFTA01160766
Blessing Five:
Having done good
deeds
in one's past
78 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
is stable and unwavering, hard to
distract, pure and
radiant, spacious and light,
adaptable to any sort
of task and implicitly happy and
peaceful. Those
who are less lucky might have a
mind that is dull,
inert and easily distracted.
EFTA01160767
A person blessed with success on
the level of the
personality might may find that
people believe every
word of what they say. Those who
are less lucky
might find that even if they tell the
truth solidly for
a month, no-one will believe them.
A person blessed with success on
the level of the
lifestyle might seem to be born
smart. Their discretion
is reliable. Those who are less
lucky might have
such bad judgement that they
become too afraid to
EFTA01160768
make any decisions, always
hesitating or
provaricating instead — and they
miss life's opportunities
as a result. Even though they might
do their
best at work and take painstaking
care never to
make any error — they may be
disliked and discriminated
against by their boss.
A society blessed with success can
muster all its
human and natural resources to
become a world
leader. Less lucky countries, even
those with educated
EFTA01160769
citizens and abundant natural
resources can
be reduced to deserts by corruption
and civil strife.
B. DEFINITIONS
Bl. "Merit": Definitions and
Characteristics
This residue of positivity or
strength of mind which
we have built up for ourselves in
their past, is called
by the technical term, `merit'. The
Pali word `purifiA'
from which we derive the word
`merit', can be
translated in different ways
according to context
EFTA01160770
just like the word `well' can mean
`healthy' or `properly'
depending on the context. Thus,
the word
`puririA' has many meanings — it
can mean goodness,
purification, cleansing, happiness
or full. This
spectrum of definitions, tell us not
only the characteristics
of merit, but also something of the
function
of merit too. The word `merit' in
English
[pufifiA] can sometimes be
confusing because it
makes us think of being honoured
EFTA01160771
or praised or
approved of by another person.
However, all that
is intended in this case is that it is
`deserved'. It occurs
spontaneously without needing a
third party
to award it to us. A general
definition of merit is:
'the result of doing a good deed'. It
has the following
characteristics:
1. It is distilled in the mind as soon
as we perform
a good deed;
2. Is the agent by which the quality
of the mind is
EFTA01160772
improved;
3. It can be accumulated;
4. Merit belongs to the one who
performed its originating
deed;
5. As we use it, normally it will
become exhausted;
6. The amount of merit depends on
strength of intention,
amount of effort and amount of
gratitude
and ingratitude of the producing
action.
7. Gives effects attracting
favourable circumstances
at four levels: mind, personality,
lifestyle and
EFTA01160773
society.
If you are an advanced meditator
you can use your
meditation to see what merit is
like. However, the
most that a normal meditator can
see of the merit is
like its shadow. We see its effects
and so deduce
that it must be present. We can
compare merit to
electricity (i.e. something which
we cannot see or
feel because it is nothing more
than a source of
power which cannot be observed
with the naked
EFTA01160774
eye). Normally, we cannot see
electricity, only the
effects it causes such as the heat
from an iron when
electricity is connected, or the
electric shock which
ensues if one grasps a live wire; it
enters a light bulb
and gives us the light by which we
can read in the
evening; it goes into a radiator and
brings us
warmth; it enters a refrigerator and
stops our food
from decaying and it enters a
motor and makes it
to spin. In the same way that we
EFTA01160775
can use electricity
without really ever having seen it,
most of us have
to be able to content with accruing
merit without
seeing it for ourselves. Merit
cannot be observed
with the naked eye, nevertheless
we have the feeling
that when we perform a
meritorious deed, that
the mind is refreshed and loses any
sense of irritation
or crampedness leaving the mind
spacious,
light and content. Most people in
the world have
EFTA01160776
never seen the real nature of merit
itself, and thus
have their doubts as to whether
doing good deeds
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
Deeds in One's Past 79
really creates merit or not.
However, those with
more experience of meditation,
who have seen the
real nature of the merit for
themselves, will see the
merit as clearly as others see the
rain falling from
the heavens.
B.2 "In the past": Defined
At this point we have to examine
EFTA01160777
the meaning of
the merits that we have performed
in the past —
and this may apply to anything in
your past
whether it means yesterday or
many years ago. In
fact our past can be divided into
two periods:
I. Our Recent Past: which means
the time from
which we were born from our
mother's womb,
and opened our eyes for the first
time to look at
the world right up to yesterday.
2. Our Distant Past: which means
EFTA01160778
all of our existences
and experiences up to the time
when we
entered the womb in the most
recent lifetime.
To describe both of these periods
of our past
in a simpler way we can say that
the merit in
our recent past is all the good
deeds we have
done this lifetime since our
childhood onwards.
Examples of such good deeds
might
include helping our parents wash
the dishes
EFTA01160779
when we were young. We might
have helped
with the family business as we
became older.
Eventually, when we completed
our education,
and got down to a steady career,
we have divided
our time between earning a living
and
accruing good deeds for ourselves.
All these
good deeds right from the time
when we were
born can be referred to as merit in
our recent
past.
EFTA01160780
As for the merit in our distant past,
this refers
to the merits that we have accrued
in our
previous lives, whether it may be
last lifetime
or a hundred lifetimes ago.
B3. Quality of Merit
Apart from categorizing merit
according towhen it
was accrued merit can be
categorized according to
its quality: mundane merit
[lokiyapufiriA] and transcendental
merit [lokuttarapuliriA].
1. Mundane merit is the merit that
people are generally
EFTA01160781
familiar with
that is to say for
people
for whose mind is not completely
pure at the time
they do the good deed. Such merit
can run out.
When the merit is used up, it will
no longer give
its benefits — just like a tank full
of petrol which
has a limited range.
2. Transcendental Merit is the
merit that arises in
the pure mind. Such merit is
steadfast and will
never diminish or be exhausted.
Thus the purity of the mind also
EFTA01160782
has an important
role to play in dictating the quality
of the merit we
are able to accrue for ourselves.
Cl. Three Major ways to Accrue
Merit
There are Ten Major Ways to
Accrue Merit. As
mentioned in the preceding
sections, merit arises
as the result of doing good deeds.
Unfortunately,
simply knowing that "good" is
"meritorious"
doesn't explain how to go about
doing good deeds.
EFTA01160783
"Goodness" or "merit" can become
meaningless
and cliched if they are not defined
in the context
of practice, and for this reason that
Buddhism summarizes
the different ways of practice of
good
deeds into a collection of ten types
of practice in
three categories through which
merit canbe accrued.
For the benefit of such people, the
three
categories of ways to accrue merit
[puririAkiriyavatthu] are —
generosity, keeping
EFTA01160784
the precepts and meditation.
I. Generosity includes merit
generated through
generosity, merit generated
through service,
merit generated through the
transfer of merit to
others and merit generated through
rejoicing in
the merit of others.
2. Keeping the Precepts includes
merit generated
through keeping the Precepts.
3. Meditation includes merit
generated through
meditation, merit generated
through humility
EFTA01160785
towards those of high virtue, merit
generated
through listening to Dhamma
sermons, merit
generated through giving a
discourse on the
Dhamma and merit generated
through correcting
our assumptions about the world.
80 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
C2. Ten Major Ways to accrue
merit
If you expand these three
categories into their ten
types of practice we get the
following:
EFTA01160786
1. Generosity: this means merit
generated through
generosity [dAnamaya]. Some may
wonder why
merit can be accrued as the result
of giving. Merit
arises in the mind as explained
above. The mind
in its natural state takes the form of
a clear sphere
of diamond brightness, however,
when polluted
by defilements, these reduce the
sparkling mind
to dullness and weakness, lowering
the potential
of the mind. If a person does
EFTA01160787
something generous,
giving away some part of that
wealth
which is the source of their
anxiety, the mind
becomes more at ease. Merit arises
and this merit
lights up the mind for a while. The
radiance
gradually accrues in the mind. The
brightness,
or the merit accumulates in the
mind as generous
deeds are performed regularly. The
merit
that arises from generosity is
generated by two
EFTA01160788
actions of the mind: firstly, the
removal of the
defilement of greed from the mind
— something
which immediately upgrades the
quality of the
mind and of our character too;
secondly, as a result
of the benefit obtained from the
gift by the
recipient — the more benefit is
obtained by the
recipient, especially from a gift
that is hard-wearing,
the more merit will be accrued by
the
giver.There are many different
EFTA01160789
forms of generosity.
I. Giving useful material objects
to others,
whether it is food, clothing, shelter
or medicine,
will generate merit for the giver.
The
most basic act of generosity is the
gift of something
that is beneficial to the recipient
[vatthudAna].
2. Giving worldly knowledge
[vidhayadAna]
Merit is also generated if you give
the gift of
knowledge that is beneficial to the
recipient.
EFTA01160790
of benefit to any recipient.
Knowledge may
be vocational skills — such as how
to set oneself
up as a tailor.
3. Giving spiritual knowledge
[dhammadAna]
of benefit to the recipient is
knowledge of the
Dhamma such as the advice
contained in this
book.
4. Forgiving: There is also a way
of giving where
you don't have to make any
physical effort at
all — when you are angry with Mr.
EFTA01160791
A, Mr. B
and Mr. C. All of them have at
some time or
other contributed trouble to your
life. Suppose
that one day, you decide to put an
end to all
the anger and forgive them for all
the upsets
they have caused you in the past
— and start
afresh. In such a case, as soon as
the thought
crosses you mind to forgive them,
merit will
arise in your mind. Even though
you haven't
EFTA01160792
expended even the slightest
physical effort,
you have managed to earn yourself
merit
though giving `forgiveness'
[abhAyadAna].
Even giving others a smile instead
of a scowl
will bring you merit according to
the same
principle of forgiveness!
2. Humility: This means merit
generated through
Humility towards those of High
Virtue
[apacAyanamaya]. You may be
surprised that
EFTA01160793
even without expending any
physical effort, simply
possessing the attitude of humility
can cause
one to accrue merit. The person
who, instead of
finding fault with others is both
humble and respectful,
has a virtue that will allow him to
find
the good in each and every person
he meets. He
will put others' faults to one side.
Such humility
will lead the owner to accrue
merit, because at
the very least, they will always see
EFTA01160794
the world in
a positive light, allowing them to
remain in a
pleasant mood the whole day long.
If they are
perceptive they will have the
wisdom to see the
virtues in the hearts of others and
instil themselves
with those virtues which they see
in others
— accruing even greater merit for
themselves.
3. Service: This means merit
generated through
Service [veyyAvaccamaya]. This
is the domain
EFTA01160795
of those who immediately rush to
assist others
who they see doing good deeds.
For example, if
they find out that their neighbour is
preparing a
meal to offer the monks, they will
prepare all the
seasoning needed for the meal and
and give that
to the neighbour making the meal.
4. Transfer of Merit: Merit
generated through the
transfer of merit to others
[pattidAnamaya].
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
Deeds in One's Past 81
EFTA01160796
Whenever someone does a good
deed and his
mind is full of merit as the result of
his goodness,
and he transfers some part of his
merit to
another person, or to his deceased
relatives, these
are all counted as ways of
generating merit
through the transfer of merit.
5. Rejoicing in the Merit of
others: Merit generated
through rejoicing in the merit of
others
[pattAnumodanAmaya]. This sort
of merit is accrued
EFTA01160797
by those who, whenever they see
that
someone else has done a good
deed, is pleased
for them and rejoices with them in
the merit that
they have made. Even if they are
unable to contribute
anything more to that person's
merit
making, by rejoicing with them or
congratulating
them on doing their good deed,
they will earn
a part of the merit for themselves
too. It is in this
connection that you often hear the
EFTA01160798
word ' Sadhu!'
in Buddhist circles.
6. Keeping the Precepts: Merit
generated through
keeping the Precepts [sEla].
Keeping the Precepts
ensures that we never take
advantage of others
through our physical or verbal
actions — and at
the same time we bring no harm to
ourselves.
You might wonder how keeping
the Precepts can
possibly give rise to merit. When
we abandon
all thoughts of taking advantage of
EFTA01160799
others, in
their place arises the radiance of
merit that has
accrued in the mind. This will have
the effect of
quenching heart-felt troubles.
7. Meditation: This means merit
generated through
meditation [bhAvanAmaya].
Meditation is a way
of training the mind to become
wiser. There are
many different subdivisions to
what can be considered
as mind training and these include
reading
books on Dhamma, chanting and
EFTA01160800
meditation
itself. Meditation has the effect on
the mind of
causing the arising of radiance and
distancing
the mind from disturbance by
anxiety, limiting
its habitual wandering, bringing
peace. Whenever
the covering of defilements is
banished from
the mind, especially the defilement
of ignorance
which usually imprisons the mind
in darkness
and undermines its true potential,
wisdom will
EFTA01160801
arise in the mind as the brightness
of merit.
8. Listening to Dhamma
Sermons: This means
merit generated through listening
to Dhamma
sermons [dhammassavanamaya].
Listening to
Dhamma lectures or sermons on
the Dhamma
will enhance our wisdom. Before,
we might have
had only a rudimentary
understanding of the
real nature of the world, but now
as a result of
hearing Dhamma Teachings, we
EFTA01160802
know how to
tell the difference between good
and evil. Such
an improvement in the level of our
wisdom will
result in our accruing merit for
ourselves.
9. Giving a discourse on the
Dhamma: This means
merit generated through giving a
Discourse on
the Dhamma
[dhammadesanArnaya] Teaching
the Dhamma by giving a sermon
will bring merit
to the preacher in the following
ways:
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EFTA01160804
are able to
revise the different groups of
dhammas, increasing
your mastery of them. As you
recollect
those dhammas, you will be
inspired by
them and this will bring radiance
to the mind.
Mastery also comes through the
necessity to
revise from the Dhamma texts,
sometimes two
to three weeks in advance of
actually giving
the sermon, in order to obtain a
profound
EFTA01160805
understanding of the Dhamma
topic in hand
before having to teach it to others.
10. Straightening One's Views:
This means merit
generated through Straightening
out one's A A
views: [diEEhujukammamaya]. As
the result of
listening to a good sermon, the
listener will have
the discretion to tell good from
evil, right from
wrong. They will no longer doubt
that doing
good deeds gives good results or
that doing evil
EFTA01160806
will bring bad results. Before long
the mind is
steadfast in the pursuit of good
deeds and in the
avoidance of evil. This process is
what we mean
82 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
by correcting our understanding of
the world.
Once our understanding is proper,
then the
deeds of mind, speech and body
will be good
and proper too. The determination
will arise in
the mind that you will pursue good
EFTA01160807
deeds for
evermore — no longer being
sidetracked into evil
or unproductive ways.
Thus if you it hard to remember all
ten categories
of meritorious deeds, you can
summarize them
down to three major categories:
generosity, keeping
the Precepts and meditation.
Dl. Level of mind
The first benefits that merit will
bring when it arises
are benefits at the level of the
mind. This is one of
EFTA01160808
the most important benefits
because there is no need
for one to wait for the after-life in
order to see the
results. Whenever we perform a
good or meritorious
deed, merit will arise immediately.
If you do a
good deed at night, merit will arise
at night. If you
do a good deed by day, merit will
arise by day. If
you do a good deed on an aircraft
in mid-air, then
the merit will arise in our mind
there in mid-air.
Wherever you are, if you perform
EFTA01160809
a meritorious
deed, the effect will arise in the
mind instantaneously
— it doesn't need much
expenditure of energy
for such merit to arise — even just
thinking to
do a meritorious deed will cause
merit to arise and
will put the mind at ease. There is
no need to wait a
long time in order to see the results
at the level of
the mind of your meritorious
deeds. You don't even
need to wait for someone to admire
you for doing
EFTA01160810
such a good deed. The results of
merit will arise
automatically in the mind without
you having to
do anything more than good deeds
— and the benefits
that arise are as follows:
1. Merit cleanses the mind: When
the mind is clean
it is ready to pursue even greater
degrees of good
deeds. In the days before we
started accruing
merit, we considered that our mind
was already
pure. However, as soon as we start
doing meritorious
EFTA01160811
deeds, we realize that our mind has
become
purer than we ever expected.
Before our
mind was as bright as the morning
star
but
now our mind is even brighter,
with the radiance
of the full moon. No matter how
clouded
and dull the mind might be
beforehand, when
merit arises in the mind will clarify
the mind just
like soap or detergent cleans the
dirt out of a cloth
leaving it pristine and white.
EFTA01160812
2. Merit raises the quality of the
mind: Merit that
arises in the mind helps to filter
out defilements
which might otherwise operate in
the mind.
Merit will neutralize such
negativity in the mind,
not allowing them to affect the
spaciousness and
lightness or to slow down the
operation of the
mind — and having filtered the
mind in this way,
the mind is left ready to serve us in
all types of
task. The meritorious deeds we do
EFTA01160813
therefore
upgrade the quality of our minds.
3. Merit brings us happiness:
When the mind is
purified and filtered by the arising
of merit, it
gives rise to radiance and
refreshedness of mind
which is the precursor of
happiness. Such happiness
is not fleeting, superficial
happiness. It is
an overflowing of happiness like
on the days we
make an offering or a donation at
the temple and
we feel refreshed by the goodness
EFTA01160814
of our action,
as if our heart was so big that it
filled the whole
of our being.
4. Merit will make the mind more
stable: Merit will
make our mind more stable in the
face of the
worldly vicissitudes such as being
praised or
insulted.
5. Merit will make the mind more
flexible: The
mind will have increased potential
for success
with the task in hand, whether the
task be large
EFTA01160815
or small, gross or refined —
whatever the nature
of the task, the mind made flexible
will be
ready for all eventualities.
6. Merit will make the mind more
radiant: It will
increase the potential of the mind
to gain insight
to overcome all manner of
obstacles that arise in
the course of performing any task.
7. Merit will increase the potential
of the mind: You
will begin to notice the difference
whenever you
apply your mind to any task. You
EFTA01160816
might overcome
the tendency to lose your temper
easily.
The mind that is free from anxiety
and
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
Deeds in One's Past 83
cloudedness, that is spacious and
pure and steadfast
will be the mind of the highest
potential.
8. Merit will allow better decisions
to be taken:
Decisions can be made quickly and
accurately
without hesitation.
9. Merit will allow a more
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insightful analysis of
any situation: Thoughts will be
`on the ball' and
a correct analysis of the situation
every time.The
mind dwells only on subjects that
are skilful. You
find yourself unable to think over
anything potentially
damaging to your high state of
mind.
10.Merit will make your thinking
thorough and
comprehensive: You will not
allow your thought
to be dragged down into
shoddiness.
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11. Merit will help to make your
thought both noble
and deep: Merit will incline your
mind towards
the higher things of life and away
from
the baser side of life.
All of these features illustrate the
general beneficial
effects of merit at the level of the
mind. They
are effects that take place equally
no matter which
of the ten ways you use to generate
merit. However,
the benefits of merit go further
than this. They
EFTA01160819
are more than just a feeling in the
heart — leading
to rebirth in more fortunate realms
live to come.
D2. Level of Personality
This level of the effects of merit is
easier to observe
than the effects on the mind. As we
accrue more
and more merit, the general
benefits, no matter
which way in which we
accumulate merit, will
spread to the level of our
personality and will gradually
change it for the better. The
changes in our character
EFTA01160820
originate from the changes
mentioned above
in the quality of the mind.
I. Merit will bring you physical
grace: from your
complexion to your voice and even
your physical
proportions — all are attractive
and appropriate
to the task of pursuing perfection.
2. Merit will bring knowledge,
wisdom and mastery:
because the illumination whch
merit brings
will awaken us to the nature of the
world as it
really is. Anyone who has set their
EFTA01160821
heart on being
smart should start by cultivating
merit.
3. Merit will help to upgrade our
tastes and values:
As the mind dwells on matters that
are only virtuous
and leaves aside evil thought,
thinking
things through thoroughly and in
depth, our
tastes and values will change in
favour of virtue
and morality.
4. Merit will develop our
character and personality:
These changes of attitude and and
EFTA01160822
discretion will
express themselves in changes of
character and
personality.
5. Merit causes our speech to
become skilful: skilful
thought becomes habitual and this
causes our
speech to be skilful too.
6. Merit causes our behaviour to
improve: Good
speech has its effect on our
physical actions and
we find that our behaviour
gradually changes
for the better. The way that we
express ourselves,
EFTA01160823
our deportment when in company,
no matter
where we mix socially, will be
impeccable instead
of being vulnerable to all forms of
temptation.
7. Merit strengthens our patience:
We no longer
drool over others' possessions. In
the olden days,
others might have been suspicious
even at the
sight of us, worrying about when
we were going
to rob them of their beloved
possessions —
but now that there is no more
EFTA01160824
drooling, they can
enjoy their wealth in peace.
8. Merit causes us to have more
control over our
temper: You certainly wouldn't let
yourself be
drawn into a conflict any more.
This is another
way in which one's personality
changes as the
result of upgrading the quality and
potential of
the mind.
9. Merit improves our personal
appearance: Personality
includes your personal appearance.
Merit accrued will cause our
EFTA01160825
complexion to be
soft and radiant
so much more
refreshing than
before when you weren't interested
in merit.
10.Merit will reduce our
anxieties: All your misgivings
and bones you had to pick with
others,
which before used to keep you
awake at night,
will now be forgiven.
D3. Level of Lifestyle
Merit will take its effect on our
mind and our personality
immediately whenever we perform
a meritorious
EFTA01160826
deed. At the third level, that of the
lifestyle,
84 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
however, we cannot be sure how
quickly the benefits
will be manifested because our
quality of lifetime
arises as the result of both present
and past
deeds. The effects of good and bad
deeds are mixed
together inseparably. When there
are so many contributing
factors, it becomes very complex
to determine
the exact source of the merit that
EFTA01160827
has given
particular benefit in a particular
lifetime. It is just
the same as looking at a particular
cell in our body
and not knowing which item of
food we ate has
nourished that cell. This is part of
the reason why
we are often hesitant to believe
that doing good
deeds brings good results or that
doing bad deeds
brings bad results. Some of the
general results of
our merit are as follows:
I. Merit will attract success: We
EFTA01160828
will be successful
whatever we turn our hand to.
2. Merit will bring us praise: You
will be praised
(at least by the wise);
3. Merit is like a protective
armour: which protects
us from dangers and misfortunes
like a guardian
angel.
4. Merit can lead us to
attainment: allow you to
make continuous progress in your
meditation.
5. Merit brings us the things that
we wish for: Merit
acts like a wish-fulfilling gem.
EFTA01160829
Another thing which makes the
results of merit difficult
to understand at the level of the
personality
is that apart from the general
benefits, there are also
differences in the way the outcome
of merit manifests
itself, rather like different
`flavours' associated
with the ways by which merit has
been performed.
D.3.1 Examples of Merit
Outcomes
D.3.1.1 Generosity and
KAlyanamittata
The benefits that merit brings to
EFTA01160830
different people
differs according to the differences
the merits they
have performed. To take a good
example — that
of generosity, the likely results of
the merits they
have done are as follows:
1. Those who make lonely
donations without encouraging
their friends will be born rich in
future
lives, but won't have many friends.
They
will have to look hard to find
anyone to give
them their friendship or even
EFTA01160831
understand
them;
2. Those who make donations
themselves and
encourage others to join them in
making merit
too will be born rich in future
lifetimes and
will have plenty of friends;
3. Those who don't make
donations, but they
encourage their friends to make
donations
will have plenty of rich friends, but
they will
be poor themselves. If any of your
friends are
EFTA01160832
in need, you will be able to tell
them how to
solve their problems instantly —
but if you
are in need you can do nothing to
help yourself;
4. Those who don't make
donations and don't
encourage others to make
donations either
have a begging bowl waiting for
them in their
next life. They will have no friends
either.
D.3.1.2 Long life: Long life versus
short life
Some people are long-lived
EFTA01160833
because in previous
lives they avoided killing or
harming animals.
Long life is useful because it
allows one plenty of
time to perform good deeds.
D. 3. I. 3 Illness: Freedom from
illness versus
sickliness
Some people are always in good
health. They
seem invulnerable to disease and
hardly even
know their doctor. Again good
health is the result
of having not been cruel to animals
in previous
EFTA01160834
lifetimes.
D.3.1.4 Complexion: Radiant
versus dull
complexion
Some people never seem to lose
their temper.
They seem to be happy the whole
of the time.
Such people have a radiant
complexion. By contrast,
those who are moody and whose
faces are
always in a frown will have a dull
and rough complexion
like that of a frog, however many
lifetimes
they are born. Thus if you know
EFTA01160835
yourself to be
moody by nature, then try to
improve your character
as soon as you can — try doing the
chanting
and meditation before you go to
bed each day.
If you are angry with anybody in
particular, try
to find a way to forgive them and
spread lovingBlessing
Five: Having Done Good Deeds in
One's Past 85
kindness towards them. If you are
angry with
anybody, don't let the anger last
overnight. It's
EFTA01160836
bad enough to be angry all day
don't let it last
to the next morning.
D.3.1.5 Power: Powerful versus
powerless
Some people are born to rule.
Wherever they go
others treat them with the utmost
respect because
in the past they have always been
quick to express
their congratulations [muditA]
whenever
they have seen anyone else
achieving success
andgiven them their support. As
for those who
EFTA01160837
are born powerless and cowering,
the real reason
for this is because of their jealous
habits in previous
lifetimes. Even if they are born
king, they will
be king of a mere vassal state or if
they are born
queen, they will be no more than a
secondary
consort. If you have the luck to
receive a gift it
will be second hand!
D.3.1.6 Riches: Rich versus poor
Some are born with a silver spoon
in their mouth.
Some are born into a wealthy
EFTA01160838
family. Others families
are poor but start to prosper as
soon as they
are conceived so that by the time
they are born,
their family is already rich. Others'
families are
poor but they start to prosper as
soon as the baby
is born. Such occurrences can only
happen to
someone who has been generous in
his previous
lifetimes. Whatever one chooses to
do, it will
make one rich. By contrast, if one
has lived by
EFTA01160839
robbery in previous lifetimes then
this lifetime,
they will have a begging bowl
waiting for them.
D.3.1.7 Social Standing: High v.
low social standing
Some people are born with high
social standing
— such as being born king or a
member of the
royal family or as member of a
house of high
standing. By contrast, some are
born a beggar's
son. They are on the lowest rung of
the social ladder.
The Lord Buddha taught that those
EFTA01160840
who are
humble and respectful of the
virtuous will be born
in a family of high social standing.
If in this lifetime
you pay respect of high virtue and
listen to
their teachings, you will be born in
a family of
high social standing next lifetime
and others will
have the chance to pay respect to
you. The reason
why some people are born with
low social
standing is that they have lacked
humility and
EFTA01160841
reverence in their dealings with the
virtuous in
their previous lifetimes and have
been stubborn
and unyielding instead.
D.3.1.8 Intelligence: Intelligent
v.s ignorant
Some people are born clever. As
soon as they have
the chance to study, all it takes is a
single lesson
and they are able to stand up and
teach in the
teacher's place. For others, the
teacher teaches
them the same thing two or three
times and still
EFTA01160842
they can make no sense of it. They
have to rely
on their friends to explain it to
them outside lesson
time. Even after so much trouble,
they have
only a superficial grasp of what
they have learned.
They will have to read through the
lesson another
ten times if they are to understand
it as well as
their peers.
D.4 Level of Society
This is the next level at which
merit takes its effect.
The result of having done only
EFTA01160843
good deeds all our
life together with the good deeds
or merit accumulated
over course of a long time will
certainly bring
peace, happiness, harmony, justice,
progress and
prosperity to themselves and the
people around
them. This happens especially as
the result of the
collective merit accrued by the
majority of people
in society. Merit takes its effect
instantly at the level
of the mind (if we are observant
enough to notice
EFTA01160844
it), however the time the effects
take to filter successively
though to the levels of personality,
lifestyle
and society take proportionally
longer.
El. Speed of Merit Taking Effect
All we have talked about are
basically the principal
forces. In fact, as with the
dynamics of the karma
which we studied in the previous
lesson, all are to
some extent modified by
supplementary factors or
concomitants, especially with
EFTA01160845
reference to the speed
with which they give their fruits.
The degree to
which meritorious deeds will give
their benefits in
our lifestyle depends on four
factors which wecall
the Four Accomplishments or
Catalysts [samapatti].
86 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
The Accomplishments are the
factors favourable
to the ripening of good karma just
like catalysts
which facilitate a chemical
reaction — there are four
EFTA01160846
of these in all:
1. Catalytic Circumstances
[gatisampatti] and
means that you are born in
favourable circumstances
or amenable surroundings in terms
of a
place to live, a birthplace or a
neighbourhood
which will affect us for the better.
To give an example
suppose you are born as someone
who is
not particularly clever, but
fortunately for you,
you are born amidst catalytic
circumstances -
EFTA01160847
born in a prospering community
with a good
standard of education available to
everyone.
Thus with the application of a little
effort in your
studies, you can make up for your
lack of innate
cleverness with cleverness learned
from your
surroundings — the clear result of
the catalytic
circumstances.Those in possession
of such
circumstancses make it easier for
themselves to
further their good deeds during
EFTA01160848
their life — and
this is one way by which merit is
self-catalytic.
2. Catalytic Gift of Wellbeing
[upadhisampatti]
These refer to the characteristics of
one's physical
and personal makeup that facilitate
the arising
of good karma. Examples of such
"gifts"
might be a golden voice which
makes everybody
want to listen to what you have to
say (no matter
whether it be good or bad!), a good
singing
EFTA01160849
voice (that sounds good even if
you cry!), a beautiful
or handsome physique (which can
make
you Miss Universe without having
to do anything
more than be born and grow up!)
Someone
who is gifted in this way, but who
instead of
sitting on his laurels, continues to
do good deeds
all his life will find that good
deeds give their
results instantly, before their very
eyes.
3. Catalytic Timing
EFTA01160850
[kAlasampatti] To be at the
right place at the right time in the
same way that
we talked about the era of a world
cycle when
people are born. In an era where
people value
virtue manifest themselves right
from the time
you are born. You will associate
with the wise
right from your childhood. You
need never come
under the influence of fools.
Throughout your
life, no matter whether you are
generous, keep
EFTA01160851
the Precepts, meditate or do
chanting, you will
hear only words of encouragement
from the people
around you, making it easy for us
to excel at
any of these practices. Thus the
results of one's
meritorious action will be much
quicker to see.
4. Catalytic Discretion
[payogasampatti]. To be
born with good discretion and
more importantly,
the moral fibre to keep to one's
principles and
apply one's discretion to one's
EFTA01160852
lifestyle will facilitate
the ripening of good karma. This
catalyst
is centred on the ability to teach
yourself to
improve in all aspects will make
you a born
leader never having to wait for
others to persuade
you or force you to do beneficial
things.
Besides being able to discriminate
between right
and wrong, good and bad you will
be able to
put your ethics into practice. Such
a personal
EFTA01160853
endowment will quicken the speed
with which
you see the fruits of your
meritorious actions at
the level of the lifestyle.
In conclusion, performing merits
will give the fruition
of good deeds instantly at the level
of the mind
and the personality. There is no
need to waitfor the
afterlife for these things. However,
at the level of
the lifestyle, you may have to wait
much longer if
you have accrued only a small
amount of merit in
EFTA01160854
your past. However, for those who
have a lot of
merit in their past lives, they will
see the fruition of
merits very quickly in the present
lifetime. Thus
those who are still skeptical about
whether doing
good deeds will really bring
benefits to us at the
level of our lifestyle, should study
the mechanism
of catalysts and inhibitors to the
fruition of good
karma as outlined in this section.
E2. Why is care needed in the
study of merit?
EFTA01160855
Merit is difficult to understand
because the effects
of merit thatwe can see are the
result of compounded
causes. Some of the good luck or
good
coincidences that we see come
from the merit we
have stored up for ourselves from
long ago. Some
of the good luck will come from
the acts of merit
which we have done recently and
which remain in
mind. Thus we need to have an
understanding of
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
EFTA01160856
Deeds in One's Past 87
merit otherwise, looking at the
outcomes we might
come to the misunderstood
conclusion that good
deeds don't give rise to merit and
might give up
too easily. The other aspect is to
understand correctly
how to do the sort of good deeds
that accrue
merit otherwise, again, we might
come to the conclusion
that our efforts to do good deeds
have nothing
but a disastrous effect on our
future.
EFTA01160857
Some people have such a strong
conviction in
merit that they think that merit and
demerit is the
only valuable way of evaluating
actions in the
world. However, such a narrow
view can lead to
some shortcomings of
understanding. To take merit
seriously, can inspire you to do
good deeds, avoid
evil and purify the mind. However,
as one of the
main characteristics of merit is that
it accrues exclusively
to the doer of a good deed, it tends
EFTA01160858
to make
Buddhists disinterested in what the
people around
them are doing. They may become
interested only
in their own personal destiny
without thinking to
try and upgrade the state of society
or show concern
for the destinies of those around
them. Thus,
the benefit of understanding merit
is to make the
best of our present to ensure a
bright future.
E3. Overcoming shyness to
accrue Merit
EFTA01160859
It is obvious from the examination
of our present
circumstances that we are living in
a time when the
circumstances of society are not
very catalytic
anymore. Because of the difficulty
in discerning the
fruits of meritorious action, the
majority of people
in the world today:
1. don't know the importance of
merit;
2. know the importance of merit
but don't know
how to go about accruing it;
3. know how to accrue merit, but
EFTA01160860
because they have
not made merit making an implicit
part of their
lives, they are not particularly
motivated to accumulate
merit.
Some people want to do
meritorious deeds, but are
too shy. Some people know that it
is good to bow
down in respect to one's parents,
but because they
didn't make bowing to their
parents part of their
everyday life since they were
children, by the time
they are old enough to realize they
EFTA01160861
are too shy to
start something new.
The important thing to overcome
the shyness we
might feel in accruing the merit in
our lives is to
make it a part of our daily routine
so that we don't
lose touch with merit or become
unfamiliar. In this
respect there are three important
pieces of advice
for the practitioner coined as
mottos for those attending
Wat Phra Dhammakaya:
1. Any morning when you have
not given alms, you
EFTA01160862
shouldn't allow yourself to take
breakfast: You
should get up in time to give alms
to the monks
on their almsround at dawn every
day. If there
is no monk on almsround you can
always collect
up small donations on a daily basis
in a
piggy-bank and offer them at the
temple the next
time you go. If you can manage to
achieve this,
you will avoid poverty in the
long-term. Even if
you are not particulary well off in
EFTA01160863
the present
lifetime, you can be assured that if
you give alms
every day, eventually you will put
an end to the
hardship of financial insecurity.
2. Any day when you don't intend
to keep the Precepts
you shouldn't dare to leave the
house: Once
you have taken the precepts, you
should revise
the intention to keep them every
day for the Five
Precepts. At the very least you will
always be
within the protection of the Five
EFTA01160864
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EFTA01160866
towards Enlightened Living
to get the benefits today. There's
no need to wait for
next lifetime before starting your
good deeds because
whether you will have the chance
to do good
deeds or not in your next life is
dictated by the
amount of good deeds you do in
this lifetime. Thus
start doing good deeds today, this
very hour, at this
very second.
In addition to the merit you
cultivate as a matter
of course in your everyday life,
EFTA01160867
you should look
for opportunities to increase your
store of merit on
special occasions such as offering
saIghadAna (offering
a meal to the monastic
community), go for a
longer meditation retreat, ordain
temporarily for
the course of the rainy season.
Don't go thinking
that you already have plenty of
merit stored up from
your past. You may be wrong. If
you really had a
lot of merit in your past, you
would be able to sit
EFTA01160868
comfortably for the whole of the
hour long meditation
session. If you still feel
uncomfortable when
you meditate or feel that you have
to change posture,
that is the sign that you still have
room for
improvement in the merit you have
stored up for
yourself. You need to use the
precious life of yours
to rectify your faults and
weaknesses — and the
best way to do this is to do as
many good deeds as
you can. Otherwise the hunger of
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the mind will go
on unabated
F. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
Fl. Metaphor: Merit in the Past -
Pedigree
The nature of the differences is not
the same as the
pot-bound bonsai of the previous
Blessing. It is not
caused by the environment— the
difference lies
within the person himself
it is a
personal attribute
which differs in strength from one
person to another.
Compare a wild strawberry with a
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domestic
breed of strawberry. You can water
and fertilize a
wild strawberry all you like, but in
the end it will
only produce a lot of leaves and a
few tiny bitter
fruits. By contrast, a domestic
strain, even if neglected
will produce numerous and
succulent fruits.
The difference is factor which
belongs to the plant
itself. With plants it is the
pedigree, but with people
it is the residue of the behaviours
they have built
EFTA01160871
up for themselves in the past
not a reputation
because that needs a third party to
remember it —
it is something they build up inside
them whether
they have witnesses for their
behaviour or not.
F2. Metaphor: Merit - Food for
the Mind
All dynamic things in the world
have fuel on which
they feed. Fire burns on
brushwood. A tree needs
food, but the food that nourishes it
is sucked up
through the roots. The body burns
EFTA01160872
on physical food.
To get the food we need for our
body we must find
ourselves a job or a career. A light
bulb burns on
electric current. Sometimes the
energy is stored up
in the object itself at a previous
time (like the bulb
of a daffodil or a car battery),
sometimes the energy
is used as it is obtained. All of
these things
must be provided with the fuel
they need or else
one day if the energy they have
stored is exhausted,
EFTA01160873
they will become useless or even
die.
All of these objects have their own
food or fuel to
nourish them, but as meditators,
the object we are
most interested in is the mind. The
mind too, must
have a food which can fuel its
efficient activity, but
what could possibly function as a
sort of energy
which the mind could store or use?
Indeed, the personal residue we are
talking about
has the special quality of being like
food which
EFTA01160874
nourishes the mind — so that the
mind can, to itsfull
potential attract good opportunities
and things on
all four levels of success
mentioned above. If mind
is well fed it has repurcussions for
all the other levels
too — sooner or later.
F3. Ex. Sini JAtaka(J.284)
The bodhisattva was once an
ascetic and had an
elephant trainer as a patron. A
stick-gatherer,
sleeping at night in the hermitage,
heard two
roosting cocks abusing each other.
EFTA01160875
In the course
of the quarrel, one cock boasted
that whoever ate
his flesh would be king, his skin
commander in
chief or chief queen and his bones,
royal treasurer
or king's chaplain. The man killed
the cock
and his wife cooked it, then taking
it with them,
they went to the river to bathe.
They left the meat
and rice on the bank, but as they
bathed, the pot
holding the food was blown into
the river. It
EFTA01160876
Blessing Five: Having Done Good
Deeds in One's Past 89
floated downstream where it was
picked up by
the elephant-trainer. The
bodhisattva saw everything
with his divine-eye and visited the
trainer
at meal-time. There he was offered
the meat and
divided it, giving the flesh to the
trainer, the skin
to his wife and keeping the bones
to himself.
Three days later, the city was
beseiged by enemies.
The king asked the trainer to don
EFTA01160877
royal
robes and mount the elephant,
while he himself
fought in the ranks. There the king
was killed by
an arrow and the trainer, having
won the battle,
was made king, his wife being
queen and the ascetic
his chaplain. The story was told in
reference
to a brahmin who tried to steal
AnAthapiAlika's
good fortune [ski]. He perceived
that the good
fortune was embodied in a white
cock for which
EFTA01160878
he begged. AnAthapiAlika gave it
to him, but
the good fortune left the cock and
settled in a
jewel. He asked for that also, but
the good fortune
went into a club. The club was also
asked
for, and AnAthapiAlika giving it,
asked the
brahmin to take it and be gone.
However, the
good fortune now settled on
AnAthapiAiika' s
wife. The brahmin thereby
admitted defeat and
confessed his intentions to
EFTA01160879
AnAthapiAIika who
told the story to the Buddha.
90 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Six: Setting Oneself up
Properly in Life 91
A. INTRODUCTION
Al. Place of Blessing Six in the
order of things
This sixth blessing is the last of the
second grouping
of blessings concerned with
"turning towards
virtue". It builds upon what has
gone before with
the "nurture" of Blessing Four and
EFTA01160880
the "nature" of
Blessing Five
bringing spiritual
development to
a point where the third grouping
"making oneself
useful" can start to become
meaningful.
A2. Objectives of the Sixth
Blessing
Studying this Blessing can be
considered to have
fulfilled its true purpose if after
reading it, the
reader feels:
1. inspired to stand on their own
two feet: that is,
to promise themselves that this
EFTA01160881
lifetime they will
never again lower themselves to
relying on anyone
else as their refuge — no longer
using others
as crutches for their own
weaknesses. The
people of old used to say `Even a
bird builds its
own nest — even a mouse digs its
own hole —
so who is a man not to stand on his
own two
feet? It is not fitting always to be
leaning on others,
borrowing from them or living in
someone
EFTA01160882
else's house. Otherwise one is no
better than a
sparrow living in the rafters of
someone else's
house. If you are the sort of person
who is not
ashamed of being dependent but
who is on the
other hand proud that there are
always others
who wants to help them, it will
probably be a
long time before you realize the
reality of the
world. It's no problem if you
happen to live in
your big sister's house, but what
EFTA01160883
happens if one
day her husband has a
disagreement with you
and wants you out of the house?
You will find it
hard to speak up in your own
defense. Even if
you have a disagreement with their
children or
grandchildren or friends, you
would never dare
to say anything to contradict them
because you
depend on their parents or
grandparents for the
roof over our head. You end up
being someone
EFTA01160884
who will not even dare to stand up
for yourself
— therefore, if at all possible, try
to avoid depending
on others — try to be
self-sufficient. No
matter whether you are male or
female, you have
to try to be independent. If you are
put in the
position where you are abused as a
dependent,
you have no choice but to put up
with it. When
you have put up with it until such
abuse becomes
engrained in your mind, you can
EFTA01160885
no longer think
of anything meritorious any more.
All you can
think of is getting your revenge.
Better then, to
build up your own standard of
living by becoming
self-sufficient in your earnings.
2. inspired never to provaricate
about accruing
merit henceforth.
If after studying this Blessing the
reader gains anything
more in addition to these two
advantages, it
can be considered as a profit. For
anyone to understand
EFTA01160886
about the importance of being your
own ref-
Blessing Six:
Setting oneself up
properly in life
92 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
uge and to see the value of
accruing merit, you need
a foundation of experience, and
that foundation is
specifically one's aim in life.
A3. Definition: Setting oneself up
properly in life
Setting yourself up in the proper
EFTA01160887
way refers to setting
up both of the inseparable parts of
our being
— setting up our body and setting
up our mind. As
the mind governs the setting up of
the body, to set
ourselves up in life means setting
up our mind correctly.
Setting up yourself means setting
up your
mind. If your mind can be properly
set up, then the
body will follow suit. For example
if your mind is
overcome with laziness, the body
will be overcome
EFTA01160888
by laziness too, lying around in a
post-prandial
sleaze. If the mind has a clear idea
about what it is
aiming for in spiritual
development, then the body
will comply with the mind's
ambitions. Thus to set
yourself up properly in life, you
must set up your
mind properly, and that means
specifically making
up your mind to pursue a pathway
of self-perfection.
A4. Aim in life helps us set
priorities, overcome obstacles
Did you ever feel that you would
EFTA01160889
like to achieve
more from life but you never seem
to have to the
time
or you never seem to get
round to doing
them? Sometimes you have so
many great plans in
mind, but when you come round to
doing them,
there is always something else to
help others with.
There is always something else
more urgent or
seemingly more important? Do
you find yourself
exhausted at the end of the day
with no strength
EFTA01160890
left to do your meditation? All of
us know that
meditation makes a significant
difference to the
quality of our minds, but even
though we know it,
it is sometimes difficult to find the
time to meditate
each day.
Part of the reason for this is that
our priorities
and aims in life are not clear.
Sometimes there are
urgent things in life which are
urgent but not important,
like a ringing telephone or
interruptions
EFTA01160891
and they can upset the whole pace
of our lives. They
can be the things that make us
unable to organize
our time as we would like to.
Sometimes these interruptions
are really unavoidable, but usually,
it
is because we give them too much
importance and
put them too high on our list of
priorities that they
rob us of our time — the reason in
turn, why we
are unable to set our priorities as
we mean to, is
because we lack a clear
EFTA01160892
perspective of our own priorities.
With meditation, we are dealing
with a practice
and a tradition, which has lifelong
consequences
for us. Therefore, for the practice
of meditation
and for the setting of
complimentary priorities
in life, we cannot afford to
overlook a clear perspective
of our own lives. We call such an
overview
our `aim in life'. If as meditators,
we have a clear
aim in life, as intelligent human
beings, we will be
EFTA01160893
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EFTA01160894
want to be a soccer champion. Aim
in life seems to
be different for different people,
however, if you
look at the deeper nature of all
people, ultimately
all people aim improve
themselves. Some people
want to improve themselves to the
utmost by purifying
their mind within the space of their
lifetime
to a point where they can enter
upon Nirvana. Others
might not be in so much of a hurry
— but it
doesn't mean that their spiritual
EFTA01160895
path will not pass
the same way some day.
A6. Virtues for creating purpose
in everyday life
Anyone who wishes to create and
maintain focus
and purpose in their life needs to
train themselves
in the following five virtues called
`core virtues'
[sAradhamma] by the Lord
Buddha:
I. Faith or Confidence [saddha]:
This means believing
in the appropriate things. It means
training
yourself to be reasonable
not to
EFTA01160896
be gullible.
The difference between being
faithful and
being gullible is that the latter has
no reason for
their confidence. Thus wisdom is
always an imBlessing
Six: Setting Oneself up Properly in
Life 93
portant component of faith. From
the Buddhist
point of view, the basis of faith is:
1. the existence of the Buddha
2. the working of the Law of
Karma — that doing
good deeds really gives rise to
good results
EFTA01160897
(with the proviso of doing those
good
deeds properly, sufficiently and
not in excess)
3. that the result of one's good or
bad karma will
follow one until it gives its
retribution.
2. The Precepts [sEla]: You must
keep the minimum
of Five Precepts (for more
explanation see Blessing
Nine).
3. Having heard much
[bahEsEta]: be specific, this
means being diligent in the
acquisition of knowledge
EFTA01160898
both spiritual and worldly by
listening to
many teachings.
4. Being a person of self-sacrifice
[cAga]: This
means being able to sacrifice and
let go both of
material possessions (given to
others) and also
to let go of our grudges and bad
temper by forgiving
others
5. Training Oneself in Meditation
[samAdhi]: We
need to train ourselves in
meditation if we are to
have any chance of attaining
EFTA01160899
wisdom. Wisdom
is the most essential element in
having a wellplanned
aim in life and being able to keep
ourselves
to it. If the mind is trained in
meditation
it will have the determination to
remain unscathed
in the face of temptations to "lower
our
sights" and settle for less
ambitious aims in life.
LIFE
1. Exclusively Materialistic Aim
In Life: Everybody
EFTA01160900
comes into the world with nothing,
but
everyone has the same basic needs
for survival
whether it be the food on their
plates, the clothes
on their backs, the roof over their
head or the
medicine they need to keep them
healthy in times
of illness. If any one of these
things are lacking
from people's lives, they cannot
survive. Man
can only go for a single day
without water. He
can only go for seven days without
EFTA01160901
food. Thus it
is only natural that the very least
that people
should aim for in their lives is to
fulfill these basic
physical needs. If their aim in life
is any lower
that this they cannot survive. Of
course some
people want more that this. Some
people are not
satisfied with the basics of
survival. They want
to be millionaires, they want
luxury, they want
the freedom in life to choose what
they buy. In
EFTA01160902
fact however much you want,
whether it is just
to fulfill their physical needs or to
satisfy their
physical wants, their aim in life is
only quite short
term. It is based on immediate
rewards. They
think of no further requirement of
life beyond
death. In their youth they seek
experience, in
their middle age they amass
wealth. Towards the
end of their lives they try to find an
heir for their
wealth. Thus we call such aims in
EFTA01160903
life "earthly"
because they extend no further
than this world
and this existence. Those who
entertain only such
an aim in life will usually (but not
always —
some people cut corners) want to
earn their living
in an honest way, by earning,
saving, using
their earnings in a responsible way
and entrusting
honest people to look after
common wealth.
2. Spiritual/Material Aim In Life:
At the same time
EFTA01160904
in the world, there are those who
recognize that
they must fulfill the physical needs
of the body,
but their aim in life runs deeper
than that. They
recognize that they need to earn
their living, but
earning that living is only a means
to an end.
They recognize that there exists
not only a physical
hunger, but the hunger of the spirit
or the
mind too. They realize that if the
mind is left
hungry it will tempt them to do
EFTA01160905
things they don't
want them to do. They need to find
time in their
lives to reach for a higher spiritual
dimension.
3. Exclusively Spiritual Aim In
Life: Last of all in
the world there are those who
realize the hunger
of the body and the mind — the
body for
physical needs and the mind in its
hunger for a
higher spiritual dimension to life.
For such a
group of people the sensitivity
towards the hunger
EFTA01160906
in the mind is so great that they
find that
they have the vocation to deal with
source of the
hunger at its root. So great is the
intensity of their
calling that they will see the need
to devote themselves
full time to the pursuit of
spirituality. To
purify themselves completely so
that hunger
may be completely extinguished.
They have the
94 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
time to devote to spiritual study
EFTA01160907
without having
to compromise their time in order
to earn a living.
They will spend their time learning
the spiritual
way and teaching it to the best of
their ability
so intensively that the life of the
householder
and the family no longer holds any
attraction for
them. We call such an aim in life
ultimate because
is seeks to come to an end of all
further
suffering and to help others to do
the same.
EFTA01160908
Bl. Exclusively Materialistic
Setting yourself up in a proper way
for those with an exclusively
materialistic aim in life consists of
two components:
1. avoiding evil
2. standing on your own two feet
The Buddha's short teaching of the
way to set yourself
up in the proper way is probably
too short for
the reader to know how to practice
it so we have to
expand a little further on the
subject matter
B1.1 Avoiding Evil
Avoiding evil means specifically
EFTA01160909
to avoid the six `roads
to ruin' [apAyamukha]. We must
avoid them in order
to avoid falling into any of the
unfortunate realms
in future existences. `Ruin'
[apAya] here means `lowdown',
`dirty', `decaying' and `lacking
prosperity'. The
word `road' [mukha] means 'path',
`front' or `face'.
There are six different types of
`roads to ruin':
I. Drinking alcohol or taking
intoxicating drugs:
like opium or heroin;
2. Nightlife: such as frequenting
EFTA01160910
brothels;
3. Frequenting shows: that have
content that is
romantic or frivolous;
4. Gambling: and lotteries
5. Associating with evil
companions
6. Being too lazy to work
We will not go into further detail
of these'roads to
ruin' here. In some places only
four `roads to ruin'
are referred to instead of six as
mentioned already
in Blessing One (srE.3) as the sort
of thing that fools
like to persuade you to do.
EFTA01160911
B1.2 Standing on you own two
feet
In the time of the Buddha, there
was someone who
asked the way to set himself up in
life. The four
practices he taught are sometimes
called the four
chambers of the millionaire's
heart. They are the
prerequisite virtues for accruing
benefit in the
present life (in Pali the
diEEhadhammikatthapayojana).
For revision take a look back at
Blessing
Two (sCC4.1). In conclusion,
EFTA01160912
anyone who is diligent
in acquisition of wealth, in
stewardship of their
earnings, who associates only with
good friends
and who uses their earnings to
support themselves
in a modest way will before long
achieve riches.
All of this hard work will only be
of benefit to us in
the present lifetime however. If
you also want benefits
in future lifetime, you need to
know how to
accrue merit too.
B2. Material/SpiritualAim
EFTA01160913
Setting yourself up in a proper way
for those with
a spiritual/material aim in life
consists of three components:
1. avoiding evil
2. standing on your own two feet
3. cultivating virtuous speech and
action
Avoiding evil and standing on
your own two feet
are the same as for those with the
exclusively materialistic
aim in life. However, on this level
we have
the addition of virtuous speech and
action. This
means immersing our mind fully in
EFTA01160914
meritorious
speech and action. The way this is
achieved is to
practice the Ten or the Three
Major Ways to Accrue
Merit [pufniakiriyavatthu] already
discussed in
Blessing Five (K2). The guiding
principles for accruing
merit are the prerequisite virtues to
accruing
benefit in future lives
[sampayikatthapayojana].
For revision take a look back at
Blessing
Two (K4.2) and Blessing Four
(84.6).
EFTA01160915
B2.1 Warnings about
prevarication
On the subject of setting oneself up
in life, there are
several common misconceptions
which you ought
to avoid:
I. Don't wait until you are old
before getting spiritual:
You should devote yourself to
spiritual
practice starting from the time
when you are still
young and healthy. In fact even to
start templegoing
from the time you are twenty is
still too
EFTA01160916
late. If you start temple-going from
the age of
Blessing Six: Setting Oneself up
Properly in Life 95
five or six, like RAhula in the time
of the Buddha,
it is your advantage. You should
start studying
the spiritual side of yourself early
in life so
that you don't make grave moral
errors. How
many of us spend many years
drinking alcohol
and damaging our minds before we
realize what
we are doing to ourselves? You
EFTA01160917
can bypass the
problem completely if you attend
the temple
from your youth.
2. Don't prevaricate about setting
yourself up in
life: You should work hard to
make yourself selfsufficient
in life at the earliest possible
opportunity
— anyone who is still a parasite
living in
someone else's house should be
quick to make
yourself independent.
3. Don't prevaricate about paying
off your debts:
EFTA01160918
Don't let your debts be something
you carry with
you to your next life! The interest
on loans that
span into the afterlife are too high
to be worth
risking slow repayment. Thus pay
off your debts
and make sure that you don't put
yourself in debt
any more. You should build up
your own financial
reserves before making an
investment, not
rely on borrowing from others or
from the bank.
If you die before you have paid
EFTA01160919
back your loan,
next lifetime you will have that
debt hanging
round your neck like a dead
albatross. Suppose
you borrow a dollar but die before
you can pay
it back — supposing you are an
angel for a thousand
years — just think what the
compound interest
will add up to during that time!
You might
never manage to pay it back.
4. Don't prevaricate about
improving on your bad
habits: If you know anything
EFTA01160920
about yourself is a
bad habit, give up doing it
immediately. Check
your own behaviour as a regular
part of your
practice and improve on yourself
instead of wasting
time finding fault with others.
5. Be careful of bad deeds in the
guise of good ones:
When you have done a good deed,
don't go wishing
for things that are irresponsible.
B3. Exclusively spiritual
Even the Bodhisattva himself
needed an aim in life
when pursuing perfections in
EFTA01160921
preparation for Buddhahood.
Thus it comes as no surprise that
on the
exclusively spiritual level of aim in
life, it is still
important to have an aim in life, in
order to waste
no time in pursuing the goal of
purifying the mind
to a point where it can enter upon
Nirvana. On this
level, even material convenience is
sacrificed in order
fully to cultivate spiritual
development.
B3.1 Human Realm as the
crossroads of existence
EFTA01160922
The clearer one's aim in life, the
more clearly one
will understand the preciousness of
human life —
and that we cannot afford to waste
a moment. Even
if you look around your house, of
which you pride
yourself as being the owner, if you
count the
number of fleas, mosquitos, ants
and mice, you will
realize that you are in the minority
— even though
it's your house! This is intended to
give you an inkling
of how rare it is to be born human
EFTA01160923
and what a
precious opportunity our human
lifespan is in forging
our destiny. In our human
company there are
basically four sorts of pathway of
human destiny
forged during a lifespan (A.ii.85):
I. Out of the darkness into the
darkness: Born with
all the disadvantages of nature and
nurture, they
did what came naturally and made
a worse mess
out of their lives;
2. Out of the darkness into the
light: In spite of
EFTA01160924
ample disadvantages of nature and
nurture, they
struggled against hardship until
being able to
make some sort of success out of
their lives;
3. Out of the light into the
darkness: In spite of all
the advantages of nature and
nurture, they became
complacent and made a mess out
of their
lives.
4. Out of the light into the light:
Avoiding the trap
of complacency, they built on the
advantages of
EFTA01160925
nature and nurture they brought
into the world,
storing up a yet brighter future for
themselves.
The human realm is like a
crossroads where destiny
can be transformed for the better or
for the
worse. For sure, transforming
one's destiny for the
better means going against the tide.
Spiritual cultivation
is often hard in the beginning, but
pays off
in the long-term — something that
may not be immediately
obvious to someone who sees
EFTA01160926
everything
96 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
in the short-term. Therefore a
proper aim in life is
vital for anyone navigating the
human crossroads
who wants to make a success in
forging a brighter
destiny.
B3.2 Prerequisites for fulfilling
the Highest Aim in Life
In a Buddhist context, fulfilment of
Highest Aim in
Life, the fruition of all levels of
cultivation is to
purify the mind completely or to
EFTA01160927
enter upon Nirvana.
In order to fulfil this goal six
conditions must
be fulfilled— without these six
prerequisites, all our
effort in setting an aim in life will
be in vain. These
six prerequisites are:
1. You have to have been born in
an amenable location
i.e. Blessing Four
2. You must have done good deeds
until used to
them i.e. Blessing Five
4 - 6. The Four Accomplishments
already met as
catalysts determining the speed
EFTA01160928
with which merit
can take its effect as described in
Blessing Five
These six factors go together as a
set of conditions
known as the Six Catalysts or
Accomplishments:
1. Catalytic Circumstances
[gatisamapati]
2. Catalytic Timing [kAlasampatti]
3. Catalytic Location
[padesasampatti]
4. Catalytic Family [kulasampatti]
5. Catalytic State of Well-being
[upadhisampatti]
6. Catalytic View [diEEhisampatti]
If you find that you are hampered
EFTA01160929
in setting yourself
up in life in the way you would
wish, perhaps
you have to consolidate Blessing
Four and Blessing
Five to contribute sufficient
Accomplishments
to your spiritual quest to give you
the `escape velocity'
you need to forge your destiny to
the full!
C. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
C.1 Metaphor: Boat must have a
rudder
If the ship that must struggle to
make way in
EFTA01160930
the ocean waves is to reach the far
shore, its captain
must have a clear destination in
mind and
keep the ship firmly on course, not
allowing the
ship to drift
no less important is
an aim in
life to those wishing to achieve
success and
profit in their lives.
C2 Metaphor: The one-eyed sea
turtle
(S.v.455)
The Lord Buddha taught that the
birth of someone
as a human is as rare as the chance
EFTA01160931
of a blind
turtle in the ocean which surfaces
for air once a
century popping its head through
the middle of
the only flower garland which
happens to be
floating in the sea. The chance of a
being which
is a denizen of hell, an animal, a
ghost or a demon
attaining human birth is even
slighter
still.Therefore having obtained
yourself a human
birth make sure you make the best
of your
EFTA01160932
life.
C.3 Metaphor: Saving for the
Future
Just as a wise merchant must keep
aside someof
his money for investment in the
future, the wise
man must keep aside some of his
time for the
practices that will allow him to
renew his merit
for future lifetimes. Just as the
wise farmer keeps
aside some of his rice crop for next
year's sowing,
the wise man will take the
opportunity
EFTA01160933
while his old merit is still giving
its fruit, to accrue
new merit for use in future
existences.
C.4 Ex.: The Retribution of
Kapila Bhikkhu
DhA.iv.37ff
In the time of the Lord Buddha
named Kassapa,
there was a gang of five hundred
thieves who
were bringing misery to the whole
of the kingdom.
The householders, together with
the police
and the army thus hunted down the
gang
EFTA01160934
and when the thieves saw that they
could no
longer defend themselves, they
escaped into the
forest. The vengeful householders
did not give
up chase and so the thieves went
deeper and
deeper into the forest until they
came to a clearing
in the heart of the forest. There
they met a
monk, and seeing the monk, they
started to see
the error of their ways. They were
receptive to
what the monk had to say, and the
EFTA01160935
monk taught
them that they must keep the
Precepts even if it
cost them their lives. In any case,
if they were to
be caught, no-one would spare
their lives beBlessing
Six: Setting Oneself up Properly in
Life 97
cause they had already murdered
so many people.
The thieves took the Five Precepts
and
didn't try to escape any more.
They concentrated
all their attention on keeping the
Precepts pure.
EFTA01160936
They would not hurt even a
mosquito or a leech.
Even if the soldiers were to catch
up with them
and attack them with swords and
knives, they
swore not to put up a fight.
Before long, the soldiers
discovered the thieves
and attacked. The thieves kept
their word and
put up no resistance
they were
so devoted to
keeping their Precepts pure. All
five hundred
thieves were executed, but through
the power
EFTA01160937
of keeping the Precepts to the
degree they would
sacrifice their lives, their bad deeds
didn't have
the chance to catch up with them.
They were
born instantly as angels. The evil
of their past
did not disappear, however, but
was waiting for
the opportunity to give its
retribution.
When they were reborn from the
celestial
world into the human realm, the
influence of the
killing they had done in the past
EFTA01160938
still affected
them. All five hundred were born
as fishermen
in the same village. However, even
though their
livelihood was to kill fish, through
the power of
their good deeds in the past, they
all still had
faith in Buddhism. Even so, the
fishermen continued
to collect demerit as a result of
their habitual
killing.
One day a group of fishermen
caught a giant,
golden-coloured fish
as big as a
EFTA01160939
boat. No-one
had ever seen such a fish in their
lives. They captured
the fish and took it to offer to King
Pasenadi of Kosala — who in turn
took the fish
to the Buddha. As soon as the fish
opened its
mouth, a foul smell spread all
around the
Jetavana monastery. The king then
asked the
Buddha why such a beautiful fish
should have
such a foul smell.
The Enlightened One then revealed
that in one
EFTA01160940
of his past existences, the fish had
been a learned
bhikkhu named Kapila during the
time of
Kassapa Buddha. Because of his
deep knowledge
of the Dhamma, he had gained
much fame
and honour. He also became very
conceited and
looked down upon the other
bhikkhus. When the
other bhikkhus pointed out to him
what was
proper or not proper, he invariably
retorted,
`How much do you know?'
EFTA01160941
implying that he
knew much more than those
bhikkhus. In the
course of time, most of the
bhikkhus avoided him.
On one occasion,the bhikkhus did
not join him
when he was reciting the
Fundamental Precepts
for the bhikkhus (i.e., the
PAEimokkha). Observing
that the bhikkhus remained silent,
Kapila
said, `There is no such thing as
Sutta,
Abhidhamma or Vinaya. It makes
no difference
EFTA01160942
whether you listen to the
PAEimokkha or not'
and left the congregation. He had
taught the
Dhamma to others in a way that
was biased in
the monk's self interest
in a
way that made
his teaching deviate from the truth.
His misrepresentation
of the Dhamma was thus
perpetuated
amongst his followers.
There were many others including
his teacher
and arahants who had warned that
monk of the
EFTA01160943
danger of his misrepresentation of
the Dhamma
— however he would not listen.
He insulted
them in return for their advice. As
a result he
developed False View and when
he passed away,
these False Views dragged him
down into the
Unfortunate Realms for a long
time. Only then
could he be born as a fish. The
Precepts of a
monk gave their fruit as the
beautiful golden
appearance of the fish but the
EFTA01160944
retribution from
insulting arahants and his teacher
gave him his
stinking mouth. Hearing the
previous karma of
the fish, the five-hundred
fishermen considered
all the evil deeds they had done as
a result of
their livelihood since their youth.
They realized
that their time in hell would
certainly be no less
than the fate of the fish they had
caught — so
they decided collectively all to
become monks
EFTA01160945
and to devote themselves to
Dhamma practice.
From the power of having
sacrificed their lives
for their Precepts in a previous
existence — i.e.
having set themselves up properly
in life — before
long they could all become
arahants and
were no longer subject to the
retribution of the
evil karma of their past.
98 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
C.5 Ex. Akkosaka BhAradvAj a
Vatthu
EFTA01160946
DhA.iv.161ff
In the time of the Buddha there
was a Brahmin
couple. The husband called
BhAradavAja was
very strict in his Brahmin
observances. He had
never shown any interest in
Buddhism. By contrast,
his wife was a person with no
further
doubt in Buddhism because she
had heard one
of the teaching of the Buddha and
had become
enlightened as a stream-enterer as
the result.
EFTA01160947
One day the husband wanted to
hold a feast
for all the most high standing
Brahmins — worshipped
as ' arahants' in their religion. Thus
the
husband and wife started their
elaborate preparations
for the feast, but when it came
close to
the `big day', because it was the
habit of the wife
always to exclaim Tuddho!'
whenever something
surprised her, her husband
appealed to her
on the day of the feast not to
EFTA01160948
mention anything
about Buddhism or to say anything
in praise of
the Triple Gem. The wife said,
"My mind is unified
with the Dhamma, therefore
whatever I say
will also be Dhamma
there is
nothing you can
do to stop my mind from being
that way!"
"And what about if I take a sword
and cut you
into small pieces — will that help
you to educate
your mind?"
"Even if you were to make
EFTA01160949
mincemeat of me,"
said the wife, "I could not help
myself from having
the Dhamma as my refuge!"
The husband didn't know what
more to say
— so they got on with the work of
providing
the feast. Everything went well
until the wife
slipped over on a pile of spilled
rice. She exclaimed,
"Namo tassabhagavato arahato
sammA sambuddh-assa!"
Everyone present heard the wife's
exclamation.
The assembled Brahmins were
EFTA01160950
angered by
what they heard. When they had
received the
invitation, they understood that the
wife had respect
for them. Now they had found out
that she
respected not them but the Buddha.
They were
specially angry because they were
opposed to
everything the Buddha did. Those
who had finished
their meal immediately stood up
and
shouted insults at the couple.
Those who had
EFTA01160951
not finished eating overturned
every plate of
food on the table. They stamped
their feet and
walked out on the couple.
The husband was so angry he
didn't know
what to say. He couldn't do
anything to punish
his wife — so he thought to take
out his anger
on his wife's teacher — the
Buddha himself. He
buckled on his sword and turned in
the direction
of Jetavana monastery with the
intention to
EFTA01160952
put an end to the Buddha and his
teachings. The
husband walked straight up to the
Buddha without
paying respect and in his anger
shouted the
rhetorical question at the Buddha,
"Do you
know what a man has to kill in
order to get a
good night's sleep...?"
The Brahmin thought that putting
an end to
the Buddha was the only way he
could save face
and sleep soundly that night.
Without waiting
EFTA01160953
for an answer, the Brahmin
continued, "... and
what a man has to kill to cure his
sorrow? . .".
And still without waiting for an
answer, the
Brahmin asked the Buddha, ". . .
and so what
form of killing would you
support?"
The Buddha knew what was on the
mind of
the Brahmin and coolly answered
the first question
with the words, "A man must kill
his anger
in order to get a good night's sleep.
EFTA01160954
If you don't
kill your anger, you will do things
that you regret
later, being put in prison or
punished — but
if you kill your anger, you don't
need to undergo
the sorrowful consequences of
your angry
deeds. The Noble Ones praise the
killing of anger
— whose root is poison and whose
crown is
sweet."
When the Buddha said that the root
of anger
is poisonous, he meant that anger
EFTA01160955
has suffering
as its result. When he said that the
crown is
sweet, he meant that we get a
strange, twisted
satisfaction out of expressing our
anger to others
or losing our temper.
After hearing only these few
words,
BhAradavAja was impressed. He
was impressed
that the Buddha was not angry in
response to
his anger. He had prepared his
sword to chop
the Buddha to pieces at the first
EFTA01160956
unwelcome
Blessing Six: Setting Oneself up
Properly in Life 99
word, but instead of hearing
anything to irritate
him further, the Brahmin had been
impressed
by every one of the Buddha's
reasoning. He
threw away his sword and invited
the Buddha
to teach him further. In the end, he
was motivated
to practise the Dhamma further
and ended
up ordaining as a monk.
Killing your anger is one way of
EFTA01160957
setting yourself
up in life. To ordain as the result of
a teaching
is to set yourself up in faith, in the
Precepts,
in Wisdom or in Meditation. It was
in this intense
way that BhAradavAj a set himself
up in
life, and before long could practice
until attaining
arahantship
100 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
The Third
Group of Blessings
EFTA01160958
"Setting Oneself up in Life"
The third group of the blessings
of life is often referred to as
"making
yourself useful". This doesn't
just refer to making oneself a
citizen
who can contribute something
positive to society, it means
being
able to be of independent means
— to earn one's own living
without having to rely on
outsiders for help. The principle
of "being
EFTA01160959
a refuge to yourself' is one very
important to Buddhism
not
just a virtue to oneself in
spiritual ways but in worldly
ways as
well. Not burdening oneself on
society is seen not only as the
basis
of self-confidence, but also as a
positive virtue to be
encouraged.
Earning one's living requires
both knowledge and skills
(found in
Blessings Seven and Eight
EFTA01160960
respectively) but as usual to
earn one's
living in an unscrupulous way
to the detriment of others is not
acceptable.
Sociable application of our
knowledge and skills is taught
in action and word respectively
in Blessings Nine and Ten
respectively
to make sure that we don't
make ourselves self-sufficient at
society's expense. This
foundation of lack of worry
concerning one's
EFTA01160961
daily bread will serve as a
foundation for a harmonious
family life
and public works to be found in
subsequent Groups of the
Blessings.
All of the previous six
Blessings we have studied, have
concerned
the adjustment of our quality of
mind. The first few Blessings
have concerned protecting our
mind from damage and finding
the most basic virtue of
discretion with which to instil
EFTA01160962
the mind.
In the sixth blessing we already
set our sights on the aim in life
we
require — now in the third
grouping we start to walk
toward that
goal.
102 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
The Learned The Wise
much knowledge maybe not much
knowledge
maybe not much virtue much virtue
maybe do not apply knowledge to
do good deeds use what knowledge
EFTA01160963
they have to do good deeds
must have good memory not
necessary to have good memory
must be educated irrespective of
literacy or education
no guarantee that they will not will
not make a mess of his life
make a mess out of their life
TABLE 7.1 COMPARISON OF
Blessing Seven: Artfulness in
Knowledge 103
A. INTRODUCTION
In fact the subject matter of the
seventh Blessing
also concerns our mind but it deals
EFTA01160964
with the way
we can find knowledge to instil in
the mind.
Knowledge has many implications
both for our
own life and for the quality of life
in society. Without
worldly knowledge we could not
set ourselves
up in life by earning our own
living. Without spiritual
knowledge, we would leave the
thirst of the
unanswered spiritual questions in
life unquenched.
For society, knowledgeable people
contribute to
EFTA01160965
the quality and standard of living
in general. If
students are demotivated or
inefficient in their efforts
to study, the repurcussions can
bring damage
to the whole educational sector and
the youth
in particular. Incidence of
gang-fighting between
schools, student drug-addiction
and `hanging out'
on the street in search of trouble
are all signs of
social problems originating in an
incapacity to
study properly. Even the
EFTA01160966
depreciation of the
credability of the teaching
profession has something
to do with an inability to inspire
children to
enjoy learning. The problem is not
entirely to be
blamed on schools however
as
we have seen in
preceding blessings, a negative
parental role
model or a bad home environment
can damage a
child's character so severely, even
before starting
school — to an extent that the best
of teachers can
EFTA01160967
do nothing to rectify the situation.
A.1 Problems & risks facing
students in general
The ideal student is someone who
never tires of
learning new things either about
worldly or spiritual
matters. It is not enough just to be
curious —
to learn in depth, a student needs to
have a real
respect for the knowledge they are
learning.
The reality of student life is that
there are many
things to interfere with the
students' enthusiasm
EFTA01160968
to learn. The student's
disillusionment can be summarized
into three different groups: loss of
sense
of responsibility towards their own
sense of human
dignity; loss of sense of
responsibility towards
the sense human dignity of others,
and; loss of
sense of responsibility towards a
fair economy:
I. Loss of responsibility towards
own sense of human
dignity may lead to:
1. Early Signs of False View: Not
bothering to
EFTA01160969
keep the Five Precepts, ignorance
of the Five
Precepts or even going so far as to
protest
against the keeping of the Five
Precepts —
as a result of the example or
persuasion of
teachers;
2. Expression of the Defilements of
Action: Taking
the lives or being cruel to people
or animals,
stealing, committing adultery or
sexual intercourse
outside marriage and telling lies.
3. Loss of `aim in life': leading to a
EFTA01160970
general lack
of motivation to study or develop
oneself and
consequent lack of preparation to
learn new
skills, fit into society or work for a
living.
Blessing Seven:
Artfulness
in Knowledge
104 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
2. Loss of responsibility towards
the sense of human
dignity of others: if teachers or
EFTA01160971
lecturers fail
to inspire the students by their
example of ethical
living, students will have no
feeling of responsibility
towards the human dignity of
others or
of society in general. Consequently
they may:
1. Profit from natural resources at
the expense of the
environment: if the students are
only interested
in the short-term gains of a
particular item of
knowledge, but fail to consider or
be taught
EFTA01160972
about the long-term consequences
(e.g They
may pull up trees to facilitate
access by profitable
farm machinery, but in so doing
cause
erosion of the top soil)
2. Always put the blame on others:
This is a very
basic form of bias often arising as
a result of
never having been praised by their
teacher or
lecturer. Never having seen their
teacher
praise the good points of others,
they assume
EFTA01160973
that picking on others' faults is
normal and
they are the only infallible person
in the
world.
3. Persuades friends to be
delinquent: For the convenience
of keeping company with those of
similar habits as themselves,
disillusioned students
persuade their friends to participate
in
various forms of delinquent
behaviour such
as truancy or "doing drugs".
3. Loss of responsibility towards
the sense of economic
EFTA01160974
fairness: If teachers fail to instil
self-discipline
in their students, the students will
have no
sense of responsibility towards a
fair economy,
specifically by:
1. Unwholesome Livelihood: like
selling drugs,
petty theft, telephone prostitution
or gambling;
2. Addiction to the Six `Roads to
Ruin ';
3. Worshipping Money: When
money becomes the
most important thing, it is unlikely
that a person
EFTA01160975
will have any concern for the state
of their
family, of the nation or the
religion. It is like
the aphorism often heard on the
lips of modem
youth that "ideals don't keep the
wolf
from the door".
A.2 Definition: Artfulness in
Knowledge
The word `bahEsEta' in the Pali
means literally `one
who has heard much'. It refers to
being learned by
having heard much both in
spiritual and worldly
EFTA01160976
ways. A `bahEsEta' is someone
who is:
"artful in knowledge" — choosing
to study
only the things appropriate for
study —
being a person learned in those
subjects and
observant — personal qualities that
lie at
the trailhead of the path to
wisdom. Such
knowledge allows one to be
independent
in earning one's living and will be
the key
which unlocks the door to worldly
EFTA01160977
success.
B. The Nature of Knowledge
B.1 The Three Levels of
Knowledge
If we want to identify the features
of learning that
will give rise to wisdom we have
to distinguish
wisdom from other sorts of
knowledge. All sorts of
knowledge help to illuminate the
mind. When we
don't understand something it is as
if we are left in
the dark about that thing. When we
understand
something it is as if light has been
EFTA01160978
thrown on that
matter. Knowledge in its most
basic form, like the
ability to do arithmetic or knowing
where to catch
the bus sometimes will feel as if it
creates some illumination
in the mind but it is just a feeling
because such an ability is restricted
to the higher
sort of knowledge we call
"wisdom". In all we can
differentiate three levels of
knowledge:
I. Theoretical knowledge
[sutamaya-pafulA] The
EFTA01160979
most basic sort of knowledge
arises via the five
senses, that is through the things
we see with
our eyes, hear with our ears, smell
with our nose,
taste with our tongue or feel by our
sense of
touch. You could call this sort of
knowledge raw
data. Touching fire tells us that it is
hot. A child
might want to know what fire is
like. Their
mother tells them not to touch it
because it is hot
and will burn them. The child will
EFTA01160980
not believe
their mother so easily. The mother
might tell
them not to touch it twice, but on
the third time
she will have to give in to the
child's curiosity
and let him touch the flame so that
the child will
know for next time that heat goes
together with
Blessing Seven: Artfulness in
Knowledge 105
brightness. This sort of knowledge
also includes
the knowledge we receive by
listening to information
EFTA01160981
and what you can remember from
what
you have heard in lectures and read
from textbooks.
If you have never had the chance
to apply
the knowledge that you have
learned then it
may still be of limited use;
2. Hands-on Knowledge
[cintamayapaririA]: The
second sort of knowledge which is
slightly more
advanced is hands-on knowledge,
the knowledge
that has been reflected on, tested
and applied.
EFTA01160982
However, even if you are the
world's best
professor, your knowledge will not
exceed this
level. With this sort of knowledge
you are like
someone stands on the water's
edge and sees
ripples on the surface of the water.
From knowledge
or experience they would be able
to assume
that the ripples are caused by fish
under the surface
of the water. Whether the fish are
large or
small or whether there are shrimps
EFTA01160983
or crabs or
shellfish moving under the water,
you could
probably notice from the size of
the ripples. But
because you cannot see the fish
directly you are
able only to make an educated
guess;
3. Insight [bhAvanAmayapaririA]:
A third and
higher sort of knowledge is insight
into deeper
truths or more challenging truths.
However if
we study meditation further we
will discover
EFTA01160984
that even finding the solutions to
simple problems
in this way is actually causing
there to be
illumination arising in the mind.
The characteristics
of wisdom when it arises in the
mind:
1. It will give rise to brightness in
the mind. Wisdom
is the light which will chase away
the
darkness of ignorance. This is not
just a metaphor
for the knowledge but when we
train
ourselves further in meditation, we
EFTA01160985
will see
that brightness really is the operant
feature of
wisdom. The illumination of the
more advanced
sorts of knowledge is so bright that
is
is like compressing the brightness
of a hundred
suns into a single spot. It is by
virtue of
such brightness that we can
identify and uproot
the defilements usually hidden in
the
mind. For those who are new to
meditation,
EFTA01160986
the brightness is not yet continuous
and is dim
like a glowworm. Such brightness
is not yet
sufficient to identify defilements,
but it is a
good start;
2. It allows us to transcend
defilements: When
wisdom arises, it allows us to
transcend defilements
previously active in the mind.
Problems
which used to exist will be
overcome
once and for all. Evil in the mind is
uprooted.
EFTA01160987
It allows us to probe deeper into
problems and
cut off problems at their roots. It
allows us to
overcome our own faults and
weaknesses. It
allows us to change our bad habits.
Such
knowledge is able to overcome
suffering and
to change our own habits. It allows
us to get
to the root of problems. Such
knowledge can
actually kill negativity in the mind
once and
for all. Such knowledge no longer
EFTA01160988
comes via
the five senses but will come
instead directly
via the mind that is still. It is not
knowledge
that comes from thinking. It is
knowledge that
arises in the still mind together
with brightness.
It is a sort of knowledge we
sometimes
call wisdom or insight. If we go
back to the
scenario with the man standing on
the edge
of the water, where through
conventional
EFTA01160989
knowledge the man could do no
better than
make an educated guess, if we
were to use
insight to assess the same situation,
it would
be as if the water was clear and the
man could
see the fish, the crabs, the shrimps
or the shellfish
without having to think about it.
The ability to harness the
knowledge that arises
from the still mind is an ability for
which you have
to train in meditation.
B.2 Contrast between the Learned
EFTA01160990
and the Wise
There are several important
differences between the
learned who know only the theory
of how to do
good deeds (but may not practice
it) and the wise
who may not know much but use
everything they
know to boost their opportunity to
do good deeds.
Unfortunately, knowledge in the
hands of a fool (or
even a learned person) can be a
dangerous thing. If
your only knowledge is academic
knowledge, no
EFTA01160991
matter how clever you might be,
there is always a
106 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
risk of making a mess of your life.
For example, if
you have a knowledge of nuclear
physics, you can
use it for peaceful applications as
an energy source
— on the other hand you can use
your knowledge
to produce atomic bombs and the
resulting holocaust
towards human life. Thus ethical
considerations
need to go hand in hand with our
EFTA01160992
academic
knowledge, like a guiding light to
give us clarity as
to whether the application of our
knowledge is good
or bad, appropriate or
inappropriate.
Those who are inter ested only in
academic learning,
no matter how clever, rich or
powerful they
may be, can never manage to make
themselves endearing
or worthy of the respect of others
and in
the end they cannot make a success
out of their lives.
EFTA01160993
STUDENT
C.1 Sense of Responsibility for
own Human Dignity
In order for a student to protect
their own sense of
human dignity, they must refrain
from the Four Defilements
of Action:
1. taking the lives or being cruel to
people or animals;
2. stealing;
3. committing adultery or have
sexual intercourse
outside marriage;
4. telling lies.
Also concerning a person's
EFTA01160994
responsibility to their
own sense of human dignity, a
person should:
• avoid sentimentality about
learning: those who
are not strong-minded in their
pursuit of learning
will not manage to succeed in
becoming
learned;
• avoid obsession with
appearances: if you want
to try to be a learned person in the
future — you
should model yourself on the
stereotype of academics
or monastics who emphasise only
EFTA01160995
two
things about their dress —
modesty and cleanliness.
• avoid childishness: those who
play around,
never take responsibility for
anything and never
taking anything seriously, will
never succeed in
becoming learned.
C.2 Sense of Responsibility for
others' Human
Dignity
Bias gives us negative attitudes
which may reduce
our chances of success in study. If
we are able to
EFTA01160996
overcome these items of unfairness
in the mind
from the outset then the mind will
be a much more
fertile receptacle for knowledge:
I. Learning based on Desire
[chandAgati]: Desire
doesn't need to be so strong that
you are a Casanova.
Such a person would have no
chance of
being a good student anyway.
However, to a
lesser degree even someone who is
excessively
fussy about what they do and what
they wear
EFTA01160997
would be unlikely to succeed in
their studies.
Those who study simply because
they would like
to become famous will find it hard
to succeed in
study. If you see possessions as an
end in themselves
then we will have no incentive to
study.
2. Learning based on Hatred
[dosAgati]: If you want
to study successfully then you
mustn't be someone
who loses their temper easily. You
must be
able to accept criticism without
EFTA01160998
being scared of
appearing foolish. Some people are
angry only
for an instant and then they recover
quickly. Others
are angry and it takes them a long
time to get
over it. They find it hard to
forgive. Even later
on, although they can't remember
why they were
angry with someone, they still feel
angry with
that person. They forget their
respect for others.
They think that they are superior to
everyone
EFTA01160999
else. Thus they can never learn
anything from
anyone else. By meditating, such
people can train
themselves to be less impatient. If
they also keep
a baseline of morality such as
avoiding killing
animals and insulting then they
will find it much
easier to acquire wisdom.
3. Learning based on Ignorance
[mohAgati]: If you
are still acting on your own
ignorance instead of
giving things careful consideration
before you
EFTA01161000
do them, then you will find it hard
acquire new
knowledge. If your old ways of
looking at the
world are faulty then you need to
let go of them
before you can expect to acquire
new ones.
4. Learning based on Fear
[bhayAgati]: Some people
lack confidence in themselves and
their own
Blessing Seven: Artfulness in
Knowledge 107
knowledge. They are always afraid
of the criticism
of others. If you are afraid of
EFTA01161001
taking decisions
yourself, then you will be destined
to always
be led by other people instead of
standing
on your own feet. You will have
no creative or
original thinking of your own. If
even you don't
trust your own knowledge then
how can you
expect to make anyone else
confident.
C.3 Sense of Responsibility for
Economic Fairness
In order for a student to protect
society's sense of
EFTA01161002
human dignity, they must refrain
from the Six Roads
to Ruin:
1. Drinking alcohol;
2. Roaming the streets at unseemly
hours;
3. Frequenting shows;
4. Gambling;
5. Association with bad company;
6. Laziness to work for a living.
Furthermore a person who is
obsessed with personal
financial gain will find it hard to
make
progress in their studies. A person
should not "worship
money". Those who see that
EFTA01161003
material rewards
are more valuable than wisdom
will never go very
far in acquiring wisdom. We don't
overlook the
importance of wealth — but on the
way that it is
best to apply one's wealth
that
will be the subject
of Blessing Fifteen.
D.1 Coming into contact with
someone knowledgeable
One of the hardest things is to find
a teacher who
will give the necessary
encouragement to bring
EFTA01161004
one's studies to fruition. The
Buddha taught in the
SilgalovAda Sutta that successful
studies are established
on the base of reciprocal duties
that a
student practices towards his
teacher and that a
teacher practises towards their
student (duties collectively
referred to as duties to the
Southern Quarter).
If a student finds a teacher that
they think
they can learn something from,
they should start
to learn from them. The teacher
EFTA01161005
should practice
the following five duties towards
their pupil, by
making sure:
1. the student is well trained;
2. that the student is taught in such
a way that he
understands and remembers well
what he has
learned;
3. that the student is thoroughly
instructed in the
lore of every art without holding
knowledge
back;
4. to give praise to the student
which raises his esteem
EFTA01161006
amongst his peers;
5. that the student's security and
safety in every
quarter (i.e. towards parents, wife,
children,
employees, friends and spiritual
mentors) is ensured,
while pointing out the loopholes
and
weaknesses present in any body of
knowledge.
Meanwhile the student should
minister to his
teacher by:
1. rising to receive them;
2. by serving them (in things
which facilitate the
EFTA01161007
teacher's convenience)
3. by obedience to the teachings or
an eagerness to
learn;
4. by personal service
5. by attentively and respectfully
learning the arts
and sciences
If a student fails to fulfil their
duties but the
teacher does their part, the student
is unworthy
of the teacher — and it will be no
surprise
if the student can never become
"skilled in
knowledge"
catastrophe will
EFTA01161008
await the student.
If the teacher fails to fulfil their
duties but the
pupil does their part, then the
teacher is unworthy
of the student — and perhaps the
student
should look elsewhere for a better
teacher
— and catastrophe awaits the
teacher.
If neither the student nor the
teacher fulfil
their duties, catastrophe will await
both student
and teacher and their failing will
have
EFTA01161009
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EFTA01161010
unlikely ever to
make a success of your career as a
student. This
applies both to the contact with
your teacher and
reading from the textbooks. It
means questioning
in order to further your
knowledge.Whatever
knowledge you learn, try to divide
it up into these
four aspects and study all four.
Only then can you
say that you have mastered that
knowledge. Such
an assessment of your own
knowledge will prevent
EFTA01161011
you from slipping into the
premature overestimation
of the amount you know and give
you the encouragement
to keep listening to people of
knowledge.
1. Knowledge in Depth: You need
to make sure
that you understand deeply what
you have
learned. You need to know the
roots and origins
of everything you study (its past).
If you are a
doctor and you see a patient ill
with certain
symptoms by looking at their face
EFTA01161012
you can tell
immediately about the prognosis of
their illness
right from ten or twenty years ago.
Don't go believing
things simply because they are
traditional
or customary without
understanding the reasons
for such belief.
2. Knowledge in Breadth: You
need to have a
broad knowledge (the present) not
only of your
own narrow specialism but also
about all the
things that concern your everyday
EFTA01161013
life. Even if
you study the arts, you still need to
know the
elements of electricity because you
use electricity
in your everyday life from the time
you get
up in the morning to the time you
go to bed. If
you have studied science, you still
need to know
about the arts otherwise you will
not understand
how to communicate emotions,
feelings and
ideas from one person to another in
different
EFTA01161014
forms whether it may be written or
visual. If you
don't study then you can be the
best engineer in
the world but if you have no gift
for communicating
with people you will just be
digging holes
for the rest of your life.
3. Thorough Knowledge: Not
only will you know
your own narrow subject but you
will know the
connections which it has with
other issues as if
you know the influences of that
knowledge all
EFTA01161015
the way from the mainstream up to
the edges.
4. Long-sighted Knowledge: You
need to have a
long-sighted knowledge. You need
to know how
things will turn out in the future.
You need to
know how one thing leads to
another.
D.3 Listening attentively
You need to listen to remember —
not just sit in the
lecture picking your fingernails
and chatting to your
friends, with no idea what the
lecture was about at
EFTA01161016
the end;
D.4 Memorizing knowledge
learned [vAcAsa-paricitta]
If you make no effort to memorize
what you have
learned, you will never become a
person `who has
heard much' (A.v.26).
Memorization is an implicit
part of the duty of a monk and it is
expectedof
monks by the lay congregation. If
the knowledge
stays in the books, it is like having
money, but having
lent it all to someone else. If you
want it back
EFTA01161017
instantly, even though it is yours
you cannot get it
back instantly. Even though you
know which textbook
you can find a certain piece of
knowledge in,
you will go reaching for the book
one day and find
that worms have eaten just the
page you needed.
D.5 Reflecting on knowledge
memorized [manasAnupekkhitA]
You have to digest new knowledge
in your mind
and look for causes and effects
Meditating is the
mostefficient way of `digesting'
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new knowledge.
D.6 Applying knowledge for one's
own benefit
(see Blessing Eight)
D. 7 Applying knowledge for the
benefit of
oneself and others
(See Blessing Eight)
Here are some practical
suggestions for budding
scholars:
1. Choose only appropriate
subjects to study which
will not have negative implications
for the huBlessing
EFTA01161019
Seven: Artfulness in Knowledge
109
man dignity of yourself, others or
society at
large;
2. Dedicate yourself
studying
your chosen subject
to the utmost of your ability;
3. Always be enthusiastic to learn
new things;
4. Study spiritual knowledge
hand-in-hand with
worldly knowledge;
5. Remember what you have
learned so that it is
always at your immediate disposal
F. ILLUSTRATIVE
EFTA01161020
EXAMPLES
F.1 Metaphor: Lamp lighting the
path for a long
journey ahead
Just as illumination is necessary to
light the path
ahead on a long journey, artfulness
in knowledge
is the pioneering virtue leading to
prosperity in life.
F.2 Ex. Buddha advises a
brahmin to pay
respect to Ananda (1.296)
There was once a brahmin who
sought the advice
of the Buddha. He said that it was
obvious how
EFTA01161021
one could pay respect to the
Buddha and the
Salgha, because they were already
a sort of personality.
However, the Brahmin didn't
know how
to pay respect to the Dhamma
which seemed more
abstract.The Buddha replied that if
you want to pay
respect to the Dhamma, you should
pay respect to
those who are learned in the
Dhamma. The Brahmin
asked around to find which of the
monks was
the most learned and everyone
EFTA01161022
agreed that/nanda
was the most learned because more
than any other
monk, he had heard the teachings
of the Lord Buddha.
Thus the Brahmin went to pay
respect to
/nanda above the other monks,
many of whom
had more advanced spiritual
attainments.
F.3 Ex. MahAsutasoma JAtaka
(J.537)
There was a certain Buddha who
while pursuing
Perfections as the bodhisattva, was
born as a king
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called MahAsutasoma. The king
was so keen to
learn new teachings of the
Dhamma that he would
invite anyone who had knowledge
of the Dhamma
to come and teach him in the
palace. On one occasion,
MahAsutasoma was captured by
an ogre. The
ogre was going to put him to death.
On just the day
the ogre was going to collect him,
it was also the
day when he had made an
appointment with a
knowledgable Brahmin Nanda to
EFTA01161024
teach some teachings
left over from the Kassapa
Buddha. In that day
and age, there were no living
teachings to be followed
any more. There were no monks
left any
more. Later even if the king
offered the prize of a
heap of gold as tall as the person to
give the teaching,
there would still be no-one who
had any teaching
to give the king. Even if the king
offered the
prize of a heap of diamonds as tall
as an elephant,
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still nobody could be found to give
a teaching to
the teacher. However, in the time
of king
MahAsutasoma, the decay of
Buddhism was not
so much that there were no
teachings left any more.
The day when the king was to be
captured, someone
had accepted an invitation to come
and give a
teaching in the palace. On that day,
out of respect
for the Dhamma, the king had first
gone to freshen
up and change into a new set of
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clothes in preparation
for hearing the Dhamma. It was as
he was
washing that he was captured. The
king made a
deal with the ogre that it could do
with him as it
liked, but it should first let him
listen to the teaching
of the Dhamma, because he had
already made
an appointment with the teacher
who was coming.
The king promised the ogre that
after hearing the
teaching he would allow it to take
him away for
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sacrifice. Even though the people
of that time didn't
know about the Precepts, they still
knew about the
importance of truthfulness. The
king was allowed
to return to the palace where the
Brahmin was waiting.
The Brahmin didn't even know
how to explain
the Dhamma, all he could do was
to read out a piece
of the scriptures. The Brahmin also
had to wash
himself before giving the teaching.
He rinsed his
hands with perfume before picking
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up the scriptures.
He bowed three times to the
scriptures and
only then did he open up the
scriptures in the most
careful possible way. The subject
matter of the scriptures
were the words of a previous
Buddha. The
Brahmin could read the words and
translate them,
but he didn't know the meaning:
Associating with the noble ones
just once,
One can be protected by that
contact for
the rest of one's life.
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110 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
However, associating with fools
even
many times,
Will fail to protect you for the rest
of your
life.
If you associate with the noble
ones,
You should associate with them
closely,
Because anyone who can learn the
virtues
of a noble one,
Will know only prosperity and
never
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know decay.
Even a royal chariot that is
beautifully
decorated,
Must eventually deteriorate and
decay,
In the same way the body that we
possess
Must eventually decay and die.
However, the Virtue of the Noble
Ones
Never goes out of date and never
decays.
It is only the Noble Ones together
Who can know each others' minds.
The earth and sky are far apart.
The two sides of the ocean are far
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apart.
But they are not so far apart,
As the behaviour of the nobles and
that
of fools.
Before putting the scriptures away,
the brahmin
bowed to them again. Hearing just
these teachings,
the king was so moved that he
cried tears of joy.
The king asked the brahmin,
"Usually when you
read this scripture to other kings,
how much do they
give you?"
The brahmin replied, "They give
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me a hundred
for each verse."
"These verses are not a `hundred a
verse' but are
a `thousand a verse" said the king,
and presented
the brahmin with five thousand.
The king remembered the
appointment he had
made with the ogre and thought to
himself, "If I
were to break my promise, it
would only make my
mind dull and guilty and I would
certainly have
an unfortunate afterlife destination
— better that I
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go to my death with that ogre
while my mind is
still radiant from having heard the
Dhamma." The
king gave himself up to the ogre.
The ogre was surprised
that the king didn't show any sign
of fearing
death. It asked the king why he had
no fear of
death. When the king told them the
Dhamma he
had learned, the ogre was so
impressed that it asked
to take refuge in the king as its
teacher and had no
more thought about sacrificing
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him.
F.4 Ex. Tuccha-Pothila (The
Blank Scripture
Monk)(DhA.iiL417-21)
In the time of the Buddha there
was an elder monk
who was so learned in the
Dhamma teachings that
he had many disciples of his own.
Many of his disciples
had become arahants as the result
of what he
had taught
but he, himself, had
not achieved anything.
He had heard a lot of teachings but
he had
never showed any interest in
EFTA01161035
practising for himself
all the theory thathe had taught.
All he had was
knowledge — he had no
attainments.
Out of compassion,the Buddha
wanted the elder
monk to realize that he must
practice for himself,
so he always called the elder by
the name `Blank
Scripture'. If the elder came to see
the Buddha, the
only thing the Buddha would say
to him was
"'Blank Scripture'— so you're
here again?" For
EFTA01161036
other disciples the Buddha would
ask questions or
give encouragement, but instead of
giving encouragement
to this elder for having so many
students
he just said `Blank scripture'.
Apart from this he
would ignore the elder completely
until everyone
else was taking their leave. Again,
the only thing
the Buddha would say to him was
"'Blank Scripture'
— so it's time for you to go?"
One day, the elder saw through his
feeling of being
EFTA01161037
slighted bythe Buddha and thought
to himself,
"What the Buddha says is really
true — I really am
a `blank scripture' — because I
know all the scriptures
by heart, but I have never used any
of it in
practice for my own benefit." He
thought to
himself,"I have spent all my life
teaching others,
but I have never taught anything to
the stubbornest
person in the world — myself."
(Sometimes, even though you
know what is good
EFTA01161038
and what is bad, you still don't
make any effort to
change your behaviour. When the
alarm clock rings
in the morning, instead of getting
up, you switch it
Blessing Seven: Artfulness in
Knowledge 111
off and go back to sleep. This is
the reason why it is
necessary to teach yourself
regularly).
Thus the blank scripture elder went
to the most
senior arahant he knew and asked
for his help in
teaching the practice of Buddhism.
EFTA01161039
The arahant,
knew what was in the mind the
elder and knew if
he made life too easy for him, he
would never give
up the arrogance he needed to shed
in order to learn
anything. Thus the arahant did not
agree to teach
him, but sent him to a more junior
arahant saying,
"That monk is still young and
healthy — he will
have the strength to teach you what
you want to
know."
The `blank scripture' elder went to
EFTA01161040
the younger
arahant, but the younger arahant
knew the character
of the elder again. He knew with
his seniority,
the elder would not pay much
attention to anything
taught to him by someone half his
age. Thus the
young arahant sent the elder to
study with a novice
who was an arahant. The elder was
tempted to
give up his search for knowledge
because of the
humiliation of having to be taught
by a young novice!
EFTA01161041
However, the warning of the
Buddha still rang
in his ear and he gritted his teeth
and went to see
the novice.
The novice knew the arrogant
character of the
elder so he told him that to get a
good result from
the teaching, the elder must be up
to his neck in
river water to get any benefit. The
elder thought, "I
am really at my last resort — if I
don't do as this
novice tells me, I will maybe never
have the chance
EFTA01161042
to learn any more."When the elder
was up to his
waist in water, he had completely
given up his dignity
and hence his arrogance. The
novice said, "Up
to your waist is enough!"
The novice taught, "There is a
termite mound
with six entrances. A water
monitor is inside the
termite mound. The way to catch
the water monitor
is to block five entrances and to
put your hand
through the sixth and you will be
able to catch the
EFTA01161043
water monitor as you wish." The
novice didn't need
to say any more. Because the elder
was an experienced
teacher he immediately knew that
the water
monitor in the teaching is the mind
itself which is
constantly thinking of things that
are of no benefit,
losing its energy via the six sense
doors. If we want
to train the mind we have to
control the five outer
senses (eyes, ears, nose, tongue
and body) and purify
the sixth sense which is the object
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of the mind.
As soon as the elder understood,
he immediately
trained himself in sensual restraint
and purification
of the mind.
By the end of the novice's
teaching, the elder was
an arahant, even standing there up
to his waist in
water. Because the elder had been
artful in knowledge
for so long, to become artful in
practice was
no difficulty. All he needed was to
have a little reminder
to make him think a little. Thus we
EFTA01161045
can see
that to be artful in knowledge is
essential for one's
personal development.
112 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Eight: Artfulness in
Application 113
A. INTRODUCTION
Since Blessing Seven, we have
already discovered
the value of being artful in
knowledge — but it is
not good enough — it is also
necessary to be artful
in the application of what we know
EFTA01161046
— the subject
of this Blessing.
A.1 People confuse knowledge
with ability
Many people confuse knowledge
with ability. Artfulness
in the application of knowledge
means that
if you have learned an
occupational subject, if you
have learned all the necessary
theory, you have to
transform that theory into practice
allowing you to
earn your living. If you have
learned Dhamma
theory, you have to transform that
EFTA01161047
knowledge into
Dhamma practice.
It is like someone who reads a
manual of swimming
who can memorize every page of
the manual.
He knows how many types of
swimming styles exist
and what all the differences are.
When he has
read the book, he puts it at the side
of the swimming
pool and jumps in — sinking
without a trace!
A.2 Why no-one wants fresh
graduates
This is one reason why many
EFTA01161048
graduates are unemployed
— they have only knowledge from
examinations
or from copying their friends. They
have
no practical knowledge. They
expect to get a prestigious
job in keeping with their
prestigious degree
and look down on almost every
type of work. When
they have only academic
knowledge, no practical
knowledge and they expect to
choose where they
want to work, who can they expect
to want to take
EFTA01161049
them on? If you don't want to be
an unemployed
graduate, you should take on any
work you can
find, to get the practical experience
ever since you
have not yet graduated. If you can
transform your
academic knowledge into practical
skills even before
you graduate, you will make an
very attractive
prospect for employers. There will
be employers
asking after you even before you
graduate.
Some people get themselves a
EFTA01161050
prestigious degree
in accounting. They take a job as a
lecturer in university
and because they can teach
accounting in a
way that allows their students to
become successful
accountants, they think that they
are also a capable
accountant. The lecturer sees that
his students
are richer than he is, so he gives up
his job to start a
business himself. Before long, his
business is bankrupt
and he has to go back to teaching!
Only then
EFTA01161051
would such a person find out the
reality that knowledge
and application of knowledge are
completely
different attributes.
B. DEFINITIONS
B.1 Definition: Artfulness in
Application
The Pali word `sippaO', meaning
`one endowed
with artistry' means someone who
is skilled in application
of their knowledge. The
`bahEsEta' of
Blessing Seven is one who is
skilled in knowledge,
EFTA01161052
Blessing Eight:
Artfulness
in Application
114 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
but the person who has mastered
this Eighth Blessing
is one who can apply that
knowledge fruitfully
too.
B.2 Six Components of Artful
Application
Not all performances or displays of
application of
knowledge qualify as `artfulness in
EFTA01161053
application'.
You can learn skills, but it doesn't
guarantee that
using the skill will bring you merit
— therefore,
before committing yourself to a
skill you want to
learn, you have to consider the
merits of it first, for
the harmony of society: If you are
a sculptor, then
why not use your skill to sculpt
Buddha images that
can bring inspiration to others? If
you can draw then
why not draw the sort of pictures
that will inspire
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others to do good deeds? Even
little skills like being
able to make toys for one's
children can help to
stop wastage of family income on
imported dolls
and cartoon characters — as a
guideline, bear in
mind the following six qualities of
applied work
that demonstrates artistry:
1. Must be refined
2. Adds to the value of the raw
materials
3. Product of the work leads to
creative thinking,
not aggressive or destructive
EFTA01161055
thinking: A motor
engineer should use his skill to
build engines to
help people in their everyday lives
rather than
to build weapons to wage war.
4. Product of the work doesn't
lead to sensual obsession:
Don't go studying the sort of arts
that
will stir up the passion of others
like cabaret
dancing or strip-tease.
5. Product of the work doesn't
lead to illwill or
vengefulness
6. Product of the work doesn't
EFTA01161056
lead to aggression:
Don't engage in arts that will cause
people to
seek vengeance such as inventing
war slogans.
B.3 Three Categories of Artful
Application
Don't think that only artistic
applications you can
`see and touch' qualify for
fulfilment of the Eighth
Blessing. Such skilfulness can be
applied to body,
speech and mind:
I. Artistic Application in Body:
This applies to
various sorts of specialism or
EFTA01161057
applied expertise,
whether it be plumbing,
mechanics, painting,
design, sculpture, photography,
printing or other
vocational skills such as gardener,
farmer, author
or nurse — and further than that,
having the
manners to walk, stand, sit and lie
down politely,
dressing appropriately, being
hospitable, expressing
respect and behaving in a
`cultivated'
way;
2. Artistic Application in Speech:
EFTA01161058
This applies to
communication skills, knowing
what to say and
how to say it in a way to inspire
the hearer towards
virtue (more in Blessing Ten)
3. Artistic Application in Mind:
This applies to
skillfulness in thinking, having
one's wits about
one and creative thinking.
In a nutshell, Artfulness in
Application is artfulness
in body, speech and mind.
APPLICATION
C.1 Transforming Knowledge into
EFTA01161059
Skills
If you want to transform your
academic knowledge
into applied ability, you have to
possess the following
qualities (PatthanA Sutta
A.iii.154):
1. Believe in what you do
[saddha]: You have to
believe that you what you are
doing is really beneficial
and virtuous. You should be
enthusiastic
about doing it and have the
confidence that you
can make a success out of it. Some
doctors graduate
EFTA01161060
in medical science, but have no
confidence
in their ability to heal people.
Some are more confident
in their own ability to construct
buildings.
In the end, they become building
contractors!
They can achieve more success
that way than
they ever could by being a doctor!
You need to
have to believe in what you are
doing if you are
to be able to dedicate yourself to it.
2. Safeguard your health: Don't
be the sort of person
EFTA01161061
who bursts into coughs and
sneezes when
exposed to the merest cold
draught. If you let
your efforts destroy your health, it
will be hard
for you to succeed in learning a
trade. A practical
way to safeguard your health from
all the possible
risks is very simple
keep the
Five Precepts
strictly. If you neglect your health
and go
looking for things to destroy
yourself by doing
Blessing Eight: Artfulness in
EFTA01161062
Application 115
unhealthy things, you will find it
hard ever to
achieve success in learning a trade.
3. You must avoid arrogance and
boastfulness:
Those who spend all day speaking
about what
they will do, but never getting
round to doing it,
will never manage to master a
trade. No-one
wants to accept someone who is
boastful as an
apprentice. The only skill which
boastful people
manage to develop is the ability to
EFTA01161063
find fault with
other people in order to let other
people know
how wonderful they are
themselves. By pushing
others down they are able to hoist
themselves
up in the estimation of others. The
habit of a
boastful person is to take a very
minor virtue or
ability and magnify it beyond all
proportion.
4. You must avoid laziness: If you
have only knowledge
but you are too lazy to do anything
with it,
EFTA01161064
then you will be no more than
knowledgeable
for the rest of your life.
5. Cultivate wisdom: Wisdom is
cultivated by being
observant and reflecting on new
skills and
techniques.
C.2 Instilling yourself with
"Artfulness in Application"
You cannot acquire wisdom just
by eating and
sleeping. You have to be active in
your search for
wisdom according to the following
steps:
I. Be observant of yourself and
EFTA01161065
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°quo sonsuo)o℃J
Injosn pue poo8
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loos O1 pluone ski Ay
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S.10mod mo 'Hogs1nu e
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mom! ol 2
Joduu s! 2I `20ej UT
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punont slum; alp
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s2upp
EFTA01161066
(for example our habits of eating
or sleeping) to
try to define what is appropriate or
inappropriate
and where the point of equilibrium
lies for
various factors. If you eat too
much it will make
you sleepy. If you eat too little,
your stomach will
rumble at night. You have to
notice what happens
to us if we go to bed late. You
have to notice
what happens to you if you get up
late. What
is better for you — to go to bed at
EFTA01161067
ten at night
and wake up at dawn, or to go to
bed at midnight
and to wake up at seven in the
morning?
Once you know how to be
observant of yourself,
you can gradually extend your
observation
to the things around you. We
notice our clothes.
How our clothes get dirty at the
collar or around
the cuffs. Notice what sort of
clothes are suitable
for what sort of situation. We
gradually extend
EFTA01161068
our mindfulness to the things more
distant from
us — noticing how to speak to
people in an appropriate
way, how to speak to people to
inspire
them instead of making them lazy.
Notice the
characteristics of the things around
you. If you
train yourself to be observant even
of yourself,
the skill will soon be developed
and wisdom will
follow.
2. Train yourself to do everything
better than best:
EFTA01161069
Never look down on any work that
comes your
way. Never think any task you do
is unimportant.
Even simple things like your
handwriting
should be done with care. From the
time when a
child is young, they should be
trained to write
neatly whatever they do so that
`being careful'
about whatever work they are to do
in the future
will be ingrained from the earliest
age. Some
people write with such messy
EFTA01161070
handwriting that
others can only barely decipher
what has been
written. Someone who writes like
that since their
youth until adulthood will soon get
themselves
in the habit of doing everything in
a shoddy way
— never achieving anything better
than `passable'
quality. If you do everything to the
best of
your ability, skills and abilities will
soon come
your way without you even having
to spend time
EFTA01161071
looking for them. Even if you
don't study the
specific qualities of a particular art,
if you are
always observant of quality, and
do things
cleanly and in a detailed way, even
though you
cannot produce artwork for
yourself, you will
be able to tell quality in the work
of others. Once
you have trained your mind to be
refined and to
notice details, even the way you
speak will start
to be of higher quality — more
EFTA01161072
based on reason
and more confident (because your
train of
thought will be more systematic).
116 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
3. Be refined in all you do: Some
might accuse you
of `nit-picking' but if you insist on
high quality
in your work, even in the details,
before long,
you will start to pick up artfulness
in application.
4. Always look for better ways to
do the same
thing: Sometimes you can already
EFTA01161073
do a task, but
if you always look for quicker,
more efficient,
more cost-effective ways of doing
the same thing,
it will force you always to improve
on your skills,
never sitting on your laurels.
5. Apprentice yourself to a
craftsman: Seek out
craftsmen in the field which you
want to master
and become apprentice to them. Be
respectful
and helpful to him so that he will
have the compassion
to push you further in the direction
EFTA01161074
of
craftsmanship.
6. Meditate regularly: The art of
training our capabilities
of action and speech is rooted in
our capability
to train the mind. Systematic
thinking
and observation can only be
developed when the
mind is well-trained. Training the
mind through
meditation will make the
acquisition of other capabilities
easy, because to be able to
meditate is
the ultimate skill
because it
EFTA01161075
deals with refinement
at its root.
C.3 Applying knowledge for your
own benefit
and the benefit of others
In continuation of the "Learning
Process already
described in Blessing Seven",
Blessing Eight concerns
the last two steps of the knowledge
acquisition
process which involve the
application of that
knowledge for the good of
ourselves and others.
Some people use their knowledge
and skills only
EFTA01161076
for their own selfish benefits.
Sometimes they are
afraid that if they teach all they
know to anyone
else then they will be giving away
their trade secrets
or that that other person may
overtake them
and make more progress than they
have done.
The attitude which is the most
healthy for rounding
off a body of knowledge that you
have learned
is to use your knowledge both for
your own benefit
and the benefit of others too. Like
EFTA01161077
the example of
the College of Surgery with the
policy "See One -
Do One - Teach One" where
capable students were
not only those who could witness
and perform surgery
— they were also able to teach
surgery to others
too! In that way, all your mastery
of the knowledge
will not be limited to overcoming
your own
shortcomings — the application of
knowledge can
also be used to overcome the
shortcomings of others.
EFTA01161078
C.4 How not to instil yourself with
"Artfulness
in Application"
If you want to learn artfulness in
application
quickly, you have to make sure
that you are not the
sort of person who can do nothing
better than find
fault with the work of others —
unless you are training
yourself to be a professional critic!
If you have
done nothing but criticise others,
when it comes to
your turn to show off your
craftsmanship, you will
EFTA01161079
not have the confidence to let
others see what you
have made or done — for fear they
will criticize
you in the same way as you have
done them. In
such a case, you will end up as
someone who never
achieves anything.
D. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
D.1 Proverb: He who knows but a
single skill...
He who knows but a single skill
can eke out his
livelihood with ease.
D.2 Metaphor: Just as twigs...
EFTA01161080
If you plant a mango tree, the
benefit you get from
it depends entirely on the amount
of fruit. Even
though the tree might grow a
trunk, branches and
leaves — these are no more than
precursors for any
benefit which may come later. In
the same way, even
though a person may be learned,
this knowledge is
no more than a precursor for the
benefit that can
accrue if the knowledge is applied.
D.3 Ex. Swimology (traditional)
Once a young professor was
EFTA01161081
making a sea voyage.
He was a highly educated man
with a long tail of
letters after his name, but he had
little experience
of life. In the crew of the ship on
which he was
traveling was an illiterate old
sailor. Every evening
the sailor would visit the cabin of
the young proBlessing
Eight: Artfulness in Application
117
fessor to listen to him hold forth on
many different
subjects. He was very impressed
with the learning
EFTA01161082
of the young man.
One evening as the sailor was
about to leave the
cabin after several hours of
conversation, the professor
asked,"Old man, have you studied
geology?"
"What is that,sir?"
"The science of the earth."
"No sir, I have never been to any
school or college.
I have never studied anything."
"Old man, you have wasted a
quarter of your
life."
With a long face the old sailor
went away. "If such
EFTA01161083
a learned person says so, certainly
it must be true,"
he thought. "I have wasted a
quarter of my life."
Next evening again, as the sailor
was about to
leave the cabin, the professor
asked him, "Old man,
have you studied oceanography?"
"What is that, sir?"
"The science of the sea."
"No, sir, I have never studied
anything."
"Old man, you have wasted half
your life."
With a still longer face the sailor
went away: "I
EFTA01161084
have wasted half my life; this
learned man says so."
Next evening again as the sailor
was about to
leave the cabin, "Old man, have
you studied meteorology?"
"What is that, sir? I have never
heard of it."
"The science of the wind, the rain,
the weather."
"No sir. As I told you, I have never
been to any
school. I have never studied
anything."
"You have not studied the science
of the earth on
which you live; you have not
EFTA01161085
studied the science of
the sea on which you earn your
livelihood; you have
not studied the science of the
weather which you
encounter every day? Old man,
you have wasted
three-quarters of your life."
The old sailor was very unhappy:
"This learned
man says that I have wasted
three-quarters of my
life! Certainly I must have wasted
three-quarters
of my life.
The next day it was the turn of the
old sailor. He
EFTA01161086
came running to the cabin of the
young man and
cried, "Professor! Have you
studied swimology?"
"Swimology? What do you
mean?"
"Can you swim, sir?"
"No, I don't know how to swim."
"Professor! You have wasted the
whole of your life!
The ship has struck a rock and is
sinking. Those
who can swim may reach the
nearby shore, but
those who cannot swim will
drown. I am sorry, professor
sir, you have surely lost your life."
EFTA01161087
You may study all the "-ologies"
of the world,
but if you don't learn swimology,
all your studies
are useless. You may read and
write books on swimming,
you may debate on its subtle
theoretical aspects,
but how will that help if you refuse
to enter
the water yourself? You must learn
how to swim.
D.4 Ex. SAlittaka JAtaka(J.10 7)
In ancient times, there was a child
with polio. His
legs were so weak that he couldn't
walk anywhere
EFTA01161088
unaided. He had to stay wherever
his friends put
him. He couldn't even get up.
Although his body
was deformed, his intelligence was
bright. He
didn't look down on any subject.
The child would
practice flicking sand until he
could flick sand a
long distance very precisely. The
boy used his skills
to earn favours from others. The
boy could flick
sand so accurately that he could
shoot holes in the
leaves of trees above. Not only
EFTA01161089
holes — but he could
shoot holes in the shapes of
anything he wanted —
whether they be the shape of
rabbits or tigers or
deer. The boy would shoot holes in
leaves to the
order of the other children in return
for sweets. The
boy with polio had never studied in
school, but
through his skill, he had more
sweets to eat than
the other children every day.
One day the boy was flicking sand
on the sand
heap for the other children when
EFTA01161090
the king passed
by. All the other children ran
away, and the boy with
polio was left alone. The king
came to rest in the
shade of the tree by the sandheap
and when he
looked up, he was surprised to see
that almost every
leaf of the tree had been perforated
in the shape of
different animals. The king asked
how the tree had
come to be that way, and found out
that it was due
to the skills of the boy with polio.
The king thought,
EFTA01161091
"the skills of such a boy should not
be wasted at
the sandpit." The king happened to
have a something
on his mind — every time he had a
meeting
118 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
of his counsellors, there was a
particular counsellor
who would interrupt and dominate
the discussion
regularly wasting the time of
everyone in the
meeting. The king asked the boy,
"if someone were
to open their mouth, would you be
EFTA01161092
able to shoot
goat dung into their mouth in the
same way you
shoot sand through leaves?"
The boy said, "It would be a piece
of cake." The
king had the boy taken into the
palace. Those with
all health and strength never got
the chance to go
to the palace, but this poor crippled
boy did. Every
time there was a meeting, the boy
was put behind
a curtain in the room. Every time
the counsellor in
question opened his mouth to
EFTA01161093
speak, the boy flicked
goat dung into his mouth. The boy
was so fast, that
the counsellor didn't even know
where the taste in
his mouth had come from. The
counsellor would
want to speak but change his mind
as a result every
time, because he would have to
swallow what was
in his mouth. One day, the
counsellor had opened
his mouth so many times that the
boy had used up
a whole litre of goat dung. The
king felt sorry for
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the counsellor and was afraid he
would get dysentery.
He ordered the counsellor to go
and wash his
mouth out immediately and told
him to reduce the
amount he said or else in future he
would get two
litres of goat dung in his mouth!
On future occasions,
the counsellor had to consider
carefully before
saying anything in case he fell prey
to flying
goat dung. As the result of having
more effective
meetings, the economics of the
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kingdom improved
considerably. The king rewarded
the crippled boy
by allocated all the money earned
in taxes from a
certain province to him as
pin-money. The cripple
became a rich man as the result of
a single skill —
because he put his mind to
perfecting his skill.
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
119
A. INTRODUCTION
A.1 Place of Blessing Nine in the
order of things
The Seventh Blessing concerned
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artfulness in
knowledge. We should be
enthusiastic about finding
any new knowledge either in
spiritual or
worldly ways as long as it doesn't
have any negative
implications for the human dignity
of ourselves,
others or society in general. Once
you can
avail yourself of such knowledge,
then it is a
blessing in itself.
The Eighth Blessing concerned
artfulness in the
application of knowledge or
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"artfulness in learning
skills". We should be enthusiastic
about learning
any new skills either in spiritual or
worldly
ways as long as they don't have
any negative implications
for the human dignity of ourselves,
others or society in general. Once
you can avail
yourself of such skills, then it is
also a blessing in
itself.
Already mooted in the previous
two Blessings
has been the difficulty of knowing
whether the
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knowledge or skill we are learning
has any negative
implications for the human dignity
of ourselves,
others or society in general. The
purpose
of the Ninth Blessing is to give us
the guidelines
we need — to allow us to judge
our own behaviour
in action and word, so that the way
we use
our intellectual resources and
craftsmanship
bring no detriment to society
around us or to our
spiritual furtherment.
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A.2 Objectives of studying
`Artfulness in Usage'
In our consideration of the value of
artfulness in
usage towards human dignity, we
must always consider
three levels of description: our
own personal
human dignity, the human dignity
of others and
the dignity of the whole economic
system in society.
Being disciplined or being "artful
in usage" has
benefits on three levels:
I. Personal Level: Being
disciplined protects and
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furthers one's own human dignity
by protecting
our health from self-induced
illness, reducing
possible obstacles in our spiritual
vocation
(especially those arising from
unintentional blunders
with the "defilements of action"
[kammakilesa]
and allowing us to develop our
level of
virtue from mere "discipline"
[vinaya] to "selfdiscipline"
[sEla] which is the foundation for
the
subsequent development of
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meditation
[samAdhi] and wisdom [parinA]. It
is said that
being disciplined is the one major
difference between
humans and savages - thus by
preserving
our level of discipline we protect
ourselves
from decline into savagery;
2. Interpersonal Level: Being
disciplined protects
and furthers others' human dignity
by stopping
people taking advantage of each
other.
3. Social Level: Being disciplined
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protects and furthers
the humanity of the fair economics
in our
society by promoting compliance
with the law
and general harmony for society.
Blessing Nine:
Artfulness
in Usage
120 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Of course it is an advantage for the
reader to know
about artfulness in usage (or more
briefly "discipline")
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and how to acquire it
but it is
not until
you become a disciplined person
that you will really
start to gain benefit from this
Blessing.
A.3 Knowing where to draw the
line
From person to person the
intellectual resources and
the level of craftsmanship may not
be the same —
however, the more the knowledge
and skills a person
has, the more potential damage
they can do to
themselves, others and society if
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they have no ethical
discretion about how to use that
knowledge and
skill. Thus it is vitally important
that everyone has
"virtue" to go hand-in-hand with
their knowledge
— specifically the virtue to know
the negative implications
of any deeds they may do or words
they
may say. In society in general, we
tend tothink that
if what we do or say is not illegal
then it is acceptable
to our human dignity — however,
the Law is
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really only a very loose guideline
for what should
or should not be done in society.
To give a firm example,
if a person can perpetrate a
murder, but has
no witnesses, he cannot be
prosecuted in a court of
law. Furthermore, the Law from
country to country
is different — does this mean that
the ethics can
also be localized? In some
countries, the Law might
even be undemocratic — so the
Law alone doesn't
give us sufficient guidelines for the
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preservation of
human dignity at any of the levels
of description.
More detailed guidelines were
provided by the
Buddha in the form of a checklist
of four items to
be considered in order from the
first to the last:
I. The Five Precepts: Does the
action or speech contradict
break the Five Precepts 1. killing;
2. stealing;
3. adultery; 4. telling lies, and; 5.
drinking
alcohol (see below) — i.e. the
baseline of humane
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behaviour? This form of discipline
is spiritual
discipline, concerning our quality
of mind and
the quality of mind of those who
share society
with us. We find that these Five
Precepts are at
the heart of codes of discipline of
many different
religions, whether it be the
Christian Ten
Commandments, Islamic law, the
16 rules of
Hindu conduct.
2. The Five Virtues: Does the
action or speech contradict
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the Five Virtues [paiicadhamma]
of 1. compassion;
2. right-livelihood; 3.
sexual-restraint;
4. truthfulness, and; 5. awareness?
— see Blessing
Sixteen. This form of discipline is
spiritual
discipline, concerning our quality
of mind and
the quality of mind of those who
share society
with us.
3. Local Law: Does the action or
speech contradict
the local law? This form of
discipline is worldly
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or material discipline, concerning
our quality of
life and the quality of life of those
who share society
with us.
4. Local Custom: Does the action
or speech contradict
the local custom? This form of
discipline is
worldly or material discipline and
concerns social
harmony and solidarity.
Thus if an action goes against the
Five Precepts,
even if it doesn't break the Law, it
should not be
done. Also, even if it doesn't break
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the law notto
do something, but omitting to do
something goes
against the local custom, perhaps
this is a good reason
to comply, at least for harmony on
the local level
(but of course, it should not break
the Five Precepts).
B. DEFINITIONS
B.1 Definition: Artfulness in
Usage
The root of the Pali word for
`artfulness in usage'
or `discipline' is `vinaya' comes
from two stems `vi'
and ney' Wey' means something
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that leads you.
`Vi' can mean any of three things:
`good', `revealed'
or 'different'. Thus in compound
the definition of
the word ' vinaya' means `leads
you to good' or
`leads you to brightness' or `leads
you to something
different'. Leading one to
goodness, means that it
takes you away from evil. Leading
one to revelation
means that it allows us to see a
person as they
really are. Leading one to be
different means that it
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raises one above people in general.
The actual meaning of the word is
`rulesor regulations
to restrain ourselves in body and
word to
avoid causing suffering to
ourselves or others'. Notice
that `vinaya' doesn't restrain the
mind directly,
but in effect, it has a positive effect
on the mind too
because bodily action and speech
originate in the
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
121
mind. When we can avoid causing
suffering to ourselves
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or others, we set ourselves on the
path to
goodness, revelation and
difference from others in
general. Vinaya' will be the virtue
that tells us what
is appropriate and inappropriate to
do or say or look
at or eat.
B.2 Definition: Self-Discipline
When people think of Precepts,
they often mistakenly
think that Precepts are nothing
more than prohibitions.
In fact the meaning of the Pali
word for
`Precepts' i.e. `stla' means `the
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norm' or `cooling'.
Precepts mean the level of virtue
that is normal for
human beings to have. It is a norm
that distinguishes
men from savages or from animals.
It is for
this reason that we differentiate
`vinaya' from `sEla'
by calling the latter
"self-discipline". As we shall
see "self-discipline" is the result of
training yourself
in "discipline". It is a state of mind
rather than a
set of rules to follow.
B.3 The Difference between
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Discipline & Self-Discipline
Discipline is the means by which
we restrain (the
manifesting of) unwholesome
actions and speech.
When one is new to discipline, the
mind is usually
still reluctant. Many thoughts will
go through the
mind to protest at the
inconvenience of behaving
in a disciplined way. Such
thoughts do not
constitutea breach of discipline
because they are not
manifest. Apart from protecting
the practitioner
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from degradation of behaviour into
any of the Four
Defilements of Action
[kammakilesa], discipline
will gradually channel the mind
into the development
of "self-discipline". Self-discipline
is the attainment
of restraint of unwholesome
thought as
well as unwholesome action and
speech. At this
point there is no further reluctance
in the mind any
more. One has managed to be "a
teacher to oneself'
sufficiently well to be able to
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police one's body,
speech and mind without the need
for any further
rules or regulations to force such
behaviours.
B.4 Different Types of Discipline
There are different sets of codes of
conduct which
can be used for training in
discipline. Some are suitable
for laypeople. Others are suitable
for monks.
They work on the principle of the
"principle of limitation"
because as Kierkegaard wrote in
Either/Or:
A Fragment of Life: Part One
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(1843):
"The more a person limits
themselves,the more
resourceful he becomes"
(p.289-91)
In Buddhism, it is not by arbitrary
rules that we
limit ourselves — we choose rules
that also ensure
protection of the human dignity of
ourselves, others
and society — but it is true that the
more intensive
the level of practice, the more rules
of training
we tend to keep.
B.4.1 Discipline for Householders
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B.4.1.1 Five Precepts
The Five Precepts [parica-stla] are
the basic set of
discipline advocated for every
Buddhist. The Five
Precepts are much older than
Buddhism, but were
adopted by Buddhism amongst
many other religions
as the core practice for moral
conduct. Elements
of the same principles are found in
the Ten
Commandments, Islamic Law and
even Hindu
practices. This is because the Five
Precepts protect
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against a person taking advantage
of the weaknesses
of himself and others. There is
nothing that
people love more than their own
life, their possessions,
their spouse and trust. There is
nothing that
disables people more than the loss
of their own clear
conscience. These five weaknesses
in human relationships
are guarded by the Five Precepts.
Such
weaknesses are not exclusive to
Buddhists, but apply
for all people in the world,
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therefore the Five
Precepts are the fundemental
bedrock of all morality.
The Precepts themselves consist of
five rules of
training:
1. Not to kill living beings
2. Not to steal
3. Not to commit adultery
4. Not to tell lies
5. Not knowingly to drink alcohol
or consume intoxicants.
By keeping the Five Precepts
people can ensure
harmony for society and also
prevent many of the
roots of suffering. The Precepts
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bring coolness to
the mind and body — there is no
burning caused
by suffering in body and mind as
the result.
122 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
The Five Precepts share the same
Pali word "paricasEla"
as the five principles upon which
Sukarno
founded the Indonesian
Constitution — but don't
go thinking that Indonesian Law is
founded on
Buddhist Principles because on
closer examination,
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the five basic principles of the
Indonesian Constitution
turn out to be something else
completely.
The Five Precepts are intended to
be kept by Buddhist
householders on a daily basis.
B.4.1.2 Eight Precepts
The Eight Precepts are a set of
rules of training
which expand on the Five Precepts
with adjustment
of the third and fifth precepts and
addition of the
sixth, seventh and eighth. The
Precepts themselves
consist of eight rules of training:
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1. Not to kill living beings
2. Not to steal
3. Not to be uncelibate
4. Not to tell lies
5. Not to drink alcohol or consume
intoxicants
6. Not to take meals between
midday and dawn
7. Not to indulge in romantic
entertainment or immodesty
8. Not to be indulgent in one's
sleeping habits
They are intended to be kept by
Buddhist householders
during times of intensified
training, especially
on meditation retreats or for
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self-purification
on a periodic basis, such as one or
twice a week.
Eight precepts is sometimes called
`uposatha-sEla'
where the Eight Precepts are kept
for three days
before, during and after one of the
quarter moon
days. The only real difference is
the length of time
one expects to keep them. The
content is the same
but for uposatha-sEla, usually, one
will only keep
them on the full moon days with
the possibility of
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one day before for preparation and
one day after
for debriefing. For Eight Precepts
the length of time
the precepts are kept has no special
duration.
B.4.2 Discipline for Monastics
B.4.2.1 Ten Precepts
The Ten Precepts are a set of rules
of training which
expand on the Eight Precepts with
adjustment of
the seventh precept and addition of
the tenth. The
Precepts themselves consist of ten
rules of training:
1. Not to kill living beings
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2. Not to steal
3. Not to be uncelibate
4. Not to tell lies
5. Not to drink alcohol or consume
intoxicants
6. Not to take meals between
midday and dawn
7. Not to indulge in romantic
entertainment
8. Not to indulge in immodesty
9. Not to be indulgent in one's
sleeping habits
10. Not to handle gold or silver
They are intended to be kept by
Buddhist novices
on a daily basis
B.4.2.2 Two Hundred &
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Twenty-Seven Precepts
As Buddhists train themselves as
laypeopleand as
monks, Buddhist spiritual
discipline can be divided
into two parts accordingly:
discipline for the homeless
[anagAriyavinaya] and discipline
for the
householder [agAriyavinaya]. The
monks have special
discipline in keeping with their
aim to reach an
end of defilements within the
shortest possible time.
For the monastic community,
eradication of defilements
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in the mind is intensive, so the
self-discipline
of monastics is intensive
accordingly. The 227 Precepts
are a set of rules of training which
expand on
the Ten Precepts. They are
intended to be kept by
fully-ordained Buddhist monks on
a daily basis.
CONSIDERATIONS
C.1 Components of Five Precepts
In the keeping of Five Precepts,
householders often
feel guilty when they mistakenly
do unwholesome
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things — they don't know whether
it means
they have broken their Precepts.
Some people accidentally
run over a stray dog while they are
driving
because they happen to be in a
hurry and wonder
whether it breaks the Precepts.
Some women
know that they have never taken
the possession of
others without asking (i.e. they
have never stolen)
but they wonder if taking money
from their husband
without asking is breaking the
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Precepts. The
Components of Five Precepts
explained below are
an attempt to answer this genre of
questions.Below
you will find descriptions of the
factors involved
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
123
in breaking each of the Precepts.
All factors must
be present in order for the Precept
to be broken.:
C.1.1 First Precept: Not Killing
In order to break the Precept of not
killing, your
action has to consist of five
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components:
1. The victim must really he alive:
Suppose there is a
certain dog we have hated for a
long time. Every
time we see it it has barked us,
chased us and
bitten us. We think that the dog is
alive, but in
fact it has already died. Someone
else had just
shot the dog dead that very
morning. It is lying
dead in the road, but we were not
to know that.
Seeing it lying in the road we think
to ourselves,
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"This time we can get our own
back on the dog,"
and we reverse the car over the
dog. In this case
we have not managed to break the
Precepts because
it had already died long ago of
other
causes.
2. We are aware that the victim is
alive: Sometimes
we misunderstand that an animal is
already
dead, so you think that a cremation
is in order.
You throw the body of the animal
into the flames
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— but it is not really dead.
However we were
not to know that. This time the
animal does really
die! Again, such an action does not
break
the Precepts.
3. We have the intention to kill the
victim: Supposing
you run over an animal killing it
accidentally,
because there is no intention to kill
(you could
not avoid it), again the Precepts are
not broken.
4. We put in the effort to kill the
victim: You have to
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put in the effort to kill, if you are
to break the
Precepts. You have to really aim
the gun and pull
the trigger if you are to create the
necessary conditions
to break the Precepts.
5. The victim dies in the way
intended: As the result of
our efforts, the animal must really
die if the Precepts
are to be broken. If you shoot to
kill, but
the result is only to break an arm
or leg, the Precepts
are not yet broken.
C.1.2 Second Precept: Not
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EFTA01161137
you cannot find
the rag you usually use, often you
feel irritated
or angry. In the past there was an
agreement between
market gardeners as follows
whatever
they plant, whether it may be
bananas or sugar
cane or aubergines or chillis, if
anyone walks
through the field and feels they
want to eat some
of the crop, they are allowed to
help themselves
to as much as they can eat, but it is
prohibited to
EFTA01161138
take any in your pockets or in a
bag to eat in the
home. It is said that there is only
one eater of
stolen food who steals food and
takes it home to
eat and that is a stray dog.
3. The perpetrator has the
intention to steal: Even the
intention to steal starts to cloud the
mind.
4. The perpetrator makes the effort
to steal the object:
This means trying to find devious
strategies and
actually putting those strategies
into practice.
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5. The perpetrator obtains the
object in keeping with his
intention.
C.1.3 Third Precept: Not
Committing Adultery
In order to break the Precept of not
committing
adultery, your action has to consist
of four components:
1. The object of the affection must
be a man or woman
who is prohibited: So what do we
mean by a partner
who is prohibited? There are four
sorts of
women who are prohibited to men
• married women;
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• women who are still in the care
of their parents;
• women who lifestyle prohibits
sexual intercourse,
such as nuns or female prisoners.
• women related to us such as our
mother or
our sister or our daughter
and three types of men prohibited
to women:
• any man who is not your own
husband;
• men whose lifestyle prohibits
sexual intercourse
such as monks.
124 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
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• men who are related to us
2. The perpetrator has the
intention to have sexual
intercourse
with that person;
3. The perpetrator makes the effort
to have sexual intercourse
(e.g. removes his clothes)
4. There is a joining of the sexual
organs.
In fact there is no man or women
born in the world
who has no connections except for
the one who is
already married to you. No-one
else is the legitimate
subject for sexual intercourse —
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not in the bar
nor the night club
even
prostitutes are prohibited
(consider respect for human
dignity and fair
economics and you will understand
why) — there
are no such things as `wayside
flowers' free to be
picked by anyone.
C.1.4 Fourth Precept: Not Telling
Lies
In order to break the Precept of not
telling lies,
your speech has to consist of four
components:
1. Saying something that is not
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true
2. Having the intention to
misrepresent the truth
3. Making the effort to
misrepresent the truth.
4. The listener understands what
you have said.
The damage of lying comes from
the chain reaction
it causes: inorder to lie to someone
once, you
have to lie to yourself first three
times. The first
time you lie to yourself is in order
to prepare yourself
to tell a lie. You have to make up
the story and
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convince yourself first. The second
time you have
to lie to yourself is when you meet
the person who
you are going to lie to. Thirdly,
you have to remember
what lies you have told to who,
because
next time you meet them you have
to tell them
things consistent with that first lie,
or else your
dishonesty will be discovered. If
the lie is an important
one, sometimes you will have to
remember
it for years. The result of being a
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liar is that
eventually you will lose your
self-confidence because
you have lied to yourself until you
have
become used to it. At the end of
your life, your
memory becomes so blurred to the
truth that you
end up suffering from senile
dementure as the result
of the mental hypocrisy you have
accumulated
throughout the course of your life.
C.1.5 Fifth Precept: Not Drinking
Alcohol
In order to break the Precept of not
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drinkingalcohol,
your action has to consist of five
components:
1. The liquid drunk must be
alcohol
2. The person must know that it is
alcohol.
3. The person must have the
intention to drink it
4. The person must make the effort
to drink it
5. The alcohol must be swallowed.
For the purposes of the fifth
Precept, not only alcohol
and heedlessness-inducing
intoxicants are
prohibited, but also such drugs
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such as heroine,
opium, maruana etc.. If you
consider tobacco from
the point of view of this Precept in
an objective way,
you will find that smoking tobacco
must be avoided
too. Those who become addicted
to anything like
tobacco will find themselves in
difficulty when they
come to practice meditation on a
retreat where there
is no opportunityto smoke. Some
people say that
they smoke without being addicted
— and they
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have been smoking without
addiction continuously
for the last ten years!
C.1.6 Seriousness of Breaking
Precepts
In addition, breaking a Precept
may be more or less
serious dependent on an additional
three factors:
I. the amount of effort invested in
breaking the
Precept: the more the effort
invested in a deed,
the more serious is the breaking of
that Precept.
To kill a large animal is more
serious than to kill
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a small animal because it takes
more effort.
2. the gratitude or ingratitude in
breaking the Precept:
the more an action expresses
ingratitude,
the greater will be the seriousness
of breaking
the Precept. Wringing the neck of
the cock which
crowed to wake you up every
morning at dawn
to go to school until you got
yourself a university
degree is worse than wringing the
neck of
another cock you have never
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known before. Thus
one should be very careful not to
disregard the
debt of gratitude owed to others. If
that person
or animal is one that is useful —
especially if it
has been helpful to us personally in
the past.
3. The strength of the intention
behind breaking the
Precept: if you kill an ant by
pulling each leg out
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
125
one by one and then killing it, it is
worse than
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killing the ant outright in one fell
swoop. To kill
a mosquito by slapping it is not as
bad as putting
a candle flame to the wings of the
mosquito and
leaving it in pain to wriggle to
death for the next
three days. If a person kills with
vengeance and
cruelty, it is more serious than for
killing out of
vengeance in cold blood. If
someone kills someone
with a single shot, it is not so bad
as someone
who tortures someone to death.
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Thus even
in the past, they would try to find
quick ways of
execution so that they could reduce
the evil accrued
by the executioner. (Best of all is
not to have
to kill the prisoner at all).
C.2 Components of Eight
Precepts
C.2.1 Differences between Five
and Eight
Precepts
The following differences are
found between the
components of Precepts shared
between the Five
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and Eight Precepts:
The Third Precept: Unchastity :
The first difference
between the Five Precepts and the
Eight Precepts
concerns the Third Precept.
Immoral sexual relations
[kAmesu micchAchAra] are
replaced by
abstention from any sexual
relations
(brahmacariyA — lit.
Brahma-faring). For the
Third Precept of the Eight Precepts
there are only
two components:
1. You have the intention of
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having sexual relations.
2. There is a joining of the sexual
organs.
In this case it makes no difference
whether your
partner is your husband or wife. It
will cause
your Precepts to be broken. If
either or both husband
and wife are training themselves in
the
Eight Precepts it is usual for them
to sleep apart.
This form of training is important
because for
most people in the world who lack
control over
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their own minds, for most of the
time, their
thoughts and action are dictated by
the defilements
of sensual indulgence. The five
precepts
already teaches you to be
contented with your
spouse. The Eight Precepts goes
further with this
training by offering sixth, seventh
and eighth
Precepts to help play a supporting
role in the
reduction of attachment to sensual
stimuli.
The Fifth Precept: Not Drinking
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Alcohol : Another difference
between Five Precepts and Eight
Precepts
concerns the fifth Precept. For Five
Precepts the
fifth Precept has five components,
but for the
Eight Precepts, there are only four
components
as follows:
1. The liquid drunk must be
alcohol
2. The person must have the
intention to drink it
3. The person must make the effort
to drink it
4. The alcohol must be swallowed.
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You will see that for the Eight
Precepts it is no
longer necessary to know that the
drink is alcohol
in order to cause the fifth Precept
to be broken.
C.2.2 Sixth Precept: Refraining
from Untimely
Eating
It is commonly asked by
housewives who keep the
Eight Precepts whether they are
allowed to taste
the food they are preparing for
their husbands in
the evening. Sometimes to taste
and to eat food are
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not the same (except for the person
who tastes half
a plate of food and still doesn't
know the flavour!)
1. It must be midday of one day to
the dawn of the next:
The dawn signals the changing of
the day for
Buddhists — technically the
earliest time that if
you go out into the open, and
stretch out your
arm, you can see the lines on your
hand clearly
without having to use a torch or
the time at dawn
when you can first distinguish the
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leaves of trees
as being of different shades of
green.
2. The substance eaten is solid
food (chewable): This
second component has some
exceptions i.e.
chewable food that is allowed.
Exceptions include
refined sugar, sugar cane juice,
tamarinds,
embolic myrobalan, nutgall or
pickled ginger.
For those who might have dietary
problems if
their stomach is completely empty,
cheese or
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butter is allowed (but not cheese
sandwiches!)
3. The effort is made to eat the
food
4. The food is swallowed.
If all four of these components are
present then the
126 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
sixth Precept will be broken.The
point of keeping
the sixth precept is to remove
another possible risk
of sleepiness as a hindrance to
one's meditation
practice by avoiding a heavy
evening meal. If we
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eat too much, it will give us more
energy than we
can use and this contributes to ease
of sexual
arousal. If you were to miss a meal
once a week by
forgoing an evening meal, you will
find that the
excess food will be burned up.
C.2.3 Seventh Precept: Not
indulging in
entertainment or immodesty
Indulging in entertainment means
specifically: singing,
dancing or playing musical
instruments yourself,
watching others doing the same
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(excepting the
national anthem or music in
honour of the monarch).
Immodesty means wearing
perfume, jewelry,
flowers or makeup (except talcum
powder for medicinal
purposes). Some people ask if they
can
watch the television when keeping
the eight precepts
— the answer is that you have to
be selective
about what you watch. You can
watch news but
don't go watching a cabaret or
certain sorts of advertising.
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You have to avoid contact with
cosmetics
that are meant for beautification
instead of for
health. You shouldn't wear
perfume, make-up,
flowers, hair dye. Wearing talcum
powder should
just be to prevent athlete's foot or
abrasion — not
for beautification. The components
of this seventh
precept are any of the following:
1. Playing musical instruments,
dancing or singing
romantic songs yourself
2. Watching entertainment
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consisting of singing, dancing
or romantic music.
or all of the following:
1. There are cosmetics or perfume
2. The reason is not because of
poor health
3. You wear the cosmetics or
perfume
C.2.4 Eighth Precept: Not
engaging in Indolent
Sleeping Habits
The following are the components
of the eighth
precept:
1. The sleeping place is large or
high
2. You know that the sleeping
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place is large or high
3. Sitting or lying down on that
place
You will notice that not only lying
on a soft mattress
is forbidden but also sitting on
such a mattress,
because they contribute to making
the mind
wander.The softer the mattress on
which you sleep,
the less you feel like getting up in
the morning. As
you sleep without mindfulness, it
will start to undermine
the purity of your third precept.
However,
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nowadays houses commonly have
sofas which are
soft. If you were to be strict, sitting
on a sofa would
be forbidden, but for the sake of
manners, it is better
to accept others hospitality than to
take all the
cushions off the sofa and throw
them away. At the
same time we should take good
care of our presence
of mind. We have to think of both
our Precepts
and the appropriateness in any
situation.
Sometimes hotels have nowhere
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but beds upon
which to sleep. In other places it
may be too cold to
sleep on the floor without anything
under you in
the way of insulation. Thus
consider appropriateness
in each situation.
C.3 Monastic Discipline
C.3.1 The Objectives behind
Monastic
Discipline (Vin.iii.20, A.v.70)
The Buddha created the monastic
discipline for ten
reasons:
1. To maintain peace in the
monastic community;
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2. To restrain stubborn and
shameless disciples;
3. To maintain the happiness of the
monastic community;
4. To maintain the happiness of
monks who love
discipline;
5. To give protection from
defilements that might
increase in the present time (for
example if
monks are allowed to speak
one-to-one with
females, there may be many new
problems resulting);
6. To give protection from
defilements that might
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increase in the future (for example
if monks are
allowed to speak one-to-one with
females, later
it may lead the monk to spend all
their time
thinking of that female.);
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
127
7. To instil faith in the public who
are not yet faithful;
8. To increase the faith of the
public who are already
faithful;
9. To maintain the Teaching of the
Buddha steadfast;
10. To maintain discipline itself;
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C.3.2 Components of Monastic
Discipline
Although it would be possible to
give the components
for each of the 227 monastic
Precepts (same
principles apply as for those of the
Five and Eight
Precepts) there is insufficient space
to do so. However,
to demonstrate that monastic
discipline is
more than just the code of conduct,
the four components
of monastic practice are described
below:
C.3.2.1 Restraint according to
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monastic code of
conduct [pAEimokkhasaOvara]:
The `pAEimokkha' is the set of
rules of training
which the Buddha gave to monks
for the restraint
of their bodily actions and speech.
As soon a monk
ordains, whether he knew the rules
or not previously,
it is immediately his duty to make
sure he
knows and abides by the 227 rules
of conduct. The
227 Rules therein can be divided
into three degrees
of seriousness:
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I. Rules entailing defeat
[pArAjika]: There are
four rules in this category: killing
people,
stealing, sexual intercourse and
claims of
mental attainments. Any monk
who infringes
the rules of this category
immediately in no
longer a monk any more. Whether
he is disrobed
or not, he is no longer a monk any
more.
It is the heaviest infringement of
monastic
conduct possible.
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2. Rules entailing an initial and
subsequent
meeting of the order
[saIghAdisesa]: This category
of rules of training is less serious
than
the previous, but can still be
considered evil
and coarse. When a monk breaks
one of these
rules, they must confess their
transgression to
the rest of the monastic
community. If a monk
who has infringed such a rule still
has not admitted
his fault to the rest of the monastic
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community,
then he is still not returned to
purity.
The reason for this is to show that
you are
aware of your fault and will not do
it again.
Only then can the monk be
re-admitted to the
monastic community.
3. Rules entailing confession:
These include
"Rules entailing confession"
[pAcittiya],
"Rules entailing forfeiture and
confession "
[nissaggiya-pAcittiya]; "Rules
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entailing acknowledgment"
[pAEidesanEya]; "Minor
Transgressions" [dukkaEa],
and;"Wrong
Speech" [dubbhAsita]. For these
infringements
of the monastic conduct there is no
need
for monks to confess in front of the
monastic
assembly. By confessing to
another monk the
offending monk can be returned to
purity
again. In fact, confession doesn't
wash away
the evil caused by infringement of
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the discipline,
but it helps to give the monk the
mindfulness not to infringe the
same rule of
conduct again. Confession is like
the healing
of an open wound — but the scar
still remains.
Best of all is never to break the
rules of monastic
conduct.
C.3.2.2 Restraint of the senses
[indriyasaOvara]
This means specifically the
restraint of the eyes, ears,
nose, tongue, skin contact and
mind. Monks should
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not look at inappropriate things: if
a monk sees a
couple petting at the side of the
road, he shouldn't
stay and watch them but should
quickly go somewhere
else. Monks should not listen to
inappropriate
things — there is no need to go
listening to gossip
that doesn't concern him. Monks
should not
smell things that are inappropriate
or taste things
that are inappropriate: mostly this
concerns food
and not just eating things for the
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taste. Monks
should not touch or have skin
contact with things
that are inappropriate: not using
rubbing creams
just for the smoothness of the skin
or to take pleasure
in touching soft and comfortable
things. Monks
should not use their mind to think
of inappropriate
things. In other words monks
should not find
pleasure or displeasure from the
use of the senses.
C.3.2.3 Purity of livelihood
[Ajtvaparisuddhi]
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Monks have to make their living,
but not by cultivating
fields or earning a wage. The
proper way of
making a living for a monk is to go
on almsround.
128 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
All monks know this but some
think that almsround
is inconvenient because sometimes
alms are donated,
sometimes not. To set oneself up
as a fortune
teller or a seller of lottery tickets
somehow
seems more convenient!
but it
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is not pure livelihood
for monks. Lotteries are a form of
gambling
and gambling is one of the roads to
ruin. Thus if
monks encourage and make their
living out of lotteries
or lottery numbers, don't go
supporting them
— they are in breach of monastic
discipline. Fortune
telling by monks is no better than
lottery tips.
Fortune telling is a pseudo-science
of statistics and
is not grounded on truth. Thus
fortune telling is a
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sort of guesswork which is not
much better than
lying.
C.3.2.4 Reflection on the
Requisites
[paccayapaccavekkhaAa]:
This is the practice by monks of
recollection or reflection
on the four different sorts of
requisites before
use. The requisites of clothing,
food, shelter and
medicine are the basic needs of
life. Monks must
reflect that the requisites are
nothing more than
needs to keep the body going, in
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the same way as
fuel keeps a car mobile. Most
people use the requisites
of life without distinguishing
between need
and want — but for monks the
proper practice is to
use the requisites to train oneself in
the consideration
of moderation.
SELF-DISCIPLINE
D.1 Levels of Avoidance
Properly practised, discipline will
give rise to selfdiscipline.
Where discipline is the avoidance
of unwholesomeness
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by external means, self-discipline
is the avoidance of
unwholesomeness by internal
means. To distinguish between the
two, we identify
three different ways in which
unwholesomeness
can be avoided [virati]:
I. Avoidance on the spur of the
moment
[sampattavirati]: this is a form of
discipline
whereby one refrains from
unwholesome action
or speech spontaneously without
having requested
any Precepts in advance. If you see
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a
fish washed up on the beach and
you decide on
the spur of the moment to throw it
back into the
water out of compassion, rather
than killing —
this is the sort of avoidance which
we call `avoidance
on the spur of the moment'.
Perhaps you
would turn in a lost wallet with all
of the money
instead of keeping it for yourself,
for fear of being
accused of stealing. Such
avoidance of evil
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occurs as the result of fear and
shame of evil or
the consequences of evil
[hiri-ottappa];
2. Avoidance having requested the
Precepts
[samadAnavirati]: this is a form of
discipline
whereby one refrains from
unwholesome action
or speech for fear of breaking
Precepts one has
previously requested from a monk.
Some people
simply make a vow to keep the
Precepts each
day in front of the shrine. Even if
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someone were
to give you a bottle of beer,
because you have
taken the five precepts that day,
you will turn
down the offer for fear of breaking
your vow;
3. Avoidance through
transcending [samuccedavirati]:
this is a form of self-discipline
whereby
one no longer has any temptation
to do evil, because
the mind has reached a stage of
purity and
transcendental attainment whereby
no unwholesome
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intention can arise in the mind any
more
to drive unwholesome speech or
action. This is
absolute avoidance of evil of the
type achieved
by those who have attained the
stages of Buddhist
sainthood.
D.2 Refraining from the Tenfold
Path of
Unwholesomeness
The result of practising discipline
until attainingselfdiscipline
is to remove oneself from the
influence
of the Tenfold Path of
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Unwholesomeness
[akusaladhammapatha],
the first four of which can be
recognized
as the Four Defilements of Action
[kammakilesa]:
I. Killing: e.g. killing people,
fishing, hunting
and cruelty to animals
2. Stealing: e.g Thieving,
mugging, shoplifting,
corruption and deceit
3. Committing adultery:
unfaithfulness to one's
spouse, rape, pre-marital sex
4. Lying: eg. telling lies,
exaggeration, forgery
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5. Malicious or divisive gossip:
e.g. gossip in a
Blessing Nine: Artfulness in Usage
129
way to turn one person against
another, mudslinging
6. Harsh or insulting speech: e.g.
name calling,
swearing
7. Idle chatter: e.g. purposeless
babble, raving,
boasting
8. Covetousness: e.g. considering
to get something
one wants in a dishonest way,
coveting
others' possessions
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9. Vengeful Thought: e.g. wanting
to get revenge
or get your own back
10. False View: e.g. thinking good
and evil to be nonexistent,
thinking you have no debt of
gratitude
to your parents, thinking death to
be the end of
the story, not believing in the Law
of Karma
and to establish oneself in the
Tenfold Path of
Wholesomeness
[kusaladhammapatha]:
1. absolutely not killing.
2. absolutely not stealing
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3. absolutely not committing
adultery
4. absolutely not lying
5. absolutely not gossiping
6. absolutely not speaking harshly.
7. absolutely not idle chatter
8. absolutely not thinking to take
the possession
of others
9. absolutely remove yourself from
vengefulness.
10. absolutely possession of Right
View
E. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
E.1 Metaphor: Vinaya to
knowledge is as a
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scabbard to a sword
Even if you have theoretical
knowledge and experience,
you need to have an extra virtue to
protect
you from using that knowledge in
the wrong way
— that virtue is self-discipline.
Without self-discipline,
you will apply your knowledge to
do immoral
things. The people of old had
sayings that:
"If a sharp sword lacks a scabbard,
it can harm
even the owner. If a hand-grenade
lacks a firing
EFTA01161193
pin it can kill even the owner. A
person of
knowledge and experience can
come to an unfortunate
end, if he lacks self-discipline"
E.2 Metaphor: Value of clay is in
the value of
the mold
The people of old remarked that a
humble lump
of clay in the middle of a field is a
strange thing.
Unshaped, in the middle of that
field it is without
worth. However, if you put it into
moulds
of various sorts, it acquires worth
EFTA01161194
depending on
the nature of the mould. If you put
the clay in
the mould for a plate or a cup,
when it comes
out of the mould, it has acquired
some value —
it is something you can use on the
table. If you
put it into the mould for a doll,
then the resulting
doll is of value and can be used to
decorate
the house. If you put the clay into
the mould for
a Buddha image, the clay is
suddenly transformed
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into something superior to
household
use, but something to be the object
of respect
for all who see it. Thus you can see
that the better
the mould you subject the clay to,
the more
value it acquires. When we come
to talk about
people instead of clay, we find that
in the same
way, the thing that gives people
their value is
the self-discipline they abide by.
The greater the
degree of self-discipline, the
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ewmore they are
worth.
130 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Ten: Artfulness in Speech
131
A.INTRODUCTION
Some might think the words
coming from our
mouths are relatively unimportant
when compared
to the artfulness in "knowledge",
"application" and
"usage" discussed in the previous
blessings of this
grouping. However, when it comes
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to "making
oneself useful to society"one
cannot avoid communicative
skills for team-building and for
passing
one's knowledge on to others.
A.1 Buddhism founded on the
tenet of correct
speech
Furthermore, it is only due to the
care taken in
"communicative skills" that the
Buddha's Teaching
can have been passed down across
the space of
2,500 years to the present day and
still inspire people.
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Words can be true but they may
not be pleasant
to listen to. If words are both true
and polite,
the ancients said that they were
both worth listening
to and also worth hearing. If
words, apart from
being both true and polite were
also useful, the ancients
said that such words apart from
being worth
believing and worth hearing are
also worthy of respect
— it is hard to find any religion
which analyses
speech to such depth.
EFTA01161199
A.2 Verbal karma easier to
produce than
Physical karma
If you compare the possibilities for
doing and saying
good things, you find that the
possibilities for
good speech are almost unlimited,
more than what
we can do with the body. You can
really do many
more good deeds with your speech
than your actions
or if you make the mistake of
doing evil, you
can do much more evil with your
speech than with
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your body. This is the reason why
the Buddha had
to give the art of speaking its own
separate blessing,
because of all there is to be
studied.
A.3 Why one mouth is ample
Without understanding the
principles of artful
speech, we are wont to say too
much. The people
of old would teach small children
the way to look
at yourself in the mirror. They
would say, don't go
looking at how beautiful or
handsome you are —
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because before long old age will
rob you of all these
things. Take a good look at your
own face. You will
notice that even though your eyes
have only one
function, to look, nature has given
you two. You
will notice that even though your
ears have only
one function, to hear, nature has
also given you two.
You will notice that even though
your nostrils have
only one function, to breathe,
nature has given you
two. However, your mouth has two
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functions, to
eat and to talk, but nature has
given you only one
mouth. It is as if nature is telling us
to use our mouth
in moderation — not to eat too
much and not to
say too much!
From our study of self-discipline
in Blessing Nine,
we already know to avoid the
different sorts of unwholesome
speech described in the Tenfold
Path
of Unwholesomeness
[akusaladhammapatha] —
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Blessing Ten:
Artfulness
in Speech
132 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
these go beyond lying to
enumerate no less than
four different sorts of
unwholesome speech which
should be avoided:
1. Telling lies
2. Divisive Speech
3. Harsh Speech
4. Idle Chatter
B.1 Telling Lies
EFTA01161204
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EFTA01161206
another or to set
one monk against another, the evil
will be very
heavy.The degree to which the
victims are divided:
If the victims are completely
unable ever
to get back together again, the evil
will be very
heavy.
2. The Strength of the Intention
behind wanting to cause
a division: The stronger the
divisive intention, the
heavier will be the evil.
3. The amount of effort put in to
making a division. The
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more the effort the heavier the evil
B.3 Idle Chatter
Idle chatter is speaking
purposelessly just to pass
the time. There are two
components to idle chatter:
1. To have the intention to talk
about something meaningless:
Meaningless words are the sort of
words
that don't lead a conversation
anywhere.
2. Speaking those meaningless
words
The seriousness of retribution of
idle chatter depends
on the importance of the
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meaningfulness
that you impede be speaking. Even
those who always
speak in a joking way that lacks
seriousness
don't have to wait for next life to
see the results of
their misdeeds — no-one will take
them seriously.
The amount of evil involved in idle
chatter depends
on several factors:
1. Amount of chatter: The
heaviness of the retribution
depends on whether you chatter a
lot or a
little.
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2. How much the speaker is
believed: The more others
are taken in by what we say, the
worse will
be the retribution.
3. The strength of the intention:
The stronger the intention
the worse the retribution.
B.4 Harsh Speech
Harsh speech includes swearing or
insultingothers
to the degree that it upsets them.
Harsh speech
even includes sarcasm and
sarcastic
comparisons.There are three
components to harsh
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EFTA01161211
heavy if the victim
is of high mental attainment.
2. Whether the insult is to their
face or behind their
back. An insult to someone's face
is worse in its
retribution than an insult behind
their back.
3. The strength of bad intention
behind the insult. The
stronger the bad intention, the
worse will be the
retribution.
4. The amount of effort behind the
insult
Blessing Ten: Artfulness in Speech
133
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B.5 Retribution of insulting those
of virtue
There are eleven forms of disasters
befalling monks
who (unfoundedly) verbally abuse
others who have
already attained the stages of
sainthood:
1. failing to attain the due mental
attainments;
2. falling away from the previous
mental attainments;
3. their Sadhamma will become
clouded;
4. will delude themselves into
thinking they have
already attained Sadhamma;
EFTA01161213
5. will become discontented with
pursuing the
Brahma-faring;
6. will commit monastic
transgressions;
7. will give up the training and fall
back into the
low (household) life:
8. will be struck down by grave
illness;
9. will be struck down by madness
or mental distraction;
10. will commit mortal blunders,
and;
11. has the hell realms as an
afterlife destination.
AN.XI.6
EFTA01161214
Thus if at all possible, whether
concerning a monk
or not, never be someone to find
fault in others.
Always try to look for the good in
others. You may
notice the weaknesses of others.
Observe them, remember
them but don't use them as the
subject of
conversation. If you are always
immersed in the
good deeds of others then even if
you try to think
of evil things you will be unable
to. You won't be
tempted to find fault with that
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person or that person
to the degree that you end up
finding fault with
people who have no fault.
B.6 Disadvantage of saying too
much
Most people in the world believe
that they are men
of principle. However, when it
comes to speaking,
many find that they just say what
they feel like. If
people do have a governing
principle about the
things they say, then usually they
just try to say the
things that are pleasing for the
EFTA01161216
other person to hear.
The trouble with such a principle is
that people will
always say what is easiest to say
instead of saying
the things that need to be said.
Such a principle,
when you come to speech at the
level of politicians
or those in power will impede the
progress of the
country because politicians are
always saying what
is easiest to say instead of speaking
out about the
things in society which ought to be
changed.
EFTA01161217
If one has no clear principles then
the more you
speak, the more damage you do.
The people of old
had the saying that, "The more you
say the more
trouble you create." The reason is
that when we
have already said all that is
beneficial and necessary
to say and we keep on speaking
then the next
things to come out of our mouth
are worthless or
harmful speech such as gossip,
slander, abuse, chatter
and lies. Thus the people of old
EFTA01161218
said, "keep what
you have to say to mimimum and
you will
mimimize your problems.
However if you refuse
to speak at all then no-one
understands you!" Thus
we all have to say something, but
for our own benefit
we should clearly understand the
nature of
speech and the principles of artful
speech that is
beneficial so say so that we can be
confident in selecting
the things we say or keep to
ourselves.
EFTA01161219
C.1 Definition
By artful speech we mean speech
that has been carefully
filtered and distilled by the mind as
good,
before it is allowed to pass our
lips. It is not only
speech that is better than nothing.
It is speech that
has been carefully selected by
many criteria. It must
be good from every viewpoint —
so good that it
cannot have any fault found in it.
The reason why
we must be careful with our speech
EFTA01161220
is that however
good our intentions if we say
something in
the wrong way we can still upset
the people around
us because they cannot see what
we are thinking.
All they can pick up is the words
by which we express
those intentions.
C.2 Components of speech
From the meaning communicated
by the things
people say we can identify three
major components:
1. The Intention behind the
Words: You can see
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whether the intention behind the
things someone
is saying is based on greed (e.g.
they would
like to get something from
someone), hatred (e.g.
in order to try to harm someone) or
delusion (e.g.
out of the envy of someone). These
are all dam/34
A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
aging forms of speech. If speech is
used in a good
way then the intention must be
good. Good
speech may be said out of
EFTA01161222
compassion.
2. The Sort of Words Chosen: The
more true they
are the less false they are. The
more polite speech
is the less rude it is and vice versa.
If the usefulness
of words is reduced then they
become more
superfluous. Thus you can classify
the speech of
anyone in the world in terms of
these three variables
no matter what language it is
spoken in:
1. True or Untrue
2. Polite or Rude
EFTA01161223
3. Useful or SuperfluousWords are
either true or
false.
3. The Occasion Chosen to say
them: Sometimes
this means whether what is said is
appropriate
to the time available and the place
where it is
said.
C.3 Qualities of artful speech
Applying the general components
of speech toartful
speech, we find that there are five
components. If
speech is truly good it must be
good to five levels.
EFTA01161224
It is not like a one-star hotel which
is better than a
hotel with no stars. If we are truly
principled in the
things we say, then every word we
say must be `five
star'. If it is any less, we will not
let it pass our lips.:
I. Speech must always be based
on the intention
of compassion: If the intention
behind our speech
is not compassion for the hearer
then those words
are better not said. Think for
example of the sort
of things you say when you are
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angry with someone
and you will see that if you are
angry its
better to keep your mouth closed.
2. Speech must be true: (sort of
words spoken) Supposing
we would like someone to do a
good deed
(i.e. we have compassion for them)
but to get
them to do so we tell a white lie
then it is no
longer artful speech. Some people
would like to
cheer up a child so they say "Oh!
Here comes
the most precious boy in the
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world!" This could
not yet be counted as artful speech
— it is no
more than words to fool children.
The same thing
even goes for telling "white lies"
to fool people
into doing beneficial things or the
meaningless
words exchanged between people
in love.
3. Speech must be polite (sort of
words spoken): If it
is not polite it can never be artful
speech. It is
speech which ought to stay in the
market place.
EFTA01161227
4. Speech must be useful (sort of
words spoken): It
should not something be said just
to float on the
breeze. Does it create benefit by
making the mind
of the speaker and the listener
brighter? Does it
create benefit both in this lifetime
and the next?
This doesn't mean that we tell lies
for our own
benefit but by doing so we take
advantage of others.
Both speaker and listener must
benefit as the
result of the words spoken. Why
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bother telling
someone that Mr. So-and-so is
involved in corruption
when everyone throughout the
town already
knows it to be a fact.
5. Speech must be at the
appropriate time and occasion
(the occasion chosen to say them):
Even
if you say the right thing but it is at
the wrong
time then you cannot consider it to
be artful
speech. You might want to give
your husband
or wife or friend a useful piece of
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criticism but if
you do it in front of their boss it
turns advice
into a disgrace for that person. If
you want to
give your boss a warning you have
to choose the
appropriate time or else it might be
seen as insult.
C.4 Special Considerations when
giving criticism
The subject of appropriate
occasion is something
that is very hard to judge. In
societies where there
must be quality control and there
does need to be
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evaluation and criticism of sloppy
practices, then
often one cannot wait for the right
opportunity to
come along by accident. In such a
case you have to
do your best to create the
opportunity. Apart from
keeping to all the five principles
already mentioned,
there are two extra considerations
which you
should bear in mind which can
help to create favourable
circumstances for giving criticism:
1. Praise them before you criticise
them: A piece of
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criticism may take three pieces of
praise to balance
up the good feeling lost. The praise
should
always come first. Don't forget
that others have
feelings too and even if someone
has made a lot
of faults you shouldn't criticise
them for any
Blessing Ten: Artfulness in Speech
135
more than two faults per day or
else you may
have a resignation on your hands.
2. Smile when you give the
criticism: Don't criticise
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out of anger.
If you ever say something to
someone and you are
surprised that it makes them angry,
try checking
the words that you said using the
`five-star' measure
of artful speech mentioned above.
If you do not
filter your use of words carefully,
then your
wordsmay cause harm to others.
On other occasions,
like a cup and a saucer must be of
a matching
quality, sometimes situations
require words of
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a matching quality too. Sometimes
it is good to
speak in a way that is polite, but
sometimes a situation
doesn't require it because in some
exceptional
circumstances, five star language
is not appreciated.
C.5 Those who don't appreciate
artful speech
It is not as if you should speak in
the most polite
possible way to every person you
meet. Some people
cannot stand to hear polite
language and may
even criticize you because of it.
EFTA01161234
They hear someone
speaking clearly and accuse that
person of being
`affected'. In such cases you might
need to lower
the grade of politeness of the
language you use to
make your language more direct,
to shock the person
into awareness. However, the rest
of the four
components of good speech must
remain intact. The
following sort of people might
need to hear direct
speech:
I. Those who have a superiority
EFTA01161235
complex or like to
pretend that everyone is equal:
Those who think
they are God's gift to the world.
Such people will
not profit from flowery speech.
Sometimes they
need to be shocked by the words
they hear in
order to change themselves for the
better.
2. Those whose mind is blinded to
the virtues of
the speaker by their lack of faith
for that person:
This is especially true if someone's
mind is
EFTA01161236
still attached to practices that are
diametrically
opposed to the ones you are
advocating. Thus
you can speak flowery words until
you are red
in the face and they will still not be
inspired by
your words. Even so you must not
give up trying
to help such people!
3. Those who are in the midst of
depression: For
such people, flowery words are of
no more use
than flute music to a buffalo.
C.6 Praiseworthy Talk
EFTA01161237
In Buddhism, the most useful sort
of talk istalk of
virtue by one who exemplifies the
virtue they are
talking about. The Buddha taught
that ten types of
conversation which are
praiseworthy are:
1. one who wants little and talks on
wanting little
[appiccha];
2. one who is contented and talks
on contentment
[santuEEhi];
3. one who is loves seclusion and
talks on seclusion
[paviveka];
EFTA01161238
4. one who loves solitude and talks
on solitude
[asaOsagga];
5. one who strives energetically
and talks on energetic
striving [viriya];
6. one who is self-disciplined and
talks on selfdiscipline
[sEla];
7. one who has attained
concentration and talks
on concentration [samAdhi];
8. one who has attained wisdom
and talks on wisdom
[pafifiA];
9. one who is has attained
liberation and talks on
EFTA01161239
liberation [vimutti], and;
10.one who is has attained seeing
and knowing of
liberation and talks on seeing and
knowing of
liberation [vimuttinAAadassana].
C. 7 Characteristics of a peace
envoy
One of the most useful
applications of artful speech
is to make the world a more
peaceful place. Whenever
there is conflict in society the
reasons for people
to do evil things are multiplied
manyfold. If we
ever have the opportunity to
EFTA01161240
encourage people to
live together in peace and harmony
it is something
very meritorious for us to do.
Anyone who is fitting
to be an envoy of this sort should
have eight
characteristics which we should
learn and train
ourselves in so that we may be
ready if ever we
have the opportunity to take on this
duty. In the
future, no matter how many
lifetimes we are born
for we will always have friends
and relatives who
EFTA01161241
are peaceful and harmonious:
136 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
I. You must be able to listen to
others opinions and
not refuse their point of view:
Some people like
to hear only the sound of their own
voice. They
don't let others get a word in
edgeways. Of
course they can never find anyone
to listen to
them. Before becoming a good
speaker you must
train yourself to listen to other
people first.
EFTA01161242
Whether what another person is
saying is right
or wrong, at least give them the
chance to say
what they have to say and in that
way you will
be able to pick up the jist of what
they have to
say.
2. When you do speak, you must
be able to capture
your listener's attention and hold
it: That doesn't
mean just spending all your time
listening to
what others have to say but when it
comes to
EFTA01161243
your turn to speak then you should
see to it that
what you are saying is listened to.
Don"t go
speaking in a way that is irritating
so that no one
can listen to you for long.
3. Know how to set the boundaries
for what you
have to say to the minimum: If
you are not able
to limit the scope of what you have
to say then it
is like driving a cart along to chase
a rabbit. This
is what it is always like if the
objective of what
EFTA01161244
you have to say is not clear. There
will be no end
to what you have to say. Political
negotiations
will go on for seven days and
seven nights and
still reach no conclusion.
4. You must be able to remember
what you have to
say: Never use a forgetful person
as your emissary.
5. Understand the detail of
everything you have to
say: It is not enough simply to be
able to memorize
the details.
6. Having the ability to make
EFTA01161245
others understand
what you have to say: This really
takes a lot of
ability. You must be artful in the
use of metaphor
and artful speech.
7. You must be skilled in selecting
to say only useful
things and cutting out the rest.
8. By habit you must be someone
who is not fond
of starting arguments: Never send
anyone with
a short temper as your ambassador
unless you
are planning to start a war.
Finally, in the words of the
EFTA01161246
Buddha
"An ambassador is one who even
in the company
of the harsh-spoken, can remain
unscathed
and unruffled, makes no mistake in
his
use of words, doesn't conceal
information, has
the ability to alleviate the doubts of
others and
who is not angered by
questioning."
(Vin. Culavagga 7/201)
C.8 Buddhist Principles of Public
Speaking
There are many different recipes
EFTA01161247
for success for public
speaking in the world — including
those of the
Toastmasters or Carnegie, but in
general, they do
not have principles which deviate
far from the principals
already outlined above — except
for aspects
of the delivery. Buddhist
principlesof public speaking
emphasize the following
components:
I. Sound body: This includes all
aspects of non-verbal
communication
2. Sound speech: This means
EFTA01161248
speech that is pleasant
to the ears, eyes and mind of the
listener:
1. Being pleasant to the ear means
possessing "Five
Star" speech and includes the use
of words,
use of intonation and the rhythm of
what is
said.
2. Being pleasant to the eye means
the speaker having
a pleasant personality and use of
expression.
3. Being pleasant to the mind
includes appropriate
choice of subject, being prepared,
EFTA01161249
having
one's thoughts organized and
structuring the
speech into three parts: an
introduction, main
body and conclusion.
3. Sound mind: Exemplifying the
virtues which you
talk about.
Buddhist public speaking is not
just talking to be
understood or believed, but for the
enjoyment and
the inspiration of the listener to do
good deeds.
D. ILLUSTRATIVE
EXAMPLES
EFTA01161250
D.1 Metaphor: A fish lives & dies
because of its mouth
A fish can have long life
dependant on its mouth
which it uses to feed. However,
because the selfsame
mouth and its greed for bait, it
swallows the
hook which brings its life to an
end. In the same
Blessing Ten: Artfulness in Speech
137
way, if we use our mouth for artful
speech, it can
bring us success and prosperity in
life, but sometimes
even a word of unwholesome
EFTA01161251
speech from
the same mouth can cost us our
lives.
D.2 Metaphor: It is not just
knowing the right thing to say
A smart person is not a person who
knows when to
say the right thing
they must
also know when to
keep their silence. A knowledge of
the things not to
be said is more important for an
artful speaker, even
more than a knowledge of the
things to be said.
D.3 Ex.: Condemned manwho
said too much
EFTA01161252
The less you say, the less risk you
run of saying
something foolish, even
dangerous. In 1825 a new
czar, Nicholas I, ascended the
throne of Russia. A
rebellion immediately broke out,
led by liberals
demanding that the country
modernize — that its
industries and civil structures catch
up with the rest
of Europe. Brutally crushing the
rebellion (the
Decembrist Uprising), Nicholas I
sentenced one of
its leaders, Kondraty Ryleyev, to
EFTA01161253
death. On the day
of the execution. Ryleyev stood on
the gallows, the
noose round his neck. The
trap-door opened — but
as Ryleyev dangled, the rope
broke, dashing him
to the ground. At the time, events
like this were considered
signs of providence or heavenly
will, and a
man saved from execution this
way was usually
pardoned. As Ryleyev got to his
feet, bruised and
dirtied but believing his neck had
been saved, he
EFTA01161254
called out to the crowd, "You see,
in Russia they
don't know how to do anything
properly, not even
how to make a rope!" A messenger
immediately
went to the Winter Palace with
news of the failed
hanging. Vexed by this
disappointing turnabout,
Nicholas I nevertheless began to
sign the pardon.
But then: "Did Ryleyev say
anything after this
miracle?"the czar asked the
messenger. "Sire," the
messenger replied,"he said that in
EFTA01161255
Russia they don't
even know how to make a rope!"
"In that case,"said
the Czar, "let us prove the
contrary," and he tore
up the pardon. The next day
Ryleyev was hanged
again. This time the rope did not
break. Morale:
Once the words are out, you
cannot take them back.
Keep them under control. Be
particularly careful
with sarcasm: The momentary
satisfaction you gain
with biting words will be
outweighed by the price
EFTA01161256
you pay.
D.4 Ex. NandivisAla JAtaka
(J.28)
A tale which has become most
famous as one of
;Bops' Tales, in fact originates
from the JAtaka Tale
of NantivisAla, the ox which
pulled 100 carts for a
wager. This young ox was
miraculously strong ever
since it was born and so the owner
had the ox pull
100 carts. When he found that the
ox could pull the
carts, the owner made the ox's
ability subject to a
EFTA01161257
wager to a millionnaire who didn't
believe it. However,
when it came to the time to prove
the bet, the
master said, `Go ahead and pull the
carts, ox!'. Because
the ox didn't like the direct
language it refused
to move. Even oxen have feelings.
Thus the
owner lost the bet. Later the owner
made a second
bet, spoke politely to the ox and
won the wager
making a profit.
D.5 Ex. MaOsa JAtaka (J.315)
There were once four sons of a
EFTA01161258
millionnaire who
wanted to compare their skills of
persuasion and
competed with each other in
asking for meat from
the cart of a butcher. When the
four brothers saw
the butcher's cart they thought to
themself that they
would like to eat some meat and
they decided to
see who could persuade the
butcher to give them
some meat.
The first son shouted out to the
butcher,"Hey
butcher! Bring me some meat!"
EFTA01161259
The butcher was a
kindly man and he said "Of course
but because your
words are not sweet to my ears" he
threw the boy
some trotters. Everybody asked
him why he gave
the boy trotters and he replied that
trotters are tough
and have no taste just like the
words of the one who
had requested them.
The second son said, "My brother!
Please give me
some of your meat to eat."
Because the second son
had had the respect to call him his
EFTA01161260
brother then he
cut off some choice meat to give to
him.
The third son said, "Oh my father!
Please give
me some of your meat to eat."
Because the third
son had had the respect to call him
his father he cut
the heart out of an ox to give to
him.
The fourth son said, "My friend!
Please give me
138 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
some of your meat to eat." The
butcher heard his
EFTA01161261
words and felt pleased. He said
that when our
ages are so similar like this, it is
closest to the
truth to say that we are friends. To
call me `father'
is too much. To call me `friend' is
the most
appropriate. So with those words
he gave the
whole of his cart to the fourth son.
The fourth
son was true to his word and took
the butcher to
his house. He said if you have this
much generosity
to me then I will be generous to
EFTA01161262
you too —
come and live here if you like
I
have a reasonable
amount of wealth to my name
therefore if
any of your friends are in distress
just tell me and
I will help. Well, it turned out that
the butcher
had a few unpaid debts so he was
able to pay all
those off. The fourth son was a
friend to the
butcher for the rest of his life.
This is the benefit accrued to the
fourth son who
didn't speak harshly, or
EFTA01161263
patronizingly but appropriately
to the truth of the situation.
Blessing Ten: Artfulness in Speech
139
The Fourth
Group of Blessings
"Harmony in the Family
Life"
The fourth group of blessings
contains Blessings Eleven to
Fourteen.
Nearly all of these concern how
we take care of our close family
and therefore the grouping is
EFTA01161264
sometimes referred to as
"Harmony
in the Family Life". Nested
between Group III concerning
"Setting Oneself up in life" and
Group V concerning
"Becoming a
pillar of society", it is obvious
that harmony at home is
something
we have to get right if we are
truly to be of use to society at
large. It
is many an important
businessman who has not
EFTA01161265
managed to go as
far as he ought in his career
because of being upset or
unfulfilled in
his family life. This does not
mean that it is necessary to have
a
husband or wife and children to
make a success in one's life —
but
if one does have one's own
family, than one has to fulfil
one's duty
to them properly. In any case
one must fulfil one's duty to
EFTA01161266
one's
parents.
140 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
Blessing Eleven: Cherishing our
Parents 141
A. INTRODUCTION
A.1 Introduction to Blessing
Eleven
As we shall see for this blessing on
cherishing our
parents, much more than for
cherishing husband,
wife or children, the factor of
"gratitude" is very
important. According to Buddhist
EFTA01161267
definition, "gratitude"
is an active virtue and to be
fulfilled, should
be practised in all of the following
stages:
1. Appreciating our Debt of
Gratitude to Our Parents
[kataliriE]
2. Repayment of our Debt of
Gratitude to Our Parents
[katavedE] by:
1. repaying our debt of gratitude to
our parents:
physically and spiritually both
before they
pass away and after death too
2. Announcing the Goodness of
EFTA01161268
Our Parents
Only when we have done all of
these components
of gratitude can we be said to have
fulfilled this
eleventh Blessing — and the
remainder of the discussion
in this blessing describes the
practicality of
putting all three components in
practice. In some
Buddhist literature, practising such
duties is known
as `filial piety'.
TO CHERISH
OUR PARENTS?
EFTA01161269
B.1 Rationale
When we start out in our career of
self-development,
it is not obvious what goodness is.
In the initial
blessings, we have had to orientate
ourselves
to virtue without really knowing
what virtue is —
let alone being able to identify
virtue in ourselves.
In the beginning, even to be able to
associate with
good people is a blessing, because
some of their virtues
might brush off on us too. In the
beginning we
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might not be aware of the virtues
in ourselves — it
being much easier to perceive the
virtues of others.
The Buddha intended us to take a
hard look at our
own parents who have done so
much for us — because
everyone has parents and everyone
has received
benefit at their hands. Thus, for our
parents more
than for others, virtue will be easy
for us to identify.
If we are able to recognize, repay
and announce
the goodness of our parents, our
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familiarity with
such virtue will become all the
stronger. Later when
we are able to see the good in our
parents, we will
be able to see the good in others.
When we are able
to see the good in others we will be
able to see the
good in ourselves and develop it
further — according
to the techniques found in the
higher blessings.
Unless we are sensative to a
greater or lesser extent
to the goodness other people
express to us, we have
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little chance of increasing the
sensitivity to the goodness
that lies within ourselves. There is
no-one in
the world who has done as much
for one as one's
parents, so if one is unable to
respond to the good
they have done one, then it is
unlikely that one will
be able to perceive good in
anything else at all. If
our debt of gratitude to our parents
is as large as
this and we are unable to see it,
that shows that we
must be severely blinded to the
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good of others.
Blessing Eleven:
Cherishing our
parents
142 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
B.2 Taking care of our parents is
the most
fundamental of virtues
Repaying the debt of gratitude to
our parents is such
a fundemental virtue, that the
people of old used it
as a benchmark for judging
strangers. Sometimes
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one has to know someone for a
long, long time before
one can really say we know such a
person in
depth. However, if you meet
someone for the first
time and you find out that they
neglect their parents,
you can be sure that they are
unlikely to have
any interest in helping anyone less
closely related.
B.3 We will be cared for by our
children
If you recognize and repay the debt
of gratitude
you have to your parents, apart
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from gaining personal
virtue, you will also set a good
example for
your own children — and they in
turn will want to
take care of you when you become
feeble in your
old age.
B.4 Richness of heart helps
meditation progress
Many people meditate for many
years without being
able to make any progress
sometimes their
mind has a continuous feeling of
"dryness". However,
if upon learning about the debt of
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gratitude
they have to their parents, they
take steps to repay
it, it often creates a "richness" of
mind which allows
them to progress again in their
meditation.
C.1 Why must we have gratitude
in our lives?
We didn't get where we are today
entirely by our
own efforts. We are the result of
considerable investment
of food, care, protection, training
and
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teaching by others. All these
resources have come
to us through the pure intentions of
others in society—
intentions without which our
civilization
would soon collapse. It is not that
people have
helped us because they want
something from us in
return, but if we, who have been
on the receiving
end of such altruism, are able to
appreciate, return
or praise the favours they have
done us, it will help
to create an atmosphere of "give
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and take" in society
instead of deterioration into "every
man to
himself'.The appreciation of good
deeds is very
important to Buddhist culture and
cherishing our
parents is our first and most
fundamental opportunity
to express gratitude.
C.2 Theories of non gratitude to
parents
Where sons and daughters neglect
their parents, often
it is not intentional, but because of
having received
influence from some of the
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theories rife in our society,
none of which are entirely true:
I. Selfish Genes: Some people
think that the only reason
that parents are kind to their
children is that
they want to see their character and
genes passed
down to the next generation. This
theory has even
led to a genetic theory called `The
Selfish Gene'
(Dawkins) by which it is proposed
that man is nothing
more than a mechanism by which
genes replicate
themselves! In such a case, parents
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don't show
kindness to their children out of
compassion but
out of the selfish desire to
propagate their own
genes. If such a theory were really
true, if you were
walking down the street with four
brothers who
were all identical twins with at
least half of the same
genes as you have then you would
rather that yourself
were eaten by a monster in order to
protect the
greater part of your genes
depending on the safety
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of your three brothers. Such
theories have their limitations
because they cannot explain why
such traits
as homosexuality which hamper
the replication of
genes might grow and spread in
the population.
The practical outcome of this
theory is that instead
of thinking to repay their parents
for all the good
things they have received, they
think that they are
bringing their parents fulfilment by
bringing up
grandchildren for their parents!
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This is logic equivalent
to borrowing money from a bank
to open a
new business and paying back the
loan to your
customers! Instead of thinking how
best to look
after their poor parents, most
children spend their
time thinking how best to get
themselves a boyfriend
or girlfriend to look after for the
rest of their
lives instead.
2. Hereditary Sin: Some
philosophies of life such as
those advocated by the Unification
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Church
(Moonism) go further to suggest
that all the bad
things in our life are passed down
to us by our
parents and therefore only be
abandoning your
parents and marrying into their
religion can you
escape from sin. Such thinking has
led to many
broken families and accusations of
kidnapping and
brainwashing.
Blessing Eleven: Cherishing our
Parents 143
3. Patricide Cults: Some
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philosophies of life such
as those found in some African
tribes are even
more destructive for the family.
Only a boy who
is brave enough to kill his own
father is eligable
to become the chief of the tribe
because it is taken
that only such a person is cruel and
brave enough
to lead a tribe.
Although our thoughts about our
parents might
not be so serious as some of the
theories described
above sometimes we find it hard to
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really comprehend
how much our parents have done
for us.
Superficially we think that the
good our parents
have done for us is easy to
describe but in fact
we don't usually don't look very
deep. Many
people are confused as to how the
debt of gratitude
to our parents could possibly be as
large.
Just thinking of how they have
brought us up and
how they have fed and schooled us
surely could
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not add up to such a large debt.
However we
should try our best to look for that
goodness, because
if you can't see the good in other
people
who have done so much for you,
don't expect to
be able to see any of the good or
positive things
that arise in yourself as a result of
your meditation.
C.3 How a Child is indebted to his
parents
Of all the people in the world there
is no-one
closer to us than our own mother
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and father. Why
should we choose our parents as
subject to our
own good deeds before thinking of
others? Our
parents are those to whom wehave
one of the
largest debts of gratitude. We can
choose whether
or not we have a spouse or
children, but all of us
have parents of whom we must
take care. All
through our childhood we have
been in debt to
them and even when adult that
debt is no less
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than it was when we were young.
But how many
children go to school thinking to
study their hardest,
do their best to pick up skills so
that they can
get a job to pay their parents back
for their kindness
as soon as they complete their
education?
As soon as they get their first job
how many think
of using thier first wage to buy a
present as a token
of gratitude for thier parents and
how many
buy lipstick instead?
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C.3.1 Before conception
If we look at the root meaning of
the word `parent'
it means `one who brings forth
their offspring'. Thus
our parents are responsible for
having given us the
gift of life. Some parents are a
mother or a father to
their children. Even if they wait
until their child is
born and then abandon it — i.e
they give rise to
children but don't bring them up
— they have still
given the child the most valuable
thing it has — its
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own life. Parents serve as physical
mold. A mold
increases a material's value (see
Blessing Nine §E.2).
In a similar sense, the birth of all
animals in the
world depends on the parents as
their physical
mold.
We are overwhelmingly indebted
to our parents
for their genes that give us our
healthy physical
shape. If our parents were those
who didn't take
good care of their own health then
we might have
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been born handicapped physically.
But as many of
us are in good health, today, with
strong physical
bodies, if we were to have no
gratitude to our parents
for the things they have given us, it
would
show that we are blind to the good
things that people
do for us. Even if our parents had
abandoned
us at birth and did nothing else to
bring us up, we
should already be overwhelmed
with the gift of life
that they have given us.
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Thus don't go thinking that to be
born human is
an automatic entitlement. Even in
your own house,
the number of people living in the
house is still
small compared to the number of
worms, mosquitos,
ants, geckos, birds etc. There are
maybe a hundred
or a thousand more non-human
living beings
even in our own house than there
are humans for
whom the house was actually built.
This tells us
that to be born human is a difficult
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thing but to be
born as an animal is easy. And if
you were to be
born as an animal — what use do
you think you
would be to the world?
C.3.2 From conception to birth
For the period we spent in the
womb, we must
mostly thank our mother but also
our father who
may have taken extra care of
mother during pregnancy.
Throughout the forty weeks of
pregnancy,
the mother needed to take regular
medical check/44
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A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
ups. Even though she may not
have liked to eat
certain sorts of nutricious diet
suitable for her baby's
health, she had to eat those things,
nonetheless.
Even though she might have
wanted to eat
certain sorts of food but knowing
that these things
may have been damaging to her
baby, she had to
go without them (e.g. avoiding the
temptation of
spicy (etc.) foods, drink and
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cigarettes) during the
pregnancy, wearing loose clothes
and having to
leave strenuous work to others.
Not only physically must the
mother protect the
child in her womb, but even the
serenity of state of
mind of the child in the womb
must be protected
by avoiding quarrels, conflict and
anxiety.
C.3.3 From Birth to adulthood
A second word used for parents is
`father' or
`mother' which means `the one
who brings up their
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offspring'. Thus there are three
types of parents —
the ones we have already
mentioned who bring
forth children but don't bring them
up, those who
are step-parents who bring up the
children of others
and lastly, those who both give rise
to children
and bring them up too. Most of us
find it is easier
to comprehend their debt of
gratitude to their parents
for the care they have received
from the time
they are born to the time they are
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old enough to
take care of themselves. What do
you think is the
time of your life when you are the
most vulnerable
and you can do nothing to help
yourself? It is not
when you have no money as a
student. It is not
during a war or when you are ill.
None of these can
compare to the risk which you
underwent on the
day you were born. Normally in
the face of danger
we would use the powers we have
(physical
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strength, connections, wealth or
wisdom) to overcome
the danger — you are able to help
yourself.
However, on the day you were
born, if your parents
didn't decide to take you as their
child to bring
them up do you think you could
survive? Could
you put up a struggle when you
don't even have
the strength to open your eyes?
Would you have
had connections enough to get you
out of trouble
when even your own parents
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hadn't wanted you?
Would you have had any wealth to
buy yourself
out of the situation at a time when
you didn't even
have a scrap of cloth to wear?
Would you have had
the wisdom to work out solutions
to your problems?
The reality of the situation is that
we could
only survive because our parents
were kind enough
to accept us.
Normally if someone is to adopt a
child they
would have to take a long, long
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time to make that
decision. If you were going to lend
some money to
someone, you have to have your
conditions and
your contracts — but for us there
was only unconditional
acceptance. Thus even that
moment of acceptance
at the most vulnerable time of our
life is
more than we can easily reimburse.
Even when the child is in the
womb, even though
they don't know how the child
would turn out, they
would lay down their life to protect
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the child in their
womb.
C.3.4 Physical Care
If you compare man with the
animals, there is no
comparable animal which takes so
long or expends
so much effort in the care of its
young. Usually the
larger the animal, the longer it
must stay in the
womb (gestation period) and the
longer it must rely
on the care of its parents after its
birth. Even an elephant
with its huge size and a gestation
period of
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three years will only look after a
baby elephant for
two years. Man although much
smaller in size than
any elephant often looks after his
children for
twenty years. They have done the
job of protecting
us like a guardian angel ever since
we were born.
Even after that we expect our
parents to organize
our marriages and pass their legacy
on to us.
Parents provide food, shelter,
clothing, education
and medical care for their children,
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supporting us
in every way. Parents often have to
put themselves
at risk or in debt in order to look
after their children.
If you find a woman catching fish
or shoplifting,
99 times out of 100 she is doing it
only to feed
her child — if it was for herself
she would never
take such a risk.
C.3.5 Spiritual Care
Keeping us healthy and educated
was not the only
responsibility which our parents
had to shoulder.
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Even our own basis of moral
understanding had to
come from our parents. If our
parents had relied
Blessing Eleven: Cherishing our
Parents 145
always on the saying "do what I
say not what I do",
by now we would surely have
grown up into hypocrites.
Our parents were an example for
us to follow
as well as scolding and punishing
us for doing
unacceptable things, keeping an
eye on our friends
and choosing only the best books
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for us to read.
Who taught us to speak and walk?
Who taught us
all the basic virtues of life and had
the patience to
remind us when we were lazy or
forgetful? Parents
are a child's first teacher because
they are the first
to teach a child his manners and
how to behave.
Even when we are grown up and
supposedly responsible
and independent, the generosity
and care
of our parents doesn't come to an
end but we find
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that they are always there to help
when we have
important questions like that of
marriage and the
last thing our parents do for us
before they die is to
pass on their accumulated wealth
for us.
These are just a very brief
summary of some of
the ways in which we have been
helped by our
parents. Even the most tough and
insensitive man
or woman, when they become
parents manages to
find in the deepest part of their
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hearts the most tender
and unlimited love for their own
children and
because of the purity of parental
intention which
fathers and mothers manage to
find, ther people of
old used to say you don't need to
go any further
than your own house in order to
find an object of
worship.
C.4 Practical recollections to
appreciate your
debt of gratitude
According to the SilgalovAda
Sutta (D.iii.180), the
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practicality of realizing one's debt
of gratitude to
one's parents can be effected by
habitually reflecting:
1. "I have been supported by my
parents - I will
support them in turn" (such a
recollection helps
the cultivation of Right View)
2. "I will do their work for them"
(such a recollection
helps the cultivation of patience,
responsibility,
knowledge and ability)
3. "I will keep up the honour and
traditions of the
family"
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4. "I will make myself worthy of
the family legacy"
(such a recollection helps one to
extricate oneself
from the Six Roads to Ruin)
5. "I will make offerings,
dedicating merit to them
after their death" (such a
recollection helps the
cultivation of Right View and
responsibility)
Such recollections will not come
naturally to any
child who has not been raised with
self-discipline,
responsibility and Right View.
Thus the gratitude a
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child has is part of a reciprocal
relationship a parent
has with their children — a subject
explored in
more depth in Blessing Twelve
(0.3).
GRATITUDE TO
OUR PARENTS
D.1 Expectations of Parents
Poor parents would rather put
themselves in debt
than to see their own children
suffer. Considering
seemingly little things like
carefully and rationally
will allow us to see through to the
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magnitude of
the debt of gratitude we own our
parents. Realizing
how good one's parents are is a
simple but necessary
precursor to the repayment of
gratitude to
our parents — because it is not
immediately obvious
or easy to understand for every
person.
There was once a man who,
together with his
brothers and sisters, had been
looking after their
mother throughout a constant
period of two years
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nursing her and paying for her
kidney transfusions
at a cost of 20,000 per month.
Such a cost was certainly
quite difficult for all the brothers
and sisters
to bear, but if they could not pay
then surely their
mother would die. Because the
mother was also
suffering from mental-disease, as
soon as she was
stronger after the transfusion, she
would complain
continuously disturbing the sons
and daughters
looking after her in the middle of
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the night. Looking
after the mother was an ordeal for
everyone
concerned and at the end of two
years, the thought
occurred to all the brothers and
sisters that two
years was enough. They thought
that all their efforts
were surely enough to repay their
debt of gratitude
to their mother. In actual fact, if
their mother
had thought the same thing of her
sick sons and
daughters early on in life then
surely none of them
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would have survived to the present
day. Their
mother would have used the last of
her earnings to
146 A Manual of Peace: 38 Steps
towards Enlightened Living
see her children well again and
even have gone into
debt rather than seeing her children
suffer.
All parents have only five
expectations of their
children (in keeping with the five
recollections of
the SilgalovAda Sutta mentioned
in the previous
paragraph) — all of which point to
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ways in which
children can handle the debt of
gratitude they owe
to their parents:
1. that their children will look after
them in their
old age;
2. that their children will
perpetuate the good work
for society they have already
started;
3. that their children will carry on
the good name
of the family;
4. that their children will use the
family wealth in
a responsible way
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5. when they pass away their
children will perform
funeral rites and continue to
dedicate the
positivity of good deeds for their
parents .
The extent to which a child
manages to do all five
of these things varies from person
to person — but
in general you can categorize
children into three
types:
1. The child whose virtue exceeds
that of his parents
and who brings more prosperity to
the family
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as during the time of his parents
[abhijAtaputta]
2. The child whose virtue equals
that of his parents
and who brings the same degree of
prosperity
to the family as was brought
during the
time of his parents [anujAtaputta]
3. The child whose virtue is less
than that of his
parents and who brings less
prosperity to the
family than during the time of his
parent [avajAtaputta]
D.2 Service
Repaying to our parents' goodness
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through service
is divided into two parts:
I. Service when they are still
alive: When they are
still alive help them in their daily
chores. look
after them when they are old, make
sure that they
are well fed, and care for them
when they are
not well. If they still have debts
when they are in
their old age then try to pay these
debts off before
they die. Serve them by making
life more
convenient (e.g. building an extra
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toilet for aged
parent)
2. Service after their death: When
they pass away
host their funeral and habitually
offer the
positivity you generate as the
result of your
meditation for their benefit: (even
if we transfer
merit to them and they are unable
to accept it
we have still done our duty to the
best of our
ability like giving a car to someone
who cannot
use it or cannot use it immediately)
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D.2.1 While parents alive
D.2.1.1 Honour
In order to show your respect for
the pure intention
which our parents have always
shown us it is
fitting to offer clothing, housing or
medicine. Sometimes
we might give a gift to our parents,
not out of
necessity, but in order to honour
our parents. Sometimes
out of their goodwill for us aged
parents or
old people will seem to be very
fussy or critical because
they have a lot of life experience
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(more than
us). Sometimes they are really too
fussy, but you
need to be able to tolerate what
they are saying and
think that they still have that
goodwill for you. If
we are patient, we can learn a lot
from their experiences.
Also there may be some things we
should
keep to ourselves instead of
burdening old parents.
Old people are weak and cannot do
much for themselves.
Only their mouth is in good
working order
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- so be patient when old people
talk a lot.
D.2.1.2 Protection
Protect your parents from things
that you know
annoy them or tire them. If you can
alleviate stressful
duties which might fall upon your
parents, you
can help them to enjoy the last
years of their life
more and preserve their dignity.
D.2.1.3 Spiritual Ways of
Repayment
All the above we are not enough to
repay our debt
of gratitude in all the ways above
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OJ UaJ锣/仞wa篓apv
[truncated]